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Fresno Christian Fellowship UMC
A 20 Day Study in Stewardship PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 01 April 2010 18:30


A 20 Day Study in Stewardship

 

“…Everything comes from you, and we have given you only what comes from your hand.”

I Chronicles 29:14

 

Day One - Your Only True Treasure

Matthew 6:21 "For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also. "

Read Matthew 6:21

Apply Jesus here tells us the most important lesson about money. Our heart, our desire and hope, is tied closely to our treasure. Our money and our heart go together. We all know that, of course, to some extent. But when Jesus calls our attention to this part of our character, he confronts us.

He alerts us to the powerful tug that material wealth possesses, an allure that makes us do and act and believe contrary to our Christian confession. We say that we live for heaven. Our pocketbook shows us what we really live for. He calls us to examine where we place our money and our heart: earthly pleasures that fade away or eternal kingdom investments that last forever.

 

1. Where is most of your treasure? Is that where your heart is?

 

2. When you give, does that frighten you or excite you? Why?

 

Pray For a renewed heart that tells treasure what to do, not more treasure that tells your heart what to do.

Do Look at your bank statement and your credit card statements.

Specifically, where does most of your money go? Are those your

priorities?

 

 

Day Two - God's Ownership of Creation

Deuteronomy 8:17-18 "You may say to yourself, 'My power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me. ' But remember the Lord your God, for it is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth...”

Read Psalm 50, especially 7-15

Apply God is the creator (Gen 1:1), the sole ruler and Lord over all creation. He controls all things in this world, the whole creation (Psalm 50:12). Nothing that we do takes away from God's overruling presence throughout all of creation. It is his to create, and protect, and use for his glory. So whenever we use the resources of the world, we use the resources of God's world.

That also means that "the silver is mine and the gold is mine" (Haggai 2:8). When we look at our own finances, we tend to forget God's sovereign ownership of creation. We expect him to care for us as if he owes us something. In Job 41: 11, God replies, "Who has a claim against me that I must pay? Everything under heaven belongs to me." Or, we think that we have earned our treasures because of our own abilities (See Deuteronomy 8:17 above).

Therefore, God doesn't need our money as if he needed an income. Instead, we need him every moment to sustain us. Our worship, and the dedication of our whole lives to him, is an acknowledgment of his control over everything. It's a thank offering, a giving back of what we have so abundantly received (Psalm 50:14).

 

1. Do you act like God "owes" you something? Why?

 

2. What causes you to forget God's loving control of the world?

 

Pray For a renewed heart that daily remembers God's active control of the world and a thankful heart that praises his loving care.

Do How might living as if God owns everything influence: the way we shop, the presents we put under the Christmas tree, the vacations we plan, our giving to the needy?1

 

 

Day Three - God's Ownership of His People

1 Corinthians 4:7 "For who makes you different from anyone else? What do you have that you did not receive? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?"

Read 1 Corinthians 4:7-14

Apply Everything good in our lives comes from God: our abilities, our upbringing, our educational background. We would not be where we are without countless interventions by God on our behalf. Beyond those temporary blessings, God has given his children the greatest gift of all: his only Son. The Corinthian church, and many of us today, practically ignore the full wonder of that claim.

The Gospel is a gift. Our union with Christ is all by God's grace. There is nothing we did to deserve it or earn it. In fact, we all were in rebellion against God (Romans 1:18ff, 3:23). And yet Christ died for his people, bearing their sin and giving them his righteousness (2Cor 5:21). When we forget that, according to Paul, we become prideful and selfish.

What if someone loaned us $100,000? Would we resent giving them five bucks? Would we treat all those resources as ours alone? God gives us things of this world to use on his behalf. He didn't have to. But we are his children now, he loves us and gives us what we need and what we can employ to further his kingdom, to spread his grace even more. His goodness includes giving us the joy of commitment to him.

1. Would you treat your things differently if they belonged to someone else? What if you acted as if God owned everything you have: your home, your clothes, your furniture, your money, your time?

2. What have you received from God? How is your life different because of Christ?

Pray Pray for a renewed, joyful heart, using the words of Psalm 100.

"Know that the Lord is good. It is he who made us, and we are his;

we are his people, the sheep of his pasture."

Do Think of ten big purchases that you've made in the past year or so. Discretely (or even just mentally) label them "Provided By and Belonging to God. For His Use Only.” 3

 

 

Day Four - True Security

Job 31:24 "1 have not put my trust in gold or said to pure gold,

'You are my security'.”

Read Luke 12:13-21

Apply The rich fool thought that he could trust in his grain. Yet the grain outlasted his own life. He invested his wealth with something it could not give: security. It would always be there to make his life comfortable. But the things of this world are unstable, a pile of sand ready to collapse. God's response to him is blunt: "You fool."

"Having lots of money can be like a drug. It can make you feel powerful and giddy. It can convince you that everything is going to be okay.” 4 We think that only if we accumulate more and more we will have enough. That day never comes-'enough' is never reached.

When we trust our Lord we can stop hoarding wealth beyond our needs and become 'rich toward God.'

