Biblical Economics 126: Thin-Skinned vs Thick-Skinned in the Workplace

Do not repay anyone evil for evil. Be careful to do what is right in the eyes of everyone. If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge, my dear friends, but leave room for God’s wrath, for it is written: “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” says the Lord. On the contrary: “If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head.” Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. –Romans 12:17-21

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Biblical Economics 125: Avoiding a Loan-Based Lifestyle

One person pretends to be rich, yet has nothing; another pretends to be poor, yet has great wealth. –Proverbs 13:7

The rich rule over the poor; and the borrower is slave to the lender. –Proverbs 22:7

Banks, the grand embodiment and exponent of credit, are allowed to flood the country with its symbols, often stimulating speculation, interrupting the regular course of trade, and seducing merchants to their ruin. –William Mathews, Getting On in the World, p. 316

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Biblical Economics 124: Reasons for Business Failure (Part 2)

DISCLAIMER

I am not a registered investment advisor with the SEC. Nothing in this video, should be taken as legally binding investment advice, in the same way that SEC licensed stockbrokers can advise their clients. I am not “selling” any stocks or OTC penny stocks as a broker in this video. The purpose of this video, is only to offer guidance to those who are interested in educating themselves, about self-directed investing and Biblically Responsible Investing (BRI).



William Mathews, Getting On in the World, pp. 318-328.

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Biblical Economics 123: Little House on the Prairie

Polly Campbell, Imperfect Spirituality, p. 4

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Biblical Economics 122: Reasons for Business Failure (Part 1)

DISCLAIMER

I am not a registered investment advisor with the SEC. Nothing in this video, should be taken as legally binding investment advice, in the same way that SEC licensed stockbrokers can advise their clients. I am not “selling” any stocks or OTC penny stocks as a broker in this video. The purpose of this video, is only to offer guidance to those who are interested in educating themselves, about self-directed investing and Biblically Responsible Investing (BRI).



William Mathews, Getting On in the World, pp. 304-318.


Little House on the Prairie: “Crossed Connection” (6.12) – speaks against “speculation,” for example, putting $5,000 into a low-priced volatile pharmaceutical stock, and speaks against gambling and horse betting; and considers all forms of stocks and bets to be gambling sins to be avoided. After Harriet loses all of her money gambling on a low-priced pharma stock, she says, “Well, at least we still have our business.” Again, self-employment with your own business was deemed the traditional tried-and-true method of success and capital accumulation. And emphatically not stocks, bets, or any other type of gambling.

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Biblical Economics 121: The Order of Priorities in Personal Finance

DISCLAIMER

I am not a registered investment advisor with the SEC. Nothing in this video, should be taken as legally binding investment advice, in the same way that SEC licensed stockbrokers can advise their clients. I am not “selling” any stocks or OTC penny stocks as a broker in this video. The purpose of this video, is only to offer guidance to those who are interested in educating themselves, about self-directed investing and Biblically Responsible Investing (BRI).



1. Business Income from Customer Payments. (not a single paycheck)

2. 20% of Business Income Put Into a FDIC Savings Account.

3. Emergency Fund In a Safe: Gold Maple Leafs and $10,000 Cash Stacks.

4. Land.

5. House.

6. Mortgage.

7. Stocks.



William Mathews’ Getting On in the World, pp. 241
, 307.

Entrepreneur Press “StartUp” Series – which business talents can you put to use?

Paul and Sarah Edwards, Secrets of Successful Self-Employment (audible)

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Biblical Economics 120: Job Competition Is Called Social Darwinism (You Can Blame Herbert Spencer)

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Biblical Economics 119: Building a Small Fortune by Self-Employment?

DISCLAIMER

Andrew Carnegie, The Empire of Business, ch. on “How to Win Fortune”. Notably, he never got a college degree. He’s an example of a person who saw America as a place where there was no barrier to entry for achieving a life of wealth. Parlaying job experience into profitable self-employment was all that was required. He was a poor Scottish immigrant; and it has been said that he embodied the American Dream of upward mobility through self-employment. Even the cartoon character Scrooge McDuck came to be based on him.

Paul and Sarah Edwards, Secrets of Successful Self-Employment (audible)



So You Want to Start Your Own Business, Eh?

This thought has to be put to the question as well; and although Carnegie believed that self-employment was the key to making a fortune, he also at the same time accepted the bleak reality of the Industrial Revolution. That factory work was replacing a lot of the small business manufactures of the earlier period. Small businesses suffered, self-employment came under attack, and men were compelled to work in the hellish conditions of Carnegie’s fiery smoky steel mills. Statistics of the time were saying that 95% of small businesses fail after the startup phase, for one reason or another (see William Mathews, Getting On in the World, pp. 304-305; Richard Weiss, The American Myth of Success, p. 124, n38). The contradiction inherent in Carnegie’s opinion can be reconciled by the fact, that he followed the Social Darwinism of Herbert Spencer, which proclaimed that the wealthy industrialists like Carnegie, were at the top of the human food chain, in an evolutionary system where the “survival of the fittest” sorted out the top 5% to be among the fortune-makers, while everyone else was deemed by Providence to experience entrepreneurial failure. The depressing conclusion drawn by most men, in the late 1860s and early 1900s, was to simply succumb to work for someone else as a wage slave; and never try to be free as an independent 1099 contractor or sole proprietor:

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Biblical Economics 118: Self-Advertising and Perseverance

 DISCLAIMER

I am not a registered investment advisor with the SEC. Nothing in this video, should be taken as legally binding investment advice, in the same way that SEC licensed stockbrokers can advise their clients. I am not “selling” any stocks or OTC penny stocks as a broker in this video. The purpose of this video, is only to offer guidance to those who are interested in educating themselves, about self-directed investing and Biblically Responsible Investing (BRI).

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Biblical Economics 117: Faith and Hope After Economic Disillusionment

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