THE BEAUTIFUL GAME AND THE ETERNAL KINGDOM | PART 4 of 6
THE PRICE OF WONDER | What the World Cup Reveals About Humanity, Money, and God's Design for the World
What Happens When Everything Becomes a Trade
A child does not watch his first World Cup match wondering whether there is money to be made.
He watches because wonder has captured him.
The stadium seems impossibly large. The colors appear brighter than they should. Flags move like waves across the crowd. The noise rises and falls like thunder. Every touch of the ball feels important. Every attack carries possibility. Every goal seems capable of stopping time itself.
For a few moments, the world becomes bigger than it was before. Wonder arrives before calculation. It always does.
The first experience of beauty is rarely transactional. A child does not stand before the ocean calculating its economic value. He does not watch a sunset and ask whether it will outperform an index fund. He does not hear music and immediately wonder whether someone has created a derivative market around the melody.
Wonder is received before it is analyzed.
Perhaps that is why Jesus spoke so often about becoming like children. Not because children are naive, but because they still possess the ability to receive gifts without immediately attempting to control them.
The older we become, however, something changes. We begin measuring everything.
The market value.
The opportunity cost.
The upside potential.
The return profile.
Slowly, almost imperceptibly, we learn to place prices on things that were never meant to be sold.
The World Cup reveals this tension with remarkable clarity.
What begins as a celebration of human excellence quickly becomes surrounded by a vast financial ecosystem. Fan tokens emerge. Prediction markets explode. Betting platforms process billions of dollars. Every emotional moment becomes a potential transaction. Every surprise result becomes an opportunity. Every form of attention becomes inventory waiting to be monetized.
The game remains beautiful. Yet the machinery surrounding it increasingly asks a different question. How do we turn wonder into commerce?
Now, let me be clear. I am the biggest proponent of markets.
Properly ordered markets are among humanity’s greatest inventions. They allow strangers to cooperate peacefully. They reward innovation. They encourage entrepreneurship. They allocate resources efficiently. Capitalism has lifted billions of people out of poverty and created unprecedented human flourishing across the world.
The problem is not commerce. The problem is confusion. Markets are extraordinarily effective at pricing value. They are remarkably poor at pricing meaning.
And when we begin confusing value and meaning, we start putting price tags on things that were never designed to carry one.
That is where Scripture becomes so relevant. Paul writes in 1 Timothy 6:10:
“For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil. Some people, eager for money, have wandered from the faith and pierced themselves with many griefs.”
Notice what Paul does not say. He does not condemn money. He diagnoses disordered love. Money is a tool.
The danger begins when a tool becomes an object of worship.
Colossians 3:5 goes even further:
“Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature... greed, which is idolatry.”
Greed is not merely wanting more. Greed is believing that one more gain will finally satisfy what only God can satisfy. That temptation has followed humanity since Eden. The World Cup simply places it on a very public stage.
Fan tokens, prediction markets, and sports betting are not fundamentally technological stories. They are human stories. They reveal something about us. They expose how quickly excitement can become speculation and how easily joy can become a transaction.
The problem is not that money reveals our hearts. The problem is that it often does.
This is also where bitcoin is frequently misunderstood.
To outsiders, bitcoin appears to belong in the same category as every other speculative instrument. Yet the deepest lesson bitcoin teaches is almost the opposite of speculation.
The World Cup casino asks: How quickly can I get more?
Bitcoin asks: How long can I wait?
One rewards impulse. The other increasingly rewards patience. One feeds excitement. The other often cultivates conviction. One trains attention toward immediate outcomes. The other invites people to think in years, decades, and generations.
Neither saves the soul. Only Jesus does that. Yet one tends to amplify the appetite for instant gratification while the other often rewards restraint.
Galatians 5 describes the fruit of the Spirit as including patience, faithfulness, and self-control. Those virtues rarely flourish inside environments designed around constant stimulation and immediate reward.
Which brings us back to wonder.
The World Cup will eventually crown a champion. The betting markets will settle. The fan tokens will fade. The headlines will disappear.
Yet the deeper question will remain. Can we still experience wonder without trying to own it? Can we still enjoy beauty without converting it into a trade? Can we still celebrate excellence without immediately asking how to monetize it?
The child watching his first World Cup match already knows the answer.
Wonder arrives before calculation.
It always has.
And perhaps one of the great spiritual challenges of our age is learning how to return to that truth once again.
Kingdom Principles 👑
Wonder is a gift from God and should be received before it is monetized
Markets are powerful tools for human flourishing, but they cannot assign meaning to life
The danger is not money itself, but allowing money to become an object of worship
Greed begins when we expect created things to satisfy what only God can satisfy
Bitcoin increasingly rewards patience, stewardship, conviction, and long-term thinking
The fruit of the Spirit grows through faithfulness, self-control, and restraint rather than impulse
Human flourishing requires both economic freedom and spiritual formation
Jesus calls us to enjoy God’s gifts without turning them into idols
Stewardship asks, “How can I faithfully use this?” while greed asks, “How much can I get from this?”
The deepest treasures in life carry meaning far beyond their market value
Prayer 🙏✝️🔥
Lord,
Thank You for creating a world filled with beauty, wonder, creativity, and joy.
Thank You for sunsets that cannot be owned, oceans that cannot be contained, friendships that cannot be priced, and moments that remind us life is far richer than any balance sheet could ever measure.
Forgive us for the times we have confused value with meaning. Forgive us for the moments when we have attempted to turn Your gifts into idols or sought ultimate satisfaction in things that were never meant to carry that weight.
Teach us to become faithful stewards rather than anxious accumulators. Help us enjoy success without worshiping it, build wealth without being owned by it, and participate in markets without allowing markets to define us.
Holy Spirit, cultivate within us the fruit of patience, self-control, faithfulness, and contentment. Help us resist the constant pull toward immediacy, distraction, and speculation. Give us the wisdom to recognize what is truly valuable and the courage to pursue what is eternally meaningful.
Jesus, may our hearts remain anchored in You above every trend, every market, every technology, and every opportunity. Teach us to receive wonder as a gift, stewardship as a calling, and life itself as an act of worship.
And when the final whistle eventually blows on all our earthly pursuits, may we be found faithful.
In Jesus’ mighty name, Amen. ⚔️🕊️✝️🔥🌍⚽₿🏆


