Is it just me or is that in a lot of Coptic Churches in the West we are basically teaching a watered down version of the prosperity gospel in place of patristic tradition?
I often hear sentiment along the lines of there is nothing wrong with having money or buying an expensive car. In a lot of patristic lay preaching from figures that gave considerable time to the question of money such as St John Chrysostom and St Basil the Great would have huge issues with that sort of teaching.
This could simply be an ignorance of patristic teaching but what is said in its place is downright dangerous. Patristic consensus on material things would emphasise that acquisition is a sin and we have a duty to share what we have with our brothers and sisters. There are are whole dimensions of practical teaching on finances that are either distorted or downright ignored in our parishes.
I find the situation highly concerning because our love of ease and money is such that even the best of us refuse correction and guidance.
Comments
Curious to see your thoughts expanded. How does one define a line between what can be owned and what not? If a person has 750 million dollars, should he give 749 million of his earnings and live off of 100k a year?
With those 100k/year left. Can he buy whatever he wants? Or just fruits, vegetables and bread?
Can he buy meat? Which type of meat? Some are more expensive than others. Only the type that will fill him ? Salmon is more expensive than some meat. Is he not allowed to have salmon because it’s a higher luxury? Funny enough though, the Lord’s main meal was fish! (That was however a different time and the poor man’s meal if I understood correctly).
In my opinion, love of money and spending money are two different things. God gives all of us gifts and talents. Nothing wrong to accept the gift. There is wrong in relying on the gift. Love of money is not defined on how you spend, but how you spend, and how you earn. Each can place that judgement on their own. We can also keep in mind that Abraham was rich, his sons were rich, King David was rich. They didn’t appear to overdo their richness. At least not from my readings, but I may be wrong. King Solomon however, approached his richness with the wrong spirit and he speaks about it in Ecclesiastes.
In the end, pray for those that are rich, to enjoy their gift in humility, while remembering that charity and love of tithe is the healing to depending and loving on money. Only they can be the judge of themselves on those.
I have many more things to share if there is a willing audience here. Like I said, we have a sort of distorted picture when it comes to preaching about money. I fear it resembles the prosperity gospel more than it does right teaching. Telling people God blesses us with material rewards is very misleading. In a generation like ours with rampant consumerism and materialism I can think of few things more spiritually harmful.
Now that @mabsoota has commented I'd also like to say that I was impressed with this thread. I just didn't want to comment earlier as I have nothing to say but I commend you for carrying on teaching me the right forefathers' teaching. Oh how ruthless they were when it came to bodily and earthly desires..
Ⲟⲩϫⲁⲓ ϧⲉⲛ Ⲡϭⲥ
For example Paul did more than was asked when he used to work to support his own evangelical work rather than depending on others for his sustinence. The commandments allow him as a coworker with Christ to be supported by his churches but as a loving pastor he didn't want to be a burden to those new to the faith so he supported himself.
However for us, who are so much weaker than these angels among men, there is solace found in the Didache. Its instruction about following the gospel was if we could not keep it all, to at least do the very best we could. The bar is very high but God is merciful and honours the little effort we do make towards being perfect as He is.
(5) Do you see the extent of God’s providence? Abram left to find relief from famine, and came back not simply enjoying relief from famine but invested with great wealth and untold reputation, his identity well-known to everyone: now the inhabitants of Canaan gained a more precise idea of the good man’s virtue by seeing this sudden transformation that had taken place—the stranger who had gone down into Egypt as a refugee and vagabond now flush with so much wealth. Notice how he had not become less resolute or devoted under the influence of great prosperity or the abundance of wealth, but rather he pressed on once more to that place where he had formerly been before going down into Egypt. “He went into the desert,” the text says, “to the place where his tent had formerly been, to the place of the altar which he had made there in the beginning. He called on the name of the Lord God.” Consider, I ask you, how he was a lover of peace and quiet, and was constantly attentive to divine worship. The text says, remember, that he went down to that place where he had previously built the altar; by calling on the name of God he already right from the very beginning fulfilled in anticipation that saying of David, “I would rather be of no account in the house of my God than take up residence in sinners’ dwellings.” In other words, solitude turned out to be preferred by him for invoking the name of God, instead of the cities. "
So, therefore, we appear at least to engage in business for the Lord, but the profits of the business go to us. And we appear to offer victims to the Lord, but the things we offer are given back to us. For God needs nothing, but he wishes us to be rich, he desires our progress through each individual thing.
This figure is shown to us also in these things which happened to Job. For he too, although he was rich, lost everything because of God. But he bore well the struggles with patience and was magnanimous in everything which he suffered and said: “The Lord gave, the Lord has taken away; as it has pleased the Lord so is it done. Blessed be the name of the Lord.” Because of this, behold what finally is written about him: “He received back twice as much,” Scripture says, “as he had lost.”71
Do you see what it means to lose something for God? It means to receive it back multiplied. But the Gospels promise you something even more, “a hundred-fold” is offered you, besides also “life eternal” in Christ Jesus our Lord “to whom belongs glory and sovereignty forever and ever. Amen.”