Not a troll post but a genuine question. If the Bible states a rich man can never get into heaven, and Trump and his family are rich, but if they end up successfully saving the country from the Satanists and help restore and protect Christianity in America, will they still not get into heaven? I don't see them giving up their money anytime soon, and they kind of DO need that money in order to run for POTUS and do a lot of the things they need to get done, not to mention protect themselves, so it does beg the question.
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This is probably one of THE most misconstrued verses in the Bible. For reference the verse you're speaking of is Matthew 19:24: 24 "Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”
The "eye of a needle" here, like most things in the Bible, is not a literal needle eye, but a metaphor based on what would be easily understandable to the people at the time it was written, while maintaining its meaning and understandability over time so long as it wasn't misconstrued by bad actors and ignorant masses (meant in the literal definition and not as an insult).
The "eye of a needle" was a nickname for a VERY narrow gate that most people used to enter or exit Jerusalem where it was VERY difficult to get through as a person in a timely manner, much less someone with a camel.
The point of this verse is revealed in the next two verses. This is where people mess up, Matther 19:24 by itself is VERY misleading and only gives you PART of the message, with or without context of the true meaning of the needle name. The full verse (Matthew19:24-26) goes like this:
24 "Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.”
25 When the disciples heard this, they were greatly astonished and asked, “Who then can be saved?”
26 Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
As you can see, with the full three verses that were MEANT to go together, you get the full context and message in a timeless manner, regardless of if you know the context behind the needle name. That being, regardless of if something is "hard" or "impossible" for a man to do, NOTHING is impossible for God to do.
Aa rich man may not be able to enter the gate by himself (a feat of great difficulty in ancient Jerusalem), or camel might not be able to enter through the eye of a needle (difficult in the case of the gate, and literally impossible in the case of an actual needle eye), but God can do all of this, and make it happen for those that believe in him and have faith in him since NOTHING is impossible for him.
It's a different topic, but the rich young ruler parable is another one people will point to about "God doesn't want people to be rich", which is also false. In his case, God wanted to be number one in his life, but the rich young ruler loved money, status, etc. MORE than God and wasn't willing to give it up for him.
Basically, it was a test, similar to Abraham and Isaac. God asks you to faithfully give something up just to ensure he's number one in your life. That doesn't mean he'll ACTULLY make you do it, but he wants you to have faith in him to start the process.
If you take a look at the Bible you can VERY clearly see God doesn't hate rich people and that rich people make it to heaven. Off the top of my head, Daniel, David, Solomon, Basically EVERYONE in Abraham's direct line that was named and had a story recorded about them, not to mention several people during Jesus' time that were wealthy enough to have servants and households, where he would heal their servants for them in their faith.
Heck, Solomon is widely considered a candidate for THE WEALTHIEST man to ever live on the face of the earth. Daniel, at one point, basically controlled egypt by proxy and all of its riches. Job's whole story is about God allowing the devil to tempt a man who had everything in the world, including vast wealth, and after he had lost everything and STILL had faith, God restored everything he had lost and then increased it several fold (obviously including his wealth).
TL;DR: God doesn't hate wealth or rich people, that's a modern lie created by intentionally misconstruing Bible verses to fit an agenda.