Blog

  • You Can’t Stop Now!

    You Can’t Stop Now!

    “You can’t stop now” was my pastor’s reply to my testimony. I was so excited to tell him about the miracles that were taking place in my life since I decided to change some things. That was 27 years ago and looking back now I could never have imagined how prophetic his words would be. What I think he was getting at was that I would not be able to reverse this radical change in direction my life had taken. My 180 degree course correction came as result of him having given me a new way of viewing life and happiness – the Christian stewardship view.

    Very early in my journey stewardship quickly became for me a way to not conform to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of my mind! (Romans 12:2)

    I was introduced to stewardship like most people with the Time Talent and Treasure model, the 3 ‘T’s for short. However, I remember thinking this stewardship is radical stuff. This is a lifestyle that is really about be swimming against the tide of cultural secularism and runaway consumerism and materialism. I was actually attracted by the counter-culture feel of it. My way of life wasn’t working for me so I was ready to risk going against the trend. Very early in my journey in stewardship it quickly became for me a way to not conform to the pattern of this world but be transformed by the renewing of my mind! (Romans 12:2)

    I was so excited with the way this renewed way of thinking had so instantly and dramatically transformed my life I was convinced that there was more to this than Time Talent and Treasure.

    The Time, Talent, & Treasure model is tired and quite frankly doesn’t have any lasting impact in people’s lives.

    In my 14 years of promoting stewardship at the Archdiocese of Winnipeg I consistantly would tell church stewardship teams…”Our number one job is to inspire people to change the way they think about who they are and all they possess!”  The Time, Talent, & Treasure model is tired and quite frankly doesn’t have any lasting impact in people’s lives. The three ‘T’s program is tired because it simply places a demand on people the moment they hear it. They think, “Oh, the church wants me to volunteer and give more!”

    Our number one job is to inspire people to change the way they think about who they are and all they possess!” 

    It’s time we dare to think differently about how we invite people to a greater commitment to this beautiful spirituality and view of life. Hearts and minds are transformed when we think outside the box of time, talent, and treasure.

    There is a better way to stewardship than the annual 3 ‘T’s appeal, a way that is both joyful and sustainable.

    There is no doubt that we need to change what people think about stewardship? We can begin by demonstrating that stewardship is joyful when it is formed, not out of obligation or duty, but gratitude. Over the years I have developed a way to stewardship that includes nine virtues – not 3 ‘T’s.  My experience has been that these virtues, when cultivated in a person’s life, naturally lead people to greater stewardship. Moreover, they inspire stewardship that is sustainable!

    It all begins with the virtue of gratitude. Gratitude is the foundation because, “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues but the parent of all the others” (Cicero).

    Gratitude, humility, simplicity, discipline, trust and generosity are the hallmark virtues of stewardship. These six virtues when held up by the virtues of perseverance, patience, and prayer build a life of peace, hope and joy. The ways of the world lead to a hopeless end – discipleship and stewardship are the way to endless hope.

    This blog exists to inspire and equip leaders in the stewardship movement. I look forward to exploring the impact of these stewardship virtues, and hearing about how you have dared to think differently about stewardship.

    Always grateful and hopeful in our good and gracious God,

    J. Dan Potvin

  • Beware the evil ‘isms’!

    Beware the evil ‘isms’!

    From the moment we are born we are immersed in a machine that is designed to keep us pursuing instant gratification as opposed to that which will provide sustainable satisfaction. Most North Americans will spend 8 to 9 years of their life in front of a television.

    Toddlers today know what the golden arches ‘M’ stands for before they know their own surname!

    There is a way to be free of the materialism, consumerism, and hedonism that exercise such powerful influences in our lives today.

    Have any of you ever had your car repossessed by the finance company?

    I have!

    Have any of you ever had your phone disconnected by the phone company?

    I have!

    Have any of you ever lost your business and had to declare bankruptcy?

    I have!

    These three events were the perfect storm in my life that motivated me to examine my life, and the choices I was making. Desperately in need of change I took an honest look at how I viewed life and what I was pursuing.

