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Trusting Enough To Tithe
Topic: #6 of 290 for Sermons on Gifts: Giving
Sermon Series: Stewardship: Learning to Lean - Part 4
Denomination: Pentecostal
Date Added: October 2002
Audience: Believer Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Topic: Stewardship
Learning to Lean
Part 4
Stewardship: Trusting Enough to Tithe
Text: Judges 7:9-22
Intro:
This morning I would like to finish our series on Stewardship that I have entitled Learning to Lean.
Illus
Eric Hulstrand writes in Leadership magazine: "While I was preaching one Sunday, an elderly woman, Mary, fainted and struck her head on the end of the pew. Immediately, an EMT in the congregation called an ambulance. s they strapped her to a stretcher and got ready to head out the door, Mary regained consciousness. She motioned for her daughter to come near. Everyone thought she was summoning her strength to convey what could be her final words.
The daughter leaned over until her ear was at her mother’s mouth.
’My offering is in my purse,’ she whispered."
This morning I would like to bring you a message entitled Trusting Enough To Tithe.
Illus
A priest once asked one of his parishioners to serve as financial chairman of his parish. The man, manager of a grain elevator, agreed on two conditions: No report would be due for a year, and no one would ask any questions during the year.
At the end of the year he made his report. He had paid off the church debt of
$200,000. He had redecorated the church. He had sent $1,000 to missions. He had $5,000 in the bank.
"How did you do all this?" asked the priest and the shocked congregation.
Quietly he answered, "You people bring your grain to my elevator. As you did business with me, I simply withheld 10 percent and gave it to the church. You never missed it." --James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers,
Inc, 1988), p. 460.
The past three weeks we have looked extensively at the three foundations of Stewardship:
Lordship, Trust, and God’s Provision.
We have also looked at the definition of a Steward…
This definition is really key.If we do not consider ourselves stewards of the Kingdom of God, we
are going to have problems with Lordship, and we are going to have big problems when it comes to the area of Tithing.
Defintion: “Someone who is responsible for another man’s property.”
We are in such a key position as stewards.
John Wesley once said…
"When the Possessor of heaven and earth brought you into being and placed you in this world, He placed you here not as an owner but as a steward--as such He entrusted you for a season with goods of various kinds--but the sole property of these still rests in Him, nor can ever be alienated from Him. As you are not your own but His, such is likewise all you enjoy. "
One of the barometers we can use as to the health of this area of Stewardship in our life, is our attitude concerning giving to the work of the Lord. Notice I said it is our attitude towards giving, not the amount of our giving that is the barometer. The enemy comes in and says that it is the amount…this is not so.There are times in our lives when God blesses us by putting us in the place of the giver, and then there are times in our lives when God blesses us by putting us in the place of the receiver.
It is not the amount, but the attitude that is important.
Duet 16:17
"Every man shall give as he is able, according to the blessing of the LORD thy God which he hath given thee. "
Illus
I read of one pastor who perceived the whole concept of encouragement from a financial point of view. He
Learning to Lean
Part 4
Stewardship: Trusting Enough to Tithe
Text: Judges 7:9-22
Intro:
This morning I would like to finish our series on Stewardship that I have entitled Learning to Lean.
Illus
Eric Hulstrand writes in Leadership magazine: "While I was preaching one Sunday, an elderly woman, Mary, fainted and struck her head on the end of the pew. Immediately, an EMT in the congregation called an ambulance. s they strapped her to a stretcher and got ready to head out the door, Mary regained consciousness. She motioned for her daughter to come near. Everyone thought she was summoning her strength to convey what could be her final words.
The daughter leaned over until her ear was at her mother’s mouth.
’My offering is in my purse,’ she whispered."
This morning I would like to bring you a message entitled Trusting Enough To Tithe.
Illus
A priest once asked one of his parishioners to serve as financial chairman of his parish. The man, manager of a grain elevator, agreed on two conditions: No report would be due for a year, and no one would ask any questions during the year.
At the end of the year he made his report. He had paid off the church debt of
$200,000. He had redecorated the church. He had sent $1,000 to missions. He had $5,000 in the bank.
"How did you do all this?" asked the priest and the shocked congregation.
Quietly he answered, "You people bring your grain to my elevator. As you did business with me, I simply withheld 10 percent and gave it to the church. You never missed it." --James S. Hewett, Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers,
Inc, 1988), p. 460.
The past three weeks we have looked extensively at the three foundations of Stewardship:
Lordship, Trust, and God’s Provision.
We have also looked at the definition of a Steward…
This definition is really key.If we do not consider ourselves stewards of the Kingdom of God, we
are going to have problems with Lordship, and we are going to have big problems when it comes to the area of Tithing.
Defintion: “Someone who is responsible for another man’s property.”
We are in such a key position as stewards.
John Wesley once said…
"When the Possessor of heaven and earth brought you into being and placed you in this world, He placed you here not as an owner but as a steward--as such He entrusted you for a season with goods of various kinds--but the sole property of these still rests in Him, nor can ever be alienated from Him. As you are not your own but His, such is likewise all you enjoy. "
One of the barometers we can use as to the health of this area of Stewardship in our life, is our attitude concerning giving to the work of the Lord. Notice I said it is our attitude towards giving, not the amount of our giving that is the barometer. The enemy comes in and says that it is the amount…this is not so.There are times in our lives when God blesses us by putting us in the place of the giver, and then there are times in our lives when God blesses us by putting us in the place of the receiver.
It is not the amount, but the attitude that is important.
Duet 16:17
"Every man shall give as he is able, according to the blessing of the LORD thy God which he hath given thee. "
Illus
I read of one pastor who perceived the whole concept of encouragement from a financial point of view. He
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