Cash Poisoning

December 31st, 2009

Ancient Ailment has Only One Cure

I just read about Rush Limbaugh’s health problems. I think he needs to get his personal life in order, but I doubt he has sufficient incentive.

Imagine the celebrating, if he dies. Only a few Republicans danced in the streets when Ted Kennedy died. Fringe nuts and kids, generally. But disrespect, cruelty, and schadenfreude are three of the pillars of leftism, so if Rush died, the situation would be very different. We’ve seen what happens when prominent conservatives die; the remarks from the left could not be more despicable were they written by demons.

Monetary success can be a poison. It’s an especially effective poison, because it convinces you everything is fine, and it makes you dread its own antidote. I was thinking about this today, in connection with addiction. The one thing that will beat any effort to help an addict is money. An addict with money can afford to refrain from working. He can afford to alienate his friends and family. He can buy everything he needs to maintain his necrotic lifestyle. He can pay attorneys to fight anyone who tries to help him.

One of the best things you can do for an addict in your family is to write a will and cut him out. It sounds cruel, but it’s not. Most people don’t have inherited money, and they survive. Refraining from giving someone unearned money is not the same as forcing him to live in poverty. And Uncle Sam is always there to catch him if he falls.

To get back to Rush, he does not seem like a happy individual. He spends his workday criticizing people, and then he goes home to an empty house. His fulfilling hobbies: golf and cigars. I’ve been a curmudgeon and a critic, and I think it leads to dissipation and regret.

My pastor talks about money a lot, and he says the reason he does so is that every time he talks about money, he is crucifying the god of this world. I think that’s true. In the physics of human relations, money is analagous to energy. It’s a protean substance which can be transmuted into nearly anything. Sex. A convincing imitation of love. Shelter. Food. Blessings for your friends. Harm to your enemies. It’s the closest thing we have to pure power. We trust it more than we trust God, because it’s faster-acting and requires no faith or virtue to put it in action. It’s a little bit like the dark side of the fictional Star Wars force. It will get you quick results, but later on, you may find that the benefits it appeared to confer were actually curses.

Money is like the tongue. The Bible says life and death are in the power of the tongue, and that no man can tame it. The things you say and write can do great harm, or they can do great good, and it’s extremely difficult to control your words in order to maximize the good and minimize the bad. The money you spend (or retain) can do great good or harm, and unless you’re fit to have money–unless you have enough character to use it correctly–harm is more likely. Developing that control is a great challenge. I believe it’s impossible without the help of the Holy Spirit.

I belong to a branch of Christianity which promotes the idea that failure and lack are curses. It says we are not supposed to be poor. I think that’s correct. Some of the Apostles had employees. Jesus’s father was a skilled tradesman who had at least six children, and Jesus himself was part of the family business. With regard to wealthy people living in God’s will, Jesus said that with God, “all things are possible.” The Old Testament is full of passages that clearly indicate that God rewards people with prosperity and good health.

I believe in prosperity, but I also believe God doesn’t give us scissors and sharp sticks until we promise not to run with them. In other words, I don’t think God would proactively assist a person financially if he knew the money would be spent stupidly or sinfully, toward the person’s own destruction. I don’t think he would give it to a person who would respond by becoming arrogant or overly independent. We are told that if we ask for good things, God won’t give us serpents and scorpions. Money may seem like a good thing, but to some people, serpents and scorpions would very literally be less harmful than cash. Venomous animals can hurt your body, but they can’t do much to your soul.

If all this is true, I guess you have to ask who gives people monetary blessings that later turn out to be damaging. Is it God? Probably not. Not unless God has a purpose in the damage.

I think some charismatics worry too much about blessings and not enough about becoming worthy of blessings. A blessing is not a blessing if you turn it into a stumbling block. Every blessing comes with obligation and responsibility, and the supernatural improvement in character that makes good stewardship possible is a greater blessing than the blessing of which you are the steward. A material benefit is fleeting. An internal improvement is permanent and continues paying dividends forever. The weirdest thing about all this is that God himself will make the internal improvements, even though he later gives you the credit. It’s a pretty good deal.

8 Responses to “Cash Poisoning”

  1. pbird Says:

    I like to listen to Rush. He has access to a lot more information than I do and he is pretty up to date. Some things I’ve heard about before he discusses them on air. I would definitely miss him. He’s a good story teller and truly keeps the bad guys on their toes. I’ve listebed to him in the morning for over 20 years. (!!!) Good grief. But I sure know more about stuff than the relatives and such who think he is the devil.

  2. pbird Says:

    I also think he has been truly very upset lately with how things are going in the world and here politically. He has sounded very upset a lot lately and I imagine this contributed to the heart pain.

  3. km Says:

    A wealthy developer client I used to represent wrote his will with modest support during professional schooling, very long range timed out distributions and a “matching funds” formula that essentially paid out money based upon what the kids earned themselves.
    .
    If a kid wanted to be a complete waste – he/she would get exceedingly minimal (basically near stravation level) support. If he/she wanted to do something, he/she got good help from dad’s wealth. It was a neat idea (I lost contact with him over the years, so I don’t know how well it worked).

  4. Clark Says:

    Steve, I have to disagree with you on your opinion of Rush. He’s a man of God and I don’t see how you can assume he’s an unhappy person because of the reasons you listed. Like yourself, Rush does not march to the beat of most others drum. If he did, he’d be much more concerned about living to societies standards of happiness instead of standing up for what’s right and good. And the same could be said for you as well, Steve. Conversely, I know men with loving wives and children who are absolutely miserable human beings.

  5. Steve H. Says:

    I assume he’s an unhappy person because he behaves like one.
    .
    What do you mean when you call him a man of God?

  6. pbird Says:

    Rush acknowledges God, but he hasn’t as far as I can tell, jumped in headfirst and let go of the world. Many people haven’t yet.

  7. Clark Says:

    Maybe so, Steve. Maybe you’re right but he damn sure gives the lefties fits. And for that, I like him.

  8. Rachel Says:

    Rush does not go home to an empty house. He has a girlfriend, a pretty blonde 31 year old. Rumor has it that he will marry her in July.
    I do not think he is unhappy. He is very close to his brother and his family and every year Rush throws a huge Thanksgiving feast for lots of extended family.