    I had fallen prey to the seemingly attractive ‘isms’.  I was pursuing the ‘good life’ according to what all the images in the media were telling me.

    The financial problems in my life back then were creating a lot of wrong thinking in me and I was headed down a path of destruction. I was carrying a lot of worry and anxiety; I just wanted to be able to provide for my family! But the choices I was making only sabotaged any chance of that. The wrong thinking, worry and anxiety manifested itself in some bad behavior…binge drinking with my buddies!

    Desperately in need of change I took an honest look at how I viewed life and what I was pursuing.

    Fortunately, and providentially I was introduced to a new way of thinking about all that life has to offer. I began to see things differently. When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change. The slow process of taking control of the isms in my life began.

    3 Core Mindsets that have Paved the Way to a Much More Abundant Life!

    # 1 It is all God’s Gift!

    • Everything we accomplish (skills, achievements) or accumulate (possessions / wealth) is not solely of our own doing.
    • God created us and has endowed each of us with particular gifts. It stands to reason then, that everything we have or are able to do as a result of our skills, achievements, and opportunities are a gift from God. It is all God’s gift!

    I never used to think that everything in my life was a gift from God.  Ever since I’ve changed that thinking the pressure is off, I don’t worry as much! God will provide all that I need.

    This leads me to the 2nd core mindset…

    #2 Be grateful always and everywhere!

    • This is particularly helpful in finding balance and control over the ‘isms’.
    • Just think about how much we have to be grateful for in North America. And that is the key – to think about that on a daily basis. It’s too easy to take so much for granted.
    • Don’t get caught up in complaining about your circumstances, or compairing yourself to what others have. (If we are going to compare ourselves, then let’s compare ourselves to the millions of people in the world who struggle every day just to find something to eat and clean water to drink. We best not stay in our own little world view lest we forget just how blessed we are and neglect those in need.) 
    • Gratitude is the ANTIDOTE to complaining and comparing!

    Gratitude silences any complaining voice in my head. Moreover science has proven that gratitude is extremely important in maintaining a healthy and strong mind! I know that when I practice gratitude I make better choices.

    When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.

    If we believe #1 and practice #2 God will take care of the rest…the 3rd core mindset!

    #3 Trust in God’s providence!

    • God always provides what we need.
    • We have Jesus’ word on that, see Matthew 6:25-33.
    • When we trust God it not only frees us from worry it also gives us the confidence to step out in faith and do what He wants us to do.

    All good things come from our good and gracious God. Gifts that we should always and everywhere be grateful for. Stewardship of it all calls us to share it and trust God. God’s desire is that we receive His gifts gratefully, use them responsibly, develop them conscientiously, and share them generously with others. That’s the stewardship cycle.

    When we cling to our gifts too tightly it leaves no room to receive, and the cycle closes! 

    Stepping out in faith and trusting God reminds me of another God-incidence…

    One Christmas years ago I had fallen prey to the ‘isms’ and responded to an image of a happy family opening gifts in a direct mail solicitation from a finance co. I got sucked in and borrowed a $1,000 so as to make for a wonderful Christmas for my family. It wasn’t so wonderful after Christmas. It took me 8 months and $150 interest to pay back the loan!

    The next Christmas my thinking had changed. There were two God-incidences that Christmas that I will never forget. The first was when my wife noticed a single mom in line for a Christmas hamper at our church. Lynn knew this woman from the religious education program she coordinated at the church.

    Lynn had an idea. In addition to the Christmas hamper the church community was providing what if we offered to buy her children some Christmas gifts. Lynn contacted the woman and she aggreed to allow us to do that. I’ll never forget the look of joy on those little girls faces when we dropped the gifts off a few days before Christmas – and the the way our own children were filled with joy for doing it.

    The second God-incidence was the result of a prayer request I had been making to God all of December. I was praying that I would be a better steward that Christmas; be grateful for what we had; and, not give into the ads and go into debt again!

    The money we spent on those children was a bit of a sacrifice, however it felt so good. It was part of me being a better steward of our financial blessings that year and it did not go without reward.

