|
table
of contents | previous chapter | next
chapter | bottom of page | buy
this book | home
You are welcome to download, print, copy, distribute or transmit this document by any means, as long as the document is unaltered and kept its entirety, and is not sold for profit. Should you have received this document from someone else, you may want to get your own original copy at www.shepherdserve.org just to be certain you have an unaltered copy. The actual book itself may be ordered by clicking the link above. ©2006 by David Servant
THREE
The Greedy Christian

Standing on your right is an elderly
Korean woman, the wrinkles of many hard years etched across her face. To your
left stands a short, young Russian man. His worn clothing and calloused hands
make you suspect he was a farmer or factory worker.
Like everyone else in the sea of
people around you, those two silently stare at the raised platform off in the
distance. From your vantage, hundreds of yards away, it appears to be at least
forty feet high. It shines with a brilliance unlike anything you’ve ever seen,
as if it were made from gold, encased in one huge diamond. A solitary piece of
furniture sits on the front of the platform, what is obviously a king’s throne.
The hushed multitudes gaze with wonderment. Obviously something awesome is
about to happen on the surreal stage.
Daring to pull your eyes away for just
a moment, you survey the crowd around you. There are more people than you’ve
ever seen, stretching for what must be miles in every direction. In fact, you
realize that no ground is visible in any direction; even the horizon is made up
of far-away people bordered by a golden sky that stretches like a dome above
them.
Studying those nearby, you note that
they are a kaleidoscope of every kind of people—white, red, brown and black.
Some are wearing business suits; others various kinds of ethnic dress; a few
others wear only loincloths. The only similarity they share is that all are
silent, and all stand transfixed, staring at the shining stage and its golden
throne.
His Appearance
Suddenly, a sound breaks the silence.
Coming from the platform is heard a deep, resonating chord, powerful and
majestic, unlike anything you’ve ever heard. Its crescendo is like a mixture of
a thousand symphonies coupled with the roar of Niagara.
A glistening rainbow arches over the
stage, and then a Being appears, seated on the throne. His form is barely
discernible, for His brilliance is like the sun. His presence is felt by all,
and as they shield their eyes from His glory, one collective thought seizes
their minds: He is pure—purer
than the freshest spring water or crystal snowflakes. He is Holy. Nothing is hidden from His sight. Hearts race.
The brilliant Being lifts up His arms,
hands clasped together, and then pulls them apart, sweeping His arms to each
side. Instantly you feel an invisible power lifting you upward, until you find
yourself floating, along with many others, above the heads of a few who remain
in their places. Together, you are pulled by an irresistible force to the
right, while you observe that the few below you are pulled to the left, and
once the two groups are separated, the invisible force sets you down again on
your feet. Neither the Korean woman nor Russian man are with you now.
The great Being speaks to the mass on
His left. His voice is not audible, but deep within, you hear His unmistakable
utterance. Obviously, from looking at the shock on the faces of those around
you, everyone else is hearing the same words in his or her own language:
Depart from Me, accursed ones, into
the eternal fire which has been prepared for the devil and his angels; for I
was hungry, and you gave Me nothing to eat; I was thirsty, and you gave Me
nothing to drink; I was a stranger, and you did not invite Me in; naked, and
you did not clothe Me; sick, and in prison, and you did not visit Me (Matt.
25:41-43).
In unbelieving horror, the once-silent
crowd collectively responds with a cacophony of questions: “Lord, when did we
see You hungry, or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and
did not take care of You?” (Matt. 25:44). “Surely You’ve never been in those
conditions! You’re the Lord! We see You now, shining like the sun; if we had
seen You before, we would have known it! What in the world do You mean that we
had seen You before, starving, thirsty, homeless, naked, sick or in prison?”
He answers: “Those who believed in Me
on earth became one with Me. They became members of My body and I came to live
in them. I placed My love in them. Thus it is obvious who truly believed in Me.
Those who did, loved My brethren. Those who didn’t love My brethren didn’t
believe in Me or love Me. And those who did love My brethren demonstrated their love. They cared about their brethren who
were suffering, and they did what they could to relieve their pain, even if it
cost them money or time. They denied themselves, truly following Me. They
didn’t do those kind deeds to earn salvation—they did it because they were
transformed by My grace.
“I even warned you of this very
judgment, and My warning is recorded in Matthew, chapter 25. You didn’t heed My
warning, and now it’s too late. Truly I say to you, to the extent that you did
not do it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did not do it to Me.
Depart from Me into the everlasting fire.”
The Condemnation
His words are final. There is no sense
arguing. It seems impossible, but you are condemned. As a new gravity begins to
pull you downward, images race through your mind. Together, they constitute
your former idea of what Christianity is all about:
Church services. Hundreds of them.
Church dinners.
Church picnics.
Church choir practices.
Church committee meetings.
Sermons and more sermons. What did
the pastor say about the judgment of Matthew 25? Now you see him standing in the pulpit: “This
judgment of the sheep and goats is not a judgment that Christians will face,
but is considered by many Bible scholars to be a final judgment of
unbelievers.”
How foolish! Why
didn’t we notice that there were believers at the Matthew 25 judgment scene?
Why didn’t we notice that the crowd at this judgment consisted of “all the
nations”?
Another scene flashes into your mind:
Listening to a radio preacher in your car while driving to work: “This judgment
of Matthew 25 is not one Christians need fear. Most likely, it is a judgment of
various nations after the Tribulation Period. Those nations that extended
kindness to the nation of Israel will be permitted to enter the Millennium.
They are represented by the sheep. Those that were unkind to Israel during the
Tribulation, the goats, will be sent to hell.”
