II. Spend
less than you Earn: Seek Godly
Wisdom in Financial Areas.
Proverbs 17:16 "Of what use is money in the hand
of a fool since he has no desire to get Wisdom?"
The Law of Dominion
God created us to reign and rule over our possessions
and desires. Most American Christians (and Christian
Americans) are ruled by their possessions and desires.
According to Genesis 1:26-29 believers are instructed
to subdue and exercise dominion over the things of the
earth: our desires, appetites, spending patterns, debt,
health habits, lifestyle-all things that present a temptation
or lust beyond God's plan and purpose.
"This I say therefore, and testify
in the Lord, that ye henceforth walk not as other Gentiles
walk, in the vanity of their mind, having the understanding
darkened, being alienated from the life of God through
the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness
of their heart: Who being past feeling have given themselves
over unto lasciviousness." (Behaviors without
restraint) -- (Ephesians 4:17-19)
We should live a fasted life, disciplined
by the Holy Spirit in every area. Instead of "How
much can I spend and be satisfied?" consider "How
little can I spend and be satisfied?" The apostle
Paul taught us to be content in whatever state we find
ourselves. It should not matter that the debtors are
calling for our last dime if we are doing all in our
power to satisfy our debts and live within our means.
Within does not translate on the edge. Most people have
the income to support and eliminate their debts; they
simply lack Godly wisdom and counsel as to what to pay
first. Also, most people who come for counseling have
never tracked their spending patterns. A wise steward
not only tracks his income, he tracks every category
in which that income empties: "Every Dollar on
Purpose".
Very simply, these strategies help
turn the ship into the right direction:
- Do not carry much cash; Liquid Money
- Keep detailed expense records: locate every dollar.
Be selective.
- Develop a Spending Plan: Spend less
from your checking account than your paycheck!
- Work with annual and monthly figures
- Set up regular and occasional accounts (one envelope
for each bill)
- Evaluate progress regularly and adjust accordingly
- Track debt separately from expenses (Use Debt Triangle
and Self-Consolidation)
Taking Dominion over debt will transfer to other areas
of over-indulgence in our lives. Soon we recognize obsessive
patterns in shopping, eating, smoking, drinking, even
medicating. Obsessive-compulsive behaviors need not be
limited to money matters. That spirit can take on any
desire we open ourselves to as slaves. Substitute
the blanks with whatever behavior you wish to change.
How little can I ______________and still be content?
(spend-eat-smoke-drink-medicate---)
Minimum Requirement
Trap
Our society has produced generations of Minimum Requirement
mentalities. We have grown up asking, What's the least
I have to do to pass this course? What's the least I
have to know to qualify for this job? How many hours
do I have to work and not be part time? What's the least
I have to do to keep my health? How little time can
I spend with my mate and not get divorced? How little
attention or affection can I spend with my children
and still be a parent? How sinful can I be and still
go to Heaven? If not checked, that attitude consumes
every aspect of our lives.
Consequently, we have become a nation
of consumers instead of producers. We take from others
instead of producing for others, developing strong dependencies
within our social structure. The tragedy of that mentality
is that too soon, we begin treating ourselves with the
same discourtesy. We take our income and spend more
than what is really there, placing a tremendous burden
on ourselves to sweat the difference. The suggestion
to "Spend less from your checking account than
your paycheck," allows you to live on the very
least amount available, and pay extra on one of your
creditors. Also, this exercise teaches you to be selective
with how you spend the remaining money. While still
in debt, any excess moneys should go to eliminating
finance charges. You should not try to put extra amounts
in savings at this time. The creditors are taking a
higher percentage of your payments in interest than
you could ever make in a savings account. Keep an emergency
cushion in savings, but PAY THE DEBTS!
Remember that the widow did not go
around asking each creditor what their minimum payment
would be.
III. Use the Excess to Eliminate
Debt: Re-Set Your Affections
Proverbs 22:7 "The rich rule over the poor,
and the borrower is servant to the lender."
Proverbs 27:12 "The prudent see danger and
take refuge, but the simple keep going and suffer for
it."
Law of Fidelity: Being Faithful to Your Goals
Luke 16: 10-13 exhorts us to be faithful in all things
with which we have been entrusted. "He who is faithful
in a very little thing is faithful also in much, and
he who is dishonest and unjust in a very little thing
is dishonest and unjust also in much. Therefore, if
you have not been faithful in the case of deceitful
riches, money, possessions, who will entrust you to
the true riches? And if you have not proved faithful
in that which belongs to another, who will give you
your own true riches? NO servant is able to serve two
masters; for either he will hate the one and love the
other, or he will stand by and be devoted to the one
and despise the other. You cannot serve God and riches,
or anything in which you trust and on which you rely."
As we discover excess money in our
spending plan, the test comes to recognize God's provision
(miraculous flow of oil) and quickly use it to pay the
debtor first. Several techniques have been proven to
work.
Before deciding where to send the money
first, an analysis of your debt should be done. There
are actually Good and Bad categories of debt. If we
take a "Snapshot" of your balance sheet or
spending plan, we discover that you have Asset and Liability
debts. Again, we must view things from a Christian American
perspective and honestly identify trends to which we
may have yielded.
| Treasures |
World's View |
Reality |
| Bigger/Better House |
Asset |
Liability |
| Mink Coat |
Asset |
Liability |
| Better/ Luxury Car |
Asset |
Liability |
| Credit Card (Unsecured Debt) |
Bad Debt |
Bad Debt |
| Automobile Lease/Loan |
Bad Debt |
Bad Debt |
| Home Equity Loan |
Good Debt |
Bad Debt |
| Home Mortgage |
Good Debt |
Good/Bad Debt |
| Income Producing Asset |
Asset |
Asset |
| Mortgage on Income Producer |
Good Debt |
Good Debt ( if
not over-leveraged) |
Debt Elimination Strategy
Phase I:
First, take inventory of all debt to be eliminated in
Credit Cards, Department stores, Discount stores, etc;
Sears, JC Penney, Wal-Mart. Target all cards separately
using the highest balance as the center of the Target,
and move out according to amount of debt. As one pays
off, DO NOT DECREASE THE MONTHLY PAYMENT.
Simply roll the eliminated card payment onto the next
Target realm. Continue this process over the months
until all the payment is concentrated on the largest
remaining balance. One theory is to pay all the smaller
balances first to give a sense of accomplishment since
they will pay off more quickly. I preferred to pay the
most to the card with the highest finance charge so
that the creditor made as little from me as necessary.
Phase II.
Now that all "Sin" has been eliminated from your finances,
we concentrate the previous monthly allotment for credit
card debt toward Loans, Auto Loans, and Mortgage (ideally
in that order). When beginning Phase II you may decide
to split your excess and begin an investment parallel
plan. To do this, list your investment amount as if
it were a debt, but instead of paying off a debt, you
are making the purchase (or accumulating funds to make
a future purchase) of an income producing asset. For
example, make a monthly payment to your savings for
a future automobile purchase! The following charts will
demonstrate a clearer picture of strategic approaches
toward debt elimination. Remember, God will honor Proactive
behaviors which correct destructive life-styles more
than irresponsible evasion which escalates into poor
witness examples.
1. Ladder Technique:
List debts from lowest balance to the highest. Apply
extra funds to each regular payment until each has been
eliminated. |