Tuesday, October 23, 2012

GIMME FIVE

Readings: Psalm 76, Numbers 12:1-7, Matthew 25:14-30, 1 Corinthians 4: 1-5
Preached at First Presbyterian Church, Baldwin, NY, October 21st 2012

A printable PDF file can be found here

My dog Harpo can not do many tricks. But if you say “Gimme 5!” he’ll lift up his paw and give you 5. As we head through Stewardship season, I am not going to be doing any tricks, but I do want to “Give you 5”-  Five pointers as to how to be faithful in the matter of stewardship before God.

As I do so I want to hang my thoughts on a text that appears in 1 Corinthians 4:2; "It is required of stewards that they be found trustworthy"

The position of steward in biblical days was an honored position.  It was a term used for the house manager, a position of trust and responsibility. Stewardship is a lot more than bringing offerings on a Sunday.  It's about putting God first in every area of our lives.

God entrusts us with a great deal.  We have to be careful how we handle it.  As Christian people, we don’t have a choice as whether or not we are stewards. The choice we have is whether we will be good stewards. Good stewardship is an expression of true thankfulness to God. How best do we faithfully respond to the blessings God has surrounded our lives with?

1. We can be faithful with our time

To begin the day with an attitude of trust and faith is to give God the first hour. By saying the "First Hour', I don't mean the first actual hour we are awake or even a literal hour.  I mean that every day we live we should make a conscious choice to spend some of that time exclusively with our God. To make number one in our priorities, number one amongst the things we have to do in a day, time for God.

We do that for each other.  If we don't make time for each other, communication breaks down and relationships become strained.  Why should our relationship with God function differently? Some people find a first thing in the morning quiet time is the way to give God the best of the day.  Others prefer talking things over with God at the end of the day.  Some find time on their drive to work or commuting on the train. We can be flexible because no two days ever turn out to be the same.  But our faith needs nurturing daily if it is going to be of any use. Otherwise we lose our way.

2. We can be faithful in our worship

To properly worship God on a Sunday people need each other.  What's the point of maintaining a church and a minister and a staff and all the rest, if on the one hour in the week we can be together, we decide to be somewhere else?  We need to be worshiping and praying and sharing fellowship together. 

The fourth Commandment is plain enough. "Remember the Sabbath Day, to keep it Holy". I know that sometimes life's commitments, work and family and all of that make it impossible for every member to be in church every Sunday.  The best advice I heard was "Be there when you can, be elsewhere when you must". To be a faithful and grateful steward means taking God up on God's invitation and, whenever we can, give God the first day of the week for worship and for re-creation.

3. We can be faithful in our giving.

God doesn't need our money.  All our tithes and offerings can not enrich one iota the God who is King and Lord and Creator of all things. God has all the wealth of all Creation at God's disposal. What can our two penny worth add to that? So why do we have a time in our service of worship to bring to God our tithes and offerings?

Because our gifts are an expression of our thankfulness. The gifts we bring do not add to the glory of God.  The service of giving helps us to be more complete as people.  "To give" is to remind ourselves that life is not just about us. It reminds us that we can only fully be ourselves when we are in community with others.

We give because Christ gave His life for us.  He is the example.  He is the pattern.  His love is the motivation for giving God the first portion of our paycheck.  "Let giving be cheerful" instructs the scriptures.  Give graciously.  Give generously.  Give thankfully. Give because there is a need to be met and you can meet it.  Give because that is the pattern of life Christ lays before you and calls you to follow. Give, simply because you are glad to be alive!

When the offering plate comes round, or as you consider making a pledge, do it in such a way as to demonstrate that your relationship with God really means something and truly matters. That you are grateful for your God, your church and your life. If you give your loved one a gift you don't hold back.  A willingness to dip into your wallet is an indication of your love for God.

4. We can be faithful in our service.

I was once sitting playing guitar at a youth retreat when one of the participants, a gifted auto mechanic, came up to me and said, “I wish I could play guitar, I envy you".  I said, "Boy, if you've ever seen me struggling on a cold morning when my car won't start, looking under the hood and pretending like I knew something about all the stuff in there, I'd tell you which one of us should be envied.  "But it's just an engine" he said. "Right," I said, "And this is just a guitar."

Some of us have talents in one sphere. To others our gifting is in a different area.  We all have things we can do that we can offer to God.  Simple things and not so simple things. What's most needed is a willing spirit. The ability to never say, "Someone should do something about that" and the spirit that says, "How can I help do something about this".
Use the gifts you've been given, or you lose them. It's how you use your gifting that matters.

The fifth finger of this ‘Gimme 5” of stewardship is the most important. It is the one on which our time and tithes and talents must be focused and from where they should flow.

5. We can be faithful in our loving

The first great commandment is to love God with all our hearts, all our soul and all our mind.  The second is to love our neighbor as much as we love ourselves. The way we are called to face challenges, whether they be stewardship challenges in the life of our church, or personal things that affect our lives, is much the same. 

We've got to have an active faith. To love God implies that we trust God. Faith and love go together.  We should throw hope in there to, as Paul says in that great passage about love in 1 Corinthians 13, "And now faith, hope, and love abide, these three; and the greatest of these is love."

The greatest incentive behind any stewardship campaign has to be the same thing. Love.  Love for the things of God.  Love for the people of God, particularly those who make up this little piece of God's Kingdom we call First Presbyterian Church, Baldwin.

Love for this building and what it stands for within this community. Love for the many programs that take place here amongst the people, young and old, and beyond these walls in the larger community. Love for the gospel and the one who gave us the Good News, Our Lord Jesus Christ. Love for the action of the Holy Spirit who renews and changes and saves.

So here’s my big 5 of thankful, faithful stewardship!

1. We can be faithful with our time.
2. We can be faithful in our worship.
3. We can be faithful in our giving.
4. We can be faithful in our serving.
5. We can be faithful in our loving.

Be a people who pray.
         Exercise faith in your giving and serving.
                 Decide in what tangible ways you are going to face up to the challenge of being faithful stewards. And do it all with, through and from thanksgiving!

Stewardship, it's not just about money. It's about everything that God has given us and how we relate to God in all areas of our lives. "Seek ye first" said Jesus "The Kingdom of God".  Do that and Jesus promises everything else in our lives will fall into place!

Rev Adrian Pratt

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