Making Money Holy
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About this ebook
A challenge to live out our faith through the way we spend and share our financial resources.
Money has edged out sex as the forbidden topic of conversation in both secular and religious circles. Why do we think of money as shameful, whether we have lots or none at all? How can we in the church engage the topic of money in ways that are liberating and life-giving? How might we choose to deal with money in a way that is grounded in love? How do we understand money as holy? How do we recognize “enough?” Demi Prentiss shares why she believes, "we can come to understand the highest use of money as a tool for sharing God’s grace and for shaping the manifestations of God’s reign here on earth.” This book is a guide to looking at money honestly and practicing conscientious stewardship.
Demi Prentiss
Demi Prentiss has been a ministry developer at the parish, diocesan, and church-wide levels for twenty-five years, and has seen the transformational effect of refocusing the church outside its own walls. She served as editor for the Episcopal Church Foundation's Finance Resource Guide and is the co-author of Radical Sending: Go to Love and Serve. She lives in Denton, Texas.
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Making Money Holy - Demi Prentiss
Introduction
Let me assure you, dear reader, that despite the title, Making Money Holy will not offer a rite for sprinkling currency with holy water in order to render it holy. Like a hammer or a computer or a paintbrush, money is a tool, and holy is as holy does. That is, the way we use our money is what makes it holy or unholy, life-giving and liberating or death-dealing and oppressing.
That’s not to advocate a sort of works righteousness for things.
Putting it to good use does not make it saved
for eternity or assure its place in heaven. Money is fungible—a canvas that displays our projections. Money as a vehicle for holiness is more a matter of by their fruit you shall know them
(Matthew 7:16). What our money accomplishes usually indicates whether it’s been put to holy or unholy use.
In large measure, our relationship with money shapes how we put it to use. As God’s children, we are called to be fully human, bearers of the Christ-light within us. As Micah 6:8 reminds us, the Lord asks that we do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with our God.
We’re called to use our money to those ends.
To help us discern how we might walk that path, this book takes a hard look at money: how it makes us crazy, how we fear it and idolize it, and how we’re inclined to exile it from our relationship with God. When we take the risk to engage God, our faith, and the larger community in our money story, we come to recognize where our wealth lies and how we can use our assets in ways that enrich our lives.
I invite you into this conversation about money. I encourage you to discover how the discussion becomes richer and more transformative as you widen it to include a diversity of voices. I pray that you will grow as an agent in your own financial life, as you claim the true value of your assets and of your identity, grounded in God the giver of all.
Demi Prentiss
1 img1 Why Are We So Crazy About Money?
I don’t like money very much, but it calms my nerves.
—Joe Lewis, prizefighter
We are crazy about money. We like it, a whole lot. And we do crazy things because of and for and about money. What’s that about?
The Water We Swim In
In many respects, the power that money has in our lives—the crazy-making power—springs from the culture that surrounds us. That’s true whether we are products of Western European culture, or Asian culture, or African, or Caribbean. As long as we understand money as a way of quantifying our assets, money will be laden with cultural, emotional, psychological, even spiritual freight.
Money as a way of evaluating our well-being is a recent development for Americans. Eli Cook, exploring How Money Became the Measure of Everything
¹ for The Atlantic, explains:
In the mid-nineteenth century . . . American businesspeople and policymakers started to measure progress in dollar amounts, tabulating social welfare based on people’s capacity to generate income.
Until the 1850s . . . the most popular and dominant forms of social measurement in nineteenth-century America (as in Europe) were a collection of social indicators known then as moral statistics,
which quantified such phenomena as prostitution, incarceration, literacy, crime, education, insanity, pauperism, life expectancy, and disease. While these moral statistics were laden with paternalism, they nevertheless focused squarely on the physical, social, spiritual, and mental condition of the American people. For better or for worse, they placed human beings at the center of their calculating vision. Their unit of measure was bodies and minds, never dollars and cents.²
In the twentieth century, economic indicators increasingly put a monetary value on many aspects of everyday life. In the present day, a price can be put on nearly any aspect of U.S. culture: economic output, productivity, prison recidivism, the impact of cancer, the benefits of school recess, and more.
Cook concludes:
Since the mid-twentieth century . . . economic indicators have promoted an idea of American society as a capital investment whose main goal, like that of any investment, is ever-increasing monetary growth. . . . [By] making capital accumulation synonymous with progress, money-based metrics have turned human betterment into a secondary concern. By the early twenty-first century, American society’s top priority became its bottom line, [and] net worth became synonymous with self-worth.³
Money, according to Keith Hart, in his journal article From a Cultural Point of View,
is culturally plastic
—open to various interpretations depending on the culture—and endowed with multiple interpretations.⁴ For people in the United States, with money-based metrics becoming the measure of what we’re worth
far beyond our bank balance, it’s an easy jump to deciding that the more money we have, the better we are. And that way lies madness. Jesus reminds us, What will it profit them to gain the whole world and forfeit their life?
(Mark 8:36)
What’s Not to Like?
We love what money can buy for us. Beyond the material things, it buys influence, prestige, a so-called better life, even friends in some cases. So what’s not to like?
Well, clearly, it’s that forfeit your life
part that Jesus was talking about. Money can be