As your descent accelerates, more
images enter your mind, things that consumed all your time, energy and money on the earth, so that
you had no time, energy or
money to assist suffering Christians. Now you see all those things in a brand
new light:
Watching TV and paying the cable
bills.
Hobbies.
Taking care of pets.
Vacations.
Christmas time. Loads of new toys.
Sports.
Church services.
New electronic gadgets.
Eating out.
Buying the latest fashions.
Surfing the internet.
Seconds later, you stand before the
gates of hell. One final thought springs into your spinning mind before the
horror of your eternal nightmare overtakes every cell of your brain: Didn’t
the money that I gave to the church count for something? Your conscience, now free from being suppressed
by all the former lies, speaks clearly: The church you attended gave no
money to help destitute and suffering believers. The small amount of money that
you gave to your church helped pay for the mortgage, so you could have a
building in which to enjoy church services. Your money also helped pay the
utility bills, so you could be warm in winter and cool in summer during your
church services. Your money also helped pay for the Sunday School curriculum so
your children could have fun classes. Your money also helped pay for the
pastor’s and staff salaries, whose time was spent completely on activities
related to keeping the congregation happy. Your money thus benefited you, and
it was not given out of love for God, but love for yourself. And, in fact, you
gave less than your fair share compared to other church members, effectively
sponging off them. Additionally, what little you did give required no sacrifice
on your part. Demonic laughter
echoes from the smoke-filled canyons beyond Hell’s gates.
In the past year, how many hungry
Christians have you fed? How many thirsty believers have you supplied with
drinking water? How many homeless children of God have you provided with
shelter? How many naked Christians have you furnished with clothing? How many
sick or imprisoned followers of Christ have you visited? If you were to die
at this moment and stand in the judgment Jesus described in Matthew 25, would
you be among the sheep or goats? These can be sobering questions for those whose lives more closely resemble
that of the goats.
The Truth
about the Sheep and Goats Judgment
Are Jesus’ words of warning in Matthew
25:31-46 applicable to us? Or did He describe a judgment from which Christians
are exempt?
We can begin to answer that question
by noting that there will indeed be saved individuals, Christian believers, who
are a part of that future judgment. No one can intelligently dispute that the
sheep, those on Jesus’ right, are not saved people and Christian believers.
They “inherit the kingdom prepared for [them] from the foundation of the world”
(Matt. 25:34). They are called “the righteous” who receive “eternal life”
(Matt. 25:46).
The theory that the separation of the
sheep and goats is not a separation of individuals, but of nations, based on
how they treat Israel during the Tribulation, is also exposed as being absurd
by considering these same facts. Moreover, are we to believe that after two
chapters of warnings from Jesus’ lips that address the responsibility of
individuals, His words now suddenly apply only to geo-political nations? And is
He warning us in order that we will make sure we’re living in one of the
“sheep” countries if we’re alive on the earth during the Tribulation? And are
we to believe that the country we’re living in, regardless of our personal
actions or opinions about Israel during the Tribulation, is what determines if
we will receive eternal life or eternal damnation?
Also against this idea of
geo-political nations being separated rather than individuals is the fact that
the word nations (25:32) is
not a reference to geo-political nations of the world, of which there are
presently about two hundred. The Greek word, ethne, refers to ethnic groups, distinct from each
other by such things as their language, culture, geographical location and
such, and of which there are at least ten thousand in the world today. Jesus
said that “all the nations
will be gathered before Him” (Matt. 25:32, emphasis added), indicating that
there is no ethnic group that will not be found at this judgment. Are we to
think that He is going to separate ethnic groups from each other, into sheep
and goat categories, based on how they treated Israel during the Tribulation?
Will He take all the Koreans from among the scores of nations in which they
reside, and allow them entrance into the Millennium if, for instance, the
majority of them were kind toward Israel during the Tribulation? The theory
becomes more absurd the more it is considered.
A Second
Poor Theory
Is it possible that the believers
mentioned in the Matthew 25 judgment are a special group of Christians, such as
those who will be saved during the Tribulation? Perhaps, but such an idea is
not even intimated by Jesus. Are you willing to rest your eternal salvation on
something Jesus didn’t say?
Even if we suppose that only a certain
group of tribulational Christians will be part of the Matthew 25 judgment, is
there any good reason to believe that they will be judged by a different or
higher criteria than all others who will ultimately “inherit the kingdom
prepared for [them] from the foundation of the world” (Matt. 25:34)? No, there
isn’t, especially when so many other scriptures convey the same concept in
other words. For example, in John’s first epistle we find an echo of Matthew
25:31-46:
We know that we have passed out of
death into life, because we love the brethren. He who does not love abides in
death....We know love by this, that He laid down His life for us; and we ought
to lay down our lives for the brethren. But whoever has the world’s goods, and
beholds his brother in need and closes his heart against him, how does the love
of God abide in him? Little children, let us not love with word or with tongue,
but in deed and truth. We shall know by this that we are of the truth, and
shall assure our heart before Him (1 John 3:14, 16-19).
John couldn’t have made it clearer
that true Christians, those who have passed from being spiritually dead to
being spiritually alive, naturally love their fellow Christians. And the love
of which John writes is not a mere sentimental feeling, but a true love
expressed by action, specifically in providing essential material needs. John
wrote that when we express our love for the brethren in such ways, it assures
us that we are “of the truth” (1 John 3:19). If we have the means to help a
fellow believer whom we know is facing critical, essential needs, but don’t
help him, God’s love does not abide in us, and we will have no assurance that
we have passed from death to life.