    A couple of days before Christmas I was at the post office checking our mail. I was suprised to see a letter from a former employer; the company had gone out of business a couple of years earlier. I opened the letter and found a cheque for $380! It was part of a delayed and totally unexpected severance package.

    I stood there with tears in my eyes, and looking up to heaven, I said, “I get it God…You will not be out done in generosity.” I think it was God’s way of letting me know I was now thinking about things rightly, and to stay the course and trust in Him!

    If any of you reading this post feel like you could do with a change, then I hope you too will dare to think differently!

  • The Chicken Story – Another God-incidence!

    The Chicken Story – Another God-incidence!

    It was no co-incidence that our friends showed up that night. I am convinced it was a God-incidence.

    The chicken story has a back-story that I should begin with to set the stage properly. A few months prior to the chicken event I had returned to the Church after 10 years as a C&E Catholic, (a barely Christmas and Easter only Catholic).

    It was a year into recovering from the loss of my business, which had forced me into personal bankruptcy, when this ‘prodigal son’ decided to give God another chance. My faith was not on solid ground yet, however, praise God, my wife’s certainly was. She never gave up praying for my conversion.

    This ‘prodigal son’ decided to give God another chance!

    After the loss of my business I took a job as a door-to-door salesman. That lasted about nine months. Then I took a job selling life insurance. Both were not reliable sources of a stable income, and we had two young children to feed!

    I was stressing out over paying the bills and keeping food on the table. Lynn knew I was worried and she knew what to do…she always prayed for me.

    While praying for me the Holy Spirit gave Lynn an idea.

    I was out late one night meeting with a life insurance prospect. I came home that night without a sale…nothing unusual about that! It was unusual however to walk into the living room that night and see a bible open on the floor in front of the television. I thought, “That’s odd”. Then I said to myself…

    “No, that’s my little prayer warrior trying to tell me something. I’d better pick it up and check it out because she’s for sure going to ask me about it in the morning”.

    I am so glad I took the time to read what she had selected – Matthew 6:25-33.

    I tell you not to worry about your life. Don’t worry about having something to eat, drink, or wear. Isn’t life more than food or clothing?

    …But more than anything else, put God’s work first and do what he wants. Then the other things will be yours as well.

    Everything changed for me that night!

    The pastor at our church at the time had been teaching us about stewardship. Jesus telling us not to worry in his sermon on the mount made stewardship crystal clear to me. If we need not worry because God will provide for our needs, then it stands to reason that everything that we have in our lives actually comes from God. I really don’t own anything. It’s all been given to me by our good and gracious God.

    What is so special about you? What do you have that you were not given? And if it was given to you, how can you brag?

    1 Corinthians 4:7

    Something else in particular struck me that night. It was verse 33 about putting God first and doing what He wants you to do that really got my attention. I thought, wow, I really have not been putting God first and still he was taking care of us. The last few years had been difficult and we were still going through some very tough times, but we always got through it.

    Imagine what life could be like if I was putting God first I thought! That night I began my journey in stewardship and discipleship with a radical new zeal!

    Now to the ‘Chicken Story’!

    Not long after the Matthew 6 eye-opener we were sitting at the kitchen table one evening having dinner and Lynn looked quite concerned. I asked what was wrong and she asked when my next pay day would be. I had to tell her that I hadn’t sold any insurance policies for weeks and did not expect to be paid any time soon. Lynn then rather emotionally declared,

    “That’s not good, because the kitchen cupboards and fridge are empty and so is our bank account!”

    To which I replied, (not thinking it through), “Why don’t you practice what you preach! Remember Matthew 6, ‘do not worry’!”

    That did not go over well at all. The truth was that we were indeed in a tough spot with no solution in sight any time soon.

    Still, I suggested we pray and trust God.

    Prayer is the foundational virtue of a good steward. In prayer we take time to give thanks to God who is the source of all our gifts. Moreover, it is in prayer that we discern how God wants us to use and share the blessings He bestows on us. Prayer itself is a gift, how are you stewarding this gift? How is your prayer life these days?

