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 Insight for Living  -  Chuck Swindoll
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LISTEN TO TODAY'S BROADCAST
Family Rules for 'Little Children' -- Part 3
Wednesday, November 25, 2009
The letter of 1 John is for the family of God. It contains the kind of expressions and information commonly heard among family members behind closed doors. We get that impression from numerous references in these five chapters addressing "little children" and "children," as well as "fathers," "young men," and "brothers." In this letter, John passed along the same kind of sage advice we hear when gathered at the knee of a family patriarch. At the time he wrote, John had lived almost a century and had endured the blast of life's harshest treatment. He had felt the brutal blows of persecution and bore the scars that proved it. He had also witnessed the fall of many who once walked closely with their Lord; he anguished over heresies that had sprung up in the lives of Christians he loved - people who were one actively engaged in churches where he had served. Because he had "seen it all," this old gentleman was able to offer some elementary rules all of us would be wise to hear and obey.
Series: Living Right In A Wrong World
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ARTICLE

Tightwads
by Charles R. Swindoll

Mrs. Bertha Adams, 71 years old, died alone in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Easter Sunday. The coroner's report read: "Cause of death . . . malnutrition." She had wasted away to fifty pounds.

When the state authorities made their preliminary investigation of Mrs. Adams' home, they found a veritable "pigpen . . . the biggest mess you can imagine." One seasoned inspector declared he'd never seen a dwelling in greater disarray. The woman had begged food from neighbors' back doors and gotten what clothing she had from the Salvation Army. From all outward appearances she was a penniless recluse, a pitiful and forgotten widow. But such was not the case.

Amid the jumble of her unclean, disheveled belongings, the officials found two keys to safe-deposit boxes at two different local banks. In the first box were over 700 AT&T stock certificates, plus hundreds of other valuable certificates, bonds, and solid financial securities, not to mention a stack of cash amounting to nearly $200,000. The second box contained $600,000. Adding the net worth of both boxes, they found well over a million dollars.

Charles Osgood, reporting the story on CBS radio, announced that the estate would probably go to a distant niece and nephew, neither of whom dreamed their aunt had a thin dime to her name.

Can you imagine picking up the phone and hearing that you'd just inherited half a million? Why, I wouldn't know whether to shout "Glory," dance the jig, wind my watch, whistle "Dixie," or sing "The Doxology."

You can count on this, friend: those two relatives are awfully glad Aunt Bertha still had their names lying around.

But don't you also wonder about this woman? Why, oh, why would anybody salt away all that bread in two tiny boxes, month after month, year after year, and refuse to spend even enough for food to stay alive? She makes Silas Marner look like a spendthrift.

Fact is, Bertha Adams wasn't saving her money; she was worshiping it . . . hoarding it . . . gaining a twisted satisfaction out of watching the stacks grow higher as she shuffled along the streets wearing the garb of a beggar.

I confess an almost total loss of understanding as I try to imagine pleasure being drawn from simply stacking up one's treasure for the sheer and selfish delight of watching the stack grow higher. Now don't misread me. I'm a firm believer in saving, investing, intelligent spending, and wise money management. But I have trouble finding one word of scriptural support for being a tightwad!

And it isn't hard to spot them. They all start with one main question: How much does it cost? And one main answer: We can't afford it. And one main criticism: We're spending too much money. I have yet to meet a Christian tightwad who knew by experience the first principle of enthusiastic faith. Never have I seen one who could dream broad dreams or see vast visions of what God can do in spite of man's limitations.

Give me a handful of "greathearts" . . . generous, openhanded, visionary, spiritually minded givers . . . magnanimous giants with God who get excited about abandoning themselves to Him. Now I remind you, they may not need a teller for their fortune when it's over and done with, but who cares? The name of the game is not CAUTION-it's still VISION, isn't it? Seems like I read somewhere that those without it perish.

And speaking of that, when they buried Bertha Adams, she didn't take a penny with her.

Taken from Charles R. Swindoll, "Tightwads," in The Finishing Touch: Becoming God's Masterpiece (Dallas: Word, 1994), 448-49. Copyright © 1994 by Charles R. Swindoll, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Saturday, August 01, 2009

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Insight for Living is the Bible-teaching radio ministry of author and pastor Charles R. Swindoll. Insight for Living is committed to excellence in communicating biblical truth and its application.

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Insight for Living's Bible teacher, Chuck Swindoll, has devoted his life to the clear, practical, application of God's Word and the communication of God's grace. A pastor at heart, Chuck...
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