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Opinion: Money always comes with a cost

There is a difference between having money and compromising one’s principles for the sake of money. 
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Growing up Christian in an affluent society, there was a passage from scripture that always left me perplexed, “No one can serve two masters.  For you will hate one and love the other…. You cannot serve God and money.” (Matthew 6:24)

Did this mean that I was to sell all that I owned and become like St. Francis of Assisi, the wealthy thirteenth century merchant’s son who rejected his inheritance and lived like a beggar? Or, did I have to live like Mother Teresa of Calcutta, adopting extreme simplicity, serving the poorest of the poor?

Ministers explained to me that money is not the problem, it’s love of money.  That argument seemed insincere to me, however, as I observed the wealth and conduct of those who called themselves Christians.

What I have come to realize is that there is a difference between having money and compromising one’s principles for the sake of money.  There is a difference between having a comfortable lifestyle and sacrificing the well-being of one’s neighbour for the sake of greed.

American Senator Bernie Sanders, for example, owns three homes and lives quite comfortably.  Yet, it is very clear that he is a strong advocate for a world that is more just, more kind, a world that is concerned about the well-being of all children, no matter where they live or what they look like.  Regardless of his religious affiliation (he is a non-practicing Jew), most would agree that Sanders understands the principle of which Jesus spoke.

Also serving in the United States Senate is Joe Manchin, a Catholic.  Manchin is extremely wealthy and has disconcerting economic ties to the fossil fuel industry.  He has also been a stubborn opponent of global efforts to deal effectively with the climate crisis. 

Many would argue that it is a conflict of interest for a politician to make laws that increase the value of their economic investments.  When recently challenged by a group of American citizens over this concern, Manchin became the poster-boy of climate emergency denial as he drove his Maserati through a group of young environmentalists who were chanting, “We want to live!  We want to live!”

I don’t have access to Mr. Manchin’s conscience, but his behavior does seem to demonstrate a disrespect for young people who simply want to grow up and make a better world. 

Other powerful people exhibit behavior similar to that of Manchin.  Joseph Mobute Sese Seko allowed his friend, Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba, to be assassinated in becoming the dictator of The Democratic Republic of the Congo, which he renamed Zaire.  Mobutu took advantage of Cold War alliances and allowed his country to be pillaged of natural resources.  He ruled by corruption and violence, living in luxury while his people starved.  Near the end of his regime, he would not even appear in public, opting to remain in a high security yacht floating on the Congo River.

Manchin and Mobutu made the choice to pursue wealth.  It is possible, however, to live a principled life, where one works hard to make a better world for others, and still enjoy relative comfort.  One does not have to serve money in order to have money.  Frederick Banting was part of the team that discovered insulin 100 years ago.  He sold the patent to the University of Toronto for one dollar saying, “Insulin doesn’t belong to me.  It belongs to the world.”  Despite this, he maintained a high standard of living.

I too am also very thankful that my chosen career affords me a comfortable lifestyle while maintaining my ideals and goals to build a better, kinder future.

What does it benefit a person to gain the whole world and lose their soul? (Mark 8:36) There is nothing wrong with having money.  We just need to be mindful of what it is actually costing us.