Archive for Lessons Learned
Do you still believe in wealth? [Your Responses]
Posted by: | CommentsA couple of weeks ago, I sent out a few questions to my list. They were…
Do you still believe in wealth and prosperity? Or have you been kicked
down so much in the last year or two that you don’t really know what
to believe? Does the very word “wealth” now have a negative connotation?
Are you more concerned about financial freedom or financial security?
What are your biggest financial concerns right now?
Just thought you would like to see what others are saying. Here are some of the responses below (I took out any personal info). Please add a comment below if you want to add to anything!
I will always believe in God’s will for us to prosper and to help others do the same.
Financial Freedom is my focus. My biggest concern is getting the right information concerning what I desire to do and then applying that information properly.
Wealth does not have a negative tone with me.
Earnest D.
Prosper is a word found in the OT and NT. In Hebrew, prosper has two meanings. 1. It literally means for God to come upon a person. In other words, God takes over their life and cleans it up. 2. He blesses them, physically, spiritually, emotionally, relationally and financially.
A good example of both meanings was demonstrated in the life of David. He endured years of suffering before he became king. Solomon got it all without any suffering. The difference is astounding. David was known as a man after God’s own heart, while Solomon led Israel astray. Solomon was unbroken. David was not. When God wants someone to prosper, he cleans house. That’s first. If there’s somthing in the person’s life that causes them to be subject to the enemy’s schemes, God wants that out of the person before they ascend to the top.
That is what happened to me. God is more interested in the condition of my soul than the size of my bank account, and He had to clean both of them out before I was ready to prosper.
To make a long story short, I lost everything- except one house. It’s a good deal- a sandwich lease that earned me 5,000 up front and approximately $17,000 on the back end, when I sell it. Everything else went down the tubes. But God did a great work in my heart, and readjusted my thinking. Now I’m not afraid of losing money, time, reputation, comfort, security, friends, opportunities, or even my own life. Don’t get me wrong- I still struggle with fear, but it’s like an illusion that I have to dismiss, rather than the crippling force it was.
I’m a lot happier. I’ve learned, like Paul, that whether I abound or am abased, I am content, because God is with me. I want to be gloriously wealthy, but I want to do it His way, and that usually requires patience. Thanks for sending the questions, and thanks for being you.
Caleb R.
#1 Wealth does not have a negative connotation but it does seem less attainable in today’s economic environment.
#2 Financial Freedom / independence is the ideal, security would be an added benefit but is in and of itself a myth since our ultimate security is in Christ and not our financial statements.
#3 the devaluation of the US dollar, the economy, and an out of control government that seems determined to “steal” that which we have sacrificed to save, plan, an invest in preparation for the future.
Marty R.
Wealth does not have a negative connotation with me. Poverty of the heart has a sad and negative connotation with me. I think of the verses in Colossians 2:2,3; “My purpose is that they may be encouraged in heart and united in love, so that they may have the full riches of complete understanding, in order that they may know the mystery of God, namely, Christ, in whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.” NIV Cannot put a dollar price tag on opening up all the Godly treasures of wisdom and knowledge. Dollars pass away. Building Godly love and life doesn’t.
Hard to believe there is such a thing as financial security. (Just when you think you’re set… who would have ever saw that coming.) Financial freedom means there is a way out of a trap and financial prison and a way to avoid getting into one. It also means having the ability to help free others.
Jack C.
Wealth is not a ‘bad’ word.
I’m concerned about paying monthly bills and getting out of debt.
Financial security.
Brad Y.
Everything is up to God! Whatever happens happens!
Trev
The word wealth has even more importance than ever, as nothing can be taken for granted in life any longer. I believe that there are loads of opportunities waiting for attention and people with energy to develop them. Times of challenge often the times for new solutions and great innovations.
During the last year, I have had more concerns about financial security. I used these concerns to motivate me to learn about how I may grow my wealth. I am now excited about the possibilities and am working on a number of them.
