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The Sermons of John Wesley
John Wesley (1703-1791) founded Methodism. A prolific writer, he
printed several volumes of his sermons during his lifetime. The published
sermons either were rewritten from ones that he had preached or were
written specifically for print.
The Use of Money
By John Wesley
Sermon 50
(text from the 1872 edition - Thomas Jackson, editor)
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"I say unto you, Make unto yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness;
that, when ye fail, they may receive you into the everlasting habitations."
Luke 16:9
I. We ought to gain all we can gain but this it is certain we ought not to do;
we ought not to gain money at the expense of life, nor at the expense of our
health.
II. Do not throw the precious talent into the sea.
III. Having, First, gained all you can, and, Secondly saved all you can, Then
"give all you can."
1.
Our Lord, having finished the beautiful parable of the Prodigal Son, which he
had particularly addressed to those who murmured at his receiving publicans and
sinners, adds another relation of a different kind, addressed rather to the
children of God. "He said unto his disciples," not so much to the scribes and
Pharisees to whom he had been speaking before, -- "There was a certain rich man,
who had a steward, and he was accused to him of wasting his goods. And calling
him, he said, Give an account of thy stewardship, for thou canst be no longer
steward." (Luke 16:1, 2) After reciting the method which the bad steward used to
provide against the day of necessity, our Saviour adds, "His lord commended the
unjust steward" namely, in this respect, that he used timely precaution; and
subjoins this weighty reflection, "The children of this world are wiser in their
generation than the children of light:" (Luke 16:8) Those who seek no other
portion than this world "are wiser" (not absolutely; for they are one and all
the veriest fools, the most egregious madmen under heaven; but, "in their
generation," in their own way; they are more consistent with themselves; they
are truer to their acknowledged principles; they more steadily pursue their end)
"than the children of light;" -- than they who see "the light of the glory of
God in the face of Jesus Christ." Then follow the words above recited: "And I,"
-- the only-begotten Son of God, the Creator, Lord, and Possessor of heaven and
earth and all that is therein; the Judge of all, to whom ye are to "give an
account of your stewardship," when ye "can be no longer stewards;" "I say unto
you," -- learn in this respect, even of the unjust steward, -- "make yourselves
friends," by wise, timely precaution, "of the mammon of unrighteousness."
"Mammon" means riches or money. It is termed "the mammon of unrighteousness,"
because of the unrighteous manner wherein it frequently procured, and wherein
even that which was honestly procured is generally employed. "Make yourselves
friends" of this, by doing all possible good, particularly to the children of
God; "that, when ye fail," -- when ye return to dust, when ye have no more place
under the sun, -- those of them who are gone before "may receive you," may
welcome you, into the "everlasting habitations."
2.
An excellent branch of Christian wisdom is here inculcated by our Lord on all
his followers, namely, the right use of money -- a subject largely spoken of,
after their manner, by men of the world; but not sufficiently considered by
those whom God hath chosen out of the world. These, generally, do not consider,
as the importance of the subject requires, the use of this excellent talent.
Neither do they understand how to employ it to the greatest advantage; the
introduction of which into the world is one admirable instance of the wise and
gracious providence of God. It has, indeed, been the manner of poets, orators,
and philosophers, in almost all ages and nations, to rail at this, as the grand
corrupter of the world, the bane of virtue, the pest of human society. Hence
nothing so commonly heard, as:
Nocens ferrum, ferroque
nocentius aurum:
And gold, more mischievous than keenest steel.
Hence the lamentable complaint,
Effodiuntur opes,
irritamenta malorum.
Wealth is dug up, incentive to all ill.
Nay, one celebrated writer gravely exhorts his countrymen, in order to banish
all vice at once, to " throw all their money into the sea:"
. . . in mare proximum [.
. .]
Summi materiem mali!
But is not all this mere empty rant? Is there any solid reason therein? By no
means. For, let the world be as corrupt as it will, is gold or silver to blame?
