On the journey to Golgotha Jesus reminds His disciples of how profoundly important it is for them to yield their lives to God and to live unashamedly for God in the days of their lives. He calls them to set their minds on the interests of God not man’s, and to take up their cross and to follow Him. The challenge is given extreme value when Jesus asks them “For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world, and forfeit his soul?” (See Mark 8:31-38).
These are days when the economic systems of the world have been shaken and, for many different reasons, multitudes of people have lost fortunes, their retirement funds, and life savings. We are told by those who study these things that some people will never recoup their losses, and that for others it will take years to recoup if things go well in the future.
Some people have been duped, some misinformed, and others are so filled with greed and evil that it matters not to them that people are suffering. For some the world is not enough and they are never satisfied. In a profit and loss world there are some people who are forfeiting their souls for what economics can bring to their table.
In essence Jesus asks WHY. Why do people hang on to mist and wind when there is so much more to living than what the dollar can buy? For some people the question doesn’t even make sense, but to those who see beyond the moment and have a glimpse into eternity it is a crucial question. One of these days the great equalizer, otherwise known as death, will speak, and from that moment on somebody else will spend our money.
Jesus calls us not to think in terms of profit and loss but to think in terms of profit and forfeit. Can we be bought? What will a man give in exchange for his soul” {Mark 8:37). They don’t talk about this on the nightly news, do they?
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