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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com February 20th, 2006 Newsletter!
You can email Webservant Peter J. Louie by replying to this message.
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1 Timothy 6:6:19 - True Contentment, Fight the Good Fight of
Faith
Now there is great gain in godliness with contentment, for we
brought nothing into the world, and we cannot take anything out of the
world. But if we have food and clothing, with these we will be
content. But those who desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a
snare, into many senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into
ruin and destruction. For the love of money is a root of all kinds of
evils. It is through this craving that some have wandered away from
the faith and pierced themselves with many pangs.
But as for you, O man of God, flee these things. Pursue
righteousness, godliness, faith, love, steadfastness, gentleness.
Fight the good fight of the faith. Take hold of the eternal life to
which you were called and about which you made the good confession in
the presence of many witnesses. I charge you in the presence of God,
who gives life to all things, and of Christ Jesus, who in his
testimony before Pontius Pilate made the good confession, to keep the
commandment unstained and free from reproach until the appearing of
our Lord Jesus Christ, which he will display at the proper time--he
who is the blessed and only Sovereign, the King of kings and Lord of
lords, who alone has immortality, who dwells in unapproachable light,
whom no one has ever seen or can see. To him be honor and eternal
dominion. Amen.
As for the rich in this present age, charge them not to be haughty,
nor to set their hopes on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who
richly provides us with everything to enjoy. They are to do good, to
be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share, thus storing
up treasure for themselves as a good foundation for the future, so
that they may take hold of that which is truly life.
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What You Do with What You
Have...
by Dr. Philip Ryken
“I tell you that to everyone who
has, more will be given, but from the one who has not, even what he
has will be taken away”
—Luke 19:26 (Sermon from
Luke 19:11–27).
http://www.sermonaudio.com/sermoninfo.asp?sermonID=22062111479
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The Puritans and Money
By Leland Ryken (Highlights of helpful points by
Dr. C. Matthew McMahon)
One of the most influential and
controversial books of our century was Max Weber’s The Protestant
Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1930). Beginning with the
observation that the rise of middleclass trade occurred chiefly among
Protestants, Weber set out to explore the connections between the “the
Protestant ethic” and “the spirit of modern capitalism.” He found many
connections: a belief that one can serve God in one’s worldly calling,
a tendency to live disciplined and even ascetic lives, a spirit of
individualism, emphasis on working hard, and a good conscience about
making money. Although Weber was highly selective in the data he chose
to consider, his analysis uncovered much that is important about the
Protestant movement.
The so-called Weber thesis produced some
unfortunate results, however. Protestants have been pictured as
elevating money-making to the highest goal in life, as viewing the
amassing of wealth as a moral obligation, and as approving virtually
every kind of business competition. A look at Puritan attitudes and
practices toward money will show that the Weber thesis was a good idea
that ended up seriously perverting the truth.
Is Money Good or Bad?
When Martin Luther became a monk, he took
a vow of poverty. This reflected a long-standing Catholic view that
poverty is inherently virtuous for a person. But the
Reformers—including Luther himself—did not see it that way. The
starting point in their thinking about money and possessions was that
these things are good in principle.
The Puritans agreed with Calvin that “money
in itself is good.” When Samuel Willard eulogized John Hull at
his funeral, he saw no contradiction between the merchant’s having
been “a saint upon earth” who lived “above the world” and his having
been industrious in his business, so that it could be said of him that
“Providence
had given him a prosperous portion of this world’s goods.”
According to Richard Baxter, “All
love of the creature, the world, or riches is not sin. For the works
of God are all good, as such.”
Samuel Willard theorized that “riches are
consistent with godliness, and the more a man hath, the more advantage
he hath to do good with it,
if God give him an heart to it.” William Adams regarded
economic endeavor as worthy of a Christian’s affection; he wrote that
the Christian “hath much business to do in and about the world, which
he is vigorously to attend, and he hath … that in the world upon which
he is to bestow his affection.”