James and
John the Baptist Agree
Another echo of Matthew 25:31-46 is
found in James’ epistle. He also equated love of the brethren, expressed
through providing pressing material needs, as a sign of authentic faith and
salvation:
What use is it, my brethren, if a man
says he has faith, but he has no works? Can that faith save him? If a brother
or sister is without clothing and in need of daily food, and one of you says to
them, “Go in peace, be warmed and be filled,” and yet you do not give them what
is necessary for their body, what use is that? Even so faith, if it has no
works, is dead, being by itself (Jas. 2:14-17).
According to James, faith void of
works cannot save us. And specifically what kind of works did he then mention
to illustrate his point? The works of providing food and clothing for poor
brethren.
Yet another echo of Matthew 25:31-46
is heard in the preaching of John the Baptist. No one can intelligently argue
that John was not preaching a message of repentance that led to forgiveness of
sins, referred to by Luke as being “the gospel” (see Luke 3:3, 18). John warned
his audiences that unless they repented and brought forth fruit, hell was their
destiny (see Matt. 3:7-12; Luke 3:7-17). Thus, John’s message should certainly
be considered one about salvation.
When questioned by the convicted
multitudes on what they should specifically do to demonstrate their repentance,
John responded, “Let the man who has two tunics share with him who has none;
and let him who has food do likewise” (Luke 3:11). John was obviously calling
people to repent of their selfishness, selfishness manifested by their ignoring
the desperate needs of their naked, starving neighbors. If they had responded
by saying, “We have faith in the Messiah whom you say is coming soon, but we
will not have compassion on
the poor among us,” do you suppose that John would have assured them of their
salvation?
Jesus’
Consistent Message
Additional echoes of Matthew 25:31-46
are found in Jesus’ other teachings. The rich young ruler (whose story is found
in three of the four Gospels) came to Jesus seeking eternal life (see Matt.
19:16). Jesus told him to keep the commandments and listed six in particular,
which the rich young ruler subsequently claimed to have kept from his youth.
Jesus then told him, “One thing you still lack; sell all that you possess, and
distribute it to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven; and come,
follow Me” (Luke 18:22). And this, the rich young man would not do.
Was Jesus actually telling him that in
order to get into heaven, he had to sell his possessions and give the money to
the poor? As difficult as it is for many to admit it, the answer is yes. Jesus’ very next words, as the rich man sadly
walked away, were, “How hard it is for those who are wealthy to enter the
kingdom of God! For it is easier
for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter
the kingdom of God” (Luke
18:24-25, emphasis added). Jesus was talking about getting into heaven (see
also Matt. 19:23).
Obviously Jesus’ words have application,
not just to one rich man who lived 2,000 years ago, but to any and all wealthy
people who want eternal life but who refuse to repent of greed and selfishness
as it relates to the poor. Jesus said, “How hard it is for those who are
wealthy to enter the kingdom of
God!” (Luke 18:24). It wouldn’t be “hard” for them if they weren’t required to
give up any of their possessions. But because they refuse to love their
neighbor as themselves by sharing their material wealth, thus refusing to
repent and submit to God, they can’t be saved. Is this not a very loud echo of
Matthew 25:31-46? The rich young ruler will be among the goats.
It should be
noted that Jesus certainly does not want anyone to believe that he can earn
eternal life by giving away all his material wealth. Eternal life is received
by believing in, and thus following Jesus. That was what the rich young ruler
lacked. His wealth is what stood in the way of his following Jesus. His money
was his master, as was evidenced by his actions, and so Jesus could not be his
master. As Jesus said, “No one can serve two masters; for either he will hate
the one and love the other, or he will hold to one and despise the other. You
cannot serve God and mammon” (Matt. 6:24).
More
Echoes
What is the obvious message of Jesus’
story of the rich man and Lazarus? A wealthy, uncompassionate man who ignores
the pathetic plight of an impoverished man at his doorstep, dies and goes to
hell (see Luke 16:19-31). Another goat.
How about Jesus’ parable of the rich
man found in Luke 12:16-21? Jesus prefaced it with the solemn warning, “Beware,
and be on your guard against every form of greed; for not even when one has an
abundance does his life consist of his possessions” (Luke 12:15). Then He told
the parable:
The land of a certain rich man was
very productive. And he began reasoning to himself, saying, “What shall I do,
since I have no place to store my crops?” And he said, “This is what I will do:
I will tear down my barns and build larger ones, and there I will store all my
grain and my goods. And I will say to my soul, ‘Soul, you have many goods laid
up for many years to come; take your ease, eat, drink and be merry.’” But God
said to him, “You fool! This very night your soul is required of you; and now
who will own what you have prepared?” So is the man who lays up treasure for
himself, and is not rich toward God.
Although Jesus didn’t say the man went
to hell, it doesn’t seem reasonable to conclude that this selfish rich man went
to heaven. God called him a fool,
because at his death, he was materially rich but spiritually poor. Jesus wasn’t
condemning the man’s prosperity; in fact, God was at least partially
responsible for the man’s prosperity—He sent favorable weather that resulted in
a bumper crop. Jesus was, however, condemning what the man did with his prosperity. Instead of considering what
God would have him do with his abundance, he only thought of himself, retired
early, and planned to live the rest of his life in ease. The very night he made
his selfish decision, he died. Will he be a sheep or goat at the Matthew 25
judgment?
Jesus pronounced that salvation had
come to Zaccheus’ house after Zaccheus declared he would give half his
possessions to the poor and pay back those he had defrauded fourfold (see Luke
19:8-9). How would Jesus have responded if Zaccheus had said, “Lord, I accept
You as my Lord and Savior, but I will continue to defraud people and ignore the
plight of the poor”?
