Categories
Finances

Theology of Enough

Hmmmm…
The Theology of Enough probably isn’t a topic many of us want to discuss during the winter holiday season. Not because we do not agree with the principle of it, but because it is so hard to live out in our “give me more” society, especially from Black Friday through Christmas when we are encouraged to purchase so much stuff.

But here is one reason that it is important… when we live in debt, we are unable to serve God fully. We are now in the midst of the struggle of how to get out of debt. Where do we trim back? How can I be generous to others when I owe so much? And so the spiritual discipline of simplicity and the theology of enough can work together to change our mindset so that we do not fall into the marketing trap of our society and so that we can remain fully available to be used by God.

So what is the Theology of Enough? Here is a great, true-story illustration of it from Stanley Tam (I discovered this story in the book ‘Primal,’ by Mark Batterson)

Stanley Tam started the the United States Plastic Corporation, and early on Stanley made God the Senior Partner of his company. Stanley knew God was the reason for his blessings in life, and he wanted to honor God with the way he ran his company and used the earnings from his business. So Stanley legally transferred 51 percent of his business to God. Fifty-one percent of the company’s profits would be set aside and used for ministry purposes. Most of us would probably have been patting ourselves on the back at that point. Not Stanley.

After reading the parable about the merchant who found the pearl of great price and sold everything he had to obtain it, Stanley made an even bolder decision… he decided to to divest himself of all his shares. In January of 1955, every share of stock was transferred to his Senior Partner and Stanley became a salaried employee of the company he had started. From the day of that defining decision until his death in 2000, Stanley was able to manage the giving of earnings to ministry purposes… which amounted to more than a hundred million dollars. But let’s be clear – the real truth about this theology of enough wasn’t that Stanley had given God thousands of shares or millions of dollars… What he had really given God was his heart. And that’s what God really wants.

You can read Stanley’s testimony in his own words on the US Plastic website at: http://www.usplastic.com/content/aboutcorporation.aspx

A lot of the people who met Stanley envied the money his company made. But what we should really envy is his faith.

After meeting Stanley, Mark Batterson said: “Such childlike faith in such an aged body is a rare quality. He talked about good old-fashioned obedience as the key to success. He talked about giving things away as a means of sending them ahead to heaven. He talked about how God’s shovel is bigger than ours. But the most challenging
and inspiring discussion revolved around establishing an income ceiling.”
“Most people spend more money as they make more money. Their standard of living goes up in direct proportion to their income. They buy more cars, bigger televisions, and nicer things. Not Stanley. He hasn’t taken a raise in three decades. In his own words, “A man can eat only one meal at a time, wear only one suit of clothes at a time, drive only one car at a time. All this I have. Isn’t that enough?”

And that is our important question here at the highest point of consumerism of the year. How much is enough?

For some, the answer is – “One more dollar.” We want more and more, so we can spend more and more. “We have an insatiable appetite for more.” When will we take the blessings God has given us and say – “I have enough, it is now time for me to give all that I have above my level of enough away to God and His kingdom causes.”?

“Enough will never be enough unless you determine how much is enough.”

Batterson ends with these piercing questions:
“What would happen if every Christ follower had the courage to ask and answer that question with biblical integrity? What would happen if every Christ follower personalized that question and specified a dollar amount? What would happen if every Christ follower gave away everything above and beyond their predetermined income ceiling?”

What a challenging idea.
Determining how to be a good steward of what God has blessed me with.
Honestly, I can’t say that I have embraced the income ceiling idea yet… I guess I don’t feel I have “enough” yet.
But I am praying that God will keep convicting me in this area so that I know how to hold to a theology of enough and a belief in simplicity.

What about you?
How do you fight the materialism mentality in this consumer culture, especially at Christmas?
What do you think about Stanley and his choice of an income ceiling to be able to give more away for kingdom causes?

(Quotes from ‘Primal’ by Batterson)

Categories
Christian Living

Get Rich… or Embrace a Wartime Simplicity?

As I have mentioned in the “about” section of my website, I feel most of us have waded in the shallows for far too long. Too many of us are still drinking milk when we should be chewing on a sizzlin’ and delicious rib-eye steak. Therefore, some of my posts might be perceived to “step on toes.”

Realize that nothing I post hasn’t already stepped on MY own toes. In fact that’s why I share some of them – God stepped on my toes and I want to share the pain with you! And also realize that if you are wanting to grow with God, you’d better lace up your steel-toed boots and put on your big boy or big girl underoos, cause God isn’t in the habit of tiptoeing around our feelings! He is in the habit of stepping on toes to get us on the track to being more like Jesus. Sometimes I wish that weren’t the case, but fortunately His yoke is easy and His burden is light (but He never said there won’t be a yoke or burden!).