In affirming the goodness of money, the
Puritans found it necessary to defend the legitimate aspects of money
against its detractors. William Perkins did so in a sermon on Matthew
6:19–20, in which he listed what Christ did not forbid:
Diligent labour in a main vocation, whereby [a person] provides
things needful for himself, and those that depend on him.… The
fruition and possession of goods and riches: for they are the good
blessing of God being well used.… The gathering and laying up of
treasure is not simply forbidden, for the word of God alloweth here
for in some respect. 2 Corinthians 12:14
The Puritans had no guilt about making
money;
to make money was a form of stewardship. The Weber thesis made
mileage out of Baxter’s statement:
If God shows you a way in which you
lawfully get more than in another way (without wrong to your soul,
or to any other), if you refuse this, and choose the less gainful
way, you cross one of the ends of your calling, and you refuse to be
God’s steward.
In the broader context of Baxter’s writing
on economics, this call for efficiency and productiveness is simply an
evidence of common sense and a strong sense of wishing to be a good
steward of God’s gifts.
Why were the Puritans so sure that money
was a good thing? Chiefly because they believed that
money and wealth were gifts from God. “If
we happen to have inherited much property,” wrote William Perkins, “we
are to enjoy those in good conscience as blessings and gifts of God.”
John Robinson commented, “The blessing of the Lord maketh rich .… And
as riches are in themselves God’s blessings, so are we to desire them
for the comfortable course of our natural and civil states.” If money
and property are gifts from God, Richard Sibbes could affirm, “worldly
things are good in themselves and given to sweeten our passage to
heaven.”
Because the Puritans viewed prosperity as
a gift from God, they decisively dissociated it from the idea of human
merit. If it is a gift, how can it be earned? Not only does human
effort not guarantee success; even if God blesses work with
prosperity, it is God’s grace and not human merit that produces the
blessing. Cotton Mather asserted, “in
our occupation we spread our nets; but it is God that brings unto our
nets all that comes to them.” “If goods be gotten by industry,
providence, and skill,” wrote John Robinson, “it is God’s blessing
that both gives the faculty, and the use of it, and the success unto
it.” The Puritan ethic is an ethic of grace, not of human
merit.
The Puritans’ defense of private property
was an extension of their belief in the legitimacy of money. William
Ames wrote that private property is founded “not
only on human but also on natural and divine right.” Elsewhere
Ames wrote that there is justice “in the
lawful keeping of the things we have.”
When John Hull, one of the first merchant princes of Massachusetts,
lost his ships to the Dutch, he took consolation in God’s providence:
“The loss of my estate will be nothing, if the Lord please to join my
soul nearer to himself, and loose it more from creature comforts.” But
when his foreman stole his horses, Hull took the view that “I would
have you know that they are, by God’s good providence, mine.”
Puritan endorsement of money and property
should not be construed as meaning that the Puritans elevated material
goods above spiritual values. John Winthrop disparaged those who
mistake “outward prosperity for true felicity.” Peter Bulkeley wrote
that a Christian “may do many things for himself,” yet only so long as
“this is not in opposition, but in subordination, to God and his
glory.”
What About Poverty?
If riches are a blessing from God, then
poverty must be a curse and a sign of God’s disfavor—right?
Wrong, said the Puritans, who disagreed with a whole tissue of
assumptions often attributed to them in the twentieth century.
In the first place, the Puritans disagreed
that godliness is a guarantee of success. Thomas Watson went so far as
to say that “true godliness is usually attended with persecution .…
The saints have no charter of exemption from trials.… Their piety will
not shield them from sufferings.”
If godliness is not a guarantee of
success, then the converse is also true: success is not a sign of
godliness. This is how the Puritans understood the matter. John Cotton
stated that a Christian “equally bears good and evil successes as God
shall dispense them to him.” Samuel Willard wrote, “As
riches are not evidences of God’s love, so neither is poverty of his
anger or hatred.”
With the causal link between success and
godliness thus severed, the Puritans concluded several things about
poverty. One was that poverty is not necessarily a bad or shameful
thing. “Poverty
in itself,” wrote Ames, “hath no crime in it, or fault to be ashamed
of: but is oftentimes sent from God to the godly, either as a
correction, or trial or searching, or both.” Richard Baxter
concluded:
None are shut out of the church for want
of money, nor is poverty any eyesore to Christ. An empty heart may
bar them out, but an empty purse cannot. His kingdom of grace hath
ever been more consistent with despised poverty than wealth and
honor.