Concerns?
1) Trying too many different wealth creation ideas at the same time, and not mastering any of them.
2) Maintaining a risk-balanced portfolio of wealth creation strategies.
3) Growing positive cashflow
Iain P.
I believe in wealth and prosperity. The word wealth is a good thing and intended for those who want it. I am concerned about financial freedom because it seems our own government is trying to take it away. My biggest Financial concerns are coming up with the plan that will bring me to financial freedom and get me out of the the daily grind we live in and out of the hole I put myself in. All of the daily distractions are pulling my focus from what God really has in store. The one or many big ideas not yet fulfilled.
Shawn D.
I believe that we prosper as our souls prosper and yes I believe to have prosperity it starts with your mindset and perceptions of God, yourself, the body of Christ and others. Obviously if we have the wrong perceptions, we will miss out on responding properly.
I believe God wants us to have more than enough to be able to give away. I believe He is raising up Joseph’s to be able to help out in the trying times ahead.
I think that wealth typically has ‘gotten’ a bad name. But again I believe it is in our perspective. I think to look at it only from a monetary point of view is missing the mark. I also believe that we need to change our view of wealth as being a bad thing.
I am concerned more for financial security given the state of affairs with China owning most of our country, the dollar falling and just what might happen in a year or two.
[Concerns?] Getting totally out of debt, increasing cash flow, and having a reserve in the right form (gold and silver). Also, I am interested in finding a new business that would be of help to others in a difficult economy.
Michelle H.
I do still believe in wealth and prosperity. For me it does not have a negative connotation. My concern is in the managing of it and how not to partner with corrupt government officials and banking institutions that have their own interests above and at the expense of the working class people and that are responsible for getting our economy in the shape that it is in.
Right now I am more concerned about financial freedom. By basic needs are met and I am out of debt. However I feel limited with where I can go, what I can do, giving, etc. and don’t want to have to be so concerned about budget.
My biggest financial concern right now is how to create passive income so that I can focus on working for the kingdom of God. I don’t have the funds to invest in real estate right now, so there needs to be another way. I want to do some writing and hopefully generate income from that, but just don’t know how to do that right now, and I don’t want to invest any more money in other people’s programs they are marketing as that has never paid off for me in the past.
Kathy S.
Q1- Yes, I do believe in wealth and prosperity
Q2- I know I’ve been kicked down in the past, but somehow , somewhere in the back of my mind I still feel/know it is possible to achieve wealth.
Q3- Not really.I reckon wealth is about perception, how one sees themselves, having a focused mind, sheer determination to accomplish anything, passion, and that one ‘goal’.
Q4- More concerned about financial freedom, with the future generation in mind.
Q5- Biggest concerns- a mortgage, wedding finance, business funds, -pension, etc.
L Osedo
Do I still believe in wealth and prosperity? Yes, I do because it’s still in the Word of God. That said I am consistently refining my belief in this area to be more as to what I see God’s Word says about it. I think as Christians we must, or should I say MUST, be ever willing to confirm our beliefs are what we see He has promised or planned. I see more today than in the past few years how much our natural wealth comes as a result of what is promised in Matthew after we ‘seek first the Kingdom of God.’
Does the word wealth have a negative connotation? To too many Christians it does but not to me. Two things along this thought: 1) If the devil knew all it would take to get you away from serving God is a bunch of money, he’d make sure you had plenty of it. In other words satan would pay for your eternity to be destroyed if he knew he could.
2) If God created the earth and all its fulness for His children and Jesus died to get it back to us, why should we be wrong in wanting, taking or receiving it?
Lara Y.
Mark, I still believe in Gods word and his covenant promises to bless us , so Yes I do [still believe in wealth and prosperity]. The past 2 years have been tough to say the least but we live in a world wrecked by mans systems and we have to hear Gods word to find our way through the smoke. I have been somewhat passive about new business adventures and progressive ways but now I see 2011 as a year to reload and come out of the shelter.
