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Covetousness
by John Wesley
John Wesley, the founder of Methodism,
lived to a good old age, having traveled widely throughout the
British Isles. In the year before his death and standing on
the threshold of another world he said, “One great reason for
the comparative failure of Christianity is the neglect of the
solemn words, ‘Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth.’”
On another occasion he wrote: “I have only known two Methodists
grow rich without declining in grace.” And later he added a
postscript: “No, not one.”
This faithful shepherd constantly
warned his flock about the danger of accumulating wealth without
distributing it properly to their less favored brethren. The
following entries from his journal reveal how much this subject
lay on his heart:
“[Oct. 1760]—On the three following
days I spoke severally to the members of the society [at Bristol].
As many of them increase in worldly goods, the great danger
I apprehend now is they’re relapsing into the spirit of the
world; and then their religion is but a dream.” (Vol.4, p. 417)
“Sun. 18 [Sept. 18, 1763]—On Monday
evening I gave our brethren a solemn caution not to ‘love the
world, neither the things of the world.’ This will be their
great danger; as they are industrious and frugal, they must
needs increase in goods. This appears already. In London, Bristol,
and most other trading towns, those who are in business have
increased in substance sevenfold, some of them twenty, yea,
a hundredfold. What need, then, have these of the strongest
warnings, lest they be entangled therein, and perish.” (Vol.
5, pg. 31)
“Wed. 11 [July 1764]—I gave all
our brethren a solemn warning not to love the world or the things
of the world. This is one way whereby Satan will surely endeavor
to overthrow the present work of God. Riches swiftly increase
on many Methodists, so called. What but the mighty power of
God can hinder their setting their hearts upon them? And if
so, the life of God vanishes away.” (Vol. 5, p. 83)
“Sat. 20 [Nov. 1764]—The following
week I made a little tour through part of Kent and Sussex, where
some of our brethren swiftly increase the goods. Do they increase
in grace too? If not, let them take care that their money do
not perish with them.” (Vol. 5, p. 101)
“Sun. 13 [Dec. 1767]—I was desired
to preach a funeral sermon for William Osgood. He came to London
near thirty years ago, and, from nothing, increased more and
more, till he was worth several thousand pounds. He was a good
man, and died in peace. Nevertheless, I believe his money was
a great clog to him, and kept him in a poor, low state all his
days, making no such advance as he might have done, either in
holiness or happiness.” (Vol. 5, p. 245)
[From a letter dated June 27,
1769] “Riches increased; which not only led you, step by step,
into more conformity to the world, but insensibly instilled
self-importance, unwillingness to be contradicted, and an overbearing
temper. And hence you were, of course, disgusted at those who
did not yield to this temper, and blamed that conformity…Can
you be too sensible how hardly they that have riches enter into
the kingdom of heaven? Yea, or into the kingdom of an inward
heaven? Into the whole spirit of the gospel? How hard is it
for those (whether you do or no) not to conform too much to
the world? How hard not to be a little overbearing, especially
to inferiors!” (Vol. 5, p. 324)
“Fri. 24 [Sept. 1779]—James Gerissh,
jun., of Road, near Frome, was for several years zealous for
God; but he too became rich, and grew lukewarm, till he was
seized with a consumption. At the approach of death he was ‘horribly
afraid’; he was ‘in the lowest darkness, and in the deep.’ But
‘he cried unto God in his trouble,’ and was ‘delivered out of
his distress.’ He was filled with peace and joy unspeakable,
and so continued till he went to God.” (Vol. 6, p. 255)
“Mon. 3 [April 1780]—I returned
to Manchester, and, Tuesday the 4th, strongly applied ‘What
could I have done more to my vineyard that I have not done?’
At present there are many here that ‘bring forth good grapes.’
But many swiftly increase in goods; and I fear very few sufficiently
watch and pray that they may not set their hearts upon them.”
(Vol. 6, p. 271)
“Mon. 25 [April 1785]…But the
society here [Aughrim, in Ireland], as well as that at Tyrrell’s
pass, is well-nigh shrunk into nothing! Such is the baleful
influence of riches! The same effect we find in every place.
The more men increase in goods (very few excepted) the more
they decrease in grace.” (Vol. 7, p. 71)
“Sat. 31 [March 1787]—I went to
Macclesfield, and found a people still alive to God, in spite
of swiftly increasing riches. If they continue so, it will be
the only instance I have known, in about half a century. I warned
them in the strongest terms I could, and believe some of them
had ears to hear.” (Vol. 7, p. 256)
“He [Wesley] wrote from Bristol
to Walter Churchey (Works, vol. Xii p. 439), and on the 21st
he dated the searching sermon on ‘If riches increase, set not
thine heart upon them.’ The Methodists were increasing in wealth
and respectability. Wesley dreaded the result, and left as part
of his last legacy many solemn words of warning. Tyerman has
pointed out, filling several pages with quotations, the significance
of Wesley’s last pulpit instructions and warnings.” (Vol. 8,
p. 96, ed. Note)
* * * * * * * *
* * *
And what shall we say about his
own life? He truly set the example so that his teaching was
not at variance with his living. One of his sisters, being in
need and hearing of a recent legacy which had been made out
to her brother, wrote asking for aid. John wrote back saying
that he had already distributed the recent gift. She was too
late in her request.
