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Dellrose United Methodist Church

EMPOWERING * EQUIPING * TEACHING * TRAINING

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Stewardship

stewardship First fruits giving requires the theological premise that our possessions and assets ultimately belong to God. All that we have in life is a gift from God! Faith-filled, first fruits giving is our opportunity to return to God a small portion of God’s abundant blessing in our lives. Moreover, these blessings are not limited to financial assets or possessions. Most of us can examine our own lives and find numerous blessings, perhaps even some astounding miracles. As Christians, we are called to give to God “what is right, not what is left,” as the popular quote from a church marquis states. God calls us to offer our “first fruits,” not the “leftovers.”

Why is tithing a benchmark rather than a goal? In his sermon, The Use of Money, John Wesley, the founder of the Methodist movement, preached about “earning all you can, saving all you can, and giving all you can.” For Wesley, the tithe was not the ultimate goal of the Christian – it was the standard, the normative mark, the common denominator. Jesus’ teaching and example urge us to examine our choices with all of our possessions and assets, not just 10% of them. Frankly, Jesus asked his disciples for 100% commitment.

In post-modern culture, financial giving is usually not the first monetary decision people make, rather it is one of the last decisions. We might rationalize these priorities by considering our primary financial decisions to be those of basic need, similar to Maslow’s famous hierarchy of needs. We make choices about housing, food, relationships, transportation, employment, and recreation to name a few, before we make choices about monetary gifts. Our lifestyle and all of its financial requirements take precedence over our obligation to share financial resources. However, Maslow began with primitive needs. For many of us, these primitive needs for things such as food and shelter have been replaced with a super-sized, extravagant version. Thus, we minimize any substantial possibility to give. Further, when we do share, we often do so with a sense of obligation, guilt, or shame.

The decision of defining how much is enough for our lifestyle is a difficult one. Few of us living in developed countries live with anything primitive, yet millions of people each day live without even the most primitive of resources. As Christians, we are called constantly to balance between our desired wants and our perceived needs.

The ways in which we choose to earn, give, save, and spend money are really spiritual decisions. When our first decision is one of giving, we place a greater level of trust in God. We begin by saying, “Thank you God! All that we have received is a blessing from you.” We acknowledge that we worship God and not money! Giving frees us from the bondage that money can have over our lives. Tithing encourages us to focus on God as the source of our strength, rather than our own achievements or financial assets. Tithing leads to spiritual growth.

Wesley taught that one who earned and saved money, but failed to give money was not living as a faithful Christian. Tithing introduces spiritual discipline to our financial choices. The bipolar contrast between the pull and push of the hyperconsumer culture versus the biblical principles of tithing is so clear. Tithing dissuades us from absorption into the competitive posture of hyperconsumer-driven communities. Tithing challenges the common assumptions of economics and debt. It offers possibilities of economic justice, moderate consumption, and self-control

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Can These Bones Live?


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