    So, we prayed that night after we finished supper and… moments later there was a knock at our back door. It was some friends we had recently met through my life insurance job. They were a beautiful couple, farmers, and Pentecostal Christians with a joy filled faith. We asked them to come in and they carried in with them two large cardboard boxes. They placed the boxes on the kitchen table and said, “We felt like you guys could use this.”

    Those boxes contained six frozen chickens from their farm, some ground beef and lots of fresh vegetables from their garden!  Barely holding the tears back I proclaimed, “See Lynn, do not worry!”

    It was no co-incidence that our friends showed up that night. I am convinced it was a God-incidence. I believe it was a fruit of a decision we had made earlier that year. We had taken a leap of faith and committed to giving $5 a week consistently to our church as a way to say thank you to God. I know, five bucks isn’t much, but is was to us back then! Our giving practice at church had previously been to give whatever change was in my pocket. That was all we could afford, or so I thought. We began to give every week with a consistent sentiment, “Thank you God, you got us through another week!” We still give, and certainly more now as God has enabled us to; and to other charities as well. We give not because the church or other charities need it; stewardship is not about giving to need, it is about needing to give, because it’s one way we can express our gratitude to God.

    The chicken event was God’s way of telling us we were on the right track, and headed in the right direction. Lynn and I will never forget that night, and the countless God-incidences that have occurred since.

    “Stewardship is the right thing to do. Its rewards can’t be kept out!” Bishop Eugene John Gerber (1931 – 2018)

  • A Dangerous Point of View

    A Dangerous Point of View

    “You can’t stop now”, my pastor said, and he was right!

    That was 27 years ago and looking back now I could never have imagined how prophetic his words would become. I haven’t stopped since! I couldn’t stop because of the radical change in my thinking he had invited me to embrace. Moreover, he inspired in me the courage to walk in a totally different direction than the crowd. I had dared to think differently and that opened the door for God to go to work in my life.  

    What had changed in me? What was it that I couldn’t stop? The Christian Stewardship view of life is what happened! Our pastor was on fire for this counter-cultural way of viewing life and happiness and he challenged the entire parish to give it a go. I am forever grateful that he did.

    Before stewardship my attitude was, “What’s mine is mine!”

    Stewardship taught me that “What’s mine is mine” is a dangerous point of view. It’s dangerous because by making that claim I was denying the truth. The truth is that all good things come from our good and gracious God. That is true of everything we human beings have: cherished relationships with a spouse, family or friends; spiritual gifts like our faith and the hope that comes from having faith; our abilities and talents; the income we are able to earn because of our abilities and talents; the material goods we possess because we are able to earn an income; achievements of human genius and skill; our beautiful and life-sustaining planet. It’s all God’s gift. One day God will ask for an accounting of how I stewarded all these things He gave me. And, Jesus tells us there are dire consequences for having the “What’s mine is mine” view and not exercising good stewardship over God’s gifts…

    “And cast the worthless servant into the outer darkness. In that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth” (Matthew 25:30)

    I hope when I give my accounting of how I stewarded His gifts to me, God will respond…

    Well done, good and faithful servant. You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much. Enter into the joy of your master (Matthew 25:21)

    How we view things is how we do things!

    John Maxwell

    Upon hearing the stewardship message I immediately changed how I viewed all the things I possessed. The truth was it’s all God’s doing. I started to do things differently, taking much greater care for all that God gives me, and more importantly I began to share it!

    After stewardship my attitude became, “What’s mine is His!”

    What immediately followed my new view of things was a series totally out of nowhere blessings in my life. These blessings were certainly not of my own doing…I’m not that good. And, neither were they mere co-incidences. It was abundantly obvious to me that they were God-incidences. God was the only possible explanation. I believe they were God’s way of letting me know I was now headed in the right direction. Gone was my dangerous view of things.

    Stay tuned for more on the God-incidences in future posts.