"The love of money," we know, "is the root of all evil;" but not the thing
itself. The fault does not lie in the money, but in them that use it. It may be
used ill: and what may not? But it may likewise be used well: It is full as
applicable to the best, as to the worst uses. It is of unspeakable service to
all civilized nations, in all the common affairs of life: It is a most
compendious instrument of transacting all manner of business, and (if we use it
according to Christian wisdom) of doing all manner of good. It is true, were man
in a state of innocence, or were all men "filled with the Holy Ghost," so that,
like the infant Church at Jerusalem, "no man counted anything he had his own,"
but "distribution was made to everyone as he had need," the use of it would be
superseded; as we cannot conceive there is anything of the kind among the
inhabitants of heaven. But, in the present state of mankind, it is an excellent
gift of God, answering the noblest ends. In the hands of his children, it is
food for the hungry, drink for the thirsty, raiment for the naked: It gives to
the traveller and the stranger where to lay his head. By it we may supply the
place of an husband to the widow, and of a father to the fatherless. We maybe a
defence for the oppressed, a means of health to the sick, of ease to them that
are in pain; it may be as eyes to the blind, as feet to the lame; yea, a lifter
up from the gates of death!
3.
It is therefore of the highest concern that all who fear God know how to employ
this valuable talent; that they be instructed how it may answer these glorious
ends, and in the highest degree. And, perhaps, all the instructions which are
necessary for this may be reduced to three plain rules, by the exact observance
whereof we may approve ourselves faithful stewards of "the mammon of
unrighteousness."
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1.
The first of these is (he that heareth, let him understand!) "Gain all you can."
Here we may speak like the children of the world: We meet them on their own
ground. And it is our bounden duty to do this: We ought to gain all we can gain,
without buying gold too dear, without paying more for it than it is worth. But
this it is certain we ought not to do; we ought not to gain money at the expense
of life, nor (which is in effect the same thing) at the expense of our health.
Therefore, no gain whatsoever should induce us to enter into, or to continue in,
any employ, which is of such a kind, or is attended with so hard or so long
labour, as to impair our constitution. Neither should we begin or continue in
any business which necessarily deprives us of proper seasons for food and sleep,
in such a proportion as our nature requires. Indeed, there is a great difference
here. Some employments are absolutely and totally unhealthy; as those which
imply the dealing much with arsenic, or other equally hurtful minerals, or the
breathing an air tainted with steams of melting lead, which must at length
destroy the firmest constitution. Others may not be absolutely unhealthy, but
only to persons of a weak constitution. Such are those which require many hours
to be spent in writing; especially if a person write sitting, and lean upon his
stomach, or remain long in an uneasy posture. But whatever it is which reason or
experience shows to be destructive of health or strength, that we may not submit
to; seeing "the life is more" valuable "than meat, and the body than raiment."
And if we are already engaged in such an employ, we should exchange it as soon
as possible for some which, if it lessen our gain, will, however not lessen our
health.
2.
We are, Secondly, to gain all we can without hurting our mind any more than our
body. For neither may we hurt this. We must preserve, at all events, the spirit
of an healthful mind. Therefore we may not engage or continue in any sinful
trade, any that is contrary to the law of God, or of our country. Such are all
that necessarily imply our robbing or defrauding the king of his lawful customs.
For it is at least as sinful to defraud the king of his right, as to rob our
fellow subjects. And the king has full as much right, to his customs as we have
to our houses and apparel. Other businesses there are, which however innocent in
themselves, cannot be followed with innocence now at least, not in England;
such, for instance, as will not afford a competent maintenance without cheating
or lying, or conformity to some custom which not consistent with a good
conscience: These, likewise, are sacredly to be avoided, whatever gain they may
be attended with provided we follow the custom of the trade; for to gain money
we must not lose our souls. There are yet others which many pursue with perfect
innocence, without hurting either their body or mind; And yet perhaps you
cannot: Either they may entangle you in that company which would destroy your
soul; and by repeated experiments it may appear that you cannot separate the one
from the other; or there may be an idiosyncrasy, -- a peculiarity in your
constitution of soul, (as there is in the bodily constitution of many,) by
reason whereof that employment is deadly to you, which another may safely
follow. So I am convinced, from many experiments, I could not study, to any
degree of perfection, either mathematics, arithmetic, or algebra, without being
a Deist, if not an Atheist: And yet others may study them all their lives
without sustaining any inconvenience. None therefore can here determine for
another; but every man must judge for himself, and abstain from whatever he in
particular finds to be hurtful to his soul.