[Concerns?] Basic planning and bill paying is more of a concern,but it has made us wiser.
Randy W.
Hi Mark, thanks for working hard to help with increasing our financial knowledge towards doing things God’s way. For the first question, I’m a firm believer of wealth and prosperity. If God gives the power to obtain wealth (Deut 8:18) how can we not believe in wealth and prosperity, especially after the way He blessed Solomon!
After reading a few financial books and gaining a bit of understanding on handling finances with wisdom, I’ve realized that freedom is better than security. When you think about it, it’s better to know that your investments are covering your expenses, so you can invest your time in helping others and enjoying your life, as opposed to, knowing that you
have plenty of money to survive for long periods of time but still have to pour a lot of blood, sweat and tears into getting it. When someone is presented with a choice concerning living right financially, who would argue the latter? Only workaholics!
Right now, my financial concerns concern getting a decent income each month to start an online business. If I can get any online job that will help with putting something in my paypal account then I can start up my own website and move on from there.
Tarisai M.
I believe in wealth and prosperity. I am more concerned about financial freedom.
Thanks.
Peter.
I do believe in wealth and prosperity, but only as a working tool to continually help others in need. In these hard times, I personally believe it’s wrong to stockpile and accumulate wealth for oneself, when so many people around us are suffering and out of work. As a blue collar working man myself, a wealthy person with millions in the bank is the equivalent of a worker showing up on a jobsite with a truck full of tools, only to sit and watch others work. If the tool of money isn’t being circulated and distributed responsibly so that others benefit, then it’s a merely another false god being bowed down to.
Financial freedom, meaning the power to decide how my day is spent and, likewise, how the money I’m entrusted with is spent. I have little interest in accumulating money for the sake of “financial security”. When you stop and think about it, both the terms “financial freedom” and “financial security” seem to be a bit of an oxymoron for a practicing Christian.
The local bank lending scene has deteriorated so badly that small businesses in my area that operate on credit are finding it harder and harder to continue doing business. Money is not being circulated and distributed to responsible lenders, and basically only those who need it the least (ie, those with accumulated wealth) are benefiting from low interest lending. If this continues, more and more businesses will continue to fold up, eventually including my own.
David O.
Wealth was established by GOD, not man…He owns it all….It is only through the grace of God and the witty inventions HE gave men that wealth started it’s transfer… I am still “waiting on the wealth of the wicked which is laid up for the righteous”.
Yes, God’s blessings are for all and it DOES NOT ALWAYS COME IN MONETARY ways.
Meg W.
I definitely still believe in wealth and prosperity. We have been kicked in the teeth all right, and are still a few months away from digging out of the hole we created for ourselves when we bought the wrong houses a few years back. Had I executed the plan correctly it wouldn’t have happened, so it’s my own fault. But it has been painful to say the least. That said, I also believe God used my colossal failure to show me where he wanted me to focus my energies (in my writing). So it may be that I simply had the order of operations backwards like I did back in Miss Chastain’s Algebra class in 1988. Maybe instead of real estate enabling me to write, maybe writing will enable me to buy real estate.
We’re still in holding mode as far as real estate goes, so I don’t plan to buy anything within the next few months, maybe not this year. But I still believe that if I can get the right property and hold onto it with positive cash flow each month, then that positive cash flow will be at least one of the savings accounts we need for [our kids'] college fund. I agree with the assertion that we have to buy based on cash flow sense rather than “maybe it’ll be worth lots more in the future and it’ll all be worth it.”
But God’s word and principles of wealth-building haven’t been affected by the housing woes of late. Let’s not forget that.
