Summary: Sermon on Christian stewardship

The Joy Of Generosity -

Generous Giving

Bible Reading:

2 Corinthians 9: 6-15

PREPARED BY

KEN GEHRELS

PASTOR

CALVIN CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH

NEPEAN, ONTARIO

The Joy Of Generosity - Generous Giving p.1

Ever found yourself really inspired to do something after watching another person?

Perhaps someone who struggled with a weight issue and managed to work a diet/exercise program that

brought them back into great shape. You went home, looked in the mirror and tried to suck it in...... and

resolved that this time, this time, you were going to do it! No more fooling around.

Or a colleague at work takes time out to attend some professional training, and comes back with a

sharpened skills set. You resolved that this year, make no mistake, you’d be sure to do the same.

You hear the call go out to donate blood, turn to your husband and say, “It’s so right. Let’s make an

appointment.” And you determine to work it into the calendar that very week..... or maybe early next week, at

latest.

And then - well - you know how it goes.

Tim Horton’s is awfully inviting. And you start to nibble away at your diet plans.

Work gets busy. Kids need extra time. Garden could use a bit of work. And you’re not quite so sure

where that course is going to fit.

And the blood donation thing? Well, they’ll still be in need next month. Maybe then.......

Like dry ice sublimating - woof, up in a cloud of smoke.

Seems like the best of intentions often go that way.

Ever find that true for yourself?

Or is it only me?

Well, me...... and a bunch of Corinthian Christians.

Some time around 50AD a bunch of folk who’d gathered together as a church community in Macedonia

heard about suffering that was happening in Jerusalem – a terrible famine had hit.

The Macedonian believers were very poor. But out of the little they had, a substantial gift was scraped

together and sent to relieve those worse off than themselves.

It was an amazing thing to see. At least, that’s what another group of Christians thought, a bunch living

just to the south of Macedonia, in a town named Corinth. As they watched the Macedonians make huge

sacrifices and send along a gift that saved lives and gave hope to starving Jews, these Corinthian believers were

inspired to do the same. It was time to organize a relief drive, they decided; time to pull together an aid

package and join in the effort to send help to Jerusalem.

Somehow, though – somehow...... well, like we said:

Sometimes the best of intentions last as long as ice cream in July.

You look up, and somehow -- you’re not really sure how -

- somehow it’s all gone.

The apostle Paul gets wind of that, and decides to prod them on; push them to re-gather their once passionate

intentions, and translate them into action;

to open their wallets and pantries

to engage in some joyful, generous giving.

So he writes a letter, with some remarkably blunt and yet diplomatic language -

- smiling at them, while at the same time landing an elbow square in their ribs as he reminds them about

their earlier pledge and challenges them to pick up this ball they’ve dropped; to turn inspiration into perspiration -

thoughts into action.

He also takes some time to restate some central elements that these Corinthian folk needed to remember if

they were ever going to establish any sort of decent, regular pattern of giving and sharing in their personal and

communal lives.

The Joy Of Generosity - Generous Giving p.2

It’s those central elements that I’d like to share with you this morning as we put the wraps on our three-part Fall

series about Stewardship,

about handling the wealth, resources, time and potential that is in our lap.

Because, you know, being generous and sharing our wealth with others can become for us exactly what

it had become for Corinthian Christians — something that seems like a really good idea; something we never get

around to actually practising.

SERIES REVIEW

Before we dig into what the Bible has to say about motivation for giving, though, let’s quickly review

where we’ve been in previous weeks.

We’ve through our Fall series on a Christian approach to stewardship, to handling the resources and

opportunities that God has placed in our lap.

Beginning with week one, something we called Trees, Time, Talents and Treasures...... point being that

all these things:

our experience of nature

the times and seasons in which we live

the talents and abilities we find within ourselves

the resources, materials and wealth that’s in our lap

All these are not ours.

God is Creator; we are the Created

He is Landlord; we are the Tenants

He unveils the times; we respond to them

He gives abilities; we exercise them

His wealth is loaned; we may use it.

Last week we paused to do a double-check about what’s going on in that pipeline between our hearts

and our VISA cards.

We talked about some in-your-face temptations that challenge each of us; temptations to live and die as

hard core consumers; spending, using and enjoying – and making that the centre piece of our life.

It’s very tempting.

We were reminded that it’s not something that anyone aims for intentionally, at least, not too many folks

aim for that. And yet – how easily it happens; how easily we all get sucked in and taken off-line in our faith;

distracted from having the central focus in life priorities being our relationship with, and service of the Creator, our

Lord God.

How deliberate we need to be in keeping the focus, keeping the faith, keeping our wallets where they

belong - as a servant in our life, a tool..... not the master;

keeping consumption as something deliberate, careful, controlled and done in full awareness

that there are a lot more people on this planet, people in desperate need, people with whom

God calls us to share.

And that, folks, plops us right down square at today’s concluding point:

Joyful, generous giving -

what are some of the key issues that make it happen;

that turn it from the best of intentions

into active reality.

Three things we’ll consider:

attitudes of giving

dynamics of giving

results of giving.

What do you think, can we work that on this Thanksgiving Weekend?

The Joy Of Generosity - Generous Giving p.3

Let’s hear, then, what the Bible says in:

2 Corinthians 9:6-15 p.1307

ATTITUDE OF GIVING

Did you catch the attitude advocated in this passage?

I call the attitude of the open hand and happy heart - v.6,7:

sowing generously

giving deliberately

doing so cheerfully.

