Swinging pendulum illustration: hold pendulum up to your nose and let it
go. It will come back but not hit you.
How do you know what to trust? If somebody on the street that you have never
met says you should trust them, should you?
No. We learned that as little
kids and from the government, right? The
only real way to know you can trust something is if it has been proven to be
trustworthy. What if something or
someone is trustworthy some of the time?
Are they trustworthy? If your car
starts most of the time, is that ok? If
your spouse is faithful 9 times out of 10, is that faithful? Can you trust a chair that only falls apart
about half the time?
What about something that only lets you down in a crisis or
when the pressure is really on? If you
went to buy tires and the salesman told you that these tires are great for
around town but don’t go over 55 on them, whatever you do; are you going to buy
those tires? Of course not. If they can’t be trusted under pressure then
they can’t be trusted.
What about money? Can
you trust money? You can trust it to buy
you a gallon of milk down at Bilby’s store.
It may take $7 to do it, but it will do it. If you have enough money you can usually buy
almost anything from somebody. I even
heard the other day about some bored college kid who sold his soul on
ebay. Good luck collecting on that but
you can even buy a soul if you want to.
The problem with money is that it is deceiving. If you have money, it will get you out of
trouble every time…until it doesn’t. If
you have money, you can buy your way out of every problem…until you can’t. Money is great for buying friends (if you
don’t care about the quality of friends).
It’s great for buying a good time (if you don’t mind it being over too
soon and bringing problems with it).
Money deceives us into thinking that it will always be there. Money deceives us into thinking we can handle
this problem if we just spend some of it.
The problem is that like an old chair, money will let you
down and it is usually when the pressure is on and we need it most. Money deceives us in several ways. It deceives us into thinking that it will
always be there. It deceives us into
thinking that we need just a little bit more of it. And it deceives us into thinking that we have
control over people or things when in reality we have no real control. And that can be scary or that can be comforting,
depending on your outlook.
Let’s look at a passage written by someone whose outlook was
correctly focused in Psalm 49. The psalmist starts off here saying that he
wants everyone’s attention, please.
Everybody, short, tall, rich or poor listen up. I’m about to tell you the truth. So, let’s read this important message in verses 5 and 6 of Psalm 49.
Why
should I fear when evil days come,
when wicked deceivers surround me—
6 those who trust in their wealth
and boast of their great riches?
when wicked deceivers surround me—
6 those who trust in their wealth
and boast of their great riches?
This is obviously not so much of a question
he needs an answer to. It is a question
that answers itself. It’s a rhetorical
question meant to make the reader understand the deception of wealth. Let’s look at this closely to see what is
meant exactly because I want us to see that this deception is contagious.
The psalmist is saying that evil days have
come and wicked deceivers are surrounding him.
And who are the wicked deceivers?
He tells us that the wicked deceivers are those who trust in their
wealth and boast of their great riches.
Why would he say that those people are wicked deceivers? There are 2 ways that I see.
First they are deceivers because they have
been deceived. They have fallen for the
lie that money can buy anything and everything.
And why does it seem like so many people that have money have fallen
into that lie? Because it is a pretty
convincing lie. Satan knows how to use
money and he has used it to bring problems at least since Jacob swindled Esau
out of his birthright.
Satan knows how to make it a convincing lie
by making money trustworthy some of the time. Sometimes
if you have enough money it will get you out of a jam. Sometimes
if you have enough money it will buy you some
pleasure that will last for some
time. Sometimes if you have enough
money it will buy you some power
over some people. And because it works sometimes, people are deceived into thinking that it will work all
the time.
And so now, not only are the people
deceived by money, they start to deceive others. The psalmist is saying he is surrounded by
people who are deceived by money and who are trying to intimidate him with the
same deception. But he is not falling
for it. He says that these wicked people
have surrounded him and now evil days have come. And most people would be afraid but not the
psalmist because his outlook, his perception of money, is correctly focused and
he sees money as the tool that it is.
*Hold up old sharpshooter shovel*
There is nothing good or bad about money,
in and of itself. It’s just a tool that
can be used for good or bad but it will let you down. Oh, it looks dependable. It has been dependable in the past. But it will let you down. Is it going to come from the handle or the
shaft or the blade? It will let you down
and it will usually come when the pressure is on and you want it to help you
the most. Then what are you going to do?
Now, I know that there are not many of us
in here this morning that would consider ourselves to be extremely
wealthy. Don’t worry; I am not going to
give a long speech about how much wealthier we are as a country than most other
countries. We all know that. But I also know that because there are no
Bill Gates or Ted Turners here this morning that it has been pretty easy for
you to agree with what I have been saying.
“Yeah, preach it, pastor. Mean old rich people deserve it!” The problem is I’m not just talking to rich
people. Money is deceptive and as I said
earlier that deception is contagious. It
can make people who have very little become convinced that they need more and
without more money then everything is hopeless.
I have seen people with hardly anything be as happy as they can be and
enjoying the full life that God has promised in John 10:10. But I believe I
have seen more poor people be just as miserable as they can be because they
didn’t have everything they thought they should have.
