2019-02-17 JAMES 1:9-11 TRIED AND TRUE (3): WHEN IT COMES TO MONEY
Notes
Transcript
TRIED AND TRUE (3): WHEN IT COMES TO MONEY
(James 1:9-11)
February 17, 2019
Read James 1:9-11 – Willie Sutton, when asked why he robbed banks said:
“Because that’s where the money is.” Love of money can lead us astray,
right? Less clear to most of us is that lack of money can do the same thing.
That’s why Solomon said in Prov 30:8b: Give me neither poverty nor riches;
feed me with the food that is needful for me, 9lest I be full and deny you and
say, ‘Who is the Lord?’ 10or lest I be poor and steal and profane the name of
my God.” Solomon realized temptation lay on all sides of the money issue.
So does James. Why, in the midst of teaching on trials, does James go off on
rich and poor? Simple. In seeking to illustrate trials, he can find no better
subject than money – or the lack thereof. Money poses one of life’s greatest
opportunities for success or failure. And either rich or poor is a trial!
Now, most of us see ourselves as neither rich nor poor. But this is still for us.
Why? Because most of us want more than we have. We think poor! For those
of us who have a little, tho we may not be rich, the temptations are the same.
So, I want to look at the rich poor and the poor rich. Money trials are to help
the two to meet on equal ground in the middle. Every trial has 3 parties –
God, who is testing to improve us; Satan -- tempting to destroy us; and us –
who determine the outcome. Money poses both temptation and test whether
we have it or not. So, how to be tried and true when it comes to money.
I.
The Rich Poor
A. The Temptation of Poverty – First, the “lowly brother”–
lowly from this world’s perspective because he does not have much. It’s not
his fault; he works just as hard as the next guy, but in God’s providence, he’s
poor. That’s his life and it’s not going to change. It’s a temptation -- and test.
How’s poverty a temptation? Because it can fill one with discontent. At its
worst, it leads to a life of crime. It doesn’t really matter whether it is out-andout robbery or white or blue-collar scams. Anyone who is cheating in order to
get what belongs to someone else has yielded to the temptation of poverty.
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Someone said, “You know you’re in trouble when you report losing your
luggage at the airline counter – and the guy behind the counter is wearing
your clothes.” Someone yielded to the temptation of poverty, right? It doesn’t
matter if the robbery happens at gunpoint in a dark alley, thru a sophisticated
internet scam or taking paper from the office supply room. Satan just won. I
remember an old cartoon character who used to say, “I’m like Robin Hood. I
rob from the rich to give to the poor. That’s me!” He failed the poverty test.
But the temptation actually goes a lot deeper than that, right? Why? Because
God looks on the heart. So, it’s not just stealing that’s wrong; it’s entertaining
the idea in my mind thru covetousness or jealousy or envy. Such thoughts
festering in our minds show we’ve been had by the temptation of poverty.
Covetousness seems tame. Who knows and who cares? But John Chrysostom
said, “More dangerous than the sins of the flesh is the sin of covetousness.”
Lust can be temporarily satisfied, but covetousness never is. It never lets up.
Augustine illustrated from his own childhood. “There was a pear tree near
our vineyard. One stormy night, we rascally youth set out to rob it. We took
off a huge load of pears, not to feast upon ourselves, but to throw to the pigs,
though we ate just enough to have pleasure of forbidden fruit. It was not the
pears [I] coveted, for I had plenty better at home. What was it that I loved in
that theft? It was this. The desire to steal was awakened simply by the
prohibition of stealing. The pears were desirable simply because they were
forbidden.” That’s where the temptation of poverty will lead us – lusting after
things we do or do not need simply because we do not have them. To the
extent we harbor covetousness, the temptation of poverty has us in its grasp.
The temptation of poverty extends beyond money. And it can even happen to
pastors. F. B. Meyer was a fine English preacher. But his Christ Church in
London had Charles Spurgeon on one side at Met Temple, and G. Campbell
Morgan at Westminster Chapel on the other. Meyer found himself envious of
their larger crowds until God moved him to pray for them. “God bless my big
brother Campbell Morgan. And God bless my big brother Mr. Spurgeon.”
He said he figured he’d sure get a blessing as the overflow from their larger
buckets filled his little one. That’s the spirit God wants.
