No servant can serve two masters . . . You cannot serve God and mammon. — Luke 16:13
An Illinois resident asked his employer for a two-thirds pay cut in order to put his income below the poverty level. He reasoned that by making himself poor he would not have to pay income tax, and therefore he would not have to support military policies he didn’t agree with. This would make him more consistent in practicing his beliefs. A close friend commented, “He has a strong commitment to justice and peace, and I think this is his way of carrying that out.”
I’m not suggesting that we should follow his example, but he is a person who doesn’t want money to divert him from his ideals. He reminds me of Agur, the wise author of Proverbs 30, who expressed concern that too much or too little wealth can get in the way of commitment to God. So we are left to consider it — money. The Illinois resident gave up part of it. Agur didn’t want too much or too little (Prov. 30:7-9). Jesus used it (John 13:29). Paul could take it or leave it (Phil. 4:11-12). The rich young ruler clung to it (Luke 18:23). Ananaias and Sapphira died because they lied to God about it (Acts 5).
What about our relationship to money? Do we use it wisely or does it control us? Is it our servant or our master? We cannot serve both God and money (Luke 16:13). — Mart De Haan
If money is your highest goal,
The thing you long to gain,
Its power will enslave your soul
And cause your life much pain. — De De Haan
READ: Proverbs 30:5-9
Money is a good servant, but a poor master.
The Bible in one year:
• Exodus 11-13