In fact, the Puritans claimed that poverty
may well be God’s way of spiritually blessing or teaching a person. In
dealing with biblical passages that promise God’s blessing to
believers, Samuel Bolton wrote:
But shall we judge nothing to have the
nature of blessing but the enjoyment of temporal and outward good
things? May not losses be blessings as well as enjoyments?
And Thomas Watson, in a list of “things
that work for good to God’s children,” included poverty in the list,
with this comment:
Poverty works for good to God’s children. It starves their lusts. It
increases their graces. “Poor in the world, rich in faith” (James
2:5). Poverty tends to prayer. When God has clipped his childen’s
wings by poverty, they fly swiftest to the throne of grace.
In thus vindicating poverty, the Puritans
were careful to distinguish themselves from Catholic teaching about
poverty as meritorious in itself. William Ames made this clear when he
denounced the
monk’s vows of poverty as “madness,
a superstitious and wicked presumption, being that they sell this
poverty for a work of perfection … which will much prevail for
satisfaction and merit before God.”
The Puritans used the phrase “evangelical
poverty” to describe their ideal of learning spiritual lessons from
such poverty as God might send them in their ordinary callings in this
world.
The Puritans did not idealize poverty as
something to be sought. Contrary to Catholic monastic theory, the
Puritans theorized that poverty is no sure way to avoid temptation.
Richard Baxter commented:
Poverty also hath its temptations … For
even the poor may be undone by the love of that wealth and plenty
which they never get: and they may perish for over-loving the world,
that never yet prospered in the world.
The Puritans also rejected the ethic of
unconcern that is content to let the poor remain poor. In their view,
poverty is not an unmitigated misfortune, but it is certainly not the
goal that we should have for people. “The rich man by liberality must
dispose and comfort the poor,” said Thomas Lever in a sermon. “God
never gave a gift,” preached Hugh Latimer, “but that he sent occasion
at one time or another to show it to God’s glory. As if he sent
riches, he sendeth poor men to be helped with it.”
Latimer even went so far as to say that “the poor man hath title to
the rich man’s goods; so that the rich man ought to let the poor man
have part of his riches to help and to comfort him withal.”
On the subject of poverty, then, the
Puritans taught that it is sometimes the lot of the godly and that it
can be a spiritual blessing. It is not, however, meritorious in
itself, and poor people require the generosity of people who have the
resources to help them.
The Dangers of Wealth
Instead of regarding success as a sign of
God’s approval or of their own virtue, the Puritans were much more
likely to look upon prosperity as a temptation. A marginal note to
Genesis 13:1 in the
Geneva Bible speaks volumes: “Abraham’s
great riches gotten in Egypt hindered him not to follow his vocation,”
implying that his riches could easily have become a temptation to him.
“Both
poverty and riches,” wrote John Robinson, “have their temptations ….
And of the two states, … the temptations of riches are the more
dangerous.” Thomas Lever claimed, “He that seeks to be rich …
will fall into diverse temptations and snares of the devil.” Richard
Rogers woke up a little after midnight and was convicted of the fact
that the blessings of God “waxed
too sweet to me, and … dangerous.”
Much to our surprise, the Puritans saw an
inverse relationship between wealth and godliness. It did not have to
turn out this way, but in their view it usually did. “Remember that
riches do make it harder for a man to be saved,” warned Richard
Baxter. Samuel Willard believed that “it is a rare thing to see men
that have the greatest visible advantages…to be very zealous for God.”
Richard Sibbes noted that “where the world hath got possession in the
heart, it makes us false to God, and false to man, it makes us
unfaithful in our callings, and false to religion itself.”
In elaborating this theme of the dangers
of wealth, the Puritans gave an anatomy of the reasons why money is
dangerous. Foremost is the tendency of money to replace God as the
object of ultimate devotion. Worldly goods “are veils set betwixt God
and us, they stay our sight in them that it cannot pierce to God.”
