Philippians
4:12 ÒI know what it is to be in
need, and I know what it is to have plenty. I have learned the secret of being
content in any and every situation, whether well fed or hungry, whether living
in plenty or in want.Ó
Of the seven deadly sins,
the only one that has appeared regularly in the headlines is lust. Now, in our current financial crisis,
another of the deadlies is grabbing all the attention. Greed. Nobody is questioning that greed is the underlying factor in
all of our financial woes. And I
mean nobody. Democrats and
Republicans agree. Business owners
and blue collar workers acknowledge itÕs true. Men and women, young and old, rich and poor all recognize
that we are in this fix because of greed.
While IÕm as upset as
anybody that we are where we are and that nobody was apparently minding the
store, I am pleased that the topic of greed is grabbing headlines. Jesus talked more about issues
surrounding money and possessions than about any other topic outside of the
Kingdom of God. To me thatÕs a
sure-fire indication of where Jesus thought our spiritual danger lies. I have been convinced for many years
that greed is our national sin and have railed in both my preaching and my
writing that our neurotic obsession with issues like gay marriage has been an
attempt to avoid facing up to whatÕs really killing us.
The desperately sad thing
is that itÕs not just killing us.
Our greed is taking down the innocent in other countries as well as in
our own. The financial crisis
caused by our greed needs a solution, and IÕve come to think that the bailout
is the lesser of two evils. But we
need to do more than solve the crisis.
We donÕt just need a bailout.
We need repentance.
Repentance, of course, is
not just saying weÕre sorry. In
its biblical context it means to turn around and actually go in a different
direction. Repentance is not about
what we say so much as how we prove our words by our actions. While itÕs natural to turn and point
our fingers at the enormous greed evident on Wall Street, each of us needs to
face the role that greed plays in our day-to-day lives. And then we have to repent. Turn around. Change.
ThatÕs where these words
of Paul in his letter to the Philippians come in. In order to curb our greed, we need to learn to be content
with what we have, even if itÕs not as much as my neighbor. Anyone who has lived the life of
keeping up with the Joneses can tell you that you never do catch them. The Joneses always have more and will
make you feel small by comparison, even if you live like a king compared to
most of the rest of the world.
Paul, on the other hand, says he has learned the secret of how to be
content even when he has so little that he goes hungry. Verse 13 gives us a window into that secret,
ÒI can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.Ó
Our greatest resource is
not our material assets but the power of God within us. ItÕs wind power, renewed by the mighty
wind of the Holy Spirit. ItÕs the
power of a little boy willing to share his lunch of loaves and fishes with
5,000 people. ItÕs the power of
leading through service and of dying in order to gain eternal life.
These next years are not
going to be easy, no matter what the final bailout plan looks like. But we have an opportunity in this
crisis to build a foundation for our country on a rock instead of shifting
sand. Each of us can learn to be
content with what we have. During
the Great Depression people learned that lesson and we have come to call them
Òthe greatest generation.Ó
Contentment led to service.
The sharing of hardship led to empathy for the poor and a willingness to
create policies to help all Americans dig out.
We have the opportunity
now to be the next Ògreatest generation,Ó not just for America but for the
world. We can do it through Christ
who strengthens us.
Help us to face
our greed, God, and to learn to be content with what you have given us. Amen.
Copyright
by Anne Robertson, 2008
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