  • Dare to Think Differently

    Dare to Think Differently

    Stuck in rush hour traffic, again! I used to hate it. That was before I developed the habit of intentionally thinking differently about my daily, 2 hours of commuting in bumper to bumper traffic. I used to complain about it until my little prayer warrior, my wife Lynn, reminded me about the power of gratitude. The next time I thought to feel grumpy while stuck in traffic I remembered I was sitting in traffic because I was blessed to be travelling to a job – a job that I love. I thought, how many people struggle every day just to survive and here I am whining about going to work! Wow, I should be ashamed. I instantly felt grateful. That slight adjustment in my thinking has forever changed the way I feel about the daily commute. Time in traffic is now an opportunity to spend some time in what Matthew Kelly calls the “classroom of silence”.  Rush hour traffic is a great time for prayer, and prayer changes things. It is amazing how the condition of our lives can be dramatically transformed, by simply changing the way we think!

     “A grateful heart silences a complaining voice!”[i]

    The Stewardship Virtue of Gratitude

    Gratitude to God has the power to unleash in us the kind of peace of mind and joy that nothing else in this world can even come close to providing. This Holy joy inspires a life that is lived well. The fruit of such a life is stewardship that has real impact! The impact is first and foremost felt in our own day-to-day living.

    When we develop the daily habit of gratitude our eyes are opened to the abundance of God’s blessings in our lives, and all around us; and, this creates in us the confidence, and the intense desire to take care of it all, and to share a generous portion of it with others. Gratitude to God has changed my vision of the purpose and meaning of life.  In addition, when we cultivate the virtue of gratitude in our lives we are liberated from any feelings of want, envy, or dissatisfaction. This is very freeing and give us peace.

    Gratitude to God inspires stewardship that flows freely and joyfully. When we are grateful to God it strengthens our hope because we know that our good and gracious God, the source of all our gifts, always provides for our needs, and even some of our wants. In appreciation for God’s gifts to us, the gifts we share are given without any fear of having enough; shared without conditions or expectations. Gratitude moves us to joyful generosity.

    Gratitude to God inspires a transition from ‘giving to a need’ to ‘needing to give’.

    Lynn and I began our journey in stewardship in 1992. We were under intense financial pressure at the time because of the loss of our business. Still, we recall that somehow, with God’s grace, we were always able to get by. We were so filled with gratitude to God we just had to give something back! Every Sunday we would write the check for our Church offering and place it in the basket with the thought “Here you are God, thanks for getting us through another week!” That is a sentiment we still hold fast to today. Gratitude to God has inspired us to make the transition from ‘giving to a need’ to ‘needing to give’.

    “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others.” [ii]

    A stewardship virtue that is enhanced by gratitude is simplicity. One of the joys of simplicity is that it gives us the freedom from being caught up in the excessive, and unnecessary, consumer debt that plagues so many people today. Good stewards know it is better to strive for meaning and purpose in life, rather than be caught up in the relentless, and exhausting, pursuit of the things our culture says will make us happy.

    The abundant life is not about having what we want…

     It’s about wanting what we have.

    Life-changing gratitude comes from recognizing God in everything, all day, and every day. Everyday gratitude to God creates the conditions for us to experience daily moments of awe. This forever changes how we experience and enjoy life!

    Don’t be like the people of this world, but let God change the way you think.

    Romans 12:2

    Three good habits to cultivate the virtue of gratitude in your life:

    1. Place a ‘Gratitude Habit’ white board on your fridge, or start a list on your smart phone, record 3 new things you are grateful for every day.
    2. Every night before you fall asleep reflect back on the day and give thanks to God for his gifts that day.
    3. Be on guard to catch yourself before complaining and look for something to be grateful for…we are all blessed in so many ways it will not be hard to find something to be grateful for.
    Joseph Daniel Potvin, Joppa Stewardship Leaders, Ottawa, Email: jdanielp@joppastewardship.com


    [i] Bishop Eugene John Gerber (1931 – 2018)

    [ii] Cicero (106–43bc) Roman statesman, orator, lawyer and philosopher

  • Dare to Think Differently

    Dare to Think Differently

    When we change the way we think, we can dramatically transform the condition of our lives.

