Matthew 7:21"Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22Many will say to me on that day, 'Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and in your name drive out demons and perform many miracles?' 23Then I will tell them plainly, 'I never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!'
IOW, don't judge what is right by looking at what other "Christians" do. Look at what the Bible teaches.
Well if everyone did that then my point would be invalid wouldn't it.
The world teaches that we should be ambitious to get a good job, make lots of money. The Bible teaches that we should be ambitious to equip ourselves to serve God's Kingdom. There is nothing wrong with ambition. There is plenty wrong with ambition directed towards achieving selfish gain.
So does a Learjet for the Kingdom of God count? Or maybe a new Porsche for the Associate pastor would be more glorifying to God?
Are you saying that, because we should give 100%, if we give less than 100%, we might as well give nothing? We are sinners; we fall short of the 100% in every area of our lives, but we are still called to strive toward perfection. I don't say, "well, I lusted, so I might as well commit adultery" or "I got angry and thought a malicious though, so I might as well go and kill the guy that ticked me off." Should I say, "I'm a little bit greedy because I bought a fancy new TV with God's money, so I might as well be completely greedy and spend it all on myself."? This seems like what you are saying.
No, if you lusted, therefore you DID commit adultery...Jesus doesn't speak of the same for violence that have been made aware. No, I am saying that if we are giving 10% or 5% or 50% it is where your heart lies.
You said "Should I say, 'I'm a little bit greedy because I bought a fancy new TV with God's money, so I might as well be completely greedy and spend it all on myself.'" But I would suggest saying, "I know that buying these things does not glory God, so I should not by them at all!" Yet, that was not even a possible alternative in your equation or in mine for that matter.
My question remains, what in our "Christian" society make these monetary things permissible and covering our eyes to the truth that we should give up everything? God's Grace is the usual answer I get, but that's a complete cop-out for someone who does not want to own up to the admittance that it is not what the Bible teaches in how we, as real Christians, should live our lives.
The really scary part is that Christian life is a complete contradiction to a capitalist society and would be more fitting with a socialist one. I am not for socialism in the slightest, but the words of the Bible scream to me that we should be sustaining each other and not just those that we closely care about with conditions being placed and lines drawn. Where is the line drawn and why?
Yet, I beg of you to answer my questions before asking your own, please. I have never felt like I have given to God by dropping money in a collection plate. I have felt like I gave to God when I helped an old woman and her grandson clean out her garage though.
It provides us a home to share with Him. It provides us transportation to visit Him in prison. It also provides us a means to buy ourselves the desires of the world. It is a tool and what we do with it is our choice.
No no, friend...it
affords these things. If we were to live in a community in which we were truly to live as the Bible suggests, our community would build houses, transportation, and RID ourselves of worldly desires because we have the tools to do so without money even being involved. The fact of the matter, it is more convenient for us to just pay some one else to build us a house, construct us a car, and buy **** we don't need in order to satisfy our inherit need for ownership (this is mine so no one can take it away because I
paid for it), greed, and tangible comfort.