I Am Second

Money

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What are the principles for financial success? How do we make good financial decisions and manage our resources for the long haul? How do we find contentment, especially when we don’t reach our dreams? Why does the Bible have over 2,300 verses on money?

Joe Gibbs helping to teach dollars and sense

Former Coach partners with Strayer University to help Washington Redskins players gain the financial savvy he lacked when he was younger

Unbeknownst to all but a handful of people, Joe Gibbs spent most of two days at Redskins Park on June 1-2. He met with many of the team's key veterans, two of their wives and about 20 players in all, sandwiching the time during the team's organized team activities.

He is involved. Very involved.

"I wanted to give back," Gibbs said in a telephone interview. "I just thought this was something I could do for the players."

Joe Gibbs talked money with the Redskins early last month. For help, he enlisted two university professors with Harvard MBAs.

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Can't Do It All

Ever had a Saturday when you woke up with about a half dozen things you wanted to accomplish, but you couldn't decide which task to tackle first? So you piddled at one of them for a little while, got stuck and started another, then left off to get busy with something else.

All Weather Blessings

These are tough economic times all around. The same rules and assumptions that used to be part of the wall paint of life don't seem to apply any more. Housing values don't just automatically go up. The next stop on the Dow Jones index may not be a thousand more, perhaps a thousand less.

Is Enough Enough?

How much money do we really need? It's a good question to ask ourselves, because our natural default is to answer, "As much as we can possibly get." That's what seems to drive the sports agents and superstars who shoot for such astronomical contracts. It's why small soft drinks at the movie theater cost $4.75. But is "as much as we can get" a legitimate motto to build our financial lives around?

Four Principles to Having Enough

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How Can I Tithe When I'm Financially Strapped?

And now, brothers, we want you to know about the grace that God has given the Macedonian churches. Out of the most severe trial, their overflowing joy and their extreme poverty welled up in rich generosity. For I testify that they gave as much as they were able, and even beyond their ability. Entirely on their own, they urgently pleaded with us for the privilege of sharing in this service to the saints. And they did not do as we expected, but they gave themselves first to the Lord and then to us in keeping with God's will. 2 Cor. 8:1-5

Giving With Eternity in Mind

From The Treasure Principle

The streets of Cairo were hot and dusty as we made our way down an alley to a plot of overgrown grass. It was a graveyard for American missionaries. Our guide pointed to a sun-scorched tombstone that read: "William Borden, 1887-1913." Borden, a Yale graduate and heir to great wealth, rejected a life of ease in order to bring the gospel to Muslims.

Are School Loans an Acceptable Form of Debt?

The New American Standard Bible translates Romans 13:8 as follows: "Owe nothing to anyone." This would appear to prohibit debt. The New International Version reads, "Let no debt remain outstanding." This translation would allow debt, but insists it be paid off as soon as possible.

First Things First

You may or may not be a list-maker. It doesn't really matter. Because whether you are or you aren't, we all live by a list. We all do what's most important to us-our ones, twos, and threes. The tens, twelves, and fifteens rarely make an actual appearance.

Culture of Opportunity

Jesus told a story about three men, each presented with an allotment of money to handle in the way they thought best. Two of the men took their share, invested it wisely, and earned a 100% return. But the third man, afraid to risk any loss, buried his money in the ground. Rather than feeling free to be creative with what God had given, rather than enjoying a relationship with his master that gave him room to try and fail, he was always looking over his shoulder, motivated less by success and more by avoiding punishment. He thought of his boss as a “hard man” (Matthew 25:24), itching to crush anyone who crossed him. You never knew what might set him off.