Jesus, of course, lived what He
preached. Perfectly obedient to the Law, He must have given to the poor all His
life. Scripture informs us that He gave to the poor during His ministry (see
John 12:6; 13:29). When Christ comes to live within a believer, is He the same
Christ who gives to the poor? Of course He is. Jesus Himself said, “Truly, truly,
I say to you, he who believes in Me, the works that I do shall he do also”
(John 14:12).
The First
Christians Care for the Poor
Matthew 25:31-46 echoes through the
book of Acts, where we discover that taking care of the poor was a regular
feature of New Testament life. Apparently those first believers took seriously
Jesus’ command to His followers, “Sell your possessions and give to charity;
make yourselves purses which do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven,
where no thief comes near, nor moth destroys” (Luke 12:33):
And all those who had believed were
together, and had all things in common; and they began selling their property
and possessions, and were sharing them with all, as anyone might have need. And
the congregation of those who believed were of one heart and soul; and not one
of them claimed that anything belonging to him was his own; but all things were
common property to them....and abundant grace was upon them all. For there was
not a needy person among them, for all who were owners of land or houses would
sell them and bring the proceeds of the sales, and lay them at the apostles’
feet; and they would be distributed to each, as any had need (Acts 2:44-45;
4:32-35).
Notice Luke’s mentioning in the above
passages that God’s grace was behind all the sharing in the first church. The
same grace that forgave those early Christians also transformed them.
Scripture is clear that the early
church fed and provided for the pressing needs of poor widows (see Acts 6:1; 1
Tim. 5:3-10). Was it because they were trying to earn their salvation? No, it
was because they had repented of greed and had been regenerated by the Holy
Spirit.
Paul, the greatest apostle to have
ever lived, entrusted by God to take the gospel to the Gentiles, human author of
a large majority of New Testament epistles, considered ministering to the
material needs of the poor an essential part of his ministry. Among the
churches he founded, Paul raised large sums of money for poor Christians (see
Acts 11:27-30; 24:17; Rom. 15:25-28; 1 Cor. 16:1-4; 2 Cor. 8-9; Gal. 2:10). At
least seventeen years after his conversion, Paul journeyed to Jerusalem to
submit the gospel he’d received to the scrutiny of Peter, James and John. None
of them could find anything wrong with the message he’d been preaching, and as
Paul recounted the occasion in his Galatian letter, he remembered, “They only
asked us to remember the poor—the very thing I also was eager to do” (Gal.
2:10). In the minds of Peter, James, John and Paul, showing compassion to the
poor was second only to the proclamation of the gospel.
Paul’s
Teaching Against Greed
Paul also warned against greed using
the strongest terms. He equated it to idolatry (see Eph. 5:3-5 and Col. 3:5),
and emphatically declared that greedy people would not enter God’s kingdom:
But do not let immorality or any
impurity or greed even be named among you, as is proper among saints....For
this you know with certainty, that no immoral or impure person or covetous [greedy] man, who is an idolater, has an inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and
God. Let no one deceive you with
empty words, for because of these things the wrath of God comes upon the sons
of disobedience (Eph. 5:3, 5-6, emphasis added; see also 1 Cor. 5:11; 6:9-11).
What is greed? It is a selfish desire
for possessions and wealth. It is possible to have an unselfish desire for
material wealth when one’s ultimate motive is to share what one acquires. In
fact, one can’t materially bless others unless he is first blessed himself.
However, when a person lives to acquire and accumulate material possessions for
personal pleasure—when that pursuit becomes his highest priority—he is guilty
of greed.
The
Selfish Acquiring of Money
Greed is an attitude of the heart, but
one that cannot remain hidden. It always manifests itself by what people do to
acquire money and material things and by what they do with their money and
material things once they are acquired. Let’s first consider the acquiring side
of greed. When the acquiring of material things is one’s chief aim in life,
rich or poor, that person is sinning. Jesus warned even poor believers against
this sin, people who were tempted to worry about basic necessities:
No one can serve two masters; for
either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will hold to one and
despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon. For this reason I say to
you, do not be anxious for your life, as to what you shall eat, or what you
shall drink; nor for your body, as to what you shall put on. Is not life more
than food, and the body than clothing? Look at the birds of the air, that they
do not sow, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly
Father feeds them. Are you not worth much more than they? And which of you by
being anxious can add a single cubit to his life's span? And why are you
anxious about clothing? Observe how the lilies of the field grow; they do not
toil nor do they spin, yet I say to you that even Solomon in all his glory did
not clothe himself like one of these. But if God so arrays the grass of the
field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He
not much more do so for you, O men of little faith? Do not be anxious then,
saying, “What shall we eat?” or “What shall we drink?” or “With what shall we
clothe ourselves?” For all these things the Gentiles eagerly seek; for your
heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But seek first His
kingdom and His righteousness; and all these things shall be added to you
(Matt. 6:24-33).
Notice that Jesus began this portion
of His Sermon on the Mount by warning about the impossibility of serving God
and money. He equated greed with making money our god, that is, allowing money
to direct our lives rather than God. Jesus warned His audience against making
the pursuit of even basic necessities their consuming desire. How much truer
are His words when applied to the pursuit of non-essential material things? The primary pursuit of Christ’s true followers
should be “His kingdom and His righteousness” (Matt. 6:33). Of course,
Christians can and must have other pursuits. Jesus didn’t say, “seek only,” but
“seek first.”
