L
Loud-living-dogma
Guest
This may truly sound like a stupid question. In reading today’s Gospel, I can’t help but compare it to the way that modern people are told to save save save for retirement, etc. If someone is sitting on a fat retirement account, the way that financial planners tell us we should be, isn’t that taking money away from people who need help today?
Isn’t the man who had to build bigger buildings to hold his grain, behaving the way that prudent financial planners tell us that we are supposed to sock away 10-15%?
When the foolish man (who was hoarding the grain) dies, won’t the grain stores go to his widow or children? Wouldn’t he be pleased that he is at least providing for his family after his death?
I"m probably looking at this with my secular glasses - - somebody set me straight!
EDIT:
It seems to me that if we follow the advice in this parable, we shouldn’t have retirement savings. Or should we? Or savings accounts at all?
Isn’t the man who had to build bigger buildings to hold his grain, behaving the way that prudent financial planners tell us that we are supposed to sock away 10-15%?
When the foolish man (who was hoarding the grain) dies, won’t the grain stores go to his widow or children? Wouldn’t he be pleased that he is at least providing for his family after his death?
I"m probably looking at this with my secular glasses - - somebody set me straight!
EDIT:
It seems to me that if we follow the advice in this parable, we shouldn’t have retirement savings. Or should we? Or savings accounts at all?
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