Daryl
Hope this ministers to you as it did to me… Mark
SMALL STRAWS IN A SOFT WIND by Marsha Burns — 11/10/2010:
Beloved, the changes that have occurred in the past few years have given cause to redefine yourself. You have even been tempted to believe that you have lost your identity somewhere along the line, which is not true. You are still unique and precious in My sight. And, I am molding you and bringing clarity to your life according to who you are in Me. You have lost nothing; the cherished elements of your character and nature are ready to emerge in high definition, and I call you to come forth in renewed purpose and power, says the Lord.
Isaiah 58:14 Then you shall delight yourself in the LORD; and I will cause you to ride on the high hills of the earth, and feed you with the heritage of Jacob your father. The mouth of the LORD has spoken.
Understanding the Real Estate Market (Step #3)
Posted by: | CommentsThis is the last of the three steps in this short blog series…
Step #1 is Getting Out Of Debt.
Step #2 is Starting Your Own Business, The Low-Risk Way.
Step #3 is Understanding the Real Estate Market.
Notice I said “understand” the market, not necessarily “buy”
or “invest” in real estate. It all depends. There’s a time
to buy, and a time to sell, and a time to do nothing but
wait!
It’s all about the timing. Ask me how I know that!
Everyone should watch the real estate market, because it’s
good to be aware of it for any investment properties, but
for your personal residence as well, which as many have
seen, is not the investment/asset they once thought!
I’m watching the real estate market now and studying
different methods and niches to determine what specific
strategies are working best or not working at all, and
I’ll be sharing some of this as well in the coming months.
You can’t always believe what some real estate “guru” tells
you is the best method ever. Maybe 5 years ago, but not now.
I do know that some of these “gurus” that are teaching
their preferred method of investing are sitting on the
sidelines themselves right now – not ALL of them, but
some of them.
I’m looking at a number of ideas, and a number of real
estate programs, but I will tell you I’m being extremely
conservative and low-risk (even NO risk) in what I am
considering for myself and for YOU.
I was hit extremely hard in real estate because I wrongly
assumed that prices would always go up, but I will not make
that mistake again. And it’s still not certain if we
have seen the bottom of home prices yet. Some
experts say we’re still years away from the bottom.
So I look forward to sharing more with you on this subject
in the near future. We won’t focus on this as urgently as
the first two steps, but it will follow behind.
Blessed (to be a wise investor who multiplied his talents),
Mark
P.S. Thank you for reading this post! Your comments and
questions are welcomed below.
P.P.S. Pass this along to your friends and colleagues, too.
***If you haven’t viewed the new 15-min. video I put together,
you can still do so at:
Do you really want to get out of debt?
Posted by: | CommentsAround the end of 2009, I had an epiphany…
It dawned on me that even though I’ve been right on teaching
people about creating wealth through businesses, investments,
and real estate, that many people (if not MOST) have been so
encumbered with debt and trying to climb from under the burden
of debt…
…they can’t even think about starting their own business or
getting into real estate or putting money into investments.
They are bound, financially AND mentally! Whatever time,
money, or resources one tries to use to build wealth is being
sucked away by debt!
You see, in the past, I always taught wealth-building with my
thoughts on debt being that if you build wealth and income,
you will automatically have enough to pay off your debts.
But now I realize that debt is the #1 hindrance to being able
to achieve wealth and increase your income to begin with…
So one of my goals, which is step #1 in this 3-step process,
is to do everything I can to help people get out of debt
COMPLETELY! This is one of the things I’ve researched deeply
this year, and I have an unbelievable program that I will be
introducing to you that should be launching in the next few
weeks.
This is not a typical “get out of debt” program that perhaps
some of you have gone through already, where you’re taught
some good information, but it’s left up to you to figure out
how to apply it to your situation all on your own, and you
feel as confused as you did before the class.
This program offers a personal roadmap, tailor-made to your
specific financial situation, and it will give you the specific
steps YOU need to take to get completely out of debt faster
than you could have ever imagined.
I’ve researched and compared many of the well-known debt
programs out there, and I’ve been working personally with the
creators of this Program, and I’m absolutely positive you’ll
be blown away!
