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	<title>Comments on: Eternal Truth Trumps Temporal Truth</title>
	<atom:link href="http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/</link>
	<description>Michael Pink</description>
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		<title>By: Kern Pegues</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-853</link>
		<dc:creator>Kern Pegues</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-853</guid>
		<description>1 Timothy 6: 6 to 10

Desire to Be Rich

What follows in verses 7%u201310 are three reasons why I believe we should not pursue riches. But first let me insert a clarification. We live in a society in which many legitimate businesses are dependent on large concentrations of capital. You can't build a new manufacturing plant without millions of dollars in equity. Therefore, financial officers in big business often have the responsibility to build reserves, for example, by selling shares in the company. When the Bible condemns the desire to get rich it is not necessarily condemning a business which aims to expand and therefore seeks larger capital reserves. The officers of the business may be greedy for more personal wealth, or they may have larger, nobler motives of how their expanded productivity will benefit people.

And even when a person in business is offered a higher paying job and accepts it, that is not enough to condemn him for the desire to be rich. He may have accepted the job because he craves the power and status and luxuries the money could bring, or he may be very content with what he has and may intend to use the extra money for building an orphanage or giving a scholarship or sending a missionary or finding an inner city ministry. Working to earn money to use for the cause of Christ is not the same as desiring to be rich. What Paul is warning against is not the desire to earn money in order to meet our needs and the needs of others; he is warning against the desire to have more and more money and the ego boost and material luxuries it can provide.
 Which is what most of us do.

Now let's look at three reasons Paul gives in verses 7%u201310 for why we should not aspire to be rich. 

First, in verse 7, "For we brought nothing into the world and we cannot take anything out of the world.'' Or as Flossie O'Connor puts it: there are no U-Hauls behind hearses. Suppose someone passes empty-handed through the turnstiles at a big city art museum and begins to take the pictures off the wall and carry them importantly under his arm. You come up to him and say, "What are you doing?" He answers, "I'm becoming an art collector." "But they're not really yours," you say, "and besides they won't let you out with those. You'll have to go out just like you came in." But he answers again, "Sure they're mine. I've got them under my arm. People look at me as an important dealer in the halls. And I don't bother myself with thoughts about leaving. Don't be a kill joy." We would call this man a fool%u2014out of touch with reality. So is the person who spends himself to get rich in this life. We will go out just the way we came in.

Or picture 269 people entering eternity in a plane crash. Before the crash there is a noted politician, a millionaire corporate executive, a playboy and his playmate, a missionary kid on the way back from visiting grandparents. Then after the crash they stand before God utterly stripped of every MasterCard, check book, credit line, image clothes, success books, and Hilton reservations. The politician, the executive, the playboy, and the missionary kid on level ground with nothing, absolutely nothing in their hands, but only what they brought in their heart. O how absurd and tragic the lover of money will seem on that day, like a man who spends his whole life collecting train tickets and in the end is so weighed down by the collection he misses the last train. Don't try to get rich, "for we brought nothing into the world and we can take nothing out of the world."
Simplicity Is Possible and Good

Second, verse 8: "If we have food and clothing, with these we shall be content." Christians can be and ought to be content with the simple necessities of life. I'll mention three reasons why simplicity is possible and good. First, because when you have God near you and for you, you don't need extra money or extra things to give you peace and security. Hebrews 13:5, 6 says,

    Keep your life free from the love of money. Be content with what you have. For he has said, "I will never fail you nor forsake you." Hence we can confidently say, "The Lord is my helper, I will not be afraid; what can man do to me?"

No matter which way the market is moving, God is always better than gold. Therefore, by God's help we can be content with the simple necessities of life.

Second, we can be content with the necessities of life because the deepest, most satisfying delights God gives us through creation are free gifts from nature and loving relationships with people. After your basic needs are met, money begins to diminish your capacity for these pleasures rather than increase them. Buying things contributes absolutely nothing to the heart's capacity for joy. There is a deep difference between the temporary thrill of a new toy and a homecoming hug from a devoted friend. Who do you think has the deepest most satisfying joy in life, the man who pays $100 for a fortieth floor suite downtown and spends his evening in the half-lit, smoke filled lounge impressing strange women with ten dollar cocktails, or the man who chooses the Motel 6 by a vacant lot of sunflowers and spends his evening watching the sunset and writing a love letter to his wife?

