求你使虚假和谎言远离我;不要使我贫穷,也不要使我富裕,只要给我需用的食物。免得我吃饱了,就不认你,说:‘耶和华是谁?’又恐怕我贫穷,就偷窃,污渎了我神的名。(箴言 30:8-9)
Upon winning $314 million in a 2002 lottery, a happy business owner expressed noble desires. He wanted to start a charitable foundation, put laid-off workers back on the job, and do nice things for his family. Already wealthy, he told reporters the big win wouldn’t change him.
A few years later, a follow-up article described a different outcome. Since winning the biggest of all lotteries, the man had run into legal problems, lost his personal reputation, and gambled away all of his money.
A thoughtful man by the name of Agur wrote words that anticipate such heartbreak. Brought low by the awareness of his own natural inclinations (Prov. 30:2-3), Agur saw the dangers of having too much or too little.
Agur saw the special challenges that come both with wealth and poverty, but also with our own tendencies. Each gives us reason for caution. Together they show our need for the One who taught us to pray, “Give us this day our daily bread.”
Discontentment makes rich people poor, while contentment makes poor people rich.
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