The Christians of old show that Christianity does not esteem worldly status or wealth as anything of value.
What matters in the end is one's
inner wealth and status before God. In fact, worldliness is precisely to esteem these earthly things as if they are ends in themselves and judging peoples worth based on such shallow standards. Nowhere in the New Testament is material wealth proclaimed as something that Christianity concerns itself with, except to press the duty to share it with those who have need of it.
In fact, wealth is really nothing to boast about. Think about it, it doesn't make you any holier than the next person and if you have it, you have a greater burden to share it and if you are selfish with it, you will give an account for every last penny of it to the person who really owns it, for you are a mere borrower. Jesus even shows that it
can be an obstacle to one's salvation and if we are honest, looking around our own world today, at the rich and mighty, we will see that there is truth to that. Hence, if we have it, while we should be grateful for it, we must be extra careful lest we end up getting proud and placing our trust in our possessions thinking that they are our assurance in this life or that they make us special. We also have to make sure we never turn away those God brings to us who have need of it.