The only true security comes from trusting in God's care for his children. As Christians, we can be assured that God loves us because of Christ's work on our behalf. Therefore, we can loosen our grip on our treasures. We see them as temporary and God's kingdom as eternal.

1. How much money do you want left when you die? Why?

2. What does becoming 'rich toward God' look like? Does that reflect your own lifestyle? Why or why not?

Pray Pray for a renewed heart that treats money as a mere thing, and treats God as the only true security.

Do Look at your long-term goals: home, retirement, children. How much accumulation of wealth is required to meet those goals? What if your lifestyle was greatly simplified-how much less would you need? Would you give away the difference?

 

 

Day Five - Who Do We Worship?

Matthew 6:24-25 "You cannot serve both God and Money Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. "

Read Matthew 6:24-34

Apply Jesus personifies wealth as Mammon. He even gives it the status of a false God, an idol, and lays down an all-or-nothing claim: if you worship wealth, you won't worship God. Our heart cannot contain two masters, two gods.

Worry is an indicator of worship. What you worry about is what you don't want to lose. Therefore, Jesus says that worrying about money and your future is an indicator of a lack of trust in God. Worse, it shows that the heart's true hope is in wealth. "His words are so uncomfortable that even those of us who say we love him and fight to defend Scripture's authority find ourselves looking for ways around what he says." 5

Research has shown that many people do not give because they are afraid. 6 The only way to ever stop worrying about money is to break its stranglehold on your heart by becoming generous. When you give money away, you stop worshipping it.

1. If you gave until it lowered your lifestyle, would you be worried? Of what?

2. What would you give up to become enormously rich? Would you give up friends and family? Would you give up your time? Christ? What would you give up just to be 'comfortable'?

Pray Pray for a renewed heart that worships Christ alone and rejects the idol of Mammon.

Do Catch yourself worshipping money-daydreaming, or worrying about it. Worship Christ instead using the same loving terms: "If I only had more of Jesus...", "With more of Christ in my life we could...", "I hope my new job gives me plenty of time to serve Jesus..." etc.

 

 

Day Six - Contentment

Hebrews 13:5 "Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, 'Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you. ' "

Read Hebrews 13:1-6

Apply In the midst of exhorting Christians to live according to the gospel the writer to the Hebrews actually commands contentment. Just as contentment is a result of trusting God, it is also the means of trusting God. T o be discontent is to accuse God with being either unloving or impotent. Contentment with our life is therefore as important a virtue as love, hospitality, mercy, or fidelity.

Sadly, we live in a culture of discontent. Every day we see an average of 3,500 ads7, each trying to convince us that what we have is not good enough. We need something new, something better, something more fashionable. Desires become hopes, which become wants, which become 'needs'. "I've just got to have that new HDTV wide-screen TV." Once the newness wears off, it's time for another new thing.

Paul advises Timothy to stay focused on the lasting joy of contentment. "But godliness with contentment is great gain. For we brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out of it." (l Tim 6:6)

1. Are you content with what you have? If not, then why?

2. How do you handle the pressure to 'keep up', or conform to a higher standard of living?

Pray For a renewed heart that is content with God's provision, that isn't always looking to new things for satisfaction.

Do Carefully look at a few ads today. What type of 'salvation' or 'better life' do they promise (approval, peace of mind, comfort! prestige, etc.)? How do they entice people into thinking that their life isn't good enough without this thing?

 

 

Day Seven - Money at the Root

1 Timothy 6:10 “For the love of money is a root of all kinds of evil.”

Read 1 Timothy 6:6-10

Apply This famous passage is central to our view of money. Paul claims that money is at the bottom of a wide variety of sin and idolatry. Money is like a spice in the smorgasbord of sinful desires. In other words, few people lust after mere dollar bills. Instead, money plays into idolatries of security, or comfort, or approval, or power. We like money because it gets us something we want. Even the Scrooge, always counting his coins, is actually counting his security, counting the thing he trusts in rather than God.

The warning flags are up. As a Christian, we are free to use money, but we should use it with caution, understanding its dangerous ability to turn our hearts from Christ to the things of this world. Jesus goes so far as to call Mammon "unrighteous" (Luke 16:9)9. "We so badly want to believe that mammon has no power over us, no authority of its own. But by giving the descriptive unrighteous to mammon, Jesus forbids us from ever taking so naive a view of wealth. We must be more tough minded, more realistic."10

1. Take an honest look at some of your most intense desires. Does money play a role in them? In what way does it play a role?

2. What do you think about people who have a lot more money and possessions than you do? Are they better people, more secure, live a better life?

Pray Pray for a renewed heart that recognizes the power of money to turn your desires away from Christ and is able to counter that power by remembering the beauty of Christ.

Do Take one alluring aspect of money and write a list of the ways it affects your life. For example, "The ways that I act like money gives me pleasure are..." or "The ways that I act like money makes me better than other people are..."