Third, we should be content with the simple necessities of life because we could invest the extra that we make for what really counts. Three billion people today are outside Jesus Christ. Two-thirds of those do not have a viable Christian witness in their culture. If they are to hear%u2014and Christ commands that they hear%u2014cross-cultural missionaries will have to be sent and paid for. All the wealth needed to send this new army of good news ambassadors is in the American church. If we, like Paul, are content with the simple necessities of life, thousands of dollars at Bethlehem and millions of dollars in the Baptist General Conference and hundreds of millions of dollars in the Protestant church would be released to take the gospel to the frontiers. And the revolution of joy and freedom it would cause at home would be the best local witness imaginable. The biblical call is that you can and ought to be content with the simple necessities of life. Therefore, don't try to get rich.
Pursuing Riches Leads to Destruction

The third reason not to pursue wealth is that the pursuit ends in the destruction of your life. Verses 9 and 10:

    Those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and hurtful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is the root of all evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced their hearts with many pangs.

No Christian Hedonist wants to plunge into ruin and destruction and be pierced with many pangs. Therefore, no Christian Hedonist desires to be rich. Test yourself. Have you learned your attitude toward money from the Bible, or have you absorbed it from contemporary American merchandising? When you ride an airplane and read the airline magazine, almost every page teaches and pushes a view of wealth which is the exact opposite from the view in verse 9. Verse 9 makes vivid the peril of desiring to be rich. The airline magazines exploit and promote the desire to be rich and to own images of wealth.

For example in the September 1983 UNITED a full page ad for LA-Z-BOY chairs shows a man in a plush office with these words at the top: "His suits are custom tailored. His watch is solid gold. His office chair is LA-Z-Boy." Below the quote,

    I've worked hard and had my share of luck: My business is a success. I wanted my office to reflect this and I think it does. For my chair I chose a LA-Z-Boy Executive Recliner. It fits the image I wanted . . . If you can't say this about your office chair, isn't it about time you sat in a LA-Z- BOY? After all haven't you been without one long enough?

For those who have ears to hear there is a philosophy of wealth in those lines which goes like this: If you've earned it, only a fool would deny himself the images of wealth. If verse 9 is true and the desire to be rich brings us into the trap of Satan and the destruction of hell, then this advertisement which exploits and promotes that desire is demonic and is just as destructive to a biblical lifestyle as anything you might read in the sex ads of the Minnesota Daily. Are you awake and free from the clean economic wickedness of American merchandising? Or has the omnipresent economic lie deceived you so that the only sin you can imagine in relation to money is stealing? I believe in free speech and free enterprise because I have no faith whatsoever in the moral capacity of sinful civil governments to improve upon the institutions created by sinful citizens. But, for God's sake, let us use our freedom as Christians to say NO to the desire for riches and YES to the truth:

    There is great gain in godliness when we are content with the simple necessities of life.

To Those Already Rich

Those are words addressed in 1 Timothy 6:6%u201310 to people who are not rich but who may be tempted to want to be rich. In 6:17-19 Paul addresses a group in the church who are already rich. What should a rich person do with his money if he becomes a Christian? The answer of verse 19 is simply a paraphrase of Jesus' teaching. Jesus said not to lay up treasure on earth, but in heaven (Matthew 6:19, 20). He said we should use our money to provide purses that do not grow old and a heavenly treasure that does not fail (Luke 12:33). He said we should use our money to secure for ourselves a welcome into eternal habitation (Luke 16:9). Paul says in verse 19 that rich people should use their money in a way that "lays up for themselves a good foundation for the future and takes hold on eternal life which is life indeed." There is a way to use your money that forfeits eternal life%u2014not because eternal life can be bought, but because the use of your money shows where your hope is.