Hard work in itself is not an outward
manifestation of greed, but it can be. When a person works long hours in order
to attain a certain standard of living, and his devotion to Christ is
negatively affected, he has made money his god. The ancient proverb admonishes
those who fall into this category: “Do not weary yourself to gain wealth, cease
from your consideration of it. When you set your eyes on it, it is gone. For
wealth certainly makes itself wings, like an eagle that flies toward the
heavens” (Prov. 23:4-5).
Making money dishonestly or
unethically is always wrong and is another manifestation of greed. The Word of
God states, “He who increases his wealth by interest and usury, gathers it for
him who is gracious to the poor” (Prov. 28:8).
Scripture commends the one who
increases his wealth by honest means and who gives away a portion of his
earnings (see Prov. 13:11; 22:9). Likewise, Scripture condemns slothfulness and
laziness for several reasons, one being that the person who has no earnings
subsequently has nothing to share with those who are needy (see Eph. 4:28).
When the goal of making money is to have money to share, making money is virtuous.
The
Selfish Use of Money
Now let’s consider how greed is
manifested once money has been acquired. In this regard, greed is the selfish use of money. What is it that could make it morally
wrong to spend all the money that you’ve legitimately earned on yourself? Does
it have something to do with the fact that others, including many of God’s own
children, who work just as hard if not harder (or who are unable to work),
struggle just to survive, lacking basic necessities such as sufficient food? Is
it morally right that one person lives in luxury while others fall asleep
hungry each night through no fault of their own?
There are, of course, a myriad of
excuses for doing nothing to assist desperately poor believers and
non-believers, but well-fed Christians will find no solace from the Bible.
Although no one can rightfully set up arbitrary rules concerning how much
should be given and how much should be kept, the consensus of Scripture is
clear: Christians who are able to give to the poor are expected by God to give,
especially to impoverished fellow believers (see Gal. 6:10). Professing
Christians who demonstrate no such concern are very likely counterfeit
Christians, and this obviously includes many among modern Christendom who have
bought into the modern lie of a customized Christianity of selfish convenience.
According to a Gallup pole, only 25%
of evangelical Christians tithe. Forty percent claim that God is the most
important thing in their lives, yet those who make between $50-75,000 per year
give an average of 1.5 percent of their incomes to charity, including religious
charity. Meanwhile, they spend an average of 12% of their incomes on leisure
pursuits.
Greed is not only expressed by what we
do with our money, but also by what we do with our time. If all our time is
spent on selfish pursuits or pleasures, we are being greedy. The time God has
given to us on this earth is a sacred trust. We should spend as much of our
time as we can in serving. All of us, not just pastors, can obey Jesus’ command
to visit fellow believers who are sick or imprisoned.
Greed’s
Justifications
Like every sin, greed has its excuses.
One is that because we pay taxes, a portion of which is used to help
impoverished people, we are relieved of any individual responsibility to help
them.
I suppose it is
good that our government feels some responsibility to help the poor. However,
much of what the government gives to the poor is actually in opposition to
God’s will. According to God’s Word, poor people who are able to work but who
refuse to do so should not be supported: “If anyone will not work, neither let
him eat” (2 Thes. 3:10). Moreover, poor people who are poor because of their
practice of sin should first demonstrate some repentance before they are
assisted. Governments should not offer monetary incentives to encourage
people’s laziness, irresponsibility or immoral behavior. Unlike the government,
our giving should be done intelligently, with the ultimate purpose of
furthering God’s kingdom. When we help the unsaved poor, we should also share
the gospel with them. This, the government does not do.
Additionally, our government does very
little if anything to help impoverished Christians in other countries, and we
have a responsibility to our world-wide family, not just those within the
geographical boundaries of our own nation.
How Poor
Are We?
Another excuse for our greed is that
so many of us think we’re poor ourselves; thus we think we’re not expected to
help the poor. But just how poor are we? 1.3 billion people in the world live
on an income of less than a dollar per day. Another 2 billion live on less than
two dollars a day. (I’ve just described more than half of the world’s
population.)
According to United Nations
statistics, 1.45 billion people still have no access to health services; 1.33
billion do not have access to safe water; 2.25 billion do not have access to
sanitation. Since you began reading this chapter, over five hundred children
have died from hunger or preventable diseases. Five hundred mothers are weeping
right now over a child they’ve lost in the past 25 minutes due to malnutrition
or a preventable disease. If we remain indifferent, how are we any different
than the rich man who ignored Lazarus?
In his book, Rich Christians in an
Age of Hunger, Ron Sider quotes
economist Robert Heilbroner, who “itemized the ‘luxuries we would have to
abandon if we were to adopt the lifestyle of our 1.3 billion neighbors who live
in desperate poverty’”:
We begin by
invading the house of our imaginary American family to strip it of its
furniture. Everything goes: beds, chairs, tables, television set, lamps. We
will leave the family with a few old blankets, a kitchen table, a wooden chair.
Along with the bureaus go the clothes. Each member of the family may keep in
his “wardrobe” his oldest suit or dress, a shirt or blouse. We will permit a
pair of shoes for the head of the family, but none for the wife or children.
We move to the
kitchen. The appliances have already been taken out, so we turn to the
cupboards....The box of matches may stay, a small bag of flour, some sugar, and
salt. A few moldy potatoes, already in the garbage can, must be hastily
rescued, for they will provide much of tonight’s meal. We will leave a handful
of onions, and a dish of dried beans. All the rest we take away: the meat, the
fresh vegetables, the canned goods, the crackers, the candy.
