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Mark 8:36 - For what shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul? The Bible does not endorse living paycheck to paycheck; it warns against hoarding money as an idol while also commanding wise provision, saving, and generosity. Thoughtful financial planning (like a 401k) can fit comfortably within biblical teaching when the heart stays surrendered to God and the money is used for his purposes. What Jesus Forbids in Matthew 6 Matthew 6:19–24 is not a blanket ban on possessions; it is a warning about where the heart’s treasure is located. Jesus contrasts treasures “on earth” that moth, rust, and thieves can destroy with “treasures in heaven” that are secure and eternal. The issue is serving money (“you cannot serve God and mammon”), not merely owning or using it; money becomes sinful when it becomes a master or an idol. So the command is: do not live for accumulation, status, or security rooted in money; live for God’s kingdom and use money as a tool. What Proverbs Teaches About Saving Proverbs consistently praises wise storing and planning, not reckless spending. Proverbs 21:20 says the wise have “precious treasure and oil” in their dwelling, while fools “devour” everything they get, meaning they consume it all instead of planning ahead. In other words, Scripture praises keeping margin, reserves, and resources for future needs, not spending everything immediately. Inheritance and Family Provision The verses you quoted from Proverbs and 1 Timothy lean strongly toward long‑term provision. Proverbs 13:22: “A good man leaves an inheritance to his children’s children,” which implies multi‑generational planning and enough surplus to bless grandchildren. 1 Timothy 5:8 teaches that failing to provide for one’s own household is a denial of the faith and “worse than an unbeliever,” grounding financial responsibility squarely in Christian obedience. The solution to the “treasure” texts is not “give away all” by default; one careful treatment notes that Jesus did not command all believers to give away everything but addressed specific idols (like the rich young ruler). The same source points out that Jesus actually affirmed prudence, investing, and counting the cost (such as in the parable of the talents and the builder counting cost), which implies planning for the future rather than careless disregard. A Christ‑honoring 401k or retirement plan will therefore: Keep God, not money, as the master (heart anchored in Christ, not in the account balance). Be structured to support obedience: caring for spouse, children, aging parents, and not being an unnecessary burden on the church. Remain a tool for generosity, not a fortress of fear—ready to be used for kingdom purposes, giving, hospitality, and care for others. How Paul’s Example Fits Paul’s desire not to be a burden fits the same principle of provision and responsibility, not a command that everyone must refuse support or live without reserves. Paul often worked with his own hands (tentmaking) so as not to burden the churches, but he also taught that “the worker is worthy of his wages” and defended rightful support for gospel workers. His example highlights a heart posture: willing to sacrifice, avoid greed, and carry personal responsibility where possible, rather than insisting on his rights. Applied to today, that posture can include: Working diligently while able. Saving and investing prudently. Refusing to let money define identity or security. So biblically, living paycheck to paycheck because of waste, greed, or refusal to plan is closer to the “fool devours all he has” side of Proverbs. Planning, saving, and even building retirement resources under the Lordship of Christ is consistent with the call to provide for one’s household, be generous, and store true treasure in heaven. If you DO have money... Practice regular, generous giving (tithes, offerings, helping the poor) so money keeps flowing through your hands instead of ruling your heart. Daily confess and act on the truth that everything you “own” belongs to God, and you are only a steward managing his money, time, and possessions. Make major financial decisions (job changes, big purchases, investments) prayerfully, with Scripture and wise counsel, asking, “Will this help me serve God more, or pull my heart toward security in money?” Build habits of contentment and gratitude by thanking God for what you already have and refusing comparison or lifestyle envy that pushes you to chase more. Guard your time and priorities so seeking God’s kingdom (word, prayer, fellowship, obedience) stays central, and refuse any pattern where making or protecting money consistently pushes God to the margins.