How a Bible Written Before Stock Markets Can Guide Stock Investing (2024)

We want our investing to be guided by the Bible. But the Bible doesn’t talk directly about modern markets, because they didn’t exist when it was written. What do we do?

In part one, we saw that the common practice of relying on the Bible only for broad, general principles leaves us with a lot of gaps. An alternative approach is to see the Bible as a window into an “implied world.” The story of that world is told in the Bible, and that same story is also played out in our own lives, because the Bible’s story of the world is the true story of the real world, and we are part of that story.

Here in part two, we’re going to look at one example — stock investing — for how this can work in practice. Of course an article of this length can’t outline all the ways the Bible might reshape investing. The point, though, is to demonstrate how it can do so, in order to encourage the development of a more robust biblical-theological framework for investing.

Wealth and What to Do with It: Giving and Lending

Let’s start on a very broad level. To be an investor, in addition to having some kind of access to financial markets, you need one specific thing: regular and stable possession of some level of wealth over and above your subsistence needs. Unlike today, relatively few people in the biblical world met that qualification. But the biblical authors do sometimes speak either to or about such people.

If asked what the Bible has to say about how people should use their wealth, most people’s first answer will be some variation of “be generous to those in need.” Most people think of generosity exclusively in terms of giving. There has been a wonderful work of God in the past half-century drawing increased attention to the biblical theme of giving.

But alongside giving, the Bible also commends lending money as a form of generosity. Consider just a few examples:

  • “It is well with the man who deals generously and lends; who conducts his affairs with justice.” (Psalms 112:5)
  • “You shall not harden your heart or shut your hand against your poor brother, you shall open your hand to him and lend him sufficient for his need, whatever it may be.” (Deuteronomy 15:7-8)
  • “Give to the one who begs from you, and do not refuse the one who would borrow from you.” (Matthew 5:42)

The person-to-person lending commended in these passages is the closest thing we find in our Bible to stock investing. Similarly to lending, the essence of stock investing is to make our financial capital available to others who want to use it, in exchange for future returns produced by their use of the capital. So the Bible’s commendation of lending represents an especially rich biblical resource for getting beyond broad ethical generalities in our application of the Bible to stock investing.

Investing for the Benefit of Others

In verses like those quoted above, we can see that lending is as much a part of God’s story of justice as giving. They show that the primary purpose of lending should not be our own gain. It should be the benefit that lending can provide to others, extending economic flourishing — directly and indirectly — to people who need it.

In the same way, when we invest in stocks, we do not need to view the stock market merely as a competitive field of individual gain-seekers. We can see it instead as an opportunity to make our financial capital available to productive and life-giving enterprises that bring flourishing to the world. And we can prioritize investments that serve the common good rather than only asking how much we personally will make.

Seen in this light, the many biblical injunctions against hoarding – such as Jesus’ parable of the rich fool – take on a new significance. It is tempting to read these merely as a concern that hoarded goods will go to waste instead of being used for a good purpose. Since the money we invest in the stock market isn’t going to waste, we’re in the clear. Right? But the next question should be: How much good are our investments actually doing? And what kind of good, and for whom? Could my portfolio be something like the big barns of the rich fool?

Investing as Assuming Risk for Good Reasons

How can lending be a form of generosity – as the Bible verses above assert – when the money is not given as a gift, but is expected to be returned? Because the lender is still giving something: the assumption of the risk that the loan won’t be repaid. When someone can’t repay us, we should cheerfully count the loan as a gift, and move on without holding a record of the loss against the person we lent to. (This helps us make sense of the seemingly paradoxical command in Luke 6:35 to “lend, expecting nothing in return.”)

Similarly, stock investing is a way we can make our money available to others for their flourishing by assuming risk. Good enterprises that serve human flourishing need capital to operate, yet there is always some risk that the enterprise will fail and the capital will be lost. This means someone has to take on financial risk if these good enterprises are going to do their work. Taking wise, prudent risks to bring life to the world is a gift we can give through our portfolios.

