Giving
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It’s a gift

There is no such thing as a free lunch –

or so we are told.

But Christians take a different view - life itself is a gift of God, part of His creation. It cannot be bought, money alone cannot extend it and being able to thank God for it and for our renewal in Jesus is an act of faith and grace.

And that starting point leads on to practicalities about how we live. In the Old Testament the people of Israel were instructed to offer a proportion of their harvest (the first fruits) in thankfulness to the Creator. It reminded them that they were stewards of the Creator’s world and through thanksgiving they were promised blessing - they knew whose they were and whom they served. A little later in the history of Israel, the people were instructed to give 1/10th of their income - a tithe. Tithing has never been universally practised in the Christian Church, but a number of Christian traditions and many individual Christians adopt it as a pattern and testify to its influence on their faith journey.

Jesus told stories about a widow’s gift and about good and bad stewards and workers in the vineyard as parables of the Kingdom. Paul writing to the congregation at Corinth appealing for the collection for the poor Christians in Jerusalem tells of the Macedonians who, though they were very poor, gave as much as they could, and even more than they could... You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ; rich as he was, he made himself poor for your sake, in order to make you rich by means of his poverty (2 Cor.8.3, 8).

For too long Churches have ignored these patterns of the Kingdom and followed the ways of the world. Giving in the Church has been limited to meeting the (small as possible) church budget. Our focus has been on what we think the church can just about manage on and we have ignored our stewardship of all the treasure-trove that God has given to each of us.

We want to change that in Epsom Methodist Church. We have a vision of the time when members of our congregation give in proportion to what God has given them - some of it to the Church but some, too, will be personal gifts to the work of the Kingdom elsewhere. We have a vision of Church Council meetings where the question can we afford...? and phrases like budget deficit and balance the books are never heard again. A vision of groups with a passion for mission debating how we can best use the finances God has placed amongst his people. We long for the day when, for all of us, giving becomes an act of joy and is never again thought of as a tax extracted or a subscription due. And there is a connection between the mission impact of the early Church and their gifts in their life together as a Christian community. "All the believers continued together in close fellowship and shared their belongings... And every day the Lord added to their group those who were being saved." (Acts 2.44, 47b).

Of course, we all have more to give than money, but for now we are concentrating on money. Paul reminds us (2 Cor. 8.12) that God asks us only to give out of what we have got not what we haven’t got; giving in proportion to your disposable income. So the invitation is to everyone and no one is exempt because his or her income is very high or very low. Have you ever sat down to work out what proportion of the money at your disposal is used for what might be called Kingdom purposes - your church and charitable giving?

Have you ever compared your weekly Church and charitable giving to the money you spend on newspapers and magazines, on holidays or chocolate or a visit to a football match, the cinema or the theatre? Is your giving to the work of God the first priority in your spending or does it come out of your loose change?

These are serious questions about discipleship as well as about money. Giving with a thankful heart, because God loves a cheerful giver, leads to a new freedom about finance and faith. We hope that all the members of our congregation will be willing to take a step in faith in considering Christian Giving. The amount you give is entirely a matter for your personal decision but it should be:

Given thankfully and cheerfully in proportion to your means regular and committed.

A useful Sermon to remind us about giving -More...............

Suggest you print this out and read at your leisure

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This page last modified: 17 March 2005