Now we have stripped
the house: the bathroom has been dismantled, the running water shut off, the
electric wires taken out. Next we take away the house. The family can move to
the tool shed....
Communications must
go next. No more newspapers, magazines, books—not that they are missed, since
we must take away our family’s literacy as well. Instead, in our shantytown we
will allow one radio....
Now government
services must go. No more postman, no more firemen. There is a school, but it
is three miles away and consists of two classrooms....There are, of course, no
hospitals or doctors nearby. The nearest clinic is ten miles away and is tended
by a midwife. It can be reached by bicycle, provided that the family has a
bicycle, which is unlikely....
Finally, money. We
will allow our family a cash hoard of $5.00. This will prevent our breadwinner
from experiencing the tragedy of an Iranian peasant who went blind because he
could not raise the $3.94, which he mistakenly thought he needed to receive
admission to a hospital where he could have been cured.
What Can’t
We Afford?
Our excuse that we cannot afford to
help our desperately poor brothers and sisters in Christ is exposed as blatant
hypocrisy by what we can afford: monthly cable TV, cellular phones, magazine subscriptions, pet food,
expensive entertainment, hobbies and vacations, new cars, dining out, the
latest fashions in clothing, cigarettes, junk food, the newest electronic
gadgets, as well as hoards of senseless Christmas and birthday gifts for our
children. Take a look around your home or apartment and note all that you
possess that no one possessed
a century ago. People survived for thousands of years without any of these
“necessities,” and most of the world continues to live without them. Yet the
income of many professing Christians is consumed by the acquiring of these
things. All the while, the one we call our Lord cries out, “Do not lay up for
yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves
break in and steal. But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where
neither moth nor rust destroys, and where thieves do not break in or steal; for
where your treasure is, there will your heart be also” (Matt. 6:19-21).
Not only must we have what the
neighbors have, we must have what they have now, so we purchase these depreciating items by
borrowing money, resulting in a good portion of our income going toward the
paying of interest. In many cases, more than one-fourth of people’s income is
spent on interest, and often only because of their desire for instant selfish
gratification. Will God accept their excuse that they couldn’t afford to do
anything to relieve the sufferings of His impoverished children?
I’m certainly not advocating that one
must live in squalor to be a Christian, or that it is a sin for Christians to
own modern conveniences. But Scripture teaches that God wants us to share a
portion of our income with the poor. God blesses us, at least in part, to
enable us to be a blessing to others.
“But what good would the little I
could give do in light of the world’s needs?” some offer as an excuse. The
translation of this excuse is, “I can’t do everything, so I’ll do nothing.” The
truth is that you can give a little and dramatically improve one person’s life.
By giving two dollars a day, you could double the income of one person among
the 3.3 billion who live on less than two dollars a day.
“Didn’t Jesus say that the world would
always have poor people?” some say. “Then why should we work to eliminate what
Jesus said would always exist?” Yes, Jesus did say, “For the poor you always
have with you,” but He went on to say, “and whenever you wish, you can do them
good” (Mark 14:7). We will always have opportunity to demonstrate God’s love
for the poor, and Jesus obviously assumed that we would, at least occasionally,
wish to do them good.
Some think that our responsibility is
only to assist poor Christians,
thus we can maintain a clear conscience as we ignore the plight of poor pagans.
Although Scripture emphasizes our responsibility towards fellow believers, it
certainly doesn’t limit us to caring only for those within our spiritual
family. For example, Proverbs 25:21 states, “If your enemy is hungry, give him
food to eat; and if he is thirsty, give him water to drink.”
There are a myriad of other excuses
that cardboard Christians use to justify their selfishness, but none of them
nullifies the clear commands of Christ and the Scriptures.
What Must
We Do?
The only proper response to any of
Christ’s commands against which we are transgressing is to repent. Where do you
start? Begin by doing a spiritual inventory. If you’ve lived a lifestyle
characterized by greed, you aren’t truly born again yet. Repent of all known
sins in your life and call on the Lord in faith to be your Savior and absolute
Lord and Master. Turn over everything to Him and submit yourself as His slave.
Next, take a financial inventory. Do
you have an income? Then you should be giving away a portion of it. The most
basic standard under the Law of Moses was to tithe, which means to give a tenth
of your income, and tithing is a good starting place for every Christian who
has an income. If you decide to give your entire tithe to your church, make
sure your church regularly and significantly gives help to the poor. Otherwise,
I wouldn’t give my church a full ten percent. (Personally, neither would I
attend a church that wasn’t regularly giving to the poor.)
You can’t afford to give a tenth of
your income? Then something has to change. You must either increase your income
or decrease your expenses. Usually the most feasible of those two options is to
decrease expenses. Sure it will require self-denial. But that is what following
Christ is all about (see Matt. 16:24).
How can you reduce your expenses? Make
a list of everything on which you spent money last month. Then start scratching
off that list the most non-essential expenses until those scratched-off
expenses equal ten percent of your income. Until your income increases, spend
no money on what has been scratched off your list. Now you can tithe.
Eliminating
Debt
If you are like most Americans, you
already have considerable personal debt. Now as a true follower of Christ, you
should desire to get out of debt so you’ll have more money to give away. Begin
by eliminating high-interest debt such as credit card debt. There are four ways
you can get money to pay off your debt: (1) increase your income, (2) sell
non-essential items you own, (3) pull out your expense list once more and
continue scratching off the most non-essential expenses, eliminating them from
your budget, and (4) lower certain expenses by economizing. For example, you
can turn your thermostat even lower than usual in the winter months, add more
covers to your bed, and save on heating bills. If people took all four of these
options seriously, they could soon eliminate their credit card debt.