3.
We are. Thirdly, to gain all we can without hurting our neighbour. But this we
may not, cannot do, if we love our neighbour as ourselves. We cannot, if we love
everyone as ourselves, hurt anyone in his substance. We cannot devour the
increase of his lands, and perhaps the lands and houses themselves, by gaming,
by overgrown bills (whether on account of physic, or law, or anything else,) or
by requiring or taking such interest as even the laws of our country forbid.
Hereby all pawn-broking is excluded: Seeing, whatever good we might do thereby,
all unprejudiced men see with grief to be abundantly overbalanced by the evil.
And if it were otherwise, yet we are not allowed to "do evil that good may
come." We cannot, consistent with brotherly love, sell our goods below the
market price; we cannot study to ruin our neighbour's trade, in order to advance
our own; much less can we entice away or receive any of his servants or workmen
whom he has need of. None can gain by swallowing up his neighbour's substance,
without gaining the damnation of hell!
4.
Neither may we gain by hurting our neighbour in his body. Therefore we
may not sell anything which tends to impair health. Such is, eminently, all that
liquid fire, commonly called drams or spirituous liquors. It is true, these may
have a place in medicine; they may be of use in some bodily disorders; although
there would rarely be occasion for them were it not for the unskillfulness of
the practitioner. Therefore, such as prepare and sell them only for this end
may keep their conscience clear. But who are they? Who prepare and sell them
only for this end? Do you know ten such distillers in England? Then excuse
these. But all who sell them in the common way, to any that will buy, are
poisoners general. They murder His Majesty's subjects by wholesale, neither does
their eye pity or spare. They drive them to hell like sheep. And what is their
gain? Is it not the blood of these men? Who then would envy their large estates
and sumptuous palaces? A curse is in the midst of them: The curse of God cleaves
to the stones, the timber, the furniture of them. The curse of God is in their
gardens, their walks, their groves; a fire that burns to the nethermost hell!
Blood, blood is there: The foundation, the floor, the walls, the roof are
stained with blood! And canst thou hope, O thou man of blood, though thou art
"clothed in scarlet and fine linen, and farest sumptuously every day;" canst
thou hope to deliver down thy fields of blood to the third generation?
Not so; for there is a God in heaven: Therefore, thy name shall soon be rooted
out. Like as those whom thou hast destroyed, body and soul, "thy memorial shall
perish with thee!"
5.
And are not they partakers of the same guilt, though in a lower degree, whether
Surgeons, Apothecaries, or Physicians, who play with the lives or health of men,
to enlarge their own gain? Who purposely lengthen the pain or disease which they
are able to remove speedily? who protract the cure of their patient's body in
order to plunder his substance? Can any man be clear before God who does not
shorten every disorder "as much as he can," and remove all sickness and pain "as
soon as he can?" He cannot: For nothing can be more clear than that he does not
"love his neighbour as himself;" than that he does not "do unto others as he
would they should do unto himself."
6.
This is dear-bought gain. And so is whatever is procured by hurting our
neighbour in his soul; by ministering, suppose, either directly or
indirectly, to his unchastity, or intemperance, which certainly none can do, who
has any fear of God, or any real desire of pleasing Him. It nearly concerns all
those to consider this, who have anything to do with taverns, victualling-houses,
opera-houses, play-houses, or any other places of public, fashionable diversion.
If these profit the souls of men, you are clear; your employment is good, and
your gain innocent; but if they are either sinful in themselves, or natural
inlets to sin of various kinds, then, it is to be feared, you have a sad account
to make. O beware, lest God say in that day, "These have perished in their
iniquity, but their blood do I require at thy hands!"
7.