An extract from the life of John
Wesley states that the commissioners had passed a law taxing
silver plate. They knew Wesley had quite an income, so they
wrote him: “The commissioners cannot doubt that you have silver
plate of which you neglected to make entry. They have directed
me to inform you that they expect you at this time to make entry
of your silver plate.”
And this is Mr. Wesley’s reply:
“I have two silver teaspoons at London and two in Bristol. That
is all the plate I have at present, nor shall I buy more while
so many around me want bread. I am, sir, your most obedient
servant. John Wesley.”
* * * * * * * *
* * *
“God loaned me coins
I may not spend
For any wasteful, selfish end.
They are a trust that I must hold
As sacred. All the world’s bright gold
Belongs to Him, and in my spending
I must repay His gracious lending.”
—Grace Noll Crowell
“All vices are indeed summed,
and all their forces consummated, in that simple acceptance
of the authority of gold instead of the authority of God, and
preference of gain, or the increase of gold, to godliness, or
the peace of God.”
“The sin of the whole world is
essentially the sin of Judas—men do not disbelieve their Christ;
but they sell Him.” –Ruskin
“If money be not thy servant it
will become thy master. The covetous man cannot so properly
be said to possess wealth as it may be said to possess him.”
– Charcon
“It is not the fact that a man
has riches which keeps him from the kingdom of heaven, but the
fact that the riches have him.” – David Caird
“A genuine impulse of generosity
is the stirring of what is divine within us—the uplifting force
of the soul. Our well-being depends upon strengthening it by
exercise. Woe to the soul that crushes it! It is a germ of Paradise.”
“Riches are the baggage of virtue,
which always hindereth the march.”
Noble Talent
or Unrighteous Mammon: The Economic Thought of John Wesley
-Jonathan Huddleston
Wesley’s basic tenets concerning
money were “the Divine proprietorship of all wealth, property,
and privilege, and the responsible stewardship of men.” Wesley
himself stated that of all models for understanding Christian
duty, “no character more exactly agrees with the present state
of man, than that of a steward.” The economic side of this stewardship
implies two Wesleyan doctrines: that money is not evil but “an
excellent gift of God,” a means “of doing all manner of good”;
and that no money can legitimately be kept as one’s own, but
only used in God’s work. Money itself is important; Christians
too seldom “consider…the use of this excellent talent.”
On the other hand, Wesley can
speak of money as a corrupting ‘hot potato’: “It must indeed
pass through my hands, but I will take care (God being my helper)
that the mammon of unrighteousness shall only pass through;
it shall not rest there.” This doctrine contains an implicit
challenge to the entire concept of private property. An individual’s
money should be regarded as a fund of God, to be distributed
for the needs of His people, and the owner’s only advantages
are that distribution starts at home, and that giving is
itself a blessing.”
Perhaps as important as his attitude
toward money was Wesley’s attitude toward the rich and the poor.
The latter “have a peculiar right to have the Gospel preached
unto them…If any, we are to except the rich.” In a journal entry,
while approving some of the rich and noble are “called,” Wesley
says he would prefer “if it were done by the ministry of others.
If I might choose, I should still (as I have done hitherto)
‘preach the gospel to the poor.’
There is no innocent way of pursuing
riches, and in Wesley’s exegesis, 1 Timothy 6:9 condemns all
“who desire [or] endeavor after more than…the necessities and
conveniences of life.” Those who have excess money lose their
humility, meekness, and patience; they are overly concerned
with their own comfort, causing “softness of mind if not of
body”; they are less happy, less disciplined, less eager for
good; they tend to avoid the needy and destitute for fear of
spoiling their nice clothes. From several references throughout
his journal, it appears that Wesley truly preferred the company
of the poor and felt uncomfortable around rich people, no matter
how religious or generous they were.
Wesley’s Three Rules
Gain All You Can
In fleshing out his economic attitudes,
Wesley prescribed three basic rules for his people to follow
toward money, all of which he detailed precisely in teaching
and example.
The first was to gain all one
could. All Christians must apply themselves “to the business
of their calling…sloth being inconsistent with religion.” Because
he viewed business as one’s calling, Wesley encouraged diligence
and faithful pursuit of business—the so-called “Protestant work
ethic.” The ethical centrality of gaining all one can many not
be immediately obvious, but Wesley taught that one should not
seek God’s will in the abstract, but rather “what will make
me most useful.”
Obviously, in light of Wesley’s
high view of usefulness of money, this included economic gain.
