Filed under poverty

Stewards R Us

God’s wisdom is easy to understand – but hard to APPLY. Biblical money management, God-honouring stewardship, is about wisdom and character more than income or education. It has to do with old-fashioned discipline. It’s more than 80% about choices. It’s not just hearing, it’s doing. I’ve begun to realise I really can be an encouragement to others, really honour God with this really important area of my finances, I can even give increasingly, joyfully and freely, more and more and more – if I can just get to control this idiot I shave with!

When people in church tomorrow hear the word stewardship, many of them may switch off and just think I’m going to say, ‘Give the church more money!’ But stewardship, what the Bible says about that, is that stewardship is basically all about how you look after what belonged to another. It involves money, but encompasses much more – and I don’t want to talk about amount so much as attitude.

The word comes out of KJV – written in the times of the feudal system.// Everyone then knew all about stewardship. They knew who a steward was – a man who managed all the business issues for the Lord in the castle. If you were the steward, you could manage huge amounts. You could do what you wanted with it. You took some to provide for your own needs – you were looked after. But you also had to know you’d be held to account; because (and here’s the real bottom line) you don’t own anything – it’s all his = it belonged to the Lord. That’s stewardship.

Stewardship means accepting that I am a manager of God’s stuff. If I look after what he gives me, he’s committed to looking after me. So I don’t worry, I trust him, and I’m faithful with everything he gives me. We all can slip away from that perspective: I AM NOT AN OWNER – I’M A STEWARD!

Follow this link for a fascinating historical lesson in the privileges and responsibilities of a Steward. Steward in Elizabethan times

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No possessions?

This coming Sunday I’ll be speaking on the line in Lennon’s Imagine when he said, “Imagine no possessions, I wonder if you can, nothing to kill or die for, a brotherhood of man.”

Is money the root of all evil (as the Bible is often misquoted as saying?).

Are poor people in some sense better off?

Would the world be better if they just gave everyone the same, whether a little or a lot?

How long would that system last?

One of my readings is the famous story of the ‘Rich Young Ruler.’ He appears in all three of the Synoptic gospels, went away from Jesus sad, because he had a lot of money. Does more make you miserable?

In the early church Acts 4 says some people sold their houses and gave the money to the church!

Your thoughts and ideas appreciated, as I try to gather mine.

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Why is fat so easy?

fat-wheelie.jpg

Just been out on my cycle for 23 miles. No, the picture above isn’t me – but I want to get some of the weight off that’s so quickly accumulated over this festive season. A very western ‘disease,’ – creeping chubbitum.

Why is it so easy to put weight on? I can usually take it off okay (blood, sweat and tears), but as you get older it seems to get harder not to end up looking like you’re wearing an inflatable rubber ring under your shirt. that stuff about turning 40 was true for me!

Now I’m not paranoid about it. I know God loves every inch of me (so if I put on some more inches will he love me more?). I like the fact that God looked on the fat portions and was pleased… and nobody’s ever going to mistake me for an anorexic, but I just feel so much better when I’m not carrying around Christmas pudding.

So tomorrow, I’ll start the New Year running.

Catalyst 2007 Francis Chan

I was at this conference. That’s me at the back somewhere.

Why do I go all that way across the pond? Because of the fantastic teaching. Here’s one of the best bits from this year. It’s longish, but worth a watch.

Thanks to http://floatingaxhead.com

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