One author tells the story of a 
							woman who met a friend of her father’s who had not 
							seen him for many years. The woman’s father was a 
							devout Christian, so she found great joy in telling 
							his old acquaintance about her dad’s recent cancer 
							fight, of his trust in the Lord, and the way he 
							faced suffering and even the prospect of death. She 
							was very proud of her father’s ways. 
							The friend, however, had lived a 
							different kind of life. Having given himself over 
							completely to earning money and hoarding every cent 
							he could, he had become very wealthy. But he didn’t 
							have the same glad anticipation of the future as his 
							friend did. He explained it to the daughter this 
							way: “Your father can be more optimistic about 
							heaven than I for a very simple reason. He is going 
							to his treasure. I’ll be leaving mine!” 
							It has been said, "Money is a 
							good servant, but a bad master." A greedy person can 
							never have enough of physical or material things. 
							They think of making more money, creating more 
							wealth, and becoming more prosperous. They dream of 
							money in their sleep, bring up money in their 
							conversation, and believe that money talks, money 
							makes money, and they forget money makes the devil 
							his employer. The void in their heart becomes a 
							gaping hole and, if unchecked, a crater. 
							Do you remember the verdict on 
							Martha Stewart? She had a net worth in the billions, 
							but she risked everything to save $60,000 in stock 
							value. She faced prison time for something that must 
							have seemed like a small infraction to her. Like 
							her, we may think that small departures from 
							integrity are no big deal. 
							Do you remember Bernie Madoff? He 
							was convicted of fraud and operating a Ponzi scheme 
							that is still considered the largest financial fraud 
							in American history. He became the picture of greed.
							
							Now here’s the shock. You don’t 
							have to have millions and or billions to become 
							greedy. The threat of greed can fall on anyone with 
							any amount of money or even someone with the lack of 
							it. If we’re not careful, we could all find 
							ourselves in a “Mine Field.” 
							I have a DVD of an old movie 
							classic called, “Kelly’s Heroes.” The movie is 
							packed with some big name actors and takes place 
							during the Second World War. During the movie, 
							Kelly’s soldiers walk into a mine field, and two of 
							his friends are killed. The rest have to crawl out 
							on their bellies carefully maneuvering around the 
							mines. It is a tense movie moment and depicts the 
							caution that must be taken when we hear the word 
							“mine.” A mine field is a very dangerous place to 
							find one’s self. There are still some places in our 
							world where the danger of stepping on a land mine is 
							still a real threat.