So, there you have it… Step #1 is to get out of debt,
even though you can have that going WHILE you’re working on
the other steps.
You HAVE to get out from under that burden. Once this rolls
out in the next few weeks, I will be letting you know!
Blessed (to be debt-free),
Mark
P.S. Thank you for reading this post! Your comments and
questions are welcomed below.
P.P.S. Pass this along to your friends and colleagues, too.
***If you haven’t viewed the new 15-min. video I put together,
you can still do so at:
More Changes Are Coming… Will You Be Ready?
Posted by: | CommentsDue to what’s been going on in the markets and the economy,
I’ve been contemplating things in my life and what I know
others are experiencing right now. I’ve been thinking how
EPIC Wealth Strategies can be more relevant for TODAY.
This has led me to make some changes and additions – really,
a re-ordering of priorities in what EPIC provides that
coincides with the change of priorities in my own life.
I’ve broken these priorities into three steps that I believe
are essential to us as Christian entrepreneurs, business
owners, and employees alike. These three steps apply to
everyone!
Starting tomorrow, I will post a short series of three new
blog posts outlining these three steps (one every few days
for each step), so be on the lookout for these. I’m pumped
about this new direction, and I know you will be, too!
Blessings!
Mark
P.S. Thank you for reading this post! Your comments and
questions are welcomed below.
P.P.S. Pass this along to your friends and colleagues, too.
***If you haven’t viewed the new 15-min. video I put together,
you can still do so at:
Doing business God’s way
Posted by: | CommentsHave you ever noticed that sometimes God’s way doesn’t make sense when you look at it in the natural?
A few months back, I had the honor of personally sitting down with Truett Cathy, the founder of the remarkably successful Chick-Fil-A chain. We had an incredible thirty minutes or so together, and for those who don’t know, Mr. Cathy is an extremely dedicated Christian who still teaches Sunday School in his church (he has been for over 50 years).
Chick-Fil-A continues to remain closed for business on Sundays because Mr. Cathy chose to honor God’s laws rather than typical business. He said, “Our decision to close on Sunday was our way of honoring God and directing our attention to things more important than our business. If it took seven days to make a living with a restaurant, then we needed to be in some other line of work. Through the years, I have never wavered from that position.”
Many “experts” said that the business would never make it when they were just starting out because of that decision. Many shopping malls refused to let them in back in the late 60′s because of that decision.
However, 40 years later, they have over 1,400 stores and are approaching $3 billion in annual sales. And to top it off, they’re still a private, family-owned company.
God’s laws or directions do supersede natural laws and what sometimes makes business sense to us.
There were times that I bought properties because they may have made business sense to do so. I bought them just because I could, but was it what I was supposed to do? I found out later that this wasn’t always the case.
It made business sense for me to retire as an architect, and I was proud to be able to say I did. But what I later realized is that God had a calling on my life as an architect, especially helping pastors build their churches and bringing their God-given visions to reality. I had neglected and even abandoned that call, and I had to repent for doing so.
And sometimes it’s just a matter of the right timing. How many times have we heard a Word from the Lord, and we rush out to make it happen on our own because we automatically think that He means right away?
Did that strike a chord with someone else besides me?
Blessings!
Mark
Are you relying on one income source?
Posted by: | CommentsIn a three-year period, I bought millions of dollars in residential real estate. I still believe that real estate is one of the best vehicles to create wealth, and that everyone should invest in real estate whether it’s your main income or you’re just buying a couple of houses a year to add to your retirement portfolio.
But some things happened in my real estate business that caused my monthly cash flow to go down significantly. I will follow up in the future about some of the lessons learned during this time specifically regarding real estate, but the point right now is…
The income from the residential real estate business was all I had at the time – income that I had come to rely on as a sole source.
