“It is better to be poor and honest than to be foolish and tell  lies” (Proverbs 19:1 NCV).
  God does not bless dishonesty. Proverbs 16:11a says, “The Lord demands fairness in every business deal” (TLB). That includes  wages, salaries, and taxes. If you want God’s blessing on your finances, you must be honest about them. The Bible also says, “It is  better to be poor and honest than to be foolish and tell lies” (Proverbs 19:1 NCV).
  Why is this an important principle? When you’re going through a season of financial stress, the temptation is enormous to toss out your  integrity and to cheat in order to make ends meet. It may mean you shade the truth on a sale or exaggerate or deflate the value of something. It may  mean you claim a false deduction on your taxes. You always lose in the long run when you lose your integrity. And that’s what you are taking to  Heaven — your character, not your money. You always lose when you give up your integrity.
  The Bible says in Proverbs 10:22, “The blessing of the Lord brings wealth, without painful toil for it” (NIV). Profit that is  made dishonestly brings trouble with it. Why? If you rip off people, other people are going to rip you off. If you cheat — including the  government — you’re going to get cheated in life. What you sow, you will reap. 
  This decision to be honest in your finances is not something you make once for all. It’s a daily decision. You’re going to be tempted  to lie. Sometimes honesty costs you. Have you learned that? Sometimes it costs to tell the truth on a form.
  But God says that if you’re faithful to him in this, you’ll never have to worry about your financial needs. 
  PLAY today’s audio teaching from Pastor Rick  >>
  Talk It Over
        - Where in the financial details of your life can you choose to honor God today?
       - How have you seen God bless your hard but honest decisions about money?
       - Why is doing the honest thing with your finances often the more difficult choice?
   
                                                
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