Day Eight - The Antidote

1 Timothy 6:18 “...do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share.”

Read 1 Timothy 6:6-9, 17-19

Apply Paul has already warned us about the dangerous side of money in this passage. He now turns to the Biblical use of money, by urging

Timothy to teach the rich in Ephesus: to invest their treasure into eternal purposes. The purpose of wealth is to do good with it. What a noble and high calling. Note that he doesn't command the rich to become poor. Instead he commands the rich to be generous, "rich in good deeds." They give up one type of riches to gain another. And in doing that, they break the enslaving grip that treasures have on our heart. In short, the antidote for money's poisonous effect in our lives is generosity. It's an antidote of drinking the sweet medicine of trusting in God's control of the future, trusting in the "life that is truly life." This is first of all a generosity of the heart. The heart has to turn from loving good deeds more than loving riches. But that is a measurable turning. The desire to give is easily quantified-when money actually leaves the account and goes to God's kingdom.

1. John Newton's method was to figure out what a "barely decent" lifestyle was (home, food, clothing), and then to give one penny away for every penny spent on oneself. What would your life be like if you followed that method?

2. What do you think about people who have a lot more money and possessions than you do? Are they better people, more secure, live a better life?

Pray Pray for a renewed heart that recognizes the power of money to turn your desires away from Christ and is able to counter that power by remembering the beauty of Christ.

Do Take one alluring aspect of money and write a list of the ways it affects your life. For example, "The ways that I act like money gives me pleasure are..." or "The ways that I act like money makes me better than other people are..."

 

 

Day Nine - The Motive

2 Corinthians 8:8,9 “I want to test the sincerity of your love. For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.”

Read 2 Corinthians 8:1-15

Apply In one of the first recorded church fundraising letters in history, Paul appeal to one single motive for giving: the grace of Christ. Christians don't give because they should (although they do) or because it frees their life from the idolatry of Mammon (although it does).

Christians give because they know that God gave everything, even his own Son Jesus Christ, for their sakes. Grace is the motivation for giving. Giving is a response to a gift of sheer grace. Just as those who are forgiven much also forgive, those who have been given much (peace with God, eternal life, the love of Christ, the indwelling Spirit, and more) give in return.

The Macedonians understood that grace so much that even in the midst of their own difficult circumstances they happily gave beyond their ability (8:1-4). They begged to give more.

1. Do you beg God to be able to give more than you do now? What is your goal?

2. What typically motivates your giving? Guilt, duty, expectation of God's blessing or thankfulness?

Pray Pray for a renewed lifestyle that places a priority on giving.

Do Give away some cash (not a check) this week simply because you love Jesus. Don't let anyone know about it or claim it on your taxes.

Day Ten - A Cheerful Giver

2 Corinthians 9: 7 "Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”

Read 2 Corinthians 9:6-15

Apply When Christians give, as we saw yesterday, they give motivated by grace. A reluctant gift or a guilt-manipulated gift is not generosity.

It's paying a "God tax," it's fulfilling an obligation.

A generous lifestyle, however, is a life of freedom, of simplicity, of joy, of fruitfulness, of purpose. There is a satisfaction to pleasing God, to bringing joy and honor to him.

A Christian should smile as they give, they should want to give. We should see giving like a roller coaster ride: it feels adventurous and risky, but it's really safe. We think we are going to plummet, but God holds onto us tightly (9:8). Anything that much fun becomes contagious. Many Christians experience that thrill; once they make giving a priority, it becomes more and more joyful.

1. Is giving money a-way fun for you? If yes, then when did that joy begin? If not, then why not?

2. Do you desire to give more than you do now (see yesterday's passage)? What stops you from giving?

Pray Pray for a renewed lifestyle that expresses grace, that holds onto possessions loosely, that finds joy in giving.

Do As you give, either on Sunday or at another time, use the act of giving as a specific act of worship.

 

 

Day Eleven - Starting Somewhere

Leviticus 27:30 “A tithe of everything... belongs to the LORD.”

Read Leviticus 27:30-33

Apply In the Old Testament, all believers were required to give a tenth of income to God's work and the poor. The tithe is still a minimum guideline for our giving.

The tithe (or ten percent) guideline makes many Christians feel guilty. Some of that guilt, as we saw yesterday, is false. However, as one observer states: "...some of us should feel legitimately guilty about what we put in the offering plate. Relative to the wealth that has been placed in our care, few of us give sacrificially. We are greedy and giving God the leftovers. The law has a legitimate 'role to bring us to the righteous God at the foot of the cross, where we meet a gracious loving Christ. It is the love of Christ that we are responding to, that motivates us to be great givers and deep lovers."11

What about grace? The tithe is not a law that brings us merit in God's eyes. It shows us that we need the grace of Christ to cover our greed, to set us free from self-service. We then can see the tithe just like every other law of God) as a means of expressing gratitude. That's what Leviticus says the tithe was for anyway.

1. Do you tithe your income? Do you give away more than ten percent, or less?

2. What would it take to move your giving up one level, giving away a few percent more next year?

Pray Pray for a renewed lifestyle that moves up each year in giving to biblical proportions, from nothing to tithing to beyond.

Do What is your income level? What is ten percent of the gross? How does that compare to your giving?

 

 

Day Twelve - Proportion

1 Corinthians 16:2 “On the first day of every week, each one of you should set aside a sum of money in keeping with his income.”