This idea that the assumption of risk for the sake of the common good is a form of generosity sheds new light on the parable of the talents and the parable of the minas. The “wicked and slothful” financial steward in each parable withholds money from investment for fear it will be lost. The Theology of Work Project comments that “the parable suggests if we choose to accept Jesus as king, we must expect to lead risky lives.” Willingness to take on financial risk would seem to be an obvious application!

Investing to Destroy Material Poverty

The Bible passages on lending quoted above focus on lending to the poor. In the ancient world, that was easily the predominant mode of lending. In modern stock investing, however, we are not usually working directly with the poor.

It is worth stating very clearly that stock investing is not a substitute for personally serving people in need, including by lending them money. There are also companies and funds we can invest in that focus on things like business creation in underserved communities, as we feel led to make that a priority in our investing.

However, it is also the case that ordinary stock investing serves the poor in vitally important ways, if we do it wisely. When we invest in stock, we are providing money to enterprises that will use it to carry out their activities. If we choose to invest in enterprises that do good, productive work that serves communities and helps God’s world to flourish, we are helping to fuel the kind of authentic, sustainable economic growth that is absolutely essential for lifting the poor out of material poverty in the long term and on a mass scale.

As underdeveloped nations around the world have gained their first real access to modern markets, fueled by stock investing, they have experienced dramatic economic growth, and the result has been a precipitous drop in material poverty. A study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research found that the number of people living on $1 per day or less dropped by 80% between 1970 and 2006; measurements of living standards more than doubled in the same period. Other researchers’ estimates yield different numbers, but all estimates agree that the drop in global poverty has been very large.

Of course, many problems remain, and markets are not a cure-all. The end of material poverty does not necessarily bring with it the end of social and relational poverty, to say nothing of spiritual poverty; and economic growth also introduces wholly new kinds of problems that societies living at subsistence level simply didn’t have. But economic growth and the stock investing that makes it possible must be at least one indispensable element in any serious strategy to extend wealth and opportunity to others.

Investing for the Life of the World

With the benefits of economic growth in mind, we can see that even making a return can be part of the good we can do through investing. Our primary purpose should be to serve others and bring life to the world. However, if we invest in enterprises that are doing genuinely good and life-giving work, then the growth of our portfolios is not only good for us, it’s good for the poor and for the common good. It reflects the fruitfulness that God has infused into his good world.

Ultimately, this is an important way we can participate in the biblical story of God’s creation of the world as a dynamic, growing and changing project entrusted to human stewardship. God did not just put Adam and Eve in the garden to maintain the world as it was. His intent was that we develop creation’s potential, so it would glorify God more and more over time. The modern stock investment system makes it possible to create new things and develop the world, taking our place in the biblical story of the growth of God’s world.

On the one hand, we are summoned to overcome the self-centered focus on returns for ourselves that dominates our cultural investing paradigm. On the other hand, we need not embrace – we actually ought to avoid – approaches that deprecate ordinary stock investing as having no moral value and no intrinsic place in God’s story of justice, or that recognize stock investing as valuable only in highly specialized contexts or only if certain very specific demands are met. Instead, we should explore how our portfolios can bring life to the world.

This is only a first step. But it does show that even a small dose of God’s word has the power to catalyze a dramatic transformation in our decision-making, no matter how great the historical gap between its times and ours. And so, let us be doers of the word and not hearers only – it’s time to reevaluate our investments with the big story of the Bible in mind.

Category: Economics, Faith, Investing

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How a Bible Written Before Stock Markets Can Guide Stock Investing (2024)

FAQs

Does the Bible say anything about the stock market? ›

The Bible doesn't specifically state that we should invest, but also does not forbid it. Investing is mentioned in Proverbs 31:16 and used in Jesus's parables (ex. Parable of the Ten Minas found in Luke 19:11-27), implying that it is expected and normal.

Which is a biblical principle for investing? ›

As Christians, we believe that we are stewards of the resources God has given us. This not only includes our money, but also the way we invest that money. It's important that we think of the money that we invest as God's money and that He has entrusted us to take care of it. It's not ours—we're simply stewards of it.

How does the Bible say to invest? ›

Ecclesiastes 11:2 – “Invest in seven ventures, yes, in eight; you do not know what disaster may come upon the land.”

