Adam | Faithful Messenger Profile picture
Jun 6 12 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Jesus talked about money more than heaven and hell combined.

11 of His 39 parables are about money and possessions.

1 in every 7 verses in the Gospel of Luke touches on wealth.

He wasn't uncomfortable with the topic.

He was relentless about it because He knew what it does to the human heart.

Here's what He actually taught.
Not the prosperity version.
Not the poverty version.
The real one. 🧵Image
First, the verse everyone misquotes.

1 Timothy 6:10: "The love of money is a root of all kinds of evil."

Not money. The love of it.

Jesus never condemned wealth itself.

Abraham, David, Solomon, Joseph of Arimathea, all wealthy, all commended.

What he consistently targeted was the posture of the heart toward wealth.

The question is never: how much do you have?

The question is always: what does it have of you?
Matthew 6:24 — the most direct statement Jesus ever made about money:

"No one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and money."

The Greek word is μαμωνᾶς (mamōnas) — Mammon.

Jesus personifies money as a rival god, not a neutral tool.

He doesn't say it is hard to serve both.
He says it is impossible.

Money is either a servant in your life or a master.
There is no third option.Image
The Rich Young Ruler — Mark 10:17–22.

He keeps every commandment.
He runs to Jesus.
He kneels.

Jesus looks at him and loves him, then says:

"Go, sell everything you have and give to the poor… then come, follow me."

The man walks away grieving.

Jesus doesn't chase him.
Doesn't soften it.

Then: "How hard it is for the rich to enter the kingdom of God." (v.23)

The disciples are astonished.
In their culture, wealth was a sign of God's blessing.

Jesus is dismantling their entire theology of prosperity in one encounter.
But then, Zacchaeus. Luke 19.

Also wealthy. Also encounters Jesus.

Jesus doesn't tell him to sell everything.

Zacchaeus volunteers: "Half of my goods I give to the poor. And if I have defrauded anyone, I will repay four times over."

Jesus says: "Today salvation has come to this house."

Same Jesus.
Two wealthy men.
Two completely different instructions.

Because Jesus wasn't dealing with their bank accounts.
He was dealing with their hearts.

The issue is never the money.
It is always what the money reveals about where your trust actually lives.Image
The Parable of the Rich Fool — Luke 12:16–21.

A man's land produces abundantly.
He tears down his barns to build bigger ones.

"Soul, you have ample goods laid up for many years; relax, eat, drink, be merry."

God says: "Fool. This night your soul is required of you."

Then Jesus: "So is the one who lays up treasure for himself and is not rich toward God."

The indictment is not that he was successful.

It is that he planned his entire future with zero reference to God, zero generosity, and zero awareness that his life was not his own.
Matthew 6:19–21 — the most practical financial instruction in Scripture:

"Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven."

Then the key:

"For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."

Not: where your heart is, your treasure will follow.

The reverse: where your treasure goes, your heart follows.

Generosity is not the result of a changed heart.

According to Jesus, it is one of the primary means of changing it.Image
What Jesus actually taught about money — summarized:

1. Money is not evil — the love of it is (1 Tim 6:10)
2. It cannot share the throne — God or Mammon, never both (Matt 6:24)
3. Wealth reveals what your heart trusts — not what God thinks of you
4. The Rich Young Ruler and Zacchaeus got different instructions for the same reason — Jesus dealt with the heart, not the balance sheet
5. Planning your future without God is the definition of foolishness (Luke 12)
6. Where you put your money shapes your heart — generosity is a spiritual discipline, not just a duty
The widow's two coins.

The smallest offering in the Temple that day.

Jesus called it the greatest.

Not because of the amount but because it was everything she had.

She held nothing back from God.

That is the entire theology of money in one image.

It was never about how much.
It was always about how much you kept for yourself.

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More from @Adam_FaithfulM

Jun 4
Most Christians pray.

Very few pray the way the Bible actually describes.

The gap between what we do and what Scripture teaches about prayer is wider than almost any other area of the Christian life.

Here are the things the Bible says clearly about prayer that most of us quietly ignore.

A thread. 🧵Image
1. The Bible says prayer should be persistent, not polite.

Luke 18:1 — Jesus told a parable "to the effect that they ought always to pray and not lose heart."

The parable: a widow who hammers a corrupt judge day and night until he grants her request.

Jesus holds her up as the model.

Not quiet resignation.
Not one respectful request.

Relentless, shameless, returning persistence.

Most of us pray once, hear nothing, and conclude the answer is no.

The Bible calls that losing heart, not faith.
2. The Bible says unanswered prayer often has a specific reason.

James 4:2–3 — "You do not have because you do not ask. You ask and do not receive because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions."

Two reasons. Both ignored.

First: we simply don't ask. Prayer is assumed, not practiced.

Second: we ask for things that serve our comfort, not God's purposes.

The goal of prayer is not to bend God's will toward ours.

It is to align our desires with His until what we want and what He wants become the same thing.Image
Read 10 tweets
Jun 1
Job was the most righteous man on earth.

God Himself said so.

Then God allowed everything to be taken from him — his wealth, his children, his health.

And for 35 chapters, God said nothing.

The Book of Job is not a book about why good people suffer.

It is a book about who God is when He doesn't explain Himself.

A thread. 🧵Image
First, the prologue that the reader sees, but Job never does.

