Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Love of Money

He who loves money will not be satisfied with money, nor he who loves abundance with its income. ECCLESIASTES 5:10

The love of money is a danger that we face more than we realize. If we stop only comparing ourselves to the super-rich and consider the fact that we in America, no matter how much cash on hand we may have at the moment, are all still among the wealthiest 8% of the world's population and consume a far greater percentage of the world's resources than anyone else on the planet. We all think we'd love to have oodles of money, but after you read the following sobering account from history you might reconsider. I hope you find this as compelling as I did and perhaps as convicting too. We are such poor stewards and really need from time to time to think about our dreams and fantasies might actually turn into nightmares or worse. Hope the message sinks in for all of us.

In Him, Pastor Fred


The place was Chicago, Illinois; the year was 1923. Nine of the world’s wealthiest and most successful men gathered for a meeting at the city’s Edgewater Beach Hotel. Almost anyone in that day would have exchanged places with any of these well-known executives. They were powerful and rich. The world was their oyster.

But only 25 years later, all but two were dead. None had lived the easy life their tremendous resources seemed to promise. Charles Schwab, the president of the nation’s largest independent steel company, lived on borrowed money the last five years of his life and died bankrupt. Samuel Insul, the president of a giant utility company, died a penniless fugitive from justice in a foreign country. Gas Company executive Howard Hopson suffered from insanity. Wheat speculator Arthur Cotton died destitute.

Richard Whitney, president of the New York Stock Exchange, was released from Sing Sing prison. Albert Fall, a member of the president’s cabinet, was pardoned from prison so he could die at home. Wall Street’s greatest bear, Jesse Livermore, committed suicide, as did Ivan Krueger, the head of a great monopoly. Bank president Leon Fraser also took his own life.

The most dangerous love affair any man or woman will experience in life is a love affair with money. It is a deceitful object of desire, because it can never deliver what it promises. If you make money your primary aim, you are setting yourself up for a life of heartache.

By: Dr. Ed Young

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