Read 1 Corinthians 15:58-16:4

Apply After a lengthy discussion of the glories of resurrection in Christ,

Paul places an important "therefore" in 15:58. Because we know for sure that death is defeated at the cross, we can fearlessly stand firm in faith and move out in ministry into the world.

When we worship, we respond to the hope of the gospel by committing our lives to the wonderful God that we believe in.

Worship is, in short, giving. To worship, we must not only give him our praise, our attention, our sins, our fears, our burdens, and our hearts, but also our money.

So Paul advised the Corinthians to offer their gifts as an act of worship "on the first day of the week" (Sunday). This regular, planned offering ensured not only the right proportion of generosity, but also that the gifts were used as a joyful, praise filled response to grace. For that reason, Christians have always seen regular Sunday offerings as a normal means of giving.

1. Do you give each week just to "pay for your seat" at church, or to worship?

2. Is your giving regular, or sporadic? How would regular giving increase both the proportion and the joy of generosity?

Pray Pray for a lifestyle of consistent, regular giving to the Lord what he has called you to give.

Do Take the amount that you feel God calls you to give and divide it by 12 (monthly) or 52 (weekly). Commit to giving that regular amount at worship, doubling on weeks you may be out of town. Giving by check instead of cash helps by keeping a record of consistency. (For self-employed freelance people, you may need to base giving on whenever income arrives rather than a set weekly amount).

 

 

Day Thirteen - Investing in the Kingdom

Luke 12:33 "Sell your possessions and give to the poor. Provide purses for your-selves that will not wear out, a treasure in heaven that will not be exhausted."

Read Luke 12:22-34

Apply Only two things from this world will never pass away: God's Word and people. When we invest our resources into people. We are making an eternal decision. Jesus tells us that giving cannot be a losing investment.

Are you spending on things that will pass away, or investing in a cause that will make a difference forever? As the hymn writer puts it:

"Fading is the worldlings pleasure, all his boasted pomp and show/

Solid joys and lasting treasure, none but Zion's children know."

God's kingdom will never end, billions of years after every 'safe’ investment on earth has disintegrated. Giving money to the poor, according to Jesus, is not throwing money away; rather, it is the only reasonable thing to do.

1. What do you consider 'safe' in this world? How does that compare to the safety of God's eternal kingdom?

2. Do you have the same concern for the poor as Jesus did? Why or why not?

Pray Pray for a renewed lifestyle that sees people as more eternal than things and thereby puts more effort, time and money into people for the sake of Jesus Christ.

Do Find a person that you know that has a practical need. Try to meet (at least part of) that need by getting rid of something that you have. Don't give away something worn out; give away something you like.

Day Fourteen - Sacrifice of First fruits

2 Corinthians 8:3 "For I testify that they gave as much as they were able, and even beyond their ability. "

Read Deuteronomy 26:1-4, 9-11

Apply The idea of 'first fruits' giving is to offer up to God the first rewards of our labor in acknowledgment that what we have is a gift from

God. The first fruits were the choicest, the best of the harvest. The

Israelites were saying, "God, you've given us this bounty, so know we give it back to you."

Giving the first fruits is also a sacrifice. They could be sold for a higher price than the rest of the harvest. In giving them away, God's people trusted Him to provide a continued harvest. It was therefore a sacrificial pledge; a promise that all things belong to God.

Christ gave sacrificially, and so Christian giving is sacrificial giving.

His first fruits were the pledge of the Holy Spirit, the guarantee of the full harvest of his promise. Christians has always continued this practice, giving 'off the top' sacrificially, trusting that the Lord will provide.

1. What would be the 'first fruits' of your life: your pre-tax income, your investments, your time, your abilities, your 'earning potential'? How are those a gift from God?

2. What kind of a plan could you create to give first to God in everything?

Pray Pray for a renewed lifestyle that seeks to give God the first of everything in all areas of life.

Do How could you encourage other Christians to help each other give first to God? How could our church community do that?

 

 

Day Fifteen - Outgiving God

Malachi 3:10 "Bring the whole tithe... test me in this, "says the LORD Almighty, and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it."

Read Malachi 3:8-12

Apply God dares you to trust Him in giving. He doesn't simply command obedience. He shows us how wildly generous he is, how quick to give out his favor. Then he says: if you belong to me, do likewise.

Giving is an adventure that is rewarding beyond your wildest dreams. The joy of trust flows into every area of our life: from finances, to career, to the future, to relationships, to hard times.

When we live according to our solid grasp of God's goodness our whole lives are more free and steadfast. We gain a courage that can withstand trials when we believe that Jesus Christ is committed to fulfilling his plan of redemption in us.

As the late missionary Jim Elliot said, "He is no fool who gives up what he cannot keep in order to gain what he cannot lose."8 You can never out give God.

1. How does this passage address Christians today? How does it address you?

2. What are some ways that God has acted in your life following greater commitment to him and greater offering of yourself?

Pray For a renewed church that hungers to give and that sees God's remarkable outflow of his favor.

Do Take God's dare. Give away at least ten percent of your pre-tax income. See what happens.

 

 

Day Sixteen - Outpouring of Grace

2 Corinthians 9:6 "Remember this: Whoever sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and whoever sows generously will also reap generously."