If you can’t control credit card
spending (and if you have credit card debt, that’s a good indication that you
can’t), then cut up your credit cards. (This is called plastic surgery.)
Next, work to eliminate all debt on
depreciating items. You can do that by using the income you used to pay off
high-interest debt. Once you’ve paid off what you owe on depreciating items,
save and invest the income you formerly used for payments, and from then on
purchase all depreciating items with cash. In other words, if you can’t pay for
something with cash, don’t buy it. And don’t buy what you don’t need.
Using the same means, work to
eliminate all debt on appreciating items.
Finally, chart your financial course
for the remaining years of your life. Consistently smart, unselfish choices can
result in enabling you to be a big blessing to the poor. There are scores of
ways that most of us could live more simply, enabling us to give away more
money. For example, the person who buys used cars all his life, paying cash, as
opposed to purchasing new cars with credit, is enabled to give away tens or
even hundreds of thousands of dollars during his life, depending on the age of
the cars he buys and how long he keeps them. We can make decisions regarding
housing, clothing, transportation, hobbies, pets, gifts, vacations, destructive
habits, food and entertainment that can enable us to save and give away
thousands of dollars.
A Word to
the Wealthy
What if you are a wealthy person even
by American standards, and you have excess money saved or invested, should you
give it all away? Yes.
However, sometimes the shared earnings from invested capital can be a bigger
blessing than giving away the capital. For example, if you have $100,000
invested that is earning a 10% return, you could give away $10,000 every year
for the rest of your life. This is a good reason for any Christian to consider
investing a portion of his excess money once he is out of debt. Of course, as a follower of Christ, you should not invest in anything that
would be displeasing to God.
Every follower of Christ, especially
those who are wealthy, should realize that God is the source of his wealth (see
Deut. 8:18). Thus the blesser has the absolute right to direct what the blessee
does with the blessing. True disciples of Christ have turned over all their
material possessions to Christ’s lordship. Jesus said, “So therefore, no one of
you can be My disciple who does not give up all his own possessions” (Luke
14:33). Every financial decision is a spiritual decision for those who have
truly submitted themselves to Jesus.
Those who are blessed abundantly should
be very generous. To Timothy Paul wrote,
Instruct those who are rich in this
present world not to be conceited or to fix their hope on the uncertainty of
riches, but on God, who richly supplies us with all things to enjoy. Instruct
them to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share,
storing up for themselves the treasure of a good foundation for the future, so
that they may take hold of that which is life indeed (1 Tim. 6:17-19, emphasis added).
Clearly, Paul
believed that wealthy people could only hope to “take hold of that which is
life indeed” (eternal life) if they “rich in good works” and “generous and
ready to share.” Greedy people go to hell.
How much of your income should you give away? As much as you possibly can. I guarantee
that in heaven, you will not regret any sacrifice you made on the earth.
The more you deny yourself, the more
you are like Christ. Keep in mind that the amount of money given away is not
nearly as significant as the amount of sacrifice expressed in the giving. We
read in Mark’s Gospel:
And [Jesus] sat down opposite the
treasury, and began observing how the multitude were putting money into the
treasury; and many rich people were putting in large sums. And a poor widow
came and put in two small copper coins, which amount to a cent. And calling His
disciples to Him, He said to them, “Truly I say to you, this poor widow put in
more than all the contributors to the treasury; for they all put in out of
their surplus, but she, out of her poverty, put in all she owned, all she had
to live on” (Mark 12:41-44).
Channels
of Blessing
How can you get
money into the hands of the desperately poor of this world? There are many
worthy ministries the serve the poor, but do your homework, specifically
investigating the salaries of those who lead them. Some ministry heads are
making hundreds of thousands of dollars each year while they solicit your gifts
for the poor (see CharityNavigator.org for help).
Two branches of
the ministry that I oversee, I Was Hungry (IWasHungry.org) and Orphan's Tear (OrphansTear.org), exist to meet the pressing
needs of very poor believers in developing nations. 100% of your contributions
are sent to the beneficiaries of your kindness.
God promises to reward those who help
the poor as well as discipline those who ignore them:
He who shuts his ear to the cry of the
poor will also cry himself and not be answered....He who gives to the poor will
never want, but he who shuts his eyes will have many curses (Prov. 21:13;
28:27).
A True
Story
In conclusion, I want to share with
you a touching interview of a poor Christian man named Pablito, who lived with
his family on the edge of a large public dump in Manila, Philippines. This
interview was originally published in Christian Aid’s quarterly magazine, Christian Mission, along with the following editor’s note:
In 1985 the
Association of Philippine Churches (APC) sent a young missionary couple, Nemuel
and Ruth Palma, to the poorest of the poor, Manila’s dump dwellers. Here
hundreds of families live in rows of hovels stacked up like matchboxes, with
dirty plastic sheets or pieces of flattened tin cans for roofs, and sackcloth
and cardboard milkboxes for walls. An average family of seven lives in a
structure no better than a pig sty, and no bigger than a full-sized bed!
The terrible
stench, the utter filthiness, the continual burning of garbage, the presence of
dens of thieves and hoodlums, prompted one APC worker to describe it as “man’s
version of hell, where the worms do not die, and the fire is everlasting.” It
is a place where rats outnumber children by the thousands, and flies outnumber
the rats by the millions.
The
Interview of Pablito
Q. When did you
come to know the Lord Jesus?
A. I received the
Lord as my Savior through the witness of an APC worker five years ago. But my
faith has been greatly strengthened through the testimony of my three little
children.