Paul gives three directions to the rich about how to use their money to secure their eternal future. First (v. 17), don't let your money produce pride. O, how deceptive this is! Every one of us has felt the smug sense of superiority that creeps in after a clever investment or new purchase or a big deposit. Money's chief attraction is the power it gives and the pride it feeds. Paul says don't let it happen.

Second (v. 17), he says to rich people, "Don't set your hope on uncertain riches but on God who richly furnishes you all things to enjoy." This is not easy for the rich to do. That's why Jesus said it is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom (Mark 10:23). It is hard to look at all the hope that riches offer and turn away from that to God and rest all your hope on him. It is hard not to love the gift and forget the Giver. But this is the only hope for the rich. If they can't do it, they are lost. They must hope in God more than they hope in his gifts. And whatever they enjoy on earth they must enjoy for his sake.

Finally (v. 18), the rich must use their money in good deeds and must be liberal and generous. Once they are liberated from the magnet of pride and once their hope is set on God not money, there is only one thing that can happen: their money will flow freely to multiply the manifold ministries of Christ. Hungry will be fed, sick will be healed, ignorant will be taught, and frontier peoples will be evangelized. And as with Zacchaeus of old, love will bore the gold lining out of the Christian pipeline of grace and replace it with simple, durable copper.

It seems to me that our final summary emphasis should be that in both these texts Paul really wants us to lay hold on eternal life and not lose it. Paul never dabbles in unessentials. He lives on the brink of eternity. That's why he sees things so clearly. He stands there like God's gatekeeper and treats us like godly Christian Hedonists: You do want life which is life indeed, don't you (v. 19)? You don't want ruin, destruction, and pangs of heart, do you (vv. 9, 10)? You do want all the gain that godliness can bring, don't you? Then use the currency of Christian Hedonism wisely: do not desire to be rich, but be content with the simple necessities of life. Set your hope fully on God, guard yourself from pride, and let your joy in God overflow in a wealth of liberality to a lost and needy world

We need more like Paul who said "be content with the necissities of life."   If we are in a war, and wer are, we need to develop a wartime lifestyle.

Most of this material came from John Pipers book Desiring God and Randy Alcorns book, Money, Possessions and Eternity.  

