Greetings All,
I have always been fascinated with the Biblical admonitions regarding money and wealth. The New Testament seems to take a dim view of them in more verses than those allowing that they have a legitimate purpose. (See 1Tim 6:7-10, Luke 12:33-34 14:33 and 18:18-25, Matt 6: 19-21 and 19:21-24, Mark 10:23-25, Acts 2:44-45, Col 3:2, Phil. 3:8, 1John 2:15-16).
Even the Old Testament had nothing good to say about charging interest [usury] and those that carried out the practice. (See Ezek. 18:8 and 18:17, Deut. 23:19-20, Exod. 22:25, Psalms 15:5)
{As an aside I love the current TV commercial telling us that the AVERAGE American has 14 credit cards, pays $83 per month in interest and carries a credit balance of over $8,000!}
The verse from which I named the title of this post is from Matt. 6:24, my personal favorite. It's pretty clear!
Since I am not a Christian I am not troubled by any of these verses although I fail to see how a Christian would not be (aside from blatant hypocrisy).
I agree with many of the sentiments of some of these verses. It is apparent to me that greed is probably responsible for most (if not a sizable minority of) trouble in the world and always has been. Although we are told that the early Christians lived under a form of communism, with the exception of a VERY small minority of Christians today, most would rationalize away the admonition in Acts to live in common. After all just look at the fallen Soviet Union, China, etc.
Most people would agree that money is an important subject. {Many may never admit it but it is the MOST IMPORTANT subject to them} It has always been interesting to me that although Christians claim to follow Jesus, few take him seriously when he talks about giving away your possessions and following him. Many don't even feel obligated to live a frugal life. And other religions are not exempt from the same responsibility.
The colossal wealth of the Catholic Church and the not so shabby wealth of the Protestant Churches make me wonder about the rationalizations offered by church leaders and swallowed by followers.
So here's my question: is it immoral to accumulate more wealth than you need to live "the good life" as Socrates called it? His definition of the good life allowed for enough money/wealth to have enough of the necessities and even a little more so that one could travel a "bit" and have the leisure time to study and take an active part in one's political system. (Having as much as Bill Gates or George Bush would probably have caused Socrates to have asked for the hemlock much earlier in his life).
If unfettered capitalism does not make for the ideal society for good men what about the standard of "enough is enough"? A plea to certain people (you know who you are!)lease do your best not to quibble over definitions and line drawing. I am looking for discussions on the basic ideas presented above. Of course there are always "real politic" issues that can be hashed out later. For now, I am most interested in hearing your views on the "big issues." You can define what you want to, of course. Example: Your definition of "too much" might be what the person has who has more than you.
Is there such a thing as having too much money/wealth?
How much is too much?
Is it the same amount for you as you would set for the next person?
If money buys political power doesn't this give more votes to the wealthy and less to the poor?
And doesn't this then negate any real "one man one vote" principle?
Another aside: Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one.
If a society could be established in which all people had exactly the same amount of wealth/money/possessions, and that amount proved to be adequate in terms of food, shelter, health care, etc., would this be a society that you would like to live in?
Can we have wealth without poverty?
Can we have poverty without wealth?
Can we have a society where everyone has "enough" and no one has too little or too much?
What society would Christians want? Moslems? Buddhists? Jews? Wiccans?
Peace and Love,Pilgram
I have always been fascinated with the Biblical admonitions regarding money and wealth. The New Testament seems to take a dim view of them in more verses than those allowing that they have a legitimate purpose. (See 1Tim 6:7-10, Luke 12:33-34 14:33 and 18:18-25, Matt 6: 19-21 and 19:21-24, Mark 10:23-25, Acts 2:44-45, Col 3:2, Phil. 3:8, 1John 2:15-16).
Even the Old Testament had nothing good to say about charging interest [usury] and those that carried out the practice. (See Ezek. 18:8 and 18:17, Deut. 23:19-20, Exod. 22:25, Psalms 15:5)
{As an aside I love the current TV commercial telling us that the AVERAGE American has 14 credit cards, pays $83 per month in interest and carries a credit balance of over $8,000!}
The verse from which I named the title of this post is from Matt. 6:24, my personal favorite. It's pretty clear!
Since I am not a Christian I am not troubled by any of these verses although I fail to see how a Christian would not be (aside from blatant hypocrisy).
I agree with many of the sentiments of some of these verses. It is apparent to me that greed is probably responsible for most (if not a sizable minority of) trouble in the world and always has been. Although we are told that the early Christians lived under a form of communism, with the exception of a VERY small minority of Christians today, most would rationalize away the admonition in Acts to live in common. After all just look at the fallen Soviet Union, China, etc.
Most people would agree that money is an important subject. {Many may never admit it but it is the MOST IMPORTANT subject to them} It has always been interesting to me that although Christians claim to follow Jesus, few take him seriously when he talks about giving away your possessions and following him. Many don't even feel obligated to live a frugal life. And other religions are not exempt from the same responsibility.
The colossal wealth of the Catholic Church and the not so shabby wealth of the Protestant Churches make me wonder about the rationalizations offered by church leaders and swallowed by followers.
So here's my question: is it immoral to accumulate more wealth than you need to live "the good life" as Socrates called it? His definition of the good life allowed for enough money/wealth to have enough of the necessities and even a little more so that one could travel a "bit" and have the leisure time to study and take an active part in one's political system. (Having as much as Bill Gates or George Bush would probably have caused Socrates to have asked for the hemlock much earlier in his life).
If unfettered capitalism does not make for the ideal society for good men what about the standard of "enough is enough"? A plea to certain people (you know who you are!)lease do your best not to quibble over definitions and line drawing. I am looking for discussions on the basic ideas presented above. Of course there are always "real politic" issues that can be hashed out later. For now, I am most interested in hearing your views on the "big issues." You can define what you want to, of course. Example: Your definition of "too much" might be what the person has who has more than you.
Is there such a thing as having too much money/wealth?
How much is too much?
Is it the same amount for you as you would set for the next person?
If money buys political power doesn't this give more votes to the wealthy and less to the poor?
And doesn't this then negate any real "one man one vote" principle?
Another aside: Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one.
If a society could be established in which all people had exactly the same amount of wealth/money/possessions, and that amount proved to be adequate in terms of food, shelter, health care, etc., would this be a society that you would like to live in?
Can we have wealth without poverty?
Can we have poverty without wealth?
Can we have a society where everyone has "enough" and no one has too little or too much?
What society would Christians want? Moslems? Buddhists? Jews? Wiccans?
Peace and Love,Pilgram