From an article by Mrs. Krohn:
An elderly man who had kept Shabbos in the early 20th century was interviewed by his grandchildren about the challenges he faced.
"Zeidy, it must have been so hard for you to keep Shabbos in those years," said a grandson.
The grandfather smiled and said, "It wasn't difficult to keep Shabbos; it was difficult to earn a parnassa."
Since the grandfather did not view Shabbos as a hardship, this enabled him to merit to raise generations of frum descendents, for as R' Moshe Feinstein would say, the reason earlier generations lost their children even though they were shomer Shabbos was because the parents would complain, "It's hard to be a Jew," when they lost their jobs yet again in order to keep Shabbos.
Interestingly, in the same article, R' Chaim Pinchas Scheinberg z'l is quoted as saying that the money a person spends on any mitzvah will not be deducted from the amount that is granted to him for his yearly expenses (source: Ritva, Shita Mekubetzes Beitza 16a).
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