But here's the thing. I don't claim that money is inherently evil. But you DO claim that increasing wealth is a good or moral thing. Its a beneficial thing for the benefactor, but I would never call it moral. There is no ethical consumption under capitalism. It is exploititive in nature, and merely taking part in it is facilitating evil. To say it is a moral good is to erect a golden calf. Much like the one that stands in wallstreet.
See, you're not understanding the words. Increasing wealth IS a good and moral thing. That's not saying having more money is itself a moral good. Wealth isn't just Scrooge McDuck pools of money, it's the value of what you own to other people. Something has value only because it is desired. If you take cheap ingredients, make delicious pies, and sell them to someone else, it isn't the act of selling that increased your wealth, it was making the pies. The world isn't wealthier today than in the past because we have more currency, but rather because of the things we have to value. Making pies is a good and moral thing.
Obviously, making pies isn't limited to capitalism or monetary systems, but it's an illustration that wealth isn't fixed. It is a perception that can be created and destroyed. Houses built makes the world wealthier, and when they burn down the world is poorer. You need to understand this, because investors aren't making loans for interest. You gain wealth by investing because you own something, and the value of it increases. When they say someone like Jeff Bezos has made hundreds of billions of of Amazon, that doesn't mean he's siphoned that amount of money out of people's pockets. That's the evaluation of what he owns in Amazon, and that number is so high not because that value was stolen, but because that value has been generated. If Amazon ceased to exist, that wealth wouldn't move somewhere else like it's a fixed value that has to exist somewhere, it just wouldn't exist at all, and the world would be a worse place for it.
Jesus criticizes greed. The wealthy person who won't unload possessions even if it means they can't get through the gate. The tax collector that takes extra for personal enrichment. The man who stockpiles his goods for himself and offers nothing to others. This isn't a criticism of wealth. The opposite is true, because greed ultimately destroys wealth. Greed would have had Bezos sell off his business when he could and just be content that he's got his and he doesn't need to work anymore. Take the money and run. And then Amazon might not exist, and everyone who has benefited from Amazon would be worse off.
You may be thinking "but then he wouldn't be so rich, obviously it's greedier to do what he's done because it's made him richer." But that's not how it works. Greed isn't just whatever behavior makes a person rich. Greed is a flaw, a selfish desire for personal material possessions. The world has no shortage of greedy people who've failed to be wealthy. Because capitalism doesn't reward greed. Capitalism rewards people for the value they can generate for others. An investment isn't a loan with interest. It's putting your money in someone's hands because you believe that person can make the world wealthier with those resources. If what you invested in doesn't help anyone, you don't make any money.
Certainly, I'll admit, there are those who cheat the system. There are greedy people that pervert the system for their own benefit, and we should collectively try to hold them to account. But A) you don't tear something down because of the exceptions where it goes wrong when it goes right so much more often, and B) every single attempt at communism in history has been corrupted by exactly the same bad actors who sometimes get wealthy off of capitalism, except instead of them getting wealthy in communism, they slaughter millions.