Kern </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>1 Timothy 6: 6 to 10</p>
<p>Desire to Be Rich</p>
<p>What follows in verses 7%u201310 are three reasons why I believe we should not pursue riches. But first let me insert a clarification. We live in a society in which many legitimate businesses are dependent on large concentrations of capital. You can&#8217;t build a new manufacturing plant without millions of dollars in equity. Therefore, financial officers in big business often have the responsibility to build reserves, for example, by selling shares in the company. When the Bible condemns the desire to get rich it is not necessarily condemning a business which aims to expand and therefore seeks larger capital reserves. The officers of the business may be greedy for more personal wealth, or they may have larger, nobler motives of how their expanded productivity will benefit people.</p>
<p>And even when a person in business is offered a higher paying job and accepts it, that is not enough to condemn him for the desire to be rich. He may have accepted the job because he craves the power and status and luxuries the money could bring, or he may be very content with what he has and may intend to use the extra money for building an orphanage or giving a scholarship or sending a missionary or finding an inner city ministry. Working to earn money to use for the cause of Christ is not the same as desiring to be rich. What Paul is warning against is not the desire to earn money in order to meet our needs and the needs of others; he is warning against the desire to have more and more money and the ego boost and material luxuries it can provide.<br />
 Which is what most of us do.</p>
<p>Now let&#8217;s look at three reasons Paul gives in verses 7%u201310 for why we should not aspire to be rich. </p>
<p>First, in verse 7, &#8220;For we brought nothing into the world and we cannot take anything out of the world.&#8221; Or as Flossie O&#8217;Connor puts it: there are no U-Hauls behind hearses. Suppose someone passes empty-handed through the turnstiles at a big city art museum and begins to take the pictures off the wall and carry them importantly under his arm. You come up to him and say, &#8220;What are you doing?&#8221; He answers, &#8220;I&#8217;m becoming an art collector.&#8221; &#8220;But they&#8217;re not really yours,&#8221; you say, &#8220;and besides they won&#8217;t let you out with those. You&#8217;ll have to go out just like you came in.&#8221; But he answers again, &#8220;Sure they&#8217;re mine. I&#8217;ve got them under my arm. People look at me as an important dealer in the halls. And I don&#8217;t bother myself with thoughts about leaving. Don&#8217;t be a kill joy.&#8221; We would call this man a fool%u2014out of touch with reality. So is the person who spends himself to get rich in this life. We will go out just the way we came in.</p>
<p>Or picture 269 people entering eternity in a plane crash. Before the crash there is a noted politician, a millionaire corporate executive, a playboy and his playmate, a missionary kid on the way back from visiting grandparents. Then after the crash they stand before God utterly stripped of every MasterCard, check book, credit line, image clothes, success books, and Hilton reservations. The politician, the executive, the playboy, and the missionary kid on level ground with nothing, absolutely nothing in their hands, but only what they brought in their heart. O how absurd and tragic the lover of money will seem on that day, like a man who spends his whole life collecting train tickets and in the end is so weighed down by the collection he misses the last train. Don&#8217;t try to get rich, &#8220;for we brought nothing into the world and we can take nothing out of the world.&#8221;<br />
Simplicity Is Possible and Good</p>
<p>Second, verse 8: &#8220;If we have food and clothing, with these we shall be content.&#8221; Christians can be and ought to be content with the simple necessities of life. I&#8217;ll mention three reasons why simplicity is possible and good. First, because when you have God near you and for you, you don&#8217;t need extra money or extra things to give you peace and security. Hebrews 13:5, 6 says,</p>
<p>    Keep your life free from the love of money. Be content with what you have. For he has said, &#8220;I will never fail you nor forsake you.&#8221; Hence we can confidently say, &#8220;The Lord is my helper, I will not be afraid; what can man do to me?&#8221;</p>
<p>No matter which way the market is moving, God is always better than gold. Therefore, by God&#8217;s help we can be content with the simple necessities of life.</p>
<p>Second, we can be content with the necessities of life because the deepest, most satisfying delights God gives us through creation are free gifts from nature and loving relationships with people. After your basic needs are met, money begins to diminish your capacity for these pleasures rather than increase them. Buying things contributes absolutely nothing to the heart&#8217;s capacity for joy. There is a deep difference between the temporary thrill of a new toy and a homecoming hug from a devoted friend. Who do you think has the deepest most satisfying joy in life, the man who pays $100 for a fortieth floor suite downtown and spends his evening in the half-lit, smoke filled lounge impressing strange women with ten dollar cocktails, or the man who chooses the Motel 6 by a vacant lot of sunflowers and spends his evening watching the sunset and writing a love letter to his wife?</p>
<p>Third, we should be content with the simple necessities of life because we could invest the extra that we make for what really counts. Three billion people today are outside Jesus Christ. Two-thirds of those do not have a viable Christian witness in their culture. If they are to hear%u2014and Christ commands that they hear%u2014cross-cultural missionaries will have to be sent and paid for. All the wealth needed to send this new army of good news ambassadors is in the American church. If we, like Paul, are content with the simple necessities of life, thousands of dollars at Bethlehem and millions of dollars in the Baptist General Conference and hundreds of millions of dollars in the Protestant church would be released to take the gospel to the frontiers. And the revolution of joy and freedom it would cause at home would be the best local witness imaginable. The biblical call is that you can and ought to be content with the simple necessities of life. Therefore, don&#8217;t try to get rich.<br />
Pursuing Riches Leads to Destruction</p>
<p>The third reason not to pursue wealth is that the pursuit ends in the destruction of your life. Verses 9 and 10:</p>