“How ready is [man] to terminate his happiness in externals,” noted
Thomas Watson. John Robinson said the same: “If
a man be rich, and full, he is in danger to deny God, and to say in
pride, and contempt of him …, who is the Lord?” Richard Rogers
noted regarding the wealthy bishops and clerics of the Anglican church
that they “did never seem grossly to have departed from God till they
grew in wealth and promotion.”
A second reason why riches are dangerous
is that they instill reliance on self instead of on God. Richard
Baxter was of the opinion that “when men prosper in the world, their
minds are lifted up with their estates, and they can hardly believe
that they are so ill, while they feel themselves so well.”
The acquisition of wealth, said the
Puritans, also has a way of absorbing so much of a person’s time and
energy that it draws him or her away from religion and moral concern
for others. Richard Mather, in his farewell sermon, said:
Experience shows that it is an easy
thing in the midst of a worldly business to lose the life and power
of religion that nothing thereof should be left but only the
external form, as it were the carcass or shell, worldliness having
eaten out the kernel and having consumed the very soul and life of
godliness.
Cotton Mather was equally alarmed by the
trend toward materialism in New England Society: “Religion begat
prosperity and the daughter devoured the mother.”
The Puritans also realized that money is
dangerous because it generates an appetite that it can never satisfy.
Money never keeps its promises, they observed. “Riches are like
painted grapes,” wrote Henry Smith, “which look as though they would
satisfy a man, but do not slake his hunger or quench his thirst.
Riches indeed do make a man covet more, and get envy, and keep the
mind in care.”
If money is as dangerous as all this,
shouldn’t a person simply avoid it? Not according to the Puritans.
William Ames claimed that “riches… are morally neither good or bad,
but things indifferent which men may use either well or ill.”
Thomas Adams told his city congregation, “We teach you not to cast
away the bag, but covetousness.”
How Much Is Enough? The Puritan Ideal
of Moderation
For the Puritans, the crucial issue was
not how large a person’s income was, but
how much money was spent on oneself. The Puritan ideal was
moderation. Such an ideal has, of course, appealed to many people
besides the Puritans, but the concept of “temperance” was associated
with the Puritans in their time. The Puritans conceived of
moderation or temperance as a golden mean between extremes. John
Downame wrote that “the
mean [median] estate is much to be preferred before the greatest
prosperity .… The mean estate… preserveth us from forgetfulness of
God, irreligion, and profaneness.”
If moderation is the goal, it needs to be
protected against its opposites. One of these is greed for wealth,
which is often intertwined with covetousness. In a sermon on
Matthew 6:19–20,
Perkins listed the following as the thing that Christ forbids: “sundry
practices of covetousness, whereof the first is excessive seeking of
worldly wealth, when men keep no measure or moderation.”
Another thing that moderation stands
opposed to is luxury. The Puritans looked askance at a luxurious
lifestyle, no matter what form it took one’s house, clothing,
recreation, or eating habits. When Richard Baxter denounced the
“wealthy vices,” he included a discussion of sensuality, overeating,
and overindulgence in sports and recreation. His “directions against
prodigality and sinful wastefulness” included comments against
“pampering the belly in excess … or costliness of meat or drink,”
“needless costly visits and entertainments,” and “unnecessary
sumptuous buildings.”
Such warnings against luxury were common
among the Puritans. Having defined the essence of luxury with the
formula “wealth more than necessary for nature and person,” William
Perkins proceeded to show his negative assessment of it: it is “as a
knife in the hands of a child, likely to hurt, if not taken away.”
Samuel Ward, in his college diary, listed as one of the “sins of the
university” that of “excess in apparel.”
It would be wrong to conclude that because
the Puritans were opposed to luxury they were ascetic. They did not
think that denying oneself legitimate indulgences was inherently
virtuous. In fact, they were as clear-sighted about the temptations of
poverty as they were about the temptations of luxury. Baxter’s list of
temptations ran like this: “overmuch care about their wants and
worldly matters,” discontent, covetousness, envy of the rich, neglect
of spiritual duties, and neglect of “the holy education of their
children.”