L’Oreal used to tell us, “You’re worth it.”

And in varying ways, others continue to preach this message - the Freedom 55 message that tells you

to save, plan and accumulate and then go on a happy, self-centred spending binge. When you do, the band will

play, the sun will shine and life will be, as Tony the Tiger used to say, “Grrrrrrrrrrrreat!”

That sort of an attitude begins to squeal when folks come looking for a handout. Because it may mean

the 55 thing may have to wait till 58, or 60 or more. It may mean that I’m not the only one who’s worth it, and

that I may not be quite as worth it as I thought.

The Bible suggests an about face;

that we begin considering giving in a place and time like today -

- Thanksgiving...... to the One from whom all blessings flow.

Who makes grace to abound

Who scatters His gifts

Who supplies seed and bread

Who enlarges the harvest

Who does all this...... NOT because we’re so “worth it”

But just because He wants to give.

He loves to see our lives restored, enriched, renewed.

Start the journey of giving at the Cross.

Considering the One of whom the Bible says, “He who gave Himself up for us...... He who emptied Himself,

making himself a servant.....”

I tell you, it’s hard to stand with fists clenched around our stuff; it’s hard to keep a hoarding attitude if you linger

at the cross of Jesus;

at the feet of the Saviour who gave His life for your eternity.

The longer you stay there - the more open your hands will become.

Jesus said, “Freely you have received, freely give” (Matthew 10:8).

That’s what can provide that attitude of the open hand and happy heart.

It makes joyful, generous giving possible.

Even easy!

Financial planners tell me that precious few people in Canada contribute more than the first level threshold on

our income tax forms, a measely $250. They don’t come close to that amount. Way under.

No surprise, really.

They have no real inner motivation to give.

Nothing to open the hand and gladden the heart.

May that never be said of any of us who follow Jesus!

DYNAMIC OF GIVING

The Joy Of Generosity - Generous Giving p.4

Along with a Christian attitude towards giving, comes the dynamic of giving.

And if ever there was an area ripe for abuse or misunderstanding - here it is!

Unscrupulous religious hucksters and fraud artists have used the words of v.10 to cheat millions from people.

“Send me your $50, and God will make sure you get $250 in return for supporting my organization.”

I came across one message this week of someone who said, “Give generously, and your bank account will fill

up. If the returns haven’t come in yet, don’t quit.”

I mean - give me a break.

That’s the talk of Investment Consultants who are telling us these days, “Invest in the market, and hold -

think long term and the returns will happen.”

Christian giving is NOT an investment strategy.

God is NOT a divine stockbroker.

The whole motivation behind giving is not getting from God, but trusting God.

We give in a spirit of love;

a spirit of gratitude for what Christ has done for us;

a spirit of thankfulness for God’s blessings already provided -

NOT in a spirit of greed; a desire to get more.

Hey, the dynamic is real:

YES - the Bible does teach that as we grow in giving, the blessings of God somehow seem to grow in

our lives. I’ve seen it happen in the lives of faithful, generous Christians over and over and over again.

Just remember what v.11 says; it’s crucial:

“You will be made rich in every way.........”

......WHY?????.....

.......”SO THAT.......

you can be generous on every occasion....”

The extra blessings we get belong to God just as much as the first blessings -

and they are entrusted to our care; we are given responsibility for it just in the same way as our first

blessings..........

that the purposes of God would be served.

As I show myself trustworthy, God increases my responsibility and I reach deeper into this needy world.

Sure is hard, though, to remember that when L’Oreal ads keep blaring at you.

Don’t you find?

“YOU’RE worth it!!”

....... yeah, right.

RESULTS OF GIVING

The attitude of giving - the open hand and happy heart

The dynamic of giving - give and be given more to reach deeper into the world

Finally - the results of giving.

What happens when we practice joyful, generous giving?

The answer is found in v.12-15

For a start some very basic human needs - life is improved for people who are struggling. Often even small gifts

make huge improvements:

The Joy Of Generosity - Generous Giving p.5

- a few hundred dollars digs a well and provides clean drinking water for an entire Liberian village, freeing

children of life-threatening diseases

- just a couple of dollars provides a Thanksgiving dinner to a homeless person at the Mission

- an hour devoted can cheer a lonely senior

Our world can be a pretty bleak, dismal place.

Jesus said that He came to provide life, life more abundant (John 10:10).

Giving allows His followers to do the same.

And when you do that with open faith, saying, “Hey, I can share this because of what Jesus Christ has first

given to me” then another result is increased thanksgiving and praise to God.

Praise from the one who receives your gift.

And then, perhaps surprisingly,

also increased praise from the one who gave the gift.

There’s no better feeling than knowing that the sacrifice you made has contributed directly to

the well-being of another.

Second thing giving does is increase your faith and trust in the Lord.

A basic psychological truth about the human race is that the more people have, the more they want.

And the more they get, the tighter they seem to hang on to it. That just seems to be how the human mind

works.

But when you give away your energy, your time, and especially money, it loosens your grip and

fascination on your wealth; it is an antidote to the soul poison of greed.

Someone said to me, “No one ever ruined their character by being too generous, but many people have ruined

their character because they got all wrapped up in their wealth.”

Another thing - as you see the dynamic unfold of God responding to your giving, it makes you realize even more

how everything we have

everything

is a gift.

It’s not in our control, anyway.

And we end up with a deeper trust in the Lord;

a fuller confidence in Christ to be our Shepherd and daily provider.

Allowing us to say, as the closing words of this series

say it with me:

“Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift!”