Read Corinthians 9:6-10

Apply God promises that he will pour out even more abundant grace into our lives to the degree that we commit to him. This certainly does not mean that God pays us back. If we give $100 he may not give us $1,000 back, as some people have misunderstood passages like this to mean. But in every instance he gives us (individually and as the church community) something even more precious. Himself.

Giving builds your relationship with God because, as we've seen already, it builds hope, trust, belief, and commitment to him. The real gain is a closer walk with Jesus Christ, a greater union of your life with his.

Paul also states the converse: whenever Christians, individually or together, hold back, they damage their relationship with Christ. They act without courage; they deny his goodness.

1. The idea of 'sowing and reaping' is common in Scripture. Where else does it apply?

2. Do you give because you are motivated that God will reward you in this life somehow? Or does something else motivate your giving?

3. If you were generous, but your financial situation stayed the same (or became even worse), would you stop trusting God? Why or why not?

Pray For a renewed church that sows generously, with abandon.

Do To sow generously implies giving until it actually lowers our current lifestyle. What would it take to lower your lifestyle?

Day Seventeen - Adventure

I Chronicles 29:14 "But who am I, and who are my people, that we should be able to give as generously as this? Everything comes from you, and we have given you only what comes from your hand."

Read 1 Chronicles 29:1-20

Apply David beautifully expresses a heart of gratitude here in this passage. We too should marvel at even the ability to be generous. It is one of God's good gifts to us, a sure sign of our understanding of His grace.

Giving to God's kingdom, laying down our earthly treasures at his feet, has no end. It is a roller-coaster ride through life, an adventure. And yet it is an adventure that is safe within the loving arms of the almighty God.

Only the gospel of new life in Christ can sustain such a life-long experience. To paraphrase G. K. Chesterton: "Every person wants two things in life: adventure and security. Only in Christianity do you get both."

1. Where does your ability to be generous come from? Were you always as generous as you are now, or have you grown in that area?

2. How do you live both adventurously and with security as a Christian?

3. As a community, how can we live with a greater sense of adventure?

Pray For a renewed church that recognizes the adventure of the Christian life, the thrill of being a colony of God's people in the world.

Do What is one thing that you are frightened to do for God? Commit to praying for the grace to do that within the next six months. Unite with other Christians (in your fellowship group or friends) to help each other complete your plan.

 

 

Day Eighteen – Pleasing God

Philippians 4:15,18-19 "... the gifts you sent are a fragrant offering, an acceptable sacrifice, pleasing to God. And my God will meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus.”

Read Philippians 4:10-20

Apply Giving to the work of ministry is really an offering to God himself. When the Philippians gave to Paul they were actually offering their resources to further God's kingdom. They gave so that his ministry of advancing the claims of the Gospel would progress.

All giving is used by God in this way. Money is never meant to be stored up in some type of bank account but instead used for God's kingdom purposes. When the church has hoarded wealth, it has strayed far from God's purposes and needs to repent. He doesn't desire extravagance; He doesn't need worldly success. He is a giving Lord who constantly pours out the ‘fragrant offerings’ given to him back into people so that they would know him.

For example, Paul, the recipient of the Philippian's gift, used that gift to praise God for them. He rejoiced not only for the support, (which he needed), but also for the proof it gave of their changed life. According to his calling, he used their gift to spread the gospel to even more people.

1. When you give, do you think of your offering going to God, or just going to ‘pay the church's bills?’

2. What is a better use of God's resources: luxuries or necessities? Why should Christians live a 'wartime lifestyle' instead of a 'comfort lifestyle?'2

Pray For a renewed church that constantly gives out as much as it receives, based on the needs of people surrounding the church.

Do Pick something of your own that someone has given to you (not that thing you keep in the back of your closet!) and give it to someone who needs it.

 

 

Day Nineteen – Community of Care

Acts 2:44-47 ”All the believers were together and had everything in common.

Selling their possessions and goods, they gave to anyone as he had need And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved. "

Read Acts 2:42-47

Apply The first Christians instinctively knew that their possessions needed to be shared with their brothers and sisters in Christ. Why? They had seen Jesus live in the same way.

This radical unselfishness stood out as much to the people of their time as it would to modern people. Such an astounding display of generosity and mutual care, mixed with the wonders of the Holy Spirit, pierced the hearts of many.

Giving changes the world. There is no more powerful evidence of the transformation of the gospel than radical generosity.

1. Most people feel that modern Christians could never share their possessions like the Christians in Acts 2. Is that true? Why not?

2. In a world where some philanthropists give away millions to charitable causes (often for the fame and recognition it receives), how generous would 'ordinary' Christians have to be to catch the attention of the world?

3. How could our giving bring attention to Jesus instead of ourselves?

Pray For a renewed church that is so generous that the whole city would notice.

Do As you read biographies of Christians, notice how generous they were (or weren't). Try to explain how their use of money fit into their life as a whole.