<p>    Those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many senseless and hurtful desires that plunge men into ruin and destruction. For the love of money is the root of all evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from the faith and pierced their hearts with many pangs.</p>
<p>No Christian Hedonist wants to plunge into ruin and destruction and be pierced with many pangs. Therefore, no Christian Hedonist desires to be rich. Test yourself. Have you learned your attitude toward money from the Bible, or have you absorbed it from contemporary American merchandising? When you ride an airplane and read the airline magazine, almost every page teaches and pushes a view of wealth which is the exact opposite from the view in verse 9. Verse 9 makes vivid the peril of desiring to be rich. The airline magazines exploit and promote the desire to be rich and to own images of wealth.</p>
<p>For example in the September 1983 UNITED a full page ad for LA-Z-BOY chairs shows a man in a plush office with these words at the top: &#8220;His suits are custom tailored. His watch is solid gold. His office chair is LA-Z-Boy.&#8221; Below the quote,</p>
<p>    I&#8217;ve worked hard and had my share of luck: My business is a success. I wanted my office to reflect this and I think it does. For my chair I chose a LA-Z-Boy Executive Recliner. It fits the image I wanted . . . If you can&#8217;t say this about your office chair, isn&#8217;t it about time you sat in a LA-Z- BOY? After all haven&#8217;t you been without one long enough?</p>
<p>For those who have ears to hear there is a philosophy of wealth in those lines which goes like this: If you&#8217;ve earned it, only a fool would deny himself the images of wealth. If verse 9 is true and the desire to be rich brings us into the trap of Satan and the destruction of hell, then this advertisement which exploits and promotes that desire is demonic and is just as destructive to a biblical lifestyle as anything you might read in the sex ads of the Minnesota Daily. Are you awake and free from the clean economic wickedness of American merchandising? Or has the omnipresent economic lie deceived you so that the only sin you can imagine in relation to money is stealing? I believe in free speech and free enterprise because I have no faith whatsoever in the moral capacity of sinful civil governments to improve upon the institutions created by sinful citizens. But, for God&#8217;s sake, let us use our freedom as Christians to say NO to the desire for riches and YES to the truth:</p>
<p>    There is great gain in godliness when we are content with the simple necessities of life.</p>
<p>To Those Already Rich</p>
<p>Those are words addressed in 1 Timothy 6:6%u201310 to people who are not rich but who may be tempted to want to be rich. In 6:17-19 Paul addresses a group in the church who are already rich. What should a rich person do with his money if he becomes a Christian? The answer of verse 19 is simply a paraphrase of Jesus&#8217; teaching. Jesus said not to lay up treasure on earth, but in heaven (Matthew 6:19, 20). He said we should use our money to provide purses that do not grow old and a heavenly treasure that does not fail (Luke 12:33). He said we should use our money to secure for ourselves a welcome into eternal habitation (Luke 16:9). Paul says in verse 19 that rich people should use their money in a way that &#8220;lays up for themselves a good foundation for the future and takes hold on eternal life which is life indeed.&#8221; There is a way to use your money that forfeits eternal life%u2014not because eternal life can be bought, but because the use of your money shows where your hope is.</p>
<p>Paul gives three directions to the rich about how to use their money to secure their eternal future. First (v. 17), don&#8217;t let your money produce pride. O, how deceptive this is! Every one of us has felt the smug sense of superiority that creeps in after a clever investment or new purchase or a big deposit. Money&#8217;s chief attraction is the power it gives and the pride it feeds. Paul says don&#8217;t let it happen.</p>
<p>Second (v. 17), he says to rich people, &#8220;Don&#8217;t set your hope on uncertain riches but on God who richly furnishes you all things to enjoy.&#8221; This is not easy for the rich to do. That&#8217;s why Jesus said it is hard for a rich man to enter the kingdom (Mark 10:23). It is hard to look at all the hope that riches offer and turn away from that to God and rest all your hope on him. It is hard not to love the gift and forget the Giver. But this is the only hope for the rich. If they can&#8217;t do it, they are lost. They must hope in God more than they hope in his gifts. And whatever they enjoy on earth they must enjoy for his sake.</p>
<p>Finally (v. 18), the rich must use their money in good deeds and must be liberal and generous. Once they are liberated from the magnet of pride and once their hope is set on God not money, there is only one thing that can happen: their money will flow freely to multiply the manifold ministries of Christ. Hungry will be fed, sick will be healed, ignorant will be taught, and frontier peoples will be evangelized. And as with Zacchaeus of old, love will bore the gold lining out of the Christian pipeline of grace and replace it with simple, durable copper.</p>
<p>It seems to me that our final summary emphasis should be that in both these texts Paul really wants us to lay hold on eternal life and not lose it. Paul never dabbles in unessentials. He lives on the brink of eternity. That&#8217;s why he sees things so clearly. He stands there like God&#8217;s gatekeeper and treats us like godly Christian Hedonists: You do want life which is life indeed, don&#8217;t you (v. 19)? You don&#8217;t want ruin, destruction, and pangs of heart, do you (vv. 9, 10)? You do want all the gain that godliness can bring, don&#8217;t you? Then use the currency of Christian Hedonism wisely: do not desire to be rich, but be content with the simple necessities of life. Set your hope fully on God, guard yourself from pride, and let your joy in God overflow in a wealth of liberality to a lost and needy world</p>
<p>We need more like Paul who said &#8220;be content with the necissities of life.&#8221;   If we are in a war, and wer are, we need to develop a wartime lifestyle.</p>
<p>Most of this material came from John Pipers book Desiring God and Randy Alcorns book, Money, Possessions and Eternity.  </p>
<p>Kern</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Larry Morris</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-854</link>
		<dc:creator>Larry Morris</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-854</guid>
		<description>My understanding of Christian Hedonism is that it has less to do with "riches" then in the source of our pleasure. 