What Is Money For?
The more we explore Puritan attitudes, the
more apparent it becomes that the key to everything they said on the
topic was their conviction that
money is a social good, not a private possession. Its main
purpose is the welfare of everyone in society, not the personal
pleasure of the person who happens to have control over it.
The genius of Puritanism was its
clear-sightedness about what things are for, and that genius did not
desert them in money matters. Everything depends on how a person uses
his or her money. Baxter stated, “The
question is how they use that which they labour so hard for, and save
so sparingly. If they use it for God, and for charitable uses, there
is no man taketh a righter course.”
What are the ends or uses of money? The
Puritans can speak for themselves on this topic. “Riches may enable us
to relieve our needy brethren, and to promote good works for church
and state.” Money exists “for the glory of God and the good of
others.” “The more diligently we pursue our several callings, the more
we are capacitated to extend our charity to such as are in poverty and
distress.” “God’s children look to the spiritual use of those things
which the worldlings use carnally.” In none of these comments about
the purpose of earning money does one get the impression that income
is something people have a right to spend on themselves simply because
they have earned it.
William Perkins
provides an adequate summary on using money:
We must so use and possess the goods we
have, that the use and possession of them may tend to God’s glory, and
the salvation of our souls …. Our riches must be employed to necessary
uses. These are first, the maintenance of our own good estate and
condition. Secondly, the good of others, specially those that are of
our family or kindred …. Thirdly, the relief of the poor…. Fourthly,
the maintenance of the church of God, and true religion …. Fifth, the
maintenance of the Commonwealth.
The belief that money is a social good is
also the key to Puritan views on the taking of interest.
In the sixteenth century the Puritans were overwhelmingly opposed to
the practice of taking interest on money that had been lent. They were
opposed to it because of Old Testament prohibitions against it and
because of what they felt to be the spirit behind the practice,
namely, covetousness and greed. As society changed, becoming
less agrarian and more industrial, Puritans increasingly made a
distinction between interest and usury (exploitive interest).
At first glance, the two attitudes seem
contradictory, but in fact they are not. Look at what the
anti-interest and pro-interest Puritans had in common: they both
agreed that money is a social good and that therefore hoarding and
exploitation are not permissible. In an increasingly commercial
society, the most compassionate act became the willingness to lend
money at a modest rate of interest. In Baxter’s words, "There is an
usury which is against neither justice nor charity,” and he went on to
describe conditions under which it is charitable.
Why did the Puritans view money as a
social good when, as our modern view shows, it is so much more natural
to view it as a person’s own possession? The Puritan outlook stemmed
from a firm belief that people are stewards of what God has entrusted
to them.
Money is ultimately God’s, not ours. In the words of the influential
Puritan book, A Godly Form of Household Government, money is
“that which God hath lent thee."
The Puritan Critique of The Success
Ethic
Modern Western culture is based
overwhelmingly on the success ethic—the belief that material
prosperity is the ultimate value in life and that a person’s worth can
be measured by material or social standards. By contrast, the Puritan
Thoman Watson asserted that “blessedness… does not lie in the
acquisition of worldly things. Happiness cannot by any art of
chemistry be extracted here.” Samuel Hieron was far from the success
ethic when he prayed:
Oh, let not mine eyes be dazzled, nor my
heart bewitched with the glory and sweetness of these worldly
pleasures …. Draw my affection to the love of that durable riches, and
to that fruit of heavenly wisdom which is better than gold, and the
revenues thereof do surpass the silver, that my chief care may be to
have a soul enriched and furnished with Thy grace.
The Puritan Critique of The Self-Made
Person
American culture has been strangely
enamored of the image of “the self-made person”—the person who becomes
rich and famous through his or her own efforts. The idea of having
status handed over as a gift does not appeal to such an outlook.
Yet the Puritans denied that there can even be such a thing as a
self-made person. Based on an ethic of grace, Puritanism viewed
prosperity solely as God’s gift. John Preston wrote regarding riches
that “it is God that gives them, it is he that dispenseth them, it is
he that gives the reward…. The
care of the work only belongs to us.”