At the time when I
came to Christ, I was a street vendor selling smuggled cigarettes. I
immediately realized that this was not consistent with my Christian faith, so I
stopped peddling cigarettes and started selling local newspapers and magazines
on the sidewalks.
But though I was
selling a lot and making more profit, I did not stay long in this business
either because I found out that they contained dirty pictures and pornographic
stories.
Q. How did you
become a garbage scavenger?
A. I really wanted
to live the life of a true Christian. So I built a small wooden pushcart and
went around Manila’s public markets scavenging the garbage dumps for food
leftovers, used bottles and tin cans which I sell for recycling.
Compared to
cigarette and newspaper vending, it is very hard and dirty work. I am always
tired after a day’s work and I smell terrible. But I feel clean inside, and
that is what is important to myself and my family. We want to have clean hearts
and minds before the Lord.
Q. How was your
life affected when your children received Christ?
A. My family and I
have a small home at the south corner of the dump. It is only a shanty built
with things I found in the dump, but it is a home full of joy because we all
love the Lord. We have family devotions every evening. Our daughters are always
singing songs they have learned at Bible classes. How I love to hear them sing!
They are the sunshine of my life.
My daughters’
enthusiasm for attending church and Sunday school, and praying, has greatly
affected my wife and me. In the Palma’s classes they are taught about hygiene,
so my daughters want to wear clean clothes all the time.
They also urge my wife
and me to wear clean clothes when we are not scavenging. As a result, our
family seems to stand out here in the neighborhood. Our neighbors tease me when
I wear my Sunday best by calling me “Mr. Lawyer.” I just smile at this, because
I know deep inside they, too, want to be clean—both inside and out.
Q. How do you
grow in the Lord?
A. Our three little
girls attend the feeding and educational program conducted by Nemuel and Ruth
Palma. My wife and I attend the weekly Bible study for parents held by the
Palmas at the dump.
I feel grateful to
the Lord for making our lives happy despite our poverty. So much so that I find
myself sharing this joy with my fellow scavengers. I hold a Bible study for my
neighbors, and have started another Bible study for 12 people living on the
west side of the dump.
But we need more
Bibles here. Bibles are one thing that we can’t get from the garbage because
they are never thrown away. But they are expensive. (Note: Bibles in the
Philippine language cost about $4.00 each.)
Q. How do you
make ends meet with scavenging as your means of livelihood?
A. Scavenging does
not earn much. One earns 20 to 30 pesos (around $1.50) per day. But the Lord
has provided for us very well from the garbage dump. See this pair of pants I’m
wearing? They look good, don’t they? I got them from the dump.
Some months ago I
found out that I needed reading glasses. I prayed to the Lord, and a few days
later I found these! (Pablito points to a pair of glasses he is wearing,
attached to his ears by a piece of string). I found them in a pile of freshly
dumped garbage. And they were the exact power of lens for my eyes!
Almost everything
we have and use, from my belt to my wife’s hair curlers and our little
daughters’ shoes and toys, we found at the dump. God knows our small needs, so
whatever we need is provided by Him just a stone’s throw away from us.
Q. What other
important changes have happened in your life?
A. With Jesus in
our hearts, Rosita and I have learned to accept the hardships of life with a
smile. We stopped using foul language, and I learned to love my neighbors and
to forgive quickly.
Do you know why I
do not have a pair of shoes? Yesterday was Sunday, and I planned to be in
church early for prayer. I put my best clothes on and my only pair of shoes,
which I had found at the dump. I wanted to really look nice for the Lord
because it was only two days after my forty-eighth birthday. So I convinced
myself to spend five pesos to have my shoes shined by a bootblack. The
bootblack took my shoes off to shine them, and I stood nearby.
Then I noticed a
small flower stand just across the street, and I thought of buying the Lord a
bunch of yellow flowers. I hurriedly crossed the street and bought them, but
when I returned to the bootblack’s stand, he had run away with my shoes!
I almost wanted to
cry! I was not surprised that I didn’t get angry, though I admit I was a bit
self-conscious when I walked back home in my Sunday best, barefoot, with a
bouquet of yellow flowers clutched in my hand. What a time my neighbors had in
teasing me! And I was late for the morning service.
But when I prayed
in church that day I knew that one day I will find a new pair of shoes, and
unlike the old pair, they will be a perfect match.

Missionary Nemuel Palma (at the door) visits with Pablito (with eyeglasses
found at the dump), his wife Rosita, next to him, and his three daughter:
Luz (8), Rebecca (6) and Ruth (4), and two neighbors.
Several months after the above
interview, a correspondent from Christian Aid visited Pablito and found that he was no longer
scavenging for a living. Rather, he was drawing water in four-gallon plastic
cans from a private faucet a kilometer away, and selling the water to fellow
dump-dwellers for six cents a can. He was paying the owner of the faucet about
one cent per can, and was thus able to earn $1.50 on a good day. However,
Pablito worked only in the mornings on four of his six weekly workdays in order
to conduct Bible studies for his fellow dump-dwellers in the afternoons and
evenings. Pablito admitted to the correspondent that he often gave half of his
earnings to “the poor.”
table
of contents | previous chapter | next
chapter | top of page | buy
this book | home
We’re so thankful that we can provide the teaching you’ve just read. Although it was free for you, it wasn’t actually free...someone else paid for it. If you’ve been blessed, can you help us bless others? We’re equipping pastors in many developing nations by freely giving them books in their own languages. Those books contain many of the same articles available on our website, but most often, the pastors we help don’t have affordable internet access. Your donation, large or small, can make a difference. Just click the PayPal button below. Thank you!
|