Job 1:8 — God initiates the conversation about Job:

"Have you considered my servant Job? There is no one on earth like him."

Satan's response: "Does Job fear God for nothing? You have blessed him. Remove the blessing, and he will curse you."

God accepts the challenge.

This is the most disturbing opening in Scripture.

The man suffering most severely on earth has no idea he is the subject of a cosmic wager and that God Himself offered his name.
Job's three friends arrive — Eliphaz, Bildad, Zophar.

They sit in silence with him for seven days.
That part is right.

Then they open their mouths.

Their theology is simple: you are suffering because you sinned. Repent, and God will restore you.

It sounds reasonable.
It sounds biblical.

God calls it a lie.

Job 42:7 — "You have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has."

The most dangerous theology is the kind that sounds true but reduces God to a formula.Image
Read 9 tweets
May 30
The Trinity is the most important doctrine in Christianity.

It is also the one most Christians cannot explain and the one most often attacked.

It's not irrational.
It's not three Gods.
It's not God wearing three masks.

Every popular analogy you've heard is actually a heresy.

Here's what the Trinity actually is and why it changes everything about how you understand God. 🧵Image
First, what the Trinity actually is.

The doctrine in one sentence:
There is one God who exists eternally as three distinct persons — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — each fully God, none greater than the other, sharing one divine essence.

Key distinctions:
— One in essence (οὐσία — ousia)
— Three in person (ὑπόστασις — hypostasis)

Not one God appearing in three modes.
Not three separate Gods cooperating.

One Being.
Three Persons.
Eternally and simultaneously.
Every popular analogy is actually a heresy. Here's why:

"God is like water — liquid, ice, steam."
→ Modalism: one God in three modes, not three persons simultaneously.

"God is like a man who is father, son, and husband."
→ Also, modalism: the same person wearing different hats.

"God is like a three-leaf clover."
→ Partialism: each leaf is only part of God, not fully God.

The Trinity cannot be illustrated by anything in creation because nothing in creation is like God.

Mystery is not irrationality.
It is the edge of what finite minds can fully contain.Image
Read 9 tweets
May 28
Some Christians see a demon behind every bad day.

Others don't believe spiritual warfare is real at all.

Both are wrong.

The Bible is remarkably specific about what spiritual warfare actually is, how it works, what your weapons are, and why most Christians are fighting it completely wrong.

A thread on what Scripture actually says. 🧵Image
Start with what Paul actually says in Ephesians 6:12:

"We do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places."

Four distinct categories of spiritual opposition.

The Greek word is πάλη (palē) — wrestling.

Hand-to-hand combat.
Intimate.
Personal.
Not distant artillery.

This is not a war you watch.
It is a war you are already in.
The enemy's primary strategy is not possession or attack.

It is deception.

Jesus called Satan "the father of lies" (John 8:44).

Paul warns of "schemes" — μεθοδεία (methodeia) — systematic, calculated strategies.

2 Corinthians 11:14: he masquerades as an angel of light.

The most dangerous spiritual warfare is not dramatic.

It is subtle.

A lie believed is more destructive than any outward attack.

Most spiritual defeat begins not with a temptation but with a thought accepted as truth.Image
Read 9 tweets
May 26
Everyone reads the Prodigal Son as a story about a rebellious boy who came home.

It isn't.

Jesus told this parable to show us what God is actually like.

And the portrait He paints of the father is so scandalous, so undignified, that it offended every person in His audience.

It should offend us, too.

A thread on the father nobody talks about. 🧵Image
First, understand what the son actually did.

"Father, give me the share of property that is coming to me." (Luke 15:12)

In Jewish culture, this request had one meaning:

I wish you were dead.

Demanding your inheritance while your father is still alive was an act of profound cultural and moral violence.
It declared the relationship worth less than the money.

The father had every legal and social right to disown him publicly on the spot.

He divided his property between them instead.
The son hits rock bottom, feeding pigs — the most unclean animals in Jewish law.

He rehearses a speech: "I am no longer worthy to be called your son. Make me like one of your hired servants." (v.19)

Notice: he is not returning in repentance. He is returning in desperation.

He calculated that his father's servants ate better than he did.

He came home for a job, not a relationship.

What he received instead is the entire point of the parable.Image
Read 9 tweets
May 26
If the resurrection didn't happen, Christianity is the greatest lie ever told.

If it did happen, it would be the most important event in human history.

There is no middle ground.

Paul said it himself: "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile." (1 Cor 15:17)

So let's look at the evidence.

And then at what it actually means.

A thread.🧵Image
The empty tomb is the starting point, and it is not seriously disputed.

Jewish leaders, Roman authorities, and early critics never claimed the body was still there.

Their response was not "the tomb is occupied" — it was "the disciples stole the body." (Matthew 28:13)

You don't invent a theft story for a tomb that still has a body in it.

The emptiness of the tomb was the one fact every party in Jerusalem agreed on.
The appearances are the hardest fact to explain away.

Paul, writing in 1 Corinthians 15:3–8, within 20 years of the crucifixion, lists witnesses:

Peter. The twelve. 500 people at once. James. Then Paul himself.

He adds: "most of whom are still alive" — an open invitation to go check.

This is not mythology written centuries later.

This is a legal-style deposition written while eyewitnesses were still alive and verifiable.Image
Read 9 tweets

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