B. The Test of Poverty -- If the temptation of poverty includes
jealousy, bitterness and covetousness – what is the test of poverty? Where is
God pointing us? Can one try to improve one’s lot? Absolutely. Ambition that
is second to love for Christ and others is a commendable pursuit.
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But we dare not let ambition define us. Ambition without contentment is
idolatry. I Cor 7:17, “Only let each person lead the life that the Lord has
assigned to him, and to which God has called him…. 21 Were you a
bondservant when called? Do not be concerned about it. (But if you can gain
your freedom, avail yourself of the opportunity.)24 So, brothers, in whatever
condition each was called, there let him remain with God.” Be content with
being the best that God allows you to be. That’s the test.
But James points to an even higher test. 9 Let the lowly brother boast in his
exaltation.” Exaltation? What exaltation? He’s poor -- at the bottom of the
human barrel and can’t seem to get higher. So what exaltation? Well, see that
word “boast” (καυχαομαι). Listen how else it’s used in the NT: Rom 5:11:
“More than that, we also rejoice (lit – boast) in God through our Lord Jesus
Christ, through whom we have now received reconciliation.” I Cor 1:31: “Let
the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.” II Cor 10:17: “Let the one who
boasts, boast in the Lord.” Phil 3:3: “For we are the circumcision, who
worship by the Spirit of God and glory (boast) in Christ Jesus.” And further:
Gal 6:14: “But far be it from me to boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus
Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.”
Paul didn’t boast in himself, but in the relationship he had with God, bought
and paid for by Christ. Everything else he had paled by comparison. So what
is the poor person’s compelling boast? That he knows God and is fully
accepted by Him, in Christ. He is “in Christ”. That is his boast. James 2:5:
“Listen, my beloved brothers, has not God chosen those who are poor in the
world to be rich in faith and heirs of the kingdom, which he has promised to
those who love him?” What an identity! “In Christ” you’re an heir of His
whole kingdom. That’s pretty rich! That’s a future exaltation to boast about!
Think of it this way. Try entering the White House based on your millions in
the bank. You won’t get past the front gate, right? But if you know the pres
and you’ve got the “get in free” card he signed yesterday, you’ll soon find
yourself in the Oval Office, right? So let the lowly man be content while
striving to improve his lot, but let him really glory in his relationship with
Jesus. This is the rich poor – poor physically; rich in eternal things.
My dad was rich poor. Smart. Started college. But the Great Depression hit.
His mother had a breakdown, Grandpa lost the farm and Dad came back to
help out. Worked hard at farming and construction the rest of his life –
sometimes two jobs at a time. But his financial struggles never defined him.
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He left a legacy of hard work. But what was priceless was the spiritual legacy
he left – always exalting in his relationship with Jesus. The world didn’t give
him a second thought, but Xns consistently exalted him for his faith in Christ.
That was his identity; he and mom passed the poverty test with flying colors.
II.
The Poor Rich
A. The Temptation of Riches – What’s the temptation of riches?
What would make a rich man spiritually poor? Two things: He’s tempted to
make riches his identity. And he’s tempted to trust riches more than God. If he
lost them, he’d be lost. He is what he has, and when it’s gone, he’s gone.
Riches are a huge temptation. That’s why God can’t trust very many people
with wealth. When you’ve got a lot, this world looks more real than the next.
Riches distract from what lies beyond this life.
Naturalist J. Henry Fabre did an experiment with processionary caterpillars –
so called for their penchant to follow one another. He set a group of them on
the edge of a flower pot. They followed each other around that pot for 7 days
until they died of hunger. All the time their favorite food – a branch of pine,
lay within easy reach. That’s the temptation of riches. The attempt to get and
keep them soon distracts us from the most important things in life.
It happens to believers just as to unbelievers. During Paul’s first imprisonment
in Rome he writes in Col 4:14, “Luke the beloved physician greets you, as
does Demas,” Two or 3 years later during his last imprisonment he writes in II
Tim 4:10, “For Demas, in love with this present world, has deserted me and
gone to Thessalonica.” Riches sidetracked Demas. That is the temptation of
riches. Plays right into Satan’s intention in giving people money.
B. The Test of Riches – So, the temptation of riches is to trust
them and become distracted by them. But what is God’s test? How does He
intend us to view the riches we have? How can they build us up? Three things.
