AXIOM // General

Money, Mammon, and Christ

A node in the materialist record.

Money, Mammon, and Christ: The Diagnostic of Price

Money is not a real asset; it is Dead Information. It is the signal of labor that has been hollowed out and turned into a price-point. Mammon is the structural god of this system.

Prices vs. Productive Labor

The split between the Kingdom of God and the Kingdom of Mammon (Matthew 6:24) is a technical irreconcilability:

  1. Serving Christ (The Real): This is the use of tools and community-trust to fix the neighbor's roof or feed the town. It is the work of Being Human. This labor has no "equivalent price" because it reproduces social life directly.
  2. Serving Mammon (The Price): This is looking at the world through Credit Cards, Debt, and Interest. When you serve Mammon, you prioritize the Price-Signal over the Life-Signal. You treat your labor as a spreadsheet entry.
  3. The Myth of Information: Money is a "Ghost-Signal"—a promise that you can store labor without actually building anything. This allows the Globalist Extractor to command your hands without providing any survival in return.

The Technical Reality: The Capture of the Hand

When you serve Mammon, your Work (The Hand) is no longer yours.

  • It is captured by the system of Credit.
  • You are forced to apply your skill to "Dead Projects" (like speculative corporate HQs floating on debt) because those projects offer the best "Price-Signal," even if they provide nothing to your town.
  • You build for a globalist that will never see your face and will hollow out your town the moment the profit drops.

Scriptural Alignment: Matthew 6:24

"No man can serve two masters... Ye cannot serve God and mammon."

  • This is a materialist fact. You cannot simultaneously prioritize the Reproduction of Life and the Maximized Price.
  • One is the Flesh of the Real; the other is the Hollowed-Out Data of the extractor.

Summary

The Diagnostic of Money identifies that the globalist wants your attention and your work to serve a pile of dead data. To be a Materialist Christian is to recognize that the life is in the work, not in the price.

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