Now… Warning – Sensitivity Advisory Label!
If you don’t like posts that step on toes – skip this one.
But for those of you who have adventurous toes that don’t mind a little danger, by all means continue!

What does it mean to be rich?
a large number of 100 dollar bills representing the idea of being rich What does it mean to be rich toward God?

I believe the answer is wisely explained by John Piper in his book to pastors (Brothers, We Are Not Professionals). But as these words were so convicting to me, I wanted to share them with you. (As I said – I like to share the pain!)

“Being ‘rich toward God’ means looking Godward for heavenly wealth. …God gives us money on earth in order that we may invest it for dividends in heaven. …God is not glorified when we keep for ourselves (no matter how thankfully) what we ought to be using to alleviate the misery of unevangelized and uneducated and unhoused and unfed millions.

“The evidence that many of our people are not rich toward God is how little they give and how much they own.

“Very few of our people have said to themselves: we will live at a level of joyful, wartime simplicity and use the rest of what we earn to alleviate misery. But surely that is what Jesus wants. I do not see how we can read the New Testament, then look at two billion unevangelized people, and still build another barn for ourselves. We can only justify the exorbitance of our lifestyle by ignoring the lostness of the unreached and the misery of the poor.

“…there are three levels of how to live with things: (1) you can steal to get, (2) or you can work to get, (3) or you can work to get in order to give. …Almost all of the forces of our culture urge us to live on level two. But the Bible is unrelenting in pushing us to level three.

“You will have to make clear to the business people in your congregation that you are not against multimillion-dollar industries. Nor are you necessarily against [Christians with] six-digit salaries. The problem arises when they endorse the professional status quo that says a six-digit salary should have a six-digit lifestyle. It shouldn’t. Perhaps it should have a $40,000 lifestyle and support two families on a new mission field.

“The problem is not with earning a lot. The problem is the constant accumulation of luxuries that are soon felt to be needs.”

Ouch! Ouch! Ouch! but Yes! Yes! Yes!
This commentary by Piper hurts my toes, but I find my heart in agreement with the answer. It’s like that “good soreness” after a workout. A pain, to be sure, but one that you know has stretched you and made you stronger.

I find that in regard to being rich toward God with my finances – my spirit is willing, but my flesh is weak. I want to live with simplicity. I want to embrace a Theology of Enough. But society pressures me to use my resources for myself. God help me to change and be rich toward You and Your Kingdom!

What do you think? Are Piper’s words Too harsh or are they On-Target?

— brian rushing

Categories
Christian Living

Spin the Wheel on the Game of Life… find Success!

The spinner from the boardgame Life symbolizing the chance of success The spinner on the Game of Life… I used to love spinning that colorful, numbered wheel. Perhaps if I could spin it just right, I could land on the right squares, score an occupation with a high salary, become a millionaire, and “win the Game of Life.” If only winning at real life was as easy.

But it takes a bit more to be a success in this life. Gaining tremendous wealth takes more effort than the chance spinning of a small, plastic wheel. And for many that is the full definition of success – making money. But is that really the definition of success? How should I define success? To have all that my heart desires? To have more than my neighbor? To be envied by others?

The problem is that the wrong definition of success leaves us empty – and too many of us have chosen the wrong definition.

Ravi Zacharias states: “One of the most common refrains we hear from those who have reached the pinnacle of success is that of the emptiness that still stalks their lives, all their successes notwithstanding. …judging by the remarks of some who have attained those higher standards, there is frequently an admission of disappointment. After his second Wimbledon victory Boris Becker surprised the world by admitting his great struggle with suicide. Jack Higgins, the renowned author…has said that the one thing he knows now at this high point of his career…: “When you get to the top, there’s nothing there.””

And another famous American business tycoon who achieved success in all of the ways that the world defines it indicated: “Here I am in the twilight years of my life, still wondering what it’s all about…. I can tell you this, fame and fortune is for the birds.”

“This…is one of the more difficult of life’s realities to accept. Those who have not yet experienced the success they covet find it impossible to believe that those who have attained it find it wanting in terms of giving meaning to life” (Ravi Z.).

Success based on wealth, material possessions, and fame have been found to be so empty that over and over again celebrities at the pinnacle of this type of success look for happiness in drugs and alcohol. The depression of reaching the top and finding nothing there can be so overwhelming that many of these celebrities attempt suicide. “For many in our high-paced world, despair in not a moment; it is a way of life” (Ravi Z.).

Thus, success by this definition is fatally flawed. So I’ve chosen to define my success by knowing and doing the will of God. I have found this to be so much more fulfilling. How about you? How do you define success?

God sends no one away empty except those who are full of themselves. (Dwight L. Moody)

— brian rushing