Hedonism can be defined as the pursuit of pleasure, while Christian Hedonism can be defined as the pursuit of pleasure in God.

This can be done with or without abundance. 

If you spend your time desireing more so that you can be happy or buy nice things then you have a problem.

But what if you are a businessman or woman and are paralized by the fear of "riches" and never live up to the plans that God has for your life? What if His desire was for you to build a successful business that employed 100 people, utilized His principles to run your business and faithfully tithed 25% of the before tax business profits to fund His Kingdom? What if in the excess it also allowed you to live a comfortable live and was a magnet to non-christians?

We spend to much time dwelling on how wicked our hearts are and forget that Christ has given us a new heart. Who knows what the results would be if we would dwell on what God could do with our redeemed heart and life and allow Him to actually do it .</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My understanding of Christian Hedonism is that it has less to do with &#8220;riches&#8221; then in the source of our pleasure. </p>
<p>Hedonism can be defined as the pursuit of pleasure, while Christian Hedonism can be defined as the pursuit of pleasure in God.</p>
<p>This can be done with or without abundance. </p>
<p>If you spend your time desireing more so that you can be happy or buy nice things then you have a problem.</p>
<p>But what if you are a businessman or woman and are paralized by the fear of &#8220;riches&#8221; and never live up to the plans that God has for your life? What if His desire was for you to build a successful business that employed 100 people, utilized His principles to run your business and faithfully tithed 25% of the before tax business profits to fund His Kingdom? What if in the excess it also allowed you to live a comfortable live and was a magnet to non-christians?</p>
<p>We spend to much time dwelling on how wicked our hearts are and forget that Christ has given us a new heart. Who knows what the results would be if we would dwell on what God could do with our redeemed heart and life and allow Him to actually do it .</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Dr.Matt</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-855</link>
		<dc:creator>Dr.Matt</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-855</guid>
		<description>I agree with Larry !

when opportunity knocks open the door !
Many let it pass as Larry said fear of riches?
Christians have lost their fighting spirit and  have week knees when dealing in the real world.
What they need is heart of a warrior knowing  If God is for me who can be against me!
YOU NEED MONEY ! Ever got a month without it.

