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I sometimes hope that the favor God for his children would be so obvious (seemingly unfair) that one could make lots of money and actually "work" less...not ever...just less. I call it the Mailbox Job...where I walk out to my mailbox and get my paycheck. I tell people this all the time and I get a lot of responses like, "why don't you just have it direct deposited into you checking account?" I reply, "because I need something to do!" :)
2. I think there's a fine line about what you're talking about. I would imagine that there are certain points that you reach in a business or in financial achievements that you can sit back and ask yourself, "What would the good Lord think of this?" Riding the line is hard, but I would imagine that avoiding the grey area would avoid a guilty conscience. "That's between you and God," as they say.
Seems to me that money is a tool to navigate cultural exchanges, and that it's a pretty decent measuring stick for where our priorities stand based on our use of it - that's how Jesus always talked about it. He pointed out when people loved money more than loving other people, or even God. As I read the words attributed to Jesus, and consider my life to this point, money is never the point; it’s our heart (Justin pretty much said that already). If I could guess, God doesn't think about money nearly as often as we do - positively or negatively.
I'm like a broken record on this topic - but all you ever hear in church, non-profit, and humanitarian circles is "we need more money!" So - why is it that Christians want everyone to contribute but get nervous about hearts/motives when the conversation turns to making more of it? I think it's about time we re-thought fundraising, giving, and donating. What if we could multiply our 'value-added' and saw ourselves as resource engines just waiting to be tapped - resources of time, money, art, the list goes on. And what if we actively cultivated those seeds in each of us to produce a lot more than they are now, leveraging what we make to grow families, communities, and the common good?
I don't think the desire to be successful and have part of that success be measured financially is bad at all. I'm with you Justin - go make some money and do some great stuff with it. I'm going to try to do the same.
"Resource engine" ... Love that. You're a terminology machine!