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Do You Think that the Prosperous Won't Come into Paradise?

By: Jose Anajero

One of the biggest monsters that continue us deprived is that we in truth don't want to be prosperous. And we don't want to be rich because we've got crazy, insane holy viewpoint about finances.
Sacred values are so deep-seated, so wedged to your heart, you go behind them even if you're not knowledgeable that you're following them.
Am not advocating that all of us should be well-to-do. Or our worth is defined by our income. Mother Teresa had no earnings and yet she was of the most influential people in modern history. But because of her work for the poorest of the pitiable, she spent $40 million a year. Her bureau was blessed by very rich people helping her. How could she have done her unbelievable work if there were no giving people around her?
Guys, I do not suppose people who wish to become affluent are spiritually immature.
What matters is the motivation.
Read carefully...
wealth isn't the most critical thing in the world.
But financial affects every important thing in the world.
It affects your family life.
If affects your physical life.
It affects your intellectual life.
It influences your spiritual life.
It affects you ability to help others.
We need financial. And wealth, if used properly, can bless the world.
One of the crazy holy idea am perceptive of is the belief that the well-to-do won't enter heaven.
"Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to squeeze through the eye of a needle than for a moneyed person to get into the kingdom of God."- Matthew 19:24
The passage above is repeatedly qouted as substantiation that heaven isn't for plentiful people.
I've got two challenges with that.
First of all, they don't read the two verses right after that passage...
"When the believers heard this, they were terribly dazed and inquired, "Who then can be emancipated? Jesus looked at them and said, "With man this is unattainable, but with God everything are feasible". - Matthew 19:25-26.
Jesus didn't say, "It's unachievable for plentiful people to enter paradise". He simply said, "It's going to be more not easy for the opulent person to enter paradise." Why is this? Because Jesus says that to whom much is entrusted, much more will be asked (Luke 12:48).
Here's my second point: Don't take the "came through an eye of a needle" literally. The picture is absurd, no wonder people reflect it's unfeasible.
But when Jesus said, "camel through the eye of a needle", ancient Jews would have instantaneously understood what He was talking about to. The "eye of a needle" was a usual expression for a door of a camel's quarters.
Cast silly holy viewpoint.

Article Source: http://www.internet-marketing.freearticledirectories.com

Jose Anajero invites fellow Christians to visit a site he has recently discovered which offers practical christian financial concepts.

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