These cautions and restrictions being observed, it is the bounden duty of all
who are engaged in worldly business to observe that first and great rule of
Christian wisdom with respect to money, "Gain all you can." Gain all you can by
honest industry. Use all possible diligence in your calling. Lose no time. If
you understand yourself and your relation to God and man, you know you have none
to spare. If you understand your particular calling as you ought, you will have
no time that hangs upon your hands. Every business will afford some employment
sufficient for every day and every hour. That wherein you are placed, if you
follow it in earnest, will leave you no leisure for silly, unprofitable
diversions. You have always something better to do, something that will profit
you, more or less. And "whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy
might." Do it as soon as possible: No delay! No putting off from day to day, or
from hour to hour! Never leave anything till to-morrow, which you can do to-day.
And do it as well as possible. Do not sleep or yawn over it: Put your whole
strength to the work. Spare no pains. Let nothing be done by halves, or in a
slight and careless manner. Let nothing in your business be left undone if it
can be done by labour or patience.
8.
Gain all you can, by common sense, by using in your business all the
understanding which God has given you. It is amazing to observe, how few do
this; how men run on in the same dull track with their forefathers. But whatever
they do who know not God, this is no rule for you. It is a shame for a Christian
not to improve upon them, in whatever he takes in hand. You should be
continually learning, from the experience of others, or from your own
experience, reading, and reflection, to do everything you have to do better
to-day than you did yesterday. And see that you practise whatever you learn,
that you may make the best of all that is in your hands.
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1.
Having gained all you can, by honest wisdom and unwearied diligence, the second
rule of Christian prudence is," Save all you can." Do not throw the precious
talent into the sea: Leave that folly to heathen philosophers. Do not throw it
away in idle expenses, which is just the same as throwing it into the sea.
Expend no part of it merely to gratify the desire of the flesh, the desire of
the eye, or the pride of life.
2.
Do not waste any part of so precious a talent merely in gratifying the desires
of the flesh; in procuring the pleasures of sense of whatever kind;
particularly, in enlarging the pleasure of tasting. I do not mean, avoid
gluttony and drunkenness only: An honest heathen would condemn these. But there
is a regular, reputable kind of sensuality, an elegant epicurism, which does not
immediately disorder the stomach, nor (sensibly, at least) impair the
understanding. And yet (to mention no other effects of it now) it cannot be
maintained without considerable expense. Cut off all this expense! Despise
delicacy and variety, and be content with what plain nature requires.
3.
Do not waste any part of so precious a talent merely in gratifying the desire of
the eye by superfluous or expensive apparel, or by needless ornaments. Waste no
part of it in curiously adorning your houses; in superfluous or expensive
furniture; in costly pictures, painting, gilding, books; in elegant rather than
useful gardens. Let your neighbours, who know nothing better, do this: "Let the
dead bury their dead." But "what is that to thee?" says our Lord: "Follow thou
me." Are you willing? Then you are able so to do.
4.
Lay out nothing to gratify the pride of life, to gain the admiration or praise
of men. This motive of expense is frequently interwoven with one or both of the
former. Men are expensive in diet, or apparel, or furniture, not barely to
please their appetite, or to gratify their eye, their imagination, but their
vanity too. "So long as thou dost well unto thyself, men will speak good of
thee." So long as thou art "clothed in purple and fine linen, and farest
sumptuously" every day," no doubt many will applaud thy elegance of taste, thy
generosity and hospitality. But do not buy their applause so dear. Rather be
content with the honour that cometh from God.
5.
Who would expend anything in gratifying these desires if he considered that to
gratify them is to increase them? Nothing can be more certain than this: Daily
experience shows, the more they are indulged, they increase the more. Whenever,
therefore, you expend anything to please your taste or other senses, you pay so
much for sensuality. When you lay out money to please your eye, you give so much
for an increase of curiosity, -- for a stronger attachment to these pleasures
which perish in the using. While you are purchasing anything which men use to
applaud, you are purchasing more vanity. Had you not then enough of vanity,
sensuality, curiosity before? Was there need of any addition? And would you pay
for it, too? What manner of wisdom is this? Would not the literally throwing
your money into the sea be a less mischievous folly?
6.