What are the stocks in the Bible? ›

Stocks an ancient instrument of confinement and punishment, consisting of a wooden frame in which a seated victim's feet were locked. (2chronicles 16:10, Jeremiah 20:2, 3) while imprisoned at Philippi, Paul and Silas were confined in stocks that held their feet.

What does the Bible say about trading? ›

Ecclesiastes 11 (GNB) - Bible Society. 1Invest your money in foreign trade, and one of these days you will make a profit. 2Put your investments in several places — many places, in fact — because you never know what kind of bad luck you are going to have in this world.

What are the sin stocks? ›

Sin stocks, also known as vice stocks, are shares of companies that operate in industries often considered unethical or immoral. Alcohol, tobacco, gambling, cannabis, adult entertainment and weapons are the most common industries associated with the term.

What companies follow biblical principles? ›

By Sarah Petersen, Herb Scribner
  • Forever 21. This popular clothing company owned by the Chang family also has its own Christian mark as each yellow shopping bag contains the biblical reference to John 3:16. ...
  • Chick-Fil-A. ...
  • Tyson Foods. ...
  • Marriot Hotel. ...
  • Curves. ...
  • Carl's Jr. ...
  • Alaska Airlines. ...
  • JetBlue.
Aug 5, 2013

Where should Christians invest their money? ›

First, we should seek to invest in companies that are aligned with our values (Biblically Responsible Investing). Biblically Responsible Investing is the practice of avoiding investing in companies whose primary purpose is to promote or profit from activities which are explicitly sinful. We also call those 'sin stocks.

Where in the Bible does it say divide your investment? ›

But divide your investments among many places, for you do not know what risks might lie ahead. When clouds are heavy, the rains come down. Whether a tree falls north or south, it stays where it falls.

What is the powerful Bible verse for wealth? ›

Philippians 4:19: And this same God who takes care of me will supply all your needs from his glorious riches, which have been given to us in Christ Jesus. Proverbs 10:22: The blessing of the Lord makes a person rich, and he adds no sorrow with it. 2 Corinthians 9:8: And God will generously provide all you need.

What is a powerful Bible verse for financial breakthrough? ›

“The blessing of the LORD brings wealth, without painful toil for it.” – Proverbs 10:22 (NIV)

What does the Bible say about gaining wealth? ›

Finally, 1 Timothy 6:17-18 offers divine instructions for the wealthy among us. The passage reads: “Command those who are rich in this present world not to be arrogant nor to put their hope in wealth, which is so uncertain, but to put their hope in God, who richly provides us with everything for our enjoyment.

What does the Bible say about the stock market? ›

What Paul says in 1 Corinthians 10:31 can be applied to the stock market. There Paul said, “So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” Certainly, investing in the stock market falls under “or whatever you do.” If you can do it to the glory of God, then do it.

Which book is considered as the Bible of investment? ›

Warren Buffett bought his first stock when he was eleven. At the age of 13, he filled out his first tax return, and at 19, he discovered his investing bible: The Intelligent Investor. The book, which was first published in 1949, was written by his professor Benjamin Graham.

Who are the three investors in the Bible? ›

In Matthew 25.14-30, Jesus tells a story of a rich master who entrusts his wealth to three servants while he goes away on a long journey. While he is gone, two of the servants double the value of what they've received. The third servant buries the wealth he's entrusted with, and earns no return on it.

What does the Bible say about markets? ›

The Bible describes voluntary exchange as the practical and moral means to achieve peace, prosperity, and human flourishing. 2. The Bible defines and condemns fraud and force in the marketplace, whether perpetrated by the State, by systems of oppression enshrined by legislation, or by individual acts of deception.

Does the Bible tell us to share? ›

“And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.” It must be an easy thing to forget to do good, since we are reminded not to forget to in this verse.

What does put in stocks mean in the Bible? ›

Stocks are a fastening device similar to the modern equivalent of hand cuffs, but are fixed in position. Leg stocks would go around the prisoner's ankles such that they can not remove their feet and thus can not move from their position.

What does God say about buying and selling? ›

Buying and selling in the Bible

Another specific rule governed weights and measures—having two different sets (one for buying and the other for selling) was forbidden (Deuteronomy 25:15). God said that those who cheated with such unfair business practices were an abomination to Him.

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