 

 

Day Twenty – Praise to God

2 Corinthians 9:11 “You will be made rich in every way so that you can be

generous on every occasion... your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God. "

Read 2 Corinthians 9:11-15

Apply When we can bless others with our generosity, the praise goes to God. People who receive the generous grace of Christians are able to praise God "because of the surpassing grace God has given" (verse 14). They know that such a financial gift comes from an even greater source - the grace of God in Jesus Christ.

Giving is just a part of a lifestyle of generosity. Christians always give' of their heart, their time, their hope, and their prayers. As we close this twenty day study of biblical stewardship, we reflect on all the different ways that we can give of ourselves.

Jesus died for us to set us free from this life of death. By putting to death the old, we take on the new life found in Christ. We trust that God will provide us the strength to be content in all situations (see Phil. 4:11-13) so that we can in turn sacrifice joyfully for the sake of the gospel.

1. Are you content enough in all situations to willingly be generous "on every occasion?"

2. How does giving of your financial resources encourage greater giving of your whole life to God?

3. Looking back, what has been the greatest lesson that you've learned? How do you think and act differently toward God?

Pray For a renewed church, full of people with renewed hearts, that is free to risk everything for the sake of the gospel.

Do Look for other books on Christian stewardship to continue growing in your understanding.

 
Vacation Bible School PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 13 June 2010 15:45

Vacation Bible School (V.B.S.)

 

@ Fresno Christian Fellowship U.M.C.

 

 VBS 2009 Closing Celebration

 

  • What is Vacation Bible School?  Vacation Bible School – or V.B.S. – is a week-long event held during summer vacation for elementary school-aged children.  Participants hear bible stories, sing and move to inspirational songs, make and take home crafts, play recreational games, and learn through science experiments.
  • Who can participate in VBS? Children in preschool through 6th grade (last grade completed) may participate in the activities. (Preschoolers must be at least 5-years-old by December of the current year.) We welcome youths in 7th grade or older to volunteer to help at VBS.
  • When is VBS? VBS is held every summer for one week, Monday through Friday, from 5:30pm to 8:15pm.  This year VBS is August 2-6, 2010.
  • Where is VBS? VBS is held in the social hall and meeting rooms at Fresno Christian Fellowship United Methodist Church.
  • How to register? Call the church office at (559) 233-6211, go to the FCFUMC page on the Cokebury VBS website, or download & print the registration form,(right click and save as), then complete & send it in.  You may also register in person at VBS.
  • How much does it cost?  There is NO fee to register for VBS.  Participation is FREE.
  • What to expect? Bring your children daily to VBS, register them on the first day if you haven’t pre-registered them, and pick them up at the end of each night.  Children will be served snacks and a light dinner every evening.  A special Closing Celebration program will be held on the last night where parents, family, and friends are invited to watch as the children present what they’ve learned during VBS.
  • How to volunteer? Call the church office or go to the FCFUMC page on the Cokebury VBS website to express your interest in helping this wonderful ministry.
  • What is the VBS theme?  The VBS theme changes every year.  Click on the logo below to learn about this year’s theme.

 

  

August 2nd—6th, 2010     5:30pm8:15pm 

Last Updated on Sunday, 13 June 2010 16:07
 
Story of Tithing PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 01 April 2010 18:28
Here is a good article on tithing
By David Anttony

 

Story of Tithing

The beginning of tithing can be seen in the Bible, yet many Christians as well as non-Christians have the habit of doing some type of tithing today.

Tithe is a traditionally a Christian term that means to contribute one tenth of your income to charity or to your Church as a form of Chrch giving. However it has similarities with practices in other religious cultures. In Islam it is called 'Zakat'. In India the Sikh religion also provides for such practice called 'Dasvandh' meaning one-tenth part of income to be devoted for religious purposes. Tenth Master Guru Gobind Singh started this practice. In Classical Indian society the Upanisads and the Bhagavadgita commend 'true alms' given with a sense of duty in a fit place and at a fit time to a deserving person from whom one expects nothing in return.

The origin of the word tithe can be traced to the Hebrew work 'asair' which also means to give one-tenth of a thing, generally an individual's income. Today, tithes, or tithing, is a cash payment and is voluntary in nature. Nevertheless, in certain European countries there is still the provision for enforcing tithing by allowing the church to make it mandatory.

Denmark is a case in point where a church tax is mandatory for members of the Church of Denmark. The tax varies in different municipalities. It is mostly about 1% of the taxable income. And in Finland members of state churches have to pay a church tax ranging between 1% and 2.25% of their earnings and the Church taxes are included into the general national taxation process.

But still tithing as a confirmed tradition was established only after Exodus. Tithes were routine in the olden days through much of the Near East and also later in Carthage, Lydia, and Arabia.

The Hebrew habit of tithing is recorded in the Bible, the first mention being the gift from Abraham to the Canaanite priest and king Melchizedek (Genesis--:20). Ancient Arabia, Lydia and Carthage were places where the custom of tithes existed. Tithing was implemented by the early Christian church, and had found mention in councils at Macon in 585 and at Tours in 567. They were granted formal recognition during the time of Pope Adrian I in 787.

Tithing in certain Christian churches is a disputed issue as it deals with an Old Testament process to a New Testament institution (the Church). There is no proof in the New Testament that tithing can be applied to Christians. In fact, it was obligatory only on those Jews who were living in the Promised Land to pay the tithe according to the Old Testament, as it was in reality a form of income tax required to support not just the government of the Israel of the Old Testament, but also its religious institutions and priests.