Need differs(not extrvagance).Whats your need is not necessarily someone else's need.
Maybe you are happy if your kids dont go to college.While for may others that is  vitally important.
I have a very close friend where God provided for her daughters 4 yrs of tuition fees through an generous offer from her boss.(totally free).I Havent seen that before,may be more to see soon.
I know other men of God struggling to get a new shirt on their back.Faithful men of God struggling to meet ends for years.Pay check to paycheck.Content philosophy is preached to them and they have sttled in with it.not even attempting to get out it.Wallowing in self pity !

Maybe they should just be content .

There are no easy explainations for these situations.
God allows both?

Balance is Key !
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I agree with Larry !</p>
<p>when opportunity knocks open the door !<br />
Many let it pass as Larry said fear of riches?<br />
Christians have lost their fighting spirit and  have week knees when dealing in the real world.<br />
What they need is heart of a warrior knowing  If God is for me who can be against me!<br />
YOU NEED MONEY ! Ever got a month without it.</p>
<p>Need differs(not extrvagance).Whats your need is not necessarily someone else&#8217;s need.<br />
Maybe you are happy if your kids dont go to college.While for may others that is  vitally important.<br />
I have a very close friend where God provided for her daughters 4 yrs of tuition fees through an generous offer from her boss.(totally free).I Havent seen that before,may be more to see soon.<br />
I know other men of God struggling to get a new shirt on their back.Faithful men of God struggling to meet ends for years.Pay check to paycheck.Content philosophy is preached to them and they have sttled in with it.not even attempting to get out it.Wallowing in self pity !</p>
<p>Maybe they should just be content .</p>
<p>There are no easy explainations for these situations.<br />
God allows both?</p>
<p>Balance is Key !</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Larry Morris</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-856</link>
		<dc:creator>Larry Morris</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-856</guid>
		<description>I'm not saying that Kern is this way, but I find in my circles, the one's who have the easiest time saying to be content are the one's with a steady paycheck. Many of the one's that are the most beaten down are the one's who work on commission and are afraid to take a chance or believe taht God could allow them to be blessed.

I've had both. When I worked for a steady paycheck God dealt with my heart and it's desire's for more things. He planted Ps. 39:4 firmly in me. "Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart." I found that as I delighted myself in God my heart was transformed and I wanted more of the things taht God delighted in.

But now I'm in an occupation where I can work extremely hard and there is no guarantee of an income. But I also have the ability to be blessed beyond my imagination.

My task, is to make sure that I am responsible for the little God gives me, be content with what I have AND to prepare myself and my business to be a conduit for His riches.

I daily weigh the dilema of getting a regular job with a set salary and limited options for increase. I would be content, but have to shelve many of the dreams taht God has put into my and my wife's heart. Our church would also have to be content with a substantially smaller tithe from us.

Through my own experience, I find taht my faith in God is higher, and I am more content as a part of it, now taht I am in the world of flucuating income. The is less of a buffer between me and my source of income so I work harder, smarter and rely on God more. I have complete faith taht God will provide a way. That He will meet our needs AND that He will allow His dreams in me to come to pass.

Do I want to be filthy stinking rich? Only if God can trust that it won't change who I am, that most of it will be used to further His kingdom and if safeguards are put in place to protect my family from the damages of it.

But, from the global reality, I already am filthy stinking rich!

We live in America, the richest nation in history. I can't remember the stats, but our poor are richer then most of the rest of the world. What we complain about most can't even imagine having. What we thow away for fear of lawsuits would probably feed and clothe millions.

Is this right or wrong...or just the reality of where we are? 