And why should you throw away money upon your children, any more than upon
yourself, in delicate food, in gay or costly apparel, in superfluities of any
kind? Why should you purchase for them more pride or lust, more vanity, or
foolish and hurtful desires? They do not want any more; they have enough
already; nature has made ample provision for them: Why should you be at farther
expense to increase their temptations and snares, and to pierce them through
with more sorrows?
7.
Do not leave it to them to throw away. If you have good reason to believe that
they would waste what is now in your possession in gratifying and thereby
increasing the desire of the flesh, the desire of the eye, or the pride of life
at the peril of theirs and your own soul, do not set these traps in their way.
Do not offer your sons or your daughters unto Belial, any more than unto Moloch.
Have pity upon them, and remove out of their way what you may easily foresee
would increase their sins, and consequently plunge them deeper into everlasting
perdition! How amazing then is the infatuation of those parents who think they
can never leave their children enough! What! cannot you leave them enough of
arrows, firebrands, and death? Not enough of foolish and hurtful desires? Not
enough of pride, lust, ambition vanity? not enough of everlasting burnings? Poor
wretch! thou fearest where no fear is. Surely both thou and they, when ye are
lifting up your eyes in hell, will have enough both of the "worm that never
dieth," and of "the fire that never shall be quenched!"
8.
"What then would you do, if you was in my case? If you had a considerable
fortune to leave?" Whether I would do it or no, I know what I ought
to do: This will admit of no reasonable question. If I had one child, elder or
younger, who knew the value of money; one who I believed, would put it to the
true use, I should think it my absolute, indispensable duty to leave that child
the bulk of my fortune; and to the rest just so much as would enable them to
live in the manner they had been accustomed to do. "But what, if all your
children were equally ignorant of the true use of money?" I ought then (hard
saying! who can hear it?) to give each what would keep him above want, and to
bestow all the rest in such a manner as I judged would be most for the glory of
God.
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1.
But let not any man imagine that he has done anything, barely by going thus far,
by "gaining and saving all he can," if he were to stop here. All this is
nothing, if a man go not forward, if he does not point all this at a farther
end. Nor, indeed, can a man properly be said to save anything, if he only lays
it up. You may as well throw your money into the sea, as bury it in the earth.
And you may as well bury it in the earth, as in your chest, or in the Bank of
England. Not to use, is effectually to throw it away. If, therefore, you would
indeed "make yourselves friends of the mammon of unrighteousness," add the Third
rule to the two preceding. Having, First, gained all you can, and, Secondly
saved all you can, Then "give all you can."
2.
In order to see the ground and reason of this, consider, when the Possessor of
heaven and earth brought you into being, and placed you in this world, he placed
you here not as a proprietor, but a steward: As such he entrusted you, for a
season, with goods of various kinds; but the sole property of these still rests
in him, nor can be alienated from him. As you yourself are not your own, but
his, such is, likewise, all that you enjoy. Such is your soul and your body, not
your own, but God's. And so is your substance in particular. And he has told
you, in the most clear and express terms, how you are to employ it for him, in
such a manner, that it may be all an holy sacrifice, acceptable through Christ
Jesus. And this light, easy service, he has promised to reward with an eternal
weight of glory.
3.
The directions which God has given us, touching the use of our worldly
substance, may be comprised in the following particulars. If you desire to be a
faithful and a wise steward, out of that portion of your Lord's goods which he
has for the present lodged in your hands, but with the right of resuming
whenever it pleases him, First, provide things needful for yourself; food to
eat, raiment to put on, whatever nature moderately requires for preserving the
body in health and strength. Secondly, provide these for your wife, your
children, your servants, or any others who pertain to your household. If when
this is done there be an overplus left, then "do good to them that are of the
household of faith." If there be an overplus still, "as you have opportunity, do
good unto all men." In so doing, you give all you can; nay, in a sound sense,
all you have: For all that is laid out in this manner is really given to God.
You "render unto God the things that are God's," not only by what you give to
the poor, but also by that which you expend in providing things needful for
yourself and your household.
4.