1. Savor them – Enjoy them. Know that “Every good gift and
every perfect gift is from above” (Jas 1:17). God gave it. But He’s put fire
into your hands. How do you keep from getting burned? “For everything
created by God is good, and nothing is to be rejected IF it is received with
thanksgiving, 5 for it is made holy by the word of God and prayer” (I Tim 4:45). Enjoy it, but thank God for it, and use it in accordance with God’s word.
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2. Share them – They are not to be stockpiled. A reasonable
retirement? Sure. Prov 30:25: “The ants are a people not strong, yet they
provide their food in the summer.” Save for a rainy day, but not a rainy
eternity! I Tim 6:18: “They are to do good, to be rich in good works, to be
generous and ready to share, 19 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.” Failure to share with others is failing the test of riches. God gave us
extra to give some away to those who need it more, and build eternal treasure.
3. Subjugate them – Either they will rule us or we will rule
them. V. 9: Let the lowly brother boast in his exaltation, 10 and the rich in his
humiliation,” What is the humiliation of having? Paul explains: “10) because
like a flower of the grass he will pass away. 11 For the sun rises with its
scorching heat and withers the grass; its flower falls, and its beauty perishes.
So also will the rich man fade away in the midst of his pursuits.” The poor
man’s boast is what he doesn’t have here, he’s got in spades there – in
eternity. When he leaves, it leaves. If that was his pursuit, it’s all over. “So
also will the rich man fade away in the midst of his pursuits.”
Palestine’s wind is a sirocco; in LA a Santa Ana. Hot winds rush relentlessly
off the desert for days making ground so hot you can’t walk on it. Plants not
watered at night turn brown within days. In light of eternity, that’s how fast
our things will disappear. So, do you have your money, or does it have you?
Are you going to fade away in the midst of pursuing the ever elusive more, or
will you treat your riches as temporary? Boast in your humiliation – that
you’ll leave as you entered – with nothing – but having sent plenty on ahead!
Riches seduce. Like Little Rascal Stymie who built a cart and had a goat to
pull him. A harness held a carrot just out of the goat’s reach. As the goat kept
reaching for the carrot, he pulled the cart along. But he could never quite reach
it. That’s exactly the picture when your riches have you. The question is, have
you subjugated them. Are they firmly under your control or have you found
your identity in always reaching for just a little bit more?
In the end, both the lowly man and the rich man leave this life in exactly the
same way – with nothing. The temptation is to see that differently. Passing the
test sees things as they really are and sends it on ahead. Either man can do
that. Hopefully both are doing that – giving out of whatever abundance of
time, money and energy they have to serve God and serve others.
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This trial is the great equalizer. II Cor 4:18 “as we look not to the things that
are seen but to the things that are unseen. For the things that are seen are
transient, but the things that are unseen are eternal.” If we do that, the lowly
brother will boast in his exaltation –unseen treasure in heaven; the rich brother
will boast in his humiliation – having sent ahead that which will not last here.
John Wesley passed the test of poverty and riches with flying colors. He made
a lot of money from his books, but he said, "Money never stays with me. It
would burn me if it did. I throw it out of my hands as soon as possible, lest it
should find its way into my heart." He gave away virtually everything he
earned with the goal of leaving nothing behind when he died.
Conc – James’ point is, eternity is the great leveler. When they leave this life,
rich or poor will take exactly the same thing – nothing. But both can invest in
eternity and send it on ahead. Thus the lowly man can boast in his exaltation –
that is what he is laying up in heaven by his humble and Godly living. And the
rich man can glory in his humiliation –his recognition that he can take nothing
with him, but can forever enjoy what he sent ahead. If he has sent nothing, he
could hardly enjoy that he will soon lose it all.
At the 2004 Olympics, Matt Emmons was one shot away from winning a gold
medal in the 50-meter, 3 position rifle competition. He didn’t even need a
bulls eye – just needed to hit the target. But then he made a gigantic mistake –
extremely rare in elite competition. He fired at the wrong target – standing in
lane 2 he aimed at the target in lane 3. He hit it, but got a zero score, ending up
in 8th place – all because he aimed at the wrong goal.
So James is urging, rich and poor alike – aim at the right target; aim at
eternity. When it comes to money, to be tried and true is to be more focused
on there and then than here and now. Let’s pray.
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