</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m not saying that Kern is this way, but I find in my circles, the one&#8217;s who have the easiest time saying to be content are the one&#8217;s with a steady paycheck. Many of the one&#8217;s that are the most beaten down are the one&#8217;s who work on commission and are afraid to take a chance or believe taht God could allow them to be blessed.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve had both. When I worked for a steady paycheck God dealt with my heart and it&#8217;s desire&#8217;s for more things. He planted Ps. 39:4 firmly in me. &#8220;Delight yourself in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart.&#8221; I found that as I delighted myself in God my heart was transformed and I wanted more of the things taht God delighted in.</p>
<p>But now I&#8217;m in an occupation where I can work extremely hard and there is no guarantee of an income. But I also have the ability to be blessed beyond my imagination.</p>
<p>My task, is to make sure that I am responsible for the little God gives me, be content with what I have AND to prepare myself and my business to be a conduit for His riches.</p>
<p>I daily weigh the dilema of getting a regular job with a set salary and limited options for increase. I would be content, but have to shelve many of the dreams taht God has put into my and my wife&#8217;s heart. Our church would also have to be content with a substantially smaller tithe from us.</p>
<p>Through my own experience, I find taht my faith in God is higher, and I am more content as a part of it, now taht I am in the world of flucuating income. The is less of a buffer between me and my source of income so I work harder, smarter and rely on God more. I have complete faith taht God will provide a way. That He will meet our needs AND that He will allow His dreams in me to come to pass.</p>
<p>Do I want to be filthy stinking rich? Only if God can trust that it won&#8217;t change who I am, that most of it will be used to further His kingdom and if safeguards are put in place to protect my family from the damages of it.</p>
<p>But, from the global reality, I already am filthy stinking rich!</p>
<p>We live in America, the richest nation in history. I can&#8217;t remember the stats, but our poor are richer then most of the rest of the world. What we complain about most can&#8217;t even imagine having. What we thow away for fear of lawsuits would probably feed and clothe millions.</p>
<p>Is this right or wrong&#8230;or just the reality of where we are?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Dr Matt</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-867</link>
		<dc:creator>Dr Matt</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-867</guid>
		<description>stats  :
poverty in US means less than $10,000/ person 
$36000 as a family</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>stats  :<br />
poverty in US means less than $10,000/ person<br />
$36000 as a family</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Kern</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-869</link>
		<dc:creator>Kern</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-869</guid>
		<description>For the record, I do not have a steady paycheck, as I am paid on commission.  Larry is right in that Christian hedonist is more about  where our joy comes from, riches or God.  But I think in America. Christrians are way to materialistic.  and I believe it is destroying our churche's.   Every Christian should set a standard of living  and live on it and when God blesses us not raise our standard of living but ask God where he wants us to give it.  

</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For the record, I do not have a steady paycheck, as I am paid on commission.  Larry is right in that Christian hedonist is more about  where our joy comes from, riches or God.  But I think in America. Christrians are way to materialistic.  and I believe it is destroying our churche&#8217;s.   Every Christian should set a standard of living  and live on it and when God blesses us not raise our standard of living but ask God where he wants us to give it.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Larry Morris</title>
		<link>http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/2007/03/02/eternal-truth-trumps-temporal-truth/#comment-871</link>
		<dc:creator>Larry Morris</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Nov 1999 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sellingamongwolves.com/blog/index.php?p=129#comment-871</guid>
		<description>I would agree with most of that. Howeveer, I've recently read a book by Don Ostrom called "Millionaire in the Pew" and he has an interesting insight.

He grew up in a "poverty " church and God had to walk him out of that.

I highly recommend that all read it as it has some very practical suggestions on how to prosper and keep a right relationship with God.

His plan was to be a missionary. God's plan was to raise him up to be a successful businessman who would have a far greater imnpact on the Kingdom due to his increased influence and willingness to be obedient.

ISBN 1-932503-21-8</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I would agree with most of that. Howeveer, I&#8217;ve recently read a book by Don Ostrom called &#8220;Millionaire in the Pew&#8221; and he has an interesting insight.</p>
<p>He grew up in a &#8220;poverty &#8221; church and God had to walk him out of that.</p>
<p>I highly recommend that all read it as it has some very practical suggestions on how to prosper and keep a right relationship with God.</p>
<p>His plan was to be a missionary. God&#8217;s plan was to raise him up to be a successful businessman who would have a far greater imnpact on the Kingdom due to his increased influence and willingness to be obedient.</p>
<p>ISBN 1-932503-21-8</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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