If, then, a doubt should at any time arise in your mind concerning what you are
going to expend, either on yourself or any part of your family, you have an easy
way to remove it. Calmly and seriously inquire, "(1.) In expending this, am I
acting according to my character? Am I acting herein, not as a proprietor, but
as a steward of my Lord's goods? (2.) Am I doing this in obedience to his Word?
In what Scripture does he require me so to do? (3.) Can I offer up this action,
this expense, as a sacrifice to God through Jesus Christ? (4.) Have I reason to
believe that for this very work I shall have a reward at the resurrection of the
just?" You will seldom need anything more to remove any doubt which arises on
this head; but by this four-fold consideration you will receive clear light as
to the way wherein you should go.
5.
If any doubt still remain, you may farther examine yourself by prayer according
to those heads of inquiry. Try whether you can say to the Searcher of hearts,
your conscience not condemning you, "Lord, thou seest I am going to expend this
sum on that food, apparel, furniture. And thou knowest, I act herein with a
single eye as a steward of thy goods, expending this portion of them thus in
pursuance of the design thou hadst in entrusting me with them. Thou knowest I do
this in obedience to the Lord, as thou commandest, and because thou commandest
it. Let this, I beseech thee, be an holy sacrifice, acceptable through Jesus
Christ! And give me a witness in myself that for this labour of love I shall
have a recompense when thou rewardest every man according to his works." Now if
your conscience bear you witness in the Holy Ghost that this prayer is
well-pleasing to God, then have you no reason to doubt but that expense is right
and good, and such as will never make you ashamed.
6.
You see then what it is to "make yourselves friends of the mammon of
unrighteousness," and by what means you may procure, "that when ye fail they may
receive you into the everlasting habitations." You see the nature and extent of
truly Christian prudence so far as it relates to the use of that great talent,
money. Gain all you can, without hurting either yourself or your neighbour, in
soul or body, by applying hereto with unintermitted diligence, and with all the
understanding which God has given you; -- save all you can, by cutting off every
expense which serves only to indulge foolish desire; to gratify either the
desire of flesh, the desire of the eye, or the pride of life; waste nothing,
living or dying, on sin or folly, whether for yourself or your children; -- and
then, give all you can, or, in other words, give all you have to God. Do not
stint yourself, like a Jew rather than a Christian, to this or that proportion.
"Render unto God," not a tenth, not a third, not half, but all that is God's, be
it more or less; by employing all on yourself, your household, the household of
faith, and all mankind, in such a manner, that you may give a good account of
your stewardship when ye can be no longer stewards; in such a manner as the
oracles of God direct, both by general and particular precepts; in such a
manner, that whatever ye do may be "a sacrifice of a sweet-smelling savour to
God," and that every act may be rewarded in that day when the Lord cometh with
all his saints.
7.
Brethren, can we be either wise or faithful stewards unless we thus manage our
Lord's goods? We cannot, as not only the oracles of God, but our own conscience
beareth witness. Then why should we delay? Why should we confer any longer with
flesh and blood, or men of the world? Our kingdom, our wisdom is not of this
world: Heathen custom is nothing to us. We follow no men any farther than they
are followers of Christ. Hear ye him. Yea, to-day, while it is called to-day,
hear and obey his voice! At this hour, and from this hour, do his will: Fulfil
his word, in this and in all things! I entreat you, in the name of the Lord
Jesus, act up to the dignity of your calling! No more sloth! Whatsoever your
hand findeth to do, do it with your might! No more waste! Cut off every expense
which fashion, caprice, or flesh and blood demand! No more covetousness! But
employ whatever God has entrusted you with, in doing good, all possible good, in
every possible kind and degree to the household of faith, to all men! This is no
small part of "the wisdom of the just." Give all ye have, as well as all ye are,
a spiritual sacrifice to Him who withheld not from you his Son, his only Son: So
"laying up in store for yourselves a good foundation against the time to come,
that ye may attain eternal life!"
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Acknowledgements
[Edited by Jennette Descalzo, student at Northwest Nazarene College (Nampa, ID),
with corrections by George Lyons for the
Wesley
Center for Applied Theology.] The text for
John
Wesley's sermons originally came from the
Christian
Classics Ethereal Library.
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