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Understanding Family Financial Failures

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Editor's Note: Chuck Bentley, CEO, Crown Financial Ministries, writes and blogs regularly about the mounting national debt, and the accompanying, ever increasing frustration which personal debt brings to families and individuals. In the following article Chuck puts a fine point on the cause for failure in the area of personal and family finances and identifies key preventative steps to avoid going in the wrong direction with money and possessions. Crown Financial Ministries is a partner with the SBC in the area of stewardship, providing good and godly resources for SBC churches, families, and individuals. To learn more about Crown Financial Ministries go to www.crown.org.

Without question, family financial problems seem to increase dramatically during economic slumps. Are the financial problems caused by economic slumps? Generally not.

With rare exception, family financial problems have begun long before an economic slump, perhaps as early as childhood.

Ignoring God's Word
Most of the financial problems that families face in today's society—business failures, foreclosures, bankruptcies, out-of-control debt, two-job families, and divorce—can be traced to a central problem of ignoring God's financial principles as recorded in His Word.

Usually families only recognize the symptoms of the problems (such as unpaid bills) or the consequences of the symptoms (such as repossession of property). They seldom identify the real underlying cause of the problem.

It is likely that the problem was learned from parents who had the same problem. Now if you faithfully obey the Lord your God and are careful to follow all His commands I am giving you today, the Lord your God will put you far above all the nations of the earth (Deuteronomy 28:1).

God's financial principles and instructions are not complicated or hard to understand. They were designed to free His people from financial burdens and not to bind them with an unattainable set of dos and don'ts.

Unfortunately, though, since the mid-1950s God's principles have increasingly been ignored by families, many of whom have adopted a get-rich-quick mentality by using easily obtainable credit to purchase "what I want, when I want it."

It was Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881), Earl of Beaconsfield, who said in an address before the British House of Commons on May 1, 1865, "What we do and allow in moderation, our children will allow and do in excess."

The children of these 1950s and 1960s parents learned to buy on credit from their parents' example. Now, another generation later, we are reaping the burden of sown seeds of moderate debt in the form of overwhelming excessive debt.

Without a doubt, the lack of financial discipline found in so many homes is reflected and amplified in the lives of their children and their children's families.

Symptoms of financial problems
If parents do not operate on a budget, seldom will the children. If parents use credit readily and make buying decisions based on the ability to make monthly payments, rather than on the initial price of items purchased, so will the children.

Once married and on their own, young couples attempt to duplicate in a few years what perhaps took their parents decades to accumulate. In order to accomplish that goal, they use credit, as they learned by observing their parent's lifestyles.

Before long they have numerous assets, but the assets are all tied up in liabilities. This debt burden causes many of these young couples to experience the following symptoms.

Preventive measures
Although symptoms of financial problems can be devastating, it is much easier for families to practice prevention rather than recuperation.

As such, there are four basic preventive measures that families can take to counterbalance unbiblical financial practices and to prevent the symptoms of financial problems.

Conclusion
If Christian families truly lived by sound biblical financial principles, they would not only be lights to show the way to financial freedom for their friends and acquaintances, but their children would grow up with the knowledge of God's principles and how those principles should be used.

They in turn would pass on to their children what they were taught. With consistent teaching and discipline it would take less than a generation to break Christians' financial bondage and free them to fund the work of the Lord.

 

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