Vested Interest Print
1 Timothy 6:17-21
Matthew 6:24-34
Luke 12:13-34

“When buying shares, ask yourself, would you buy the whole company?” – Rene Rivkin

Someone told me that if you’d owned one share of Coca-Cola stock 100 years ago, it would have split 1,000 times by this point. No one I know has held shares of anything for a century, but you get the point.

Albert Einstein said, “The most powerful force in the universe is compound interest.” The longer the interest accumulates, the faster it grows.

What, in traditional theory, will win me a greater return? Given equal annual yields of a safe 5 percent, will a 30-year investment perform better than a one hundred year investment? That latter always dominates the former; the time value involved carries the 100-year investment to heights the thirty-year couldn’t imagine.

But we don’t live long enough to reap the rewards of a century’s worth of investing, do we? But others could. Our investments could pay out huge annuities to others.

Must long-term investing mean the IRA that you can safely tap into at 59½ or 65? What of investing in others, for others, and not merely for your children’s children?

What of investing in the things God values? His kingdom desires love, mercy, justice (see Micah 6:6-8), and reconciled lives. The returns on these, while neither visible nor material, put the savviest fund managers to shame.

Jesus says what we should all honestly recognize, realistically embrace and pragmatically consider: the world’s wealth passes. Only something in a sort of spiritual Swiss bank account is secure for long-term performance. Only something invested in God’s market won’t burn, corrupt or pass away.

Consider the following names: J. Pierpont Morgan and Mother Teresa; Glenn McCarthy and Martin Luther King Jr.;  Dhirubhai Ambani and Mahatma Ghandi. Do you remember the former names, or the latter? Whose investments continue to yield results for the sick, the orphaned, civil rights and India? Whom do we remember?

Let’s not say that Morgan, McCarthy and Ambani lived lesser lives, but we clearly see the others living for and investing in what God values. Mother Teresa, King and Ghandi invested in an invisible market. The interest continues to compound at amazing rates in the lives of people everywhere.

Whose investment practices do you want to model? Morgan’s? Or King’s?

Remember the words of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: “Whatever you can do or dream you can do, begin it. Begin it now.”
   
On what do you spend the currency of your time?
Who benefits from your investments? Who will tomorrow?
What reaps the greatest harvest in our lives?
 
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