2-11-2 The danger of materialism
The Deception Of Possession
The connection between the desire for riches and the devil (our nature)
is powerful. The devil is a deceiver. And 'riches' is also a deceiver
(Mt. 13:22). That we know for sure. The desire for material things, for
the false security of bank balances, the excuse that we are allowing ourselves
to be so preoccupied for the sake of our families, the idea that we are
only human beings and so God will let us be dominated by these worries...all
this is the deception of the flesh. God does remember that we
are dust, and yes, of course we must provide for our own, some
thought (but not anxious thought) must be given to tomorrow (Mt.
6:25,31,34). But these facts must never make us push God's Truth into
second place. The lilies of the field are fed and dressed by
God without anxiously worrying about it. Israel on their wilderness journey
were miraculously provided with food and clothing , surely to
prefigure God's basic material care of His spiritual Israel of later years.
David, all his life long, never saw the seed of the righteous begging
bread (Ps. 37:25). Those Old Testament promises are surely relevant to
us: " Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content
with such things as ye have: for he hath said (to you, as well as Joshua),
I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee" (Heb. 1:5). Notice once
again that it isn't the actual possession of wealth that is condemned,
but the way of life that seeks more than what we have been given. This
is the real danger of materialism.
If we are faithful with the riches we have been given, then
we will be given the true riches of eternal salvation (Lk. 16:11). This
" unrighteous mammon" is not our own, it is the wealth of "
another man" , i.e. God; whereas in the Kingdom, we will have our
very own " true riches" . This is an altogether lovely idea.
Whatever we have now is not ours; we come into this world with nothing,
and at death we carry nothing out (1 Tim. 6:7). We must give our all if
we are to attain the Kingdom. The weak king who sends ambassadors asking
for conditions of peace is understood by the Lord as the man who forsakes
all he has in order for peace with God. This is the importance of forsaking
wealth (Lk. 14:33), as the merchant did (Mt. 13:44-46), as the blind
man left his garment (Mk. 10:50), as the widow threw in her two mites,
rejecting the temptation to be 'prudent' and keep one for herself to use
as capital for the future (Lk. 21:2), as Matthew " left all,
rose up and followed" (Lk. 5:28), and as the disciples in that beauteous
childlike innocence could say " Lo, we have left all...?" (Mk.
10:28). What this surely means is that in our attitudes we must
be as if we possessed nothing, as if we have in our heart of hearts resigned
everything, even the very concept of personal 'possession'. Paul could
say that he was as if he possessed nothing (2 Cor. 6:10), although
he evidently had at least some money to his name (Acts 24:26), and could
offer to re-imburse Philemon for any damages. There is a great freedom
in this, if only we would know it. We have nothing now, we own nothing,
all we have is given for us to use wisely, so that when we fail (morally,
in the failures of our lives), our use of these things may prepare the
way for our entry into the everlasting place of the Kingdom (Lk. 16:9).
We fall so easily into the trap of thinking 'this is my money…I
worked for it, saved it…’. It's God's money. The danger of materialism
is to think it is ours. Israel were told that every 7th year
they were to cancel debts, release each other from the debt they had;
and yet it was " the LORD'srelease" . You released
a man from his debt, Yahweh released him. What it meant was that your
money was Yahweh's money. He released the debt, you released it. In being
generous spirited, then, and realizing 'our' money is God's, we are Yahweh-manifest.
We are invited to see ourselves as the Levites- whose inheritance was
Yahweh, and not anything material in this world. Relationship with God
and the honour of doing His service was seen as the ultimate antidote
to materialism. Eliphaz seems to have perceived this when he told the
wealthy Job: “Lay thou thy treasure in the dust…and the Almighty shall
be thy treasure” (Job 22:24,25 RV).
The importance (the eternal importance) which attaches to our
attitude to materialism is certainly stressed. All that we have is not
our own. It's not 'my money', it's not 'your car', it's
not even 'my toe' which you accidentally trod on. Yet
we all cling on to what little we have; we get offended and upset if we
'lose' it, or if we feel it is demanded of us. But not only is our material
possession not 'ours'; " ye are not your own.
For ye are bought with a price" (1 Cor. 6:19,20). This is said in
the context of warning against abuse of our sexuality; it's not our
body, so follow God's teaching concerning it. We ourselves, the very essential
me, and you, have been bought with the blood of the Lord Jesus. If I don't
own even myself, I certainly don't own anything material. Now,
I am not my own. I am a slave, bought by the Lord Jesus. The fact He is
Lord of all means He is owner of absolutely everything to do
with us (Acts 10:36). At the judgment, this fact will be brought home.
