Poverty (virtue)


Poverty - moral virtue, which consists in staying separated from material needs and earthly goods. The material sphere for the people living in the virtue of poverty is secondary, and they bring the spiritual sphere to the fore. An example of pre-Christian practice of the virtue of poverty is, among others. Diogenes from Synopy.

True, conscious poverty leads to happiness. "People are living materialistically, as studies show, are less happy than the rest." In christianity

In Christianity, the practice of the virtue of poverty is an echo of many evangelical calls, among others. "You can not serve God and mammon" (Mt 6:24) and "So none of you who renounce all that he has can not be my disciple" (Lk 14:33).

Christian poverty is not about deprivation or poverty, just as Christianity is not about rejection of the material world (it is the heresy of manichaeism).

Poverty is about respecting what you have, sharing your skills with others. For a believer, material matters are important, but they should not overwhelm the true purpose of life. Specifically, Christian poverty is in opposition to the attitude of consumerism.

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