In this
modern age credit has exploded. Most everyone has a wallet full of
charge cards, from banks, department stores, and oil companies. There is
nothing inherently immoral about this, and yet to many those little
plastic devils are a grave temptation that enables their discontentment
and addiction to things.
Paul wrote
the Romans to "Owe no one anything except to love one another"
(Romans 13:8).
This passage is not outlawing all debt, for other passages seem to
regulate the practice. As Clinton Hamilton writes in his commentary on
Romans, "One may have incurred a debt which if due in the present must
be paid because that is the appointed time for it to be paid. Until that
point, it is not due. One must not be in arrears in the payment of a
debt" (Romans, page 725).
Paul is
telling us not to get in situations in which we cannot pay a debt when
it is due. Credit cards, mortgages, and car loans have the potential to
get people in exactly that situation. The answer to credit trouble,
unfortunately, is usually more credit. Carry the balance; take out a
second mortgage, whatever it takes. Revolving credit can be a bottomless
pit. The over-extension of credit often leads to bankruptcy, in which a
man's creditors are usually paid only a small percentage of what they
are owed.
This is
immoral and a violation of
Romans 13:8.
Yet the vile seeds were sown long before, when we thought we could be
happy if we only had more things.
The problem
is more fundamental than a lack of possessions; it is a lack of
contentment. Learn how to enjoy life with what you can afford and when
more comes, you will appreciate it better
(Phil. 4:11).
Credit is not always bad, but if it is a substitute for godly
contentment, you will regret it all the way to hell.
Other
Articles by Terry Benton
If You
Pray For Someone
Make His
Paths Straight
Deciding on Perspective
Body Versus
Soul
They Hated Me First
Subjective Spirit Leading
The Pharisee Shield
Review of Radical Restoration Chapter
1
These Things Became Our Examples
The Fall and
the Rising
For Past Auburn Beacons go to:
www.aubeacon.com/Bulletins.htm
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