God used the situation to teach me more than ever the importance of multiple streams of income. I had always believed in it, but thought I didn’t have to concern myself with it, since real estate was MY business, and I would NEVER need anything else, right?
Even if you have a steady job, I recommend that you have your own business of some kind on the side instead of relying on that one income source for obvious reasons. Don’t have fear of losing your job, but be wise and prepare in case things don’t go as planned.
If you are diverse in your businesses, investments, and real estate, then you won’t be affected as greatly as markets change in various areas. If there is a bump in the road with one of your markets (or the loss of a job), you have the others that continue to flow. In the current economy, this is not just a good idea, but could be essential for the future.
This situation in my life is what birthed the Multiple Streams of Income for the Christian Entrepreneur 7-CD Audio Program. If you haven’t picked up a copy, you can click here to learn more about the program and the whole idea of multiple streams.
Now I have three main streams of income that I am currently building with some others in the works. I want real estate (commercial and residential) to be just one of many sources for me. This time, I hope I’m building wealth much smarter and wiser.
Thank you for listening!
Mark
Where are you on the investment risk scale?
Posted by: | CommentsBack in my corporate days, if you were to ask me what my risk level was on a scale from 1 to 10, I would have said a “2″. I was really conservative with my investments.
If you would have asked me that same question just a couple of years ago, I would have answered with a resounding “10″ and would have been quite proud of that.
But where should we be? Knowing that God is balanced in all things, maybe we should follow His lead and be in the middle – maybe a “5″. But what does that mean?
Being on the low end of the risk scale would be like the “wicked servant” in Luke 19, who buried his talent because he was so afraid to take any risks.
So, needless to say, I didn’t want to be there, so, hallelujah, let’s move to a “10″!
This is exactly what I did. I would sign my life away on the dotted line on just about anything that came across my desk that looked like it might make money, believing I was quite unlike that wicked servant.
Let me make this clear. It’s not the asset itself that’s too risky; it’s HOW you invest in that asset that makes it more or less risky.
Let me give you an example. One of my biggest mistakes is the purchase of two luxury homes right before the real estate market had its biggest downturn. Because I signed for these personally and I couldn’t sell them, they became huge financial burdens on us (they were $1 million plus each).
Was it the luxury homes themselves that was risky? No, it was the way I bought them. I could have put these two homes under option with no risk at all! Why didn’t I do that? Well, I trusted the people who brought the deal to me, and as I’ve said before, I didn’t seek the Lord for wisdom in these deals, or even inquire if I was supposed to be involved with them in the first place. So any particular investment can be a “5″ just by being wise at finding ways to minimize the risks involved.
After going through certain financial struggles (some due to these two homes and some due to other mistakes made, but perhaps that’s another post), it would be tempting to run back to the safety of the “1″ or the “2″ on the risk scale. But are you getting anywhere? Not even according to Jesus himself, as evidenced in Luke 19.
Ecclesiastes 11 talks about taking risks with your investments, all the while knowing that some of them will have a return and others won’t. But you do it anyway!
Yes, we need to take risks, but as a recurring theme you’re hearing from me over and over in this series, there must be a balance to it.
Stay tuned…
Blessings!
Mark
P.S. Please leave your comments below!
FEAR and GREED: The two cancers to any Christian Entrepreneur
Posted by: | CommentsI heard a friend of mine recently say that the two cancers to any investing portfolio are fear and greed. I will be introducing my friend to you soon because of his investing insights, but his words struck home with me. Here’s why…
Over the years, I have focused many teachings on fear, but not on greed.
I have hit fear head on by constantly telling people to act even when they’re afraid. Fear is what caused the wicked servant in Luke 19 to bury his talent rather than invest it so it could multiply. I believe one of the biggest mistakes we as believers make is waiting for all fear to disappear before we are willing to act. In the first CD of the Multiple Streams of Income for the Christian Entrepreneur Audio Program, I talk about combating fear in detail so I won’t repeat the discussion here.
