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Practical Guidelines To Control Spending
by Randy Alcorn
For many people, spending money is an addictive behavior similar to alcoholism or gambling. With compulsive spending, the true enemy is within. We need to replace our preoccupation with short-term gratification and make our spending decisions from a long-term perspective. We must replace our self-indulgence with self-control, which is a fruit of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:23). "Like a city whose walls are broken down is a man who lacks self-control" (Prov. 25:28). Without self-control on the inside, our lives are made vulnerable to innumerable assaults.
The following guidelines are designed to help you exercise self-control in spending. They can help you become a better steward of God's resources, and free funds to use for kingdom purposes:
My friend wanted a good exercise bicycle. He even picked the exact model, a Tunturi model I was familiar with. I hadn't seen it sold at anything less than its retail price: $350. But instead of going out to buy it, he told me he was praying God would provide him that exact bike. By not spending the money, he would have more to give. A few days later I was in a thrift store and was stunned to see a Tunturi bicycle, that exact model. It looked like it had never been used. I called my friend. He got the exact bicycle he asked for, costing him $25 instead of $350.
I did
something similar when I finally gave up trying to purchase an original
1947 Time magazine with C. S. Lewis on the cover. I'd bidded for it on E-Bay
a number of times, but it always moved out of a price range I was comfortable
with. One evening, having lost another bid, I thought, "Lord, I'm wasting
my time. I've asked you to help me win a bid, but I've never asked you to
actually provide the magazine. It's a small thing, and I probably shouldn't
want it this much. But I'm asking you for it. If you want me to have it,
you're going to have to provide it at no cost."
I was virtually certain I'd never have it, but I felt good giving it to the Lord. Some time later someone who'd read a few of my books, seeing how often I quoted C.S. Lewis, sent me the magazine in the mail. I couldn't believe it-then I remembered how I'd prayed for it.
Often we either buy what we want or forego what we want, when there's a third alternative: ask God to provide it for us. If He doesn't, fine-he knows best. But why don't we give Him a chance?
Waiting eliminates most impulsive buying. Many things that are attractive today hold no interest two months later. Look at garage sales and you get the picture. Setting a waiting period gives God the opportunity to provide what we want, to provide something different or better, or to show us that we don't need it and should use the money differently.
I don't say this to induce guilt trips but to indicate the obvious-whenever money is used one way it prevents it from being used another. I must weigh and measure the various alternatives of how to use God's money. I sometimes choose to spend money on unnecessary things that still seem good and helpful. Sometimes I feel good about this; sometimes it seems questionable.
Often, however, there's a clear line we feel would be wrong for us to cross. For instance, we cannot justify spending thousands of dollars on jewelry when that same money could keep people alive or reach them with the gospel. We're not saying it's wrong for anyone else to have nice jewelry. We're saying that jewelry, like everything, must be subject to the scrutiny of conscience, the Holy Spirit, and God's Word. While you shouldn't impose your standards on other Christians, you should ask God to lead you.
Advertising is seductive and manipulative. It programs us. We must consciously reject its claims and counter them with God's Word, which tells us what we really do and don't need. We should withdraw ourselves from advertising that fosters greed or discontent. That may mean less television, less flipping through sales catalogs and newspaper ads, and less aimless wandering through shopping malls.
What would you think? How would you feel? How does God think and feel when at the end of the month nothing's left from the money he entrusted to us, and we don't even know where it went? If some of us ran a corporation and handled its money like we do God's, we'd go to prison!
"Be sure you know the condition of your flocks, give careful attention to your herds; for riches do not endure forever" (Prov. 27:23-24). Flocks and herds are the rancher's basic units of wealth. God is saying, know what your assets are and know where they go. "Any enterprise is built by wise planning, becomes strong through common sense, and profits wonderfully by keeping abreast of the facts" (TLB, Prov. 24:3-4).
We must get a grip on God's assets. If you don't have thought-out plans for what to do with God's money, rest assured that thousands of other people do have plans for it. If you don't harness it yourself, they'll end up with it and you'll end up with the stuff junkyards and garage sales are made of.
Two practical steps can greatly help you get a grip on your spending. The first is recording expenditures. The second is making a budget. These steps will help you detect problem areas by surfacing realities you weren't aware of. It will foster healthy discussion about what you do with money, and help you develop careful spending habits. This will improve your mental and marital health, since financial disorder is one of the leading causes of personal and familial stress.
For some, the most practical way to budget is the envelope system. Paychecks are cashed. The cash goes into envelopes with designations written on them: Food, gas, garbage, entertainment, clothing, etc. If it's the tenth of the month and nothing's left in the entertainment envelope, no more movies or eating out. If you overspend in one area you must underspend elsewhere to compensate. (But if you spend the clothing money instead, it's going to catch up with you when you need to buy clothes.) The envelope system teaches there's a bottom to the well, that resources are limited. That's an invaluable lesson.
I recommend you pick up one of the practical books on finances that deals with budgeting.i Such books show how to make a careful record of expenditures so you can find out where your money's going. Meanwhile, you can determine where you think it should be going. This will be the basis for your budget, which will include how much you've determined to give and to save, and how much is available for spending.
Living on a budget will free up lots of money. I've met with families that follow a budget and do fine on incomes of $12,000 a year. I've met with others who make $20,000 a month and are always in financial crisis. It's not how much money we make, but how we handle it that matters.
i I recommend Ron Blue's Master Your Money (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1986); Larry Burkett's Your Finances in Changing Times (San Bernardino, CA: Campus Crusade for Christ, 1975); Howard Dayton's Your Money: Frustration or Freedom (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House, 1979); and Malcolm MacGregor's Your Money Matters (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House, 1980). *Update these books
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