In Times of Plenty 11-29-09
Sunday, November 29th, 2009There once was a man named John. He was very successful as an entrepreneur, establishing many business ventures and building vast wealth. Throughout his life he was guided by his Christian values, learning at an early age to give a portion of what he made and attributing his success to God. His wealth was made through providing benefit to his customers and he used his wealth to fund research that cured disease and established many educational trusts. This man was John D. Rockefeller.
There is a man named George. He is very successful as an investor, making a vast wealth trading currency and timing market changes (which included a felony conviction for insider trading). He has been guided by his atheist values as seen by voicing a disbelief in God and exhibiting patent disdain for America’s founding principles. He made his wealth without producing any benefit and used his wealth to fund socialist political activism, drug decriminalization, and assisted suicide legislation. This man is George Soros.
Both of these men amassed large fortunes; the differences lie in how they made those fortunes, what they did with those fortunes, and to whom they credited their success. Americans have developed a very skewed viewpoint on prosperity since the days of Rockefeller’s Standard Oil. According to the U.S. Census Bureau (www.census.gov) the 2008 poverty threshold for a single person was $11,201 in annual income. In comparison the average for the world’s fifteen poorest nations yields a poverty threshold of $456 in annual income (according to www.nextbillion.net). So in perspective, an individual living in absolutely impoverished circumstances in America is over twenty-four times richer than someone living in the poorest nations. This is just considering annual income; you could consider access to public services, education, healthcare, personal freedoms, and employment and you would see the American (who is living in relative squalor) possessing a wealth unattainable by even many of the wealthy in the world.
But because Americans are easily duped by politicians and entertainers who pander to the inherent envy in the hearts of man, they often fall for the class warfare rhetoric that seeks to use governmental coercion to steal personal property and wealth to give to others who have neither earned it nor hold any legitimate claim to it. There is a sense of entitlement in this nation that seems to permeate much of society. America possesses a healthcare system that is the envy of the world, but which is in danger of being destroyed by politicians that seek to rework our nation’s values. Why is this happening? Because Americans have forsaken Godly principles of hard work and self-discipline, as well as having rejected the ultimate authority and providential care of the Almighty God.
Most people on this planet do not possess the basic religious freedoms America’s Founding Fathers declared as being “inalienable”. But modern Americans seem more than willing to discard the freedom to worship God in order to satisfy radical Godless zealots. These radicals are continually seeking to rewrite history in order to secularize American founding principles. They would be largely ineffective except that God’s people are by and large crippled by political correctness and cowed by the threat of being called intolerant.
But as always, when oppression falls upon them the Children of God eventually cry out for deliverance. Christians have been slow to do this until recently because we were living in times of plenty and so we entertained the notion that we had to feel guilty for our prosperity, so the radicals were well received. Lately, however, times have become leaner and the Christians are waking up to visions of what is happening to America. Wouldn’t it be better to keep perspective in the times of plenty?
Two things I ask of you, O LORD; do not refuse me before I die: keep falsehood and lies far from me; give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my daily bread. Otherwise, I may have too much and disown you and say, ‘Who is the LORD’ or I may become poor and steal, and so dishonor the name of my God. (Proverbs 30:7-9 NIV)
John D. Rockefeller has long been demonized as a “Robber Baron,” even though his wealth came from honest business, he was a consummate philanthropist, and he gave credit to God for his success. George Soros built his wealth on falsehoods and lies, denies God, and advocates the immoral governmental theft of personal wealth and property in order to foster his own Godless agenda. In times of plenty, how will you react: like Rockefeller or like Soros? Will you disown and dishonor God, or will you praise him with your life?
-Charles Peterson