Proverbs 21:17 ¶ He that loveth pleasure shall be a poor man:
he that loveth wine and oil shall not be rich.
As this Bible is translated this way, notice
that the second clause folds back on the first due to the colon. The second
part of the verse helps to define what is meant by the first clause. Wine, we
could say, refers to alcohol and so-called adult beverages; the many gallons of
beer and other booze that Americans consume each year, while less per person
than in the era of our Founding Fathers, still way too much. Oil is a reference
to the oil used in a rich diet and would be a reference to the high octane and
expensive foods we eat.
This is something that most of us older people
have seen in our lives. People who are addicted to pleasing the flesh usually
spend their lives paying for it. While people who are disciplined and learn to
tell themselves no seem to do well no matter how much they make. I’ve known
people who put themselves through school and had several homes, one they lived
in and a couple they rented out. I’ve known someone who worked hard all his
life and owned a thriving hotel until he sold it for millions of dollars. The
stories go on and on of frugal, thrifty people who are able to discipline their
wants and control their needs to the point where they are comfortable.
But, those young people who spend many nights at
the local sports bar or music emporium or night club, who use their credit
cards to load up on the pleasures of life, and who can’t tell themselves no on
the little doodads and geegaws they simply must have are going to spend their
lives struggling. Now, none of these Proverbs promise you that if you don’t do
these things you’ll by necessity have great success but they simply tell you
that these missteps are the way to poverty and ruin.
Later on, we are told in Proverbs 23:21 For
the drunkard and the glutton shall come to poverty: and drowsiness shall clothe
a man with rags.
For over 80 years now, since the end of World War Two, Americans have lived
large, rarely saying no to themselves, living on credit and being enslaved to
banks and mortgage companies. We have bought houses with little or no down
payment, ran up thousands of dollars of credit card debt, bought cars we didn’t
absolutely need, and filled our houses and sheds with toys we just wanted to
have but never actually needed. We go on vacations and pay for our pleasure
with credit and drop our plastic at restaurants and stores enjoying our
pleasures when we really, really don’t have the money to pay.
When the good times are here we act as if
they’re never going to end. Our rate of savings is pathetic and our spending
habits are foolish. As it is with us, so it is with our government. We don’t
even teach our children the blessings of frugality and thrift because we can’t.
We don’t know those ourselves.
It would rarely cross an American’s mind to
pursue a simple diet, to have simple tastes, and to take his or her pleasures
rarely and with careful attention to cost. It appears though, now, that our
lust for pleasing the flesh, our government’s incompetence and manipulations,
and the greed of those we gleefully give our money to who have used us and our
money as if it was their own has caught up with us. I would venture to say from
now on or at least for several years you will find it hard to survive unless
you are willing to cut some of the ballast from your life and learn to deny
yourself anything but the most simplest of pleasures.
Learning to love a quiet evening at home with those you love,
taking in the peaceful pleasure of a sunset or a sunrise, and taking joy in
doing things for those less fortunate than you or physically unable to do for
themselves may have to be your pastimes rather than loving pleasure and
enjoying paying close attention to your slightest desire or whim.
Let this be a clear warning to young people just
starting out in life. Learn to want less, learn to do more with less, and learn
to enjoy simpler things that don’t require you whipping out your credit cards.
Practice saying no to yourself at least once a day. Seek to learn discipline in
meeting your bodily needs and wants.
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