The Puritan Critique of Modern Business
Ethics
It has become an axiom of modern business
that the goal of business is to make as much profit as possible and
that any type of competition or selling practice is acceptable as long
as it is legal. The Puritans would not agree. For one thing, they
looked upon business as a service to society. “We must therefore
think,” wrote John Knewstub, “that when we come to buying and selling,
we come to witness our love towards our neighbor by our well dealing
with him in his goods.”
William Perkins said, “The end of a man’s calling is not to gather
riches for himself… but to serve God in the serving of man, and in the
seeking the good of all men.”
Nor would the Puritans agree with modern
methods of competition or profiteering. When Citizens in Boston
complained that Robert Keayne charged excessive prices, the
magistraates fined him two hundred pounds, and he very nearly found
himself excommunicated from the church. John Cotton used the
trial to lay down some business principles in a public lecture on
economics. Cotton denounced as false the following premises:
That a man might sell as dear
[expensively] as he can, and buy as cheap as he can…. That he may
sell as he bought, though he paid too dear, etc., and though the
commodity be fallen, etc. That as a man may take advantage of his
own skill or ability, so he may of another’s ignorance or necessity.
In England John Knewstub showed what a
gulf lies between the Puritans and modern commercial practices when he
wrote disparagingly of businessmen who:
come to buying and selling as it were to
the razing and spoiling of some enemy’s city …, where every man
catcheth, snatcheth and carrieth away whatsoever he can come by. And
he is thought the best who carrieth away the most…. But the Holy
Ghost will bring us to another trial of our love.
The Puritan Critique of The “Simple Life”
Philosophy
Modern materialism has produced its own
antithesis in the form of people who view affluence and possessions as
inherently tainted. The Puritans were closer to such an outlook than
to one supporting an affluent lifestyle, but they cannot be fitted
comfortably here either. William Perkins wrote, “These earthly things
are the good gifts of God, which no man can simply condemn, without
injury to God’s disposing hand and providence, who hath ordained them
for natural life.” The Puritans were also wary of a blanket
condemnation of people who have a higher standard of living than some
other people. In Perkin’s words:
We must not make one measure of
sufficiency of goods necessary for all persons, for it varies
according to the diverse conditions of persons, and according to the
time and place. More things are necessary to a public person than to a
private; and more to him that has a charge than to a single man.
The Puritan Critique of Socialism
A final force in modern life of which the
Puritans would not approve is socialism, whether in its overt form of
governmental ownership or in its subtle form of the welfare state.
William Ames wrote, “Ownership
and differences in the amount of possessions are ordinances of God and
approved by him, Prov. 22:2; II Thess. 3:12.” John Robinson
commented:
God could … either have made men’s states
more equal, or have given everyone sufficient of his own. But he hath
rather chosen to make some rich, and some poor, that one might stand
in need of another, and help another, that so he might try the
goodness and mercy of them that are able, in supplying the wants of
the rest.
As I have suggested, the Puritans would
have shared some of the assumptions of many different groups on the
economic scene today. But they would stand aghast at what secularism
and self-interest have made of principles that they placed in a
Christian context.
Summary
One of the ironies in the history of the
Puritans is that their very industriousness and plain living tended to
make them relatively affluent. Their virtues produced corresponding
temptations. On the one hand, the Puritans held attitudes conducive to
the amassing of wealth and property: the view that money and property
are good in principle, disbelief that poverty is meritorious in
itself, and a conviction that the disciplined and hardworking
lifestyle is virtuous.
On the other hand, to curb the potential
for self-indulgence that followed in the wake of their lifestyle, the
Puritans had an even longer list of cautions: an awareness that God
sends poverty as well as riches, an obsession with the dangers of
wealth, the ideal of moderation, a doctrine of stewardship in which
God is viewed as the ultimate owner of goods, and a view of money as a
social good.
<< Taken from
http://www.apuritansmind.com/Stewardship/RykenLelandPuritansAndMoney.htm
>>
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