But I have avoided talking about greed, even though my intentions of not doing so may have been justified. If I talked about greed, then perhaps the perception would be that being wealthy is being greedy. I didn’t want to come across that way since too many Christians have wrongly felt that money is a dirty word.
Perhaps another reason I didn’t talk about greed is because I didn’t think I personally had any struggles with greed, and therefore, most other Christians didn’t, either.
But now I’m not so sure…
In looking back over the past number of years, I can see how I made certain financial decisions based on the notion that everything (financially and economically) would get better and better.
I wasn’t smart with the excess money from my businesses and my real estate. Giving our tithes and offerings to the church and various ministries wasn’t a problem – we did that consistently and frankly were able to increase our giving substantially.
That’s why I thought I didn’t have a problem with greed. But it was what was left over after giving and expenses that wasn’t invested wisely, maybe even wasted.
Yes, I bought a nicer bigger house and nicer cars, but isn’t that okay since I was giving tithes and offerings? Maybe – maybe not. There’s nothing wrong with material things, but that’s between you and God to decide whether you have the green light to do that or not.
Could some of us be deceived in thinking that we’ve licked this thing called GREED? Can it be so subtle that it’s hard to detect? No, not me, right?
For us to move to the next level in our businesses and our investments, we have to be honest with ourselves and ask this question. That’s what I’m doing right now, and I just may not like the answer. Is this about the Kingdom or has it become about ME and my fleshly desires?
If we realize that greed has slithered in without us even seeing it coming, it’s not until we confess and repent that can we move on to what God would have for each of us. And with renewed vigor, let’s go out and be blessed so that we can be a blessing!
Thank you for allowing me to be so honest with you. I hope this ministers to you as it has to me. As always, please let me know your thoughts by commenting below…
Mark
Can bad things actually happen to good people?
Posted by: | CommentsWhen my wife and I first started thinking about entrepreneurial ideas while I was still in the corporate world before launching out on my own, we read a lot of books about entrepreneurs and starting your own businesses.
And in almost every book we read, it seemed like the author (entrepreneur) went through periods of business failures, huge setbacks, even bankruptcies. They all were saying that it took them to go through such deep struggle and failure for them to really learn about running businesses and becoming largely successful.
Some had millions, lost it all, and then regained it back and learned through the process so they didn’t lose it the second time around. It was uncanny at the common theme of failure and then comebacks that ran through all these lives.
I remember my wife reading one of these books, and with uncertainty in her voice, she looked up and asked me, “Are we going to have to go through this kind of failure in order for us to succeed?”
You want to know what my answer was?
Being a man of faith, I said, “Of course not, we’re believers. We’re children of God, we’re not of the world, so we don’t have to go through that.”
I then went on for probably fifteen minutes about the favor of God and how He is on our side. Now, of course, all of what I said was true (except for the part that we wouldn’t have to go through any struggles).
I’m saying I was being a man of faith, but in reality, I was being presumptuous. I was thinking that just because we were Christians, we wouldn’t have to go through the same things that people of the world do. The Lord loves us too much to make us go through such things, right?
Don’t get me wrong. God wants to bless us, but if He has to use circumstances in our lives to get our attention, then He has the prerogative to do so! I didn’t say God causes the situations, but He can certainly use them.
Remember, bad things can happen to believers. Jesus himself told us (believers) in John 16:33, “In the world, you will have tribulation.”
But just like all the entrepreneurs with the failure/success stories, the setbacks and the failures teach us and better qualify us to really achieve God’s best in our financial lives. These situations build character, prepare and equip us for the blessings to come, and allows us to share with others so they don’t make the same mistakes.
So as hard as it may be, we should be giving thanks for all of the preparation many of us are going through so that we may get to where He wants us to go!
Let this be an encouragement to many of you reading this today.
As always, please let me know your thoughts by commenting below…
Blessings!
Mark
