We’re all marketing in one way or another.
Make sure you’re living like you’re talking, or you’ll be caught out.
“I am rich in …!”
We’re all marketing in one way or another.
Make sure you’re living like you’re talking, or you’ll be caught out.
“I am rich in …!”
Filed under Humour, Leadership
This is a huge topic. Which is another way of saying, “Tread carefully, for you tread on both my hopes and offenses.”
If you’re reading this blog from a western orientation, then the double-edged sword of material affluence (materialism on one side, the embarrassment of riches on the other) probably has left you with inner conflict. Specifically, given that you are already pretty rich in this world (objectively and historically), do you feel a certain sinking apprehension about the subject of “riches in Heaven”?
Let me lob a couple of thought-grenades to disrupt your tangle of contradictory thoughts, mixed emotions, spiritual dichotomies and physical stress (your body’s reaction to that inner unrest):
Let’s start with Jesus’ direct admonition to his followers about where your time and energy are going:
Now, take Jesus’ illustration of the successful farmer whose material success prompted him to build bigger and better storage facilities (to be relevant to our era, let’s call it “retirement”) and is rebuked by God:
So there’s a statement of what he was saying not to do.
And then there’s Paul’s advice to his pastoral mentor-ee to pass on to believers who are materially successful:
Personally, in the first case, I had drawn a false equivalency or false contradiction between material prosperity and condemnation from God. But why should I insert an either/or spin when it’s so plausible that the Lord is basically saying not to get tunnel-visioned about success at the expense of spiritual growth?
And then Paul breaks open what being rich toward God looks like for people who indeed have accumulated surplus wealth: character + attitude + action. All good stuff, and Paul seems to be saying that this combination results in exactly what the farmer is rebuked for neglecting: generosity.
So, here’s the rub: Is it reasonable to expect that there will be those who are, and who are not, destined for different levels of “rich” once we get to Heaven? Obviously not in the cigar-smoking and brandy-sipping sense, but in terms of attaining some celestial currency? Treasures? Accountability? “Good and faithful”?
Given: Ultimately, everyone will be casting their crowns. And before God’s glory any peer-to-peer comparison will be ridiculously moot.
But what if you are living in the wealthy West? Are we fools by default? Is generational momentum in the area of material wealth a blessing, or a curse in disguise? Is preparing for retirement antithetical to being rich toward God? Can you have it both ways? Is it okay to hope you can?
Mind you, if you mash in the parable of the talents and the disparity between the rewards meted out to the two financially savvy and successful money managers… ah, but that’s for another post.
“I am rich in _____!”
Filed under Faith, Finances, Leadership, Money
Another intriguing post on a Linked In forum:
What is your opinion about Pastor’s knowing who is giving how much in the church offerings and asking [the] church for more money… saying that they are not contributing enough?
You’ve gotta shake your head and wonder what the heck people are thinking. (Did you notice that the pastor was referred to as “Pastor”? There’s a big clue to the church’s culture.)
I’ll paste my response below, but my first rhetorical question would be to ask why the church’s/pastor’s ministry is failing to connect with people’s sense of connection and generosity. Blaming a shortfall on people’s individual giving and publicly telling them to give more reeks of a taxation mentality.
No sense blaming the rain gauge for the drought.
This is such a subjective area where objectivity takes a back seat to motivation and attitude.
If it’s approached as a matter of obedience, then it’s not a good idea. Enforcement was not Jesus’ way.
If it’s an opportunity for encouragement (not just obligation with a smile) and the pastor’s motivation is to bring out the best in people and put their families ahead of himself and his personal stake in ministry, that would have to be front and centre. Would he/she say the same things if it resulted in the givings going elsewhere?
It also depends on the leadership model — the more everyone is agreeing to be pastor-centric as the church’s MO, the more in touch he/she should be. The more the church is run as an elder-opoly, the less need to know details.
In any case, if this is a tactic to press for more money, the leadership needs to first ask itself why their ministry hasn’t been inspiring more hilarity in people’s giving.
“I am rich in _____!”
Filed under Finances, Giving & tithing, Leadership