The Lord will ask for " my money...mine own" ; we will be asked
what we have done with our Lord's money (Mt. 20:15; 25:27). All we have
is God's; it is not our own. Therefore if we hold back in our giving,
we are robbing God. Israel thought it was absurd to put it like
this: But yes, God insisted through Malachi (3:8-12), you are robbing
me if you don't give back, or even if you don't give your heart to
Him in faith. And will a man rob God? Will a man...? We must
give God what has His image stamped on it: and we, our bodies, are made
in His image (Mt. 22:21); therefore we have a duty to give ourselves to
Him. We are not our own: how much less is 'our' money or time our own!
Like David, we need to realize now, in this life, before the
judgment, that all our giving is only a giving back to God of what we
have been given by Him: " Of thine own have we given thee" (1
Chron. 19:14). The danger of materialism is the assumption that we are
ultimate owners of what we 'have'.
But the time is soon coming when I will be given that which is
my own (Lk. 16:12)- the things associated with being in the Kingdom. We
are slaves now, owning nothing, but then we will be gloriously free (Rom.
8:21). So this idea of owning nothing, not even ourselves, is only true
of this life; the day of release from slavery will dawn, we will receive
that true freedom and that true concept of personal possession- if now
we resign it. Abraham really grasped this idea that we now can own nothing.
He swore to Yahweh as " the possessor of heaven and earth, that I
will not take from a thread even to a shoelatchet, and that I will not
take anything that is thine..." (Gen. 14:22,23). He knew that Yahweh
is the owner of all, and therefore he was not going to yield
to the temptation to increase what appeared to be 'his' possessions. Solomon
likewise had the theory straight at least: " Labour not to be rich...wilt
thou set thine eyes on that which is not? for riches certainly make themselves
wings; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven" (Prov. 23:4,5). The
riches men seek don't exist, material possession is a pure fantasy. "
He that earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes"
(Hag. 1:6- note that paid employment wasn't the norm them. Haggai is targeting
the graspingly-materialistic of his times). Real personal ownership of
wealth, or anything, is impossible; because God owns all, and like an
eagle soaring back upwards, all will return to Him. If we don't give back
what we have to God, He will ultimately take it back from us anyway by
death- or before. " All that is not given is lost" , as an Indian
proverb says. We should consider what we buy as not really being possessed
by us (1 Cor. 7:30). Paul practised what he preached: although he evidently
had some financial resources (Acts 24:26), he acted and felt as if he
possessed absolutely nothing (2 Cor. 6:10). The early brethren in Jerusalem
had the attitude that nothing they possessed was really theirs (Acts 4:32),
and therefore as a result of this, many sold what superfluous things they
had. But those who didn't, we later learn, had their possessions and lands
stolen during the persecution of the Hebrew believers that soon followed
(Acts 11:19 cp. Heb. 10:32-34). God took back what He had lent them, even
before their death. Their realization that they owned nothing was not
just a temporary height of enthusiasm; they appreciated a principle which
was true before, then and now. That principle applies today just as much
as it did then.
All this said about the deception of possession and the danger of materialism,
we need to consider the implications of the terrible judgment upon Ananias
and Sapphira. When they sold their property, the Holy Spirit’s comment
in Acts 5:4 was that the money was “their own” and “under their own power”
[Gk. exousia]. They could have chosen to give all or part of
that money to God. It was theirs and not God’s, the implication was. This
is a startling insight. What wealth we have has been genuinely entrusted
to us by the Lord, and in that sense it is indeed ‘ours’, under our power.
Yet we are to realize that of course as those under the sphere of God’s
rulership / Kingdom, we are under His ‘exousia’. Absolutely all
power of exousia in any part of Heaven or earth has now been
given to the Lord Jesus (Mt. 28:18; Jn. 17:2; Col. 2:10). And yet He has
given “authority” or exousia to us His servants, and will judge
us on His return as to how we have used this (Mk. 13:34; Jn. 1:12). We
need to make this connection- that although He has delegated to us wealth,
and placed it under our power or exousia, if we are truly part
of His Kingdom, we are to give back the exousia or power / authority
over our wealth to Him.
“The ransom of a man’s life is his riches” (Prov. 13:8) could imply that
our attitude to wealth is one of the things which ends up affecting our
eternal destiny. It’s not the only thing- but there are many,
Solomon tragically included, who have allowed their riches to divert them
from the path to the life eternal. |