Posted May 10, 2019 by Michael L. Brown

The headline was striking, the figures mind-numbing. How many of us can relate to $1.5 trillion? But that’s what the headline declared: “'THEY BROKE THE DEAL.' Donald Trump wiped nearly $1.5 TRILLION off global markets in a single tweet after threatening to double China trade tariffs.”

How much is $1.5 trillion?

In 2015, Buzzfeed posted an illustrative video which depicts $1 trillion in graphic terms. As explained by Cameron Koch in the Tech Times, “Just seeing the scale of it all is sobering, as the $100 million stacks made up of $100 bills continues to grow and grow, until the cartoon man used for scale can barely be seen amidst the piles of money.

“But if you think that's insane, the idea that lining up a trillion $1 bills end-to-end could reach the sun puts just how much money we are talking about in perspective. That's 96,906,565 miles worth of dollar bills.”

That’s a lot of money, no matter you stack it, spread it, or count it.

To put this in the context of a wage earner, let’s say you make $60,000 per year and you work for 50 straight years. That would amount to a total of $3 million, a fairly sizable sum. Now, do that again and again and again – to be exact, do that half-a-million times, and you get to $1.5 trillion.

Yet, according to financial experts, President Trump wiped that off global markets with a single tweet.

Talk about the fleeing nature of money. Talk about the fluctuations of the market. Talk about highs and lows.

Trump’s two-part tweet, consisting of 102 words, said this: “For 10 months, China has been paying tariffs to the USA of 25% on 50 billion dollars of high tech, and 10% on 200 billion dollars of other goods. These payments are partially responsible for our great economic results. The 10% will go up to 25% on Friday. 325 billions dollars of additional goods sent to us by China remain untaxed, but will be shortly, at a rate of 25%.

“The tariffs paid to the USA have had little impact on product cost, mostly borne by China. The trade deal with China continues, but too slowly, as they attempt to renegotiate. No!”

What were the effects of his words? According to The Sun, “Analysts have now pointed out that the President's message cost the markets more than $13bn for each of the 102 words in the tweet.”

Talk about presidential power. Talk about getting a bang for your buck – or more accurately, a lot of bucks for your bang.

In fact, breaking this down by the letters used in the tweet (roughly 450), $1.5 trillion would amount to $3,333,333,333.33 per letter. In sum, “A fortune has already been erased from global stocks so far this week, reports news.com.

What does all this have to do with the Bible?

Simply that the Scriptures frequently warn about the fleeting nature of wealth.

Jesus referred to it as “the deceitfulness of riches” (see Mark 4:19) meaning, at least, that: 1) riches can deceive by giving a false sense of security; and 2) riches can deceive with a false promise of satisfaction. The reality is that, “A lover of money never has his fill of money, nor a lover of wealth his fill of income” (Ecclesiastes 5:9).

That’s why Paul spoke about “the uncertainty of riches” (1 Timothy 6:17) – and he wrote this long before Donald Trump ever used Twitter and long before there was such a thing as a stock market. Riches have always been uncertain.

But the best biblical illustration for the fleeting nature of money comes from the book of Proverbs, famous for its pithy, quotable wisdom.

As rendered vividly in the NLT, “Don’t wear yourself out trying to get rich. Be wise enough to know when to quit. In the blink of an eye wealth disappears, for it will sprout wings and fly away like an eagle” (Proverbs 23:4-5).

This week, if analysts are correct, $1.5 trillion sprouted wings and flew away. Goodbye!

Of course, if Trump’s instincts are correct, this massive loss will rebound with even more massive gains.

But either way, the lesson is sure: Don’t put your trust in the financial markets. Don’t put your trust in money. Don’t put your trust in wealth.

You can be a billionaire today and a pauper tomorrow. And even as a billionaire, you can be depressed, suicidal, and empty.

That’s why Proverbs, which is, in fact, filled with shrewd business advice, also says this: “Better to have little, with fear for the LORD, than to have great treasure and inner turmoil. A bowl of vegetables with someone you love is better than steak with someone you hate. . . . Better a dry crust eaten in peace than a house filled with feasting—and conflict” (Proverbs 15:17-18; 17:1 NLT).

The fact is that a massive amount of money – really, an almost incomprehensible amount – can disappear in a moment of time. (To be precise, in the time it takes to compose 102 words and post two tweets.)

But inner-satisfaction, family wholeness, and a sense of destiny and purpose are not quickly obtained – and not easily lost.

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Kenneth Greifer posted a comment · May 13, 2019
The most depressing part of this story is that President Trump really believes that China is paying the tariffs to America's government. The American businesses that buy goods from China are paying the tariffs (taxes on imported goods) to America's government, then the American people pay higher prices for these goods. It is a tax that Trump likes a lot because he thinks China is paying it. In some cases, Chinese businesses have lowered their prices, so American businesses have paid the tariffs on cheaper items, so in a way China paid the tariffs indirectly, but not always. The big question is does Trump actually understand tariffs. He doesn't understand that the trade deficit is not sending America's wealth to China. He thinks we give $500 billion a year to China because we buy $500 billion worth of goods from them more than they buy from us, but he doesn't understand that our businesses sell those goods for a profit in America and make trillions of dollars off of China, so they actually make America richer by providing cheap goods for American businesses to sell. America's wealth has actually increased from the trade deficit, although they get more of the manufacturing jobs.