They have been deceived by the people who
have wealth – people who themselves are deceived – into thinking that the
answer to all their problems will come if they can just have enough money to be
happy. I hear people all the time say
they don’t want to be wealthy. They just
want to have enough to be content. But
that day will NEVER come, folks!
What’s worse is that it is the same people
who say with their mouths that God will take care of them. “I know that God is in control but…” There is no “but” at the end of that
sentence. Either He is in control and is
aware of your situation or He’s not. I
know that there are some people here that are hurting financially. I know that jobs are scarce and
precious. I know that our food pantry
has been there for lots of us and that’s great.
That’s what it is there for.
But now is the time, my dear family, to
believe. In fact, and I’m going to be
blunt here, now is the time to put up or shut up. Don’t be deceived! Either believe that God is sovereign or quit
saying it. Don’t bring that deception in
here because we know how contagious it is.
There is a misconception about God that if we just have enough faith,
then He will pay our bills. But what
happens when our bills don’t get paid.
Your misconception leads to a loss of faith.
True faith is what the boys in Daniel 3
had. When Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego
were about to be burned alive they said we know that God can save us and that
He will save us. But even if He
doesn’t… Even if He doesn’t! I want that to be our unofficial motto around
here. I know that God can and I know
that he will. But even if He doesn’t!
Say it with me.
And what happens if He doesn’t? What happens if the bills don’t get
paid? What happens if we lose our place
to live? What happens when the doctor
brings us bad news? Still I will praise
Him. Still I will worship Him. Still I will believe Him. And why should I praise, worship and believe
Him? Because He has proven Himself to be
trustworthy all the time. From the
beginning of Genesis to the end of Revelation and all through our lives, God
has never let us down.
He is not a tool that can be counted on most
of the time. He is the Creator and
Sustainer of all things so don’t just do something, sit there and let your
hands hang down and be still and know that He is God. And because He is God, He can choose to pay
your bills OR…OR…He may know that what you are going through is going to make
you more like Him and all you have to do is believe and be obedient and don’t
be deceived.
Of course, no one is going to use that as
an excuse to sit on the couch eating bonbons and watching Oprah, waiting for
God to pay the cable bill. 1 Timothy 5:8 says, “Anyone who does
not provide for their relatives, and especially for their own household, has
denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever.” But once you have done all of what you are
supposed to do, let go and let God, as they say.
O.J.
Simpson has been in the news again lately.
He has been in jail for some time but in 1978, when he was still playing
for the Buffalo Bills, he was quoted as saying, “I sit in my house in Buffalo
and sometimes I get so lonely it’s unbelievable. Life has been so good to me. I’ve got a great wife, good kids, lots of
money, my own health – and I’m lonely and bored…I often wondered why so many
rich people commit suicide. Money sure
isn’t a cure-all.”
That’s
pathetic on several levels but mainly because O.J. was deceived and he knew
it! He knew he was deceived by money and
things but he didn’t know where to turn. He didn’t know what to believe. He didn’t know in what to invest his time,
talents and treasure. Nor did he know at
that time how much worse it would get.
I
want us to look real quickly at what the Bible says about where we are to
invest our time, talents and treasure.
I’m not going to spend much time on this but instead of being deceived
by resources, let’s see where to invest them.
First,
James 1:27 says that we are to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself
from being polluted by the world. In
other words, we are to take care of those who can’t take care of themselves but
also those from whom we will never be repaid.
Secondly, Acts 4:32 teaches that we are to
invest in the church. “All the believers were one in heart and
mind. No one claimed that any of their possessions was their own, but they
shared everything they had. 33 With great power the apostles continued to
testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus. And God’s grace was so
powerfully at work in them all 34 that
there were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned
land or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales 35 and put it at the apostles’ feet, and it was
distributed to anyone who had need.”
It says that God’s grace was powerfully at
work through their sharing. It’s not how
much we give. It’s the spirit of sharing
that unleashes God’s grace.
Next, Listen to Psalm 1:1-3. Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with
the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of
mockers, 2 but whose delight is in the law of the Lord, and who meditates on his law day and night. 3 That person is like a tree
planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season and whose
leaf does not wither— whatever they do prospers.
Instead of being deceived by wealth and all
the problems that come with it, this says that those who are in the word and meditating
on it are the ones who prosper.
Titus chapter 2 tells us that we are to
invest our time…in each other. It says
that the older or more spiritually mature are to teach the less mature. In verse 12 it tells us to teach these to say
“No” to worldly passions; to not be deceived by things of this world.
And just like we are to invest in each
other, Matthew 28:18, the Great
Commission, tells us to invest in unbelievers.
“18 Then Jesus
came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore
go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father
and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and
teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you
always, to the very end of the age.”
And lastly, John 3:21 says, “But whoever lives by the truth comes into the light, so that it
may be seen plainly that what they have done has been done in the sight of
God.”
Live
by the truth. Don’t be deceived by
wealth or the lack of wealth. Live by
truth. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth and
the life.” That’s where your
investments should be…because He is trustworthy.