    It is my hope that this bog will inspire conversations that inspire you to ‘Dare to Think Differently’ about stewardship. Let’s dare to take stewardship outside of the time, talent & treasure box! It’s time we retired the 3 ‘T’s and consider some of the virtues of Christian stewardship and how they can be life-changing.

    The Stewardship Virtue of Humility

    When you make a firm and conscious decision to follow Jesus, you will inevitably run into stewardship. Stewardship makes our discipleship complete and opens the door to the abundant life Jesus promised.

    Happiness is the ‘Abundant Life’…Jesus said, “I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.” John 10:10

    • A life that adds value to others – who we are is God’s gift, who we become is our gift to God…and to others.
    • A life filled with the joy of recognizing and rejoicing in God’s goodness every day!
    • A life that enjoys peace of mind, the kind of peace that only Jesus can give. John 14:27

    We live in a culture that encourages self-reliance. “If it’s meant to be it’s up to me” is a familiar mantra. While it is right for us to be confident and trust in our own abilities, we should never lose sight of the truth. Humility means that we acknowledge the truth about ourselves and about God. Let’s start with our opportunities, talents, and abilities for example. These human capacities that we rely upon have only one source…they come from our good and gracious God.  Sadly, many people today tend to forget this and that leaves little room for humility. The consequence is to live under the endless pressure of relying solely on themselves.

    With pride out of the way, God is able to go to work in our lives and accomplish things we would have never thought possible!

    At the heart of stewardship is letting go of any prideful claim that our opportunities, and abilities, and any income we are able to earn because of these gifts, are of our own doing. Everything we are able to accomplish or accumulate in our life has its source, and purpose and meaning, in God. This way of thinking gets pride out of the way and God is then able to go to work in our lives to accomplish things we would have never thought possible! “His power at work in us can do far more than we dare ask or imagine. Amen.” (Ephesians 3:21)  

    Humility does not require that we embrace an overly timid stance in life.

    “Humility does not mean that we think less of ourselves…it simply means that we think of ourselves less.” 

    Rick Warren

    This is healthy humility!  A humble disposition like this puts God first, and it gives us the God-grounded confidence, and courage, to boldly develop, use, and share our gifts for his glory. Healthy humility leads to the fruitful stewardship of all that God gives us.

    St. Teresa of Calcutta said, “If you are discouraged it is a sign of pride because it shows you trust in your own power. Your self-sufficiency, your selfishness and your intellectual pride will inhibit His coming to live in your heart because God cannot fill what is already full. It is as simple as that”.

    Humility

    Humility is the antidote to the deadly sin of pride. Most importantly, being humble about the source of our gifts fills are hearts with gratitude to God. When we are grateful to God it increases the depth of our hope. That in itself makes for a much more abundant life!

    Three good habits to cultivate the virtue of humility in your life are:

    1. Study, reflect, and apply everything the Word of God has to say about the virtue of humility.
    2. Each morning, take a moment to pray that you will recognize when pride rises in you in the day ahead, and call upon the Holy Spirit to take it away!
    3. Practice the habit of intentionally confronting pride in your day-to-day experiences for one month. Keep a journal of the results, recording how it has changed your life. You can use the journal for each of the nine other virtues in the months ahead.

    Joseph Daniel Potvin

    Joppa Stewardship Leaders, Ottawa

    Email: jdanielp@joppastewardship.com

  • The Joy of Stewardship – Share Your Hope!

    The Joy of Stewardship – Share Your Hope!

    risen

    Conversion & Knowing & Obeying leads to Proclaiming…your Hope!

    This Sunday’s readings provide us with a unique opportunity to explore a most meaningful way to stewardship. Conversion – Knowing – Obeying – Proclaiming. Beginning with Peter’s speech, he invites people to repent and turn to God (Acts 3:19). This is a call to conversion, a call to see life anew. Stewardship likewise begins with a change of heart and mind. Stewardship inspires us to look at all that we are and everything we have through new lenses. It all comes from and belongs to God