Nor was such gain an absolute, for he restricted it to worthwhile
labor. Christians must avoid employment which harms health (including
long hours and toxic factory conditions), which impoverishes
another (pawn-broking to competitive selling of goods), which
hurts another’s health (primarily the sale of liquor and tobacco
products), or which might undermine morality (from taverns to
opera houses). A Christian transacting worldly business does
so to please God, and therefore applies not only diligence but
justice, mercy, and even prayer to common affairs of gaining
money.
Save All You Can
Wesley’s second rule, another,
which might fit under the prudence of economic self-interest,
is to save all one can. Wesley’s chief concern here, however,
is the avoidance of waste and luxury. (Wesley himself made a
point of keeping only two spoons.) To set aside money for the
future, which many Christians regard as pious prudence, means
to Wesley nothing less than to ‘lay up treasures on earth’—a
thing as expressly and clearly forbidden by our Lord, as either
adultery or murder.
Wesley’s saving, like gaining,
was merely recognition that money was a valuable resource belonging
to the Lord. Moreover, as money spent for one’s self (beyond
the “necessities and conveniences”) tends only to corrupt, the
thriftiness of one’s life-style is directly related to virtue.
Wesley’s prohibition of physical indulgence, decoration, and
vanity (the desire of the flesh, the desire of the eyes and
the pride of life) are linked to thrift. Pursuing pleasures
would be a waste of “so precious a talent” as money. “Despise
delicacy and variety,” Wesley continues, as a “reputable kind
of sensuality (which) cannot be maintained without considerable
expense.” In the same way, unnecessary adornments of dress or
house, and spending calculated “to gain the admiration or praise
of men,” is sinful precisely because it involves squandering
money. True, vanity, indulgence, and gluttony are harmful in
themselves. Yet the economic argument is important to Wesley:
If you could be as humble when
you choose costly as when you choose plain apparel, (which I
frankly deny) yet you could not be as beneficent—as plenteous
in good works. Every shilling which you save from your own apparel,
you may expend in clothing the naked.
Give All You Can
This of course brings up Wesley’s
third rule, to give all that one can; and this rule is the reason
for the other two. Wellman J. Warner sums this up by saying
that “The sole justification for the…pursuit of economic goods
was that one might be enabled to supply the needs of others…The
economic and the philanthropic theory of the revival were a
unit.” This practical application of Wesley’s attitude toward
stewardship was radical and uncompromising. After gaining all
they can and (providing for the barest needs of themselves and
their dependents) saving all they can, Christians should give
not a tithe but all of their income to meet the needs of others.
Wesley used his own life as an
example: “I gain all I can” in profitable labor, “I save all
I can” by frugal living, and “by giving all I can, I am effectually
secured from ‘laying up treasures on earth.’” These were no
idle boasts: as Wesley’s royalty earnings grew, his self-imposed
annual personal budget stayed at thirty pounds, until 98% of
his income was given away. He lived up to his promise that “If
I leave behind me ten pounds…you and all mankind bear witness
against me that ‘I lived and died a thief and a robber.’”
…Unfortunately, during Wesley’s
lifetime the societies had lost sight of their original emphasis,
and Wesley wrote that of all their shortcomings this was the
most weighty. Drawn from the lower classes, on becoming Methodists
they “grow diligent and frugal; consequently they increase in
goods. Hence they proportionably increase in pride, in anger,
in the desire of the flesh, in the desire of the eyes, and in
the pride of life.”
In an admonishing sermon, Wesley
charges that his people “are not so teachable as you were, not
so advisable; you are not so easy to be convinced; not so easy
to be persuaded: you have a much better opinion of your own
judgment, and are more attached to your own will.” There is
a general rule that “whenever riches have increased…the essence
of religion…has decreased in the same proportion,” and this
rule can only be circumvented in one way: by giving it away.
How happy is the
pilgrim’s lot!
How free from every anxious thought,
From worldly hope and fear!
Confined to neither court nor cell,
His soul disdains on earth to dwell,
He only sojourns here.
His happiness in
part is mine,
Already saved from low design,
From every creature-love;
Blest with scorn of finite good,
My soul is lighten’d of its load,
And seeks the things above.
The things eternal
I pursue;
A happiness beyond the view
Of those that basely pant
For things by nature felt and seen;
Their honors, wealth, and pleasures mean
I neither have nor want.
continued on page
24
No foot of land do I possess,
No cottage in the wilderness;
A poor wayfaring man,
I lodge awhile in tents below;
Or gladly wander to and fro,
Till I may Canaan gain.
Nothing on earth
I call my own;
A stranger to the world unknown,
I all their goods despise;
I trample on their whole delight
And seek a country out of sight
A country in the skies.
There is my house
and portion fair;
My treasure and my heart are there,
And my abiding home;
For me my elder brethren stay
And angels beckon me away;
And Jesus bids me come.
—John Wesley
These thoughts
were taken from
articles found in the book, Covetousness,
published by:
Harvey Christian Publishers
3107 Hwy 321 • Hampton, TN 37658
(423) 768-2297
Used by permission.
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