Present day Tithing

Despite the fact that it has originated in the Bible and earliest Christianity, now it is a unique way to gift something whenever you are given something. Giving EVERY time you are in receipt is a compelling form of giving as it allows the benefactor to experience something exceptionally eloquent - more on that later.

But back to a bit of history. Malachi 3:10 is the part of the Bible that Christians relate to when they talk about tithing. Many Christians tithe to their church because they feel it is their given duty by the Bible to do so. Many Churches now and in the past insist that their members tithe to the church to sustain its activities. In essence though, unless giving is done from free will and a with joyful focus, it does not achieve its greatest result - if in fact you ever want to create a direct result by giving.

Controversy about Tithing

Tithing has often been a contentious topic. The issue whether a Christian should pay tithe is often argued in many Christian congregations.

In an article in Wall Street Journal regarding tithing named 'The Backlash Against Tithing', Suzanne Sataline says, 'As Churches push donations, congregants balk; 'that's not the way God works'.'

Unfortunately, the mix of ideology, desire to control, and a limited perspective, can often create a Jekyll and Hyde result - the simple purity of giving being lost in the mist and confusion of theology. Despite the controversy, tithing is still a totally and amazingly powerful action that anyone can do to turn their lives around to face a more abundant direction.

For those who wish to understand a Christian perspective in tithing there is no limit of materials to read. For those who want to understand the reason WHY tithing is so powerful read on.

Why is Tithing so powerful?

This is indeed a very forceful question because if you just heedlessly take a certain path without considering what the whole process entails you may be advancing on the wrong road.

If more of the people who do regularly practice tithing knew exactly why tithing is effective when done in the full spirit of a perfect gift, then it could possibly release a better yearning to give even more. And for those who give not on a regular basis, it could motivate them to give every time they get something.

To analyse the real 'why' of how routine giving leads to more we have to understand something about Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Physics. The laws of these realms vary a lot from that of our own material or Newtonian world.

The picture 'What the Bleep' paints the quantum world through easily graspable examples. The link to the movie here gives some details about how matter gets converted into waves and behaves like liquids when seen from a quantum physics angle: http://video.yahoo.com/watch/1349535/4653525.

The movie describes an amazing world viewed from a quantum space. When a beam of electrons is fired through a plate with a slit in it onto a wall - as you would expect, it would it within a single line on the wall straight opposite the slit.

If the experiment is conducted by using an energy wave that reacts the way a water wave does, one gets a foreseeable result. As the wave strikes the plate it rebounds off the plate but where there is the opening, a part of the wave goes across through the opening. Coming out of the other side of the opening, the surging water moves out in the pattern of an arc, resulting in a new wave just as in the old laboratory tests done in schools in analysing wave patterns. As the surge of water strikes the wall across, it will have maximum force in the middle straight opposite the opening and will have lesser force all across the wall. This is exactly like the line the electrons make.

If we created one more opening in the plate, again the upshot would not be totally unexpected while experimenting a wave - two smaller waves would be formed through the openings and when the waves come into contact, they would dissolve each other and make an intervention pattern. Many waves would now strike the wall across, giving a stripped effect. These are standard patterns of wave behaviour and so there is nothing unexpected in the result.

Here is where the whole experiment takes on an entirely different direction. When electrons are sent through the two cuts in the plate, what should ordinarily result are two lines in the wall opposite. On the contrary what one sees is a stripped appearance with an intersecting pattern. This is unbelievable. The matter seems to have been turned into a wave. We can perhaps imagine that electrons were hitting against each other and ricocheting and causing a wave pattern; so if electrons are sent across separately the result should be different. But it is not, it is the same. The explanation has to be that the electron leaves as a single particle, and splits into a wave on collision with the plate, then goes across through the cuts and intervenes with itself after that on the other side. This idea of solid having fluid properties -or mattering acting like a wave - is totally surprising. The world is much more than we understand it to be.

Though the overall properties of the world appear to be solid in nature, it does seem that it has enough of properties of a liquid as well - flux or liquid energy, which behaves like fluids in the physical world. The laws of physics clearly state that liquids that are alike in nature are attracted towards each others, while those which are unlike each other has a tendency to segregate and form its own group. The ineffective combining of water and oil is an example of this. Chromatography shows clearly the dispersion in clear bands of one substance into the many substances of which it is made of, just like larger collections of human beings split into smaller groups of people sharing common passions, strengths and interests.

The secret of it all is that when we give we feel delighted and know utmost joy. As a donor we get the best of gifts, which is the gift of contentment. Often we think that it is the one who gets a gift that gets the thing and thus overlook the fact that the giver is the real getter. If anybody is in doubt about this equation, then look at yourself with kids around and observe how intently you feel when you give to them and how much you enjoy irrespective of how they respond.

When we recognize that it is to we ourselves that we are giving when we make the gesture of giving and we do it for the gratification we feel, we have the clue. This clue opens the door of comprehension of giving. And when we give repetitively the force builds up with a snowballing effect enlarging more and more the more we pour to it with our continuous gifting.

