The Purpose of Money
Early in my journey of learning about money, I noticed a very odd disconnect.
On the one hand, it was obvious that there’s a ton of personal finance advice readily available. Search on any financial question and within seconds you can find answers—sometimes, even credible answers!
And yet, lots of people struggle with money.
Why is that? With so much guidance so close at hand, why is successful money management so difficult for so many?
I believe it’s because too many people aren’t clear about the purpose of their lives. They’re living reactive lives, bouncing from one tempting use of money to another.
The only way to understand the purpose of money is to understand the purpose of life. And the only way to manage money effectively is to orient our use of money around our life purpose.
Do you know who you are?
Our culture would have us believe we’re consumers. It sounds harmless enough, right? But have you ever looked up the definition? To consume literally means to use up, devour, or spend wastefully.
How’s that working out for us?
The word first came into popular use during the Industrial Revolution, the period roughly between 1880 and 1920 that built the foundation of today’s consumer culture.
Our society shifted from agriculture to industry. People went from self-sufficient to income dependent, from making things to buying things. With so many goods spilling off assembly lines, businesses needed people to use stuff up.
To entice us to buy more and more, advertisers began linking products to our identity and happiness. Products became branded, and so did we. No longer were we referred to as citizens or workers. To politicians, the media, and makers of everything from clothing to canned food, we became consumers.
From that point forward, huge sums of money have been spent in an effort to make us believe we are consumers.
What’s in a name?
Consumer is more than a word; it’s a worldview. If I’m a consumer, who’s the most important person in the world? I am, right? Life is all about me – my pleasure, my comfort, my happiness.
If I’m a consumer, where is happiness found? In money and what it can buy.
And if I’m a consumer, life is a competition. It’s a quest to have more. More than I had last year and more than my neighbors have.
People who study happiness say this is the path that leads in the exact opposite direction of where we’d all like to go. It’s like trying to get to New York from Chicago and getting on a westbound train.
They say happiness isn’t found in living for ourselves. It’s found in living for something bigger than ourselves. It isn’t found in loving money and things. It’s found in loving people. And it isn’t found in living a life of competition. It’s found in living a life of contribution.
Remembering who we are
The good news is that we were not meant to be consumers. The Bible doesn’t say that on the sixth day God made consumers who would use up and waste all that He made on the previous five days. It says He made man and woman in His image.
Financially, the Bible describes us as stewards, or managers.
I think a lot of people misunderstand that. The word seems heavy, like a burden. It’s as if they’ve been given managerial responsibility over some stuff and misheard the instructions as: “Whatever you do, don’t break or lose any of it.”
But those aren’t the instructions we’ve been given at all.
In the Parable of the Talents, a wealthy man entrusts three servants with his stuff, goes on a long journey, and then returns to see how they did. One servant got the instructions wrong. He hid what was entrusted to him out of fear and then returned it to his master. He didn’t lose or break any of it, but he didn’t do anything productive with it either. For his efforts, or lack thereof, he received a harsh rebuke.
The other two servants were different. They turned what had been entrusted to them into something more. For their efforts, they received strong words of affirmation. And then the master entrusted them with more.
Of course, the master represents God; the servants represent us.
Three Purposes for Money
The Bible says we were designed to live not just for something more, but for someone more – God. So, the first purpose of money is to use it in ways that glorify God.
The Bible says the second most important priority in life is to love others. It never says that money or things are inherently bad. It just teaches us not to love money or things, but to love people. So, the second purpose of money is to use it in ways that strengthen our relationships with others.
And the Bible says we’ve all been given certain talents and passions in order to make a difference with our lives. So, the third purpose of money is to use it in ways that enable us to make our unique and meaningful contribution to the world.
Let me say it again. The three overarching purposes of our lives are to love God, love others, and make a God-glorifying difference with our God-given talents, passions, and resources. So those are the three main purposes of money: Use it to love God, love others, and make a difference.