Sunday, December 02, 2007

Gold Rush

I live just 20 minutes from Coloma where James Marshall discovered gold in the California foothills and where thousands of men and women stampeded towards in 1849 - home of the great California gold rush.

Looking back on the history of that time, the tens of thousands of people that descended upon California arrived with the expectation – not the hope – of striking it rich and becoming wealthy. Ironically, it wasn’t the miners who generally struck it rich – it was the men who served the miners that became wealthy. Men like Leland Stanford and Levi Strauss were the more typical "get rich" stories.

Over the past decade, these Sierra Nevada foothills -- and the rest of the nation witnessed another gold rush. With the introduction of low rate adjustable loans, ‘no proof of income’ loans and other creative financial products, people rushed to acquire property with the expectation – not the hope – of making a quick fortune.

Buy a home and keep it just a few brief months and then flip it and pocket the cash yielded by an irrational rise in value.

Like prospectors headed East with their heads hanging low, the new seekers are equally disappointed -- and broken.

Home builders and mortgage lenders are going bankrupt, opportunistic would-be entrepreneurs who jumped into real estate related businesses are returning to their day jobs and debt laden homeowners are losing their property and their dream homes.

Only one thing is certain as we witness our surrounding economy falter and adjust to its new equilibrium point – that a new gold rush is right around the corner. We just don’t know what form it will take.

There is a better way to live out these days. In our workplace, personal lives and families, we often "go for the gold" instead of the more enduring qualities -- faith, hope and love. We need to spend the necessary time and energy on the things that last.

Make purses for yourselves that do not wear out, an unfailing treasure in heaven, where no thief comes near and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.


-- Luke 12, 33-35


3 Comments so far, click here to add your own:

Real Live Preacher said...

Nice Thoughts. I'll probably feature this sometime soon at HighCallingBlogs.com.

thanks!

Eric said...

How often do we get into trouble by focusing on the wrong things -- the dream home, the gold, etc. All of this demise for the sake of profiteering (on the supply side) and lifestyle (on the demand side).

It is so hard to stay out of that chase...so tempting to have that which is seemingly in our reach but shouldn't be. Why can't we just be comfortable in our own skin and now worry about what the 'Joneses' have?

You are right...there is always another 'gold rush' and another 'idol' to serve. Satan is tenacious...

Red Letter Believers said...

I think we call it "fool's gold'!

David

"What makes our labor holy, what makes it eternal, is not just the work but the state of our hearts while performing that work. When we comprehend that truth, then we realize washing dishes is as significant to the Kingdom as operating on a patient; driving a truck is as eternally triumphant as leading a company. Then, even in the zig-zags of our careers, when life seems more random than ordered, when it feels like we're running in thick mud with heavy boots, we can rest in the knowledge we're serving God as we labor faithfully and diligently."

-- Randy Kilgore, Made to Matter