The truth that we feel happy when we gift things alters our power equation fully - we feel good and in that moment we are lovelier to others. Have you ever known a vendor on the street peddling things that we do not want like tissues, which you usually do not buy, but one day you buy and the motive for doing it is just to see that vendor happy and relieved? A similar situation could be seen in relations to buskers playing music at a street corner.

A contended individual radiates a natural magnetism that draws others to him and in doing so he enriches himself. It is clear-cut. They pull towards them both those who are desirous of experiencing that feeling as well as those who have already known the richness of it.

So just like water and oil, givers and non-givers gather in separate areas. And the best place to receive something is in a place where givers hang out! But of course you can only stay in the giving group while you give! Givers love to give to those who give.

So even though we can run to quantum physics for our answers, they also lie right in front of our face. Like attracts like - simple. Everywhere you look you see this happening. Lions hand out with lions, students hang out with students, women hang out with women, guys hang out with guys, 'poor' people hang out with 'poor' people and 'rich' people hang out with 'rich' people. And yes - givers hang out with givers.

So if you give from a sense of self-reproach then it will only boomerang on you - you will just attract to you like-minded others who have a guilt complex and cannot be contented and delighted. The borderline between remorse and anger is narrow; so people gifting things out of a sense of guilt tend to turn in that direction. Joy is one of the highest of human emotions - and from there one can only turn to love - and that is what all of us are forever searching for.

When a person starts giving he is just a couple of steps away from love - rather surprising to realize that isn't it. Particularly because most people are frantically searching for love. Now we know the answer is straightforward -start giving! And giving money is not the beginning and end of it, it is only a small part of giving - it will generate a niche of joy for us, however small what is given.

There is also a mental aspect to giving steadily. Even though at first this facet of it may not seem related to the feeling of happiness - in the end it right away brings us into contact with the supreme experience of joy.

When we gift a thing - especially a thing which is definitely not in surplus in our lives, we are sending a strong message to ourselves that life is reliable. When we have accomplished the act of giving and afterwards see that act in retrospect we understand that we can form a perfect relationship with that reliability. The opposite of reliability is fright. A group of frightened people are unlikely to be happy and delighted and so will not be able to attract any one. On the contrary, a group of reliable people would be contented and so would be quite appealing to those who are seeking such enriching experiences. At the end of the day, when reliability gets transformed into delight and again we find ourselves very close to that which we yearn most - love.

So the gist of what has been overlooked for years is right in front of us for any one to build a relationship with it with ease. My son got a lot of cash for Christmas and I enquired how he was going to spend it. He said he was going to put aside much of it. I asked him how much he would like to share. He had not even thought of it as a possibility until I gave the idea to him. What is likely to happen if our first response to getting something was to give something away - is it likely that we will know more of happiness?

Transaction based donating - or transaction based benevolence

This shows us the way to the potency of transactional giving. Many organisations give when they have plenty of money. When they do not have extra they choose not to give. Due to this their level of happiness rise and fall on the basis of market fluctuations - they have no regulation over it. But those who share EVERY time they get are in command and bond with their feeling of joy consistently.

Transactional giving rather than total giving is based on the highs and lows of business and so is a self-evident way of giving. The method is that when you get something you also give something - straightforward. If your business is bad you might give but according to the income. And when business is marking a rising graph, giving can also improve.

One of the major secrets of transaction based enterprise is that you can partake in the joy of giving so perfectly with all concerned - clients/society - staff - and enterprise. In this scenario customers understand that when they buy something they are also giving though it does not cost them anything other than choosing and shopping with you they feel power of the giving - that is why the traditional CSR - Corporate Social Responsibility, gets transformed into Customer Social Responsibility, with the customer responding perfectly to giving just by appreciating you and have that extra cause, though an elusive one, for preferring to do the shopping with you.

Members of the staff also get a chance to participate in the pleasure because every time they are part of making a sale, they know full well that they had their role in giving something to someone who needed that help. The event generates a strong sense of camaraderie within the team that promotes team spirit and motivates the team members.

Any venture, even a completely new one with no profit margin, can manage Buy1GIVE1 transaction-based giving - there are no problems in every sense to be part of it and everything is controlled by the business. The payment amount per deal begins from as low as one cent and rises to any large amount the person can decide with every business left to choose their own type of gifting and providing to sustain on the basis of their business type and success. There is simply no justification not to give in this manner when the advantages that ensue from giving are so many. Enterprises that are presently giving to a cause can easily change over very promptly and effortlessly to Buy1GIVE1 transaction-based giving while still helping the same cause giving additional substantial benefits to the venture.

At the end of the day commercialised giving is the current day reincarnation of tithing that is simple and manageable for any person, anywhere. Now that we recognize that it is not about the amount that we give such as a specific percentage, but only about the fact that we are giving that is making all that effect. When we enter the brotherhood of givers we move into a restricted and exclusive world that only those who give can enter. And if you do not begin giving today, you may not 'get' giving and never will till you begin. So get going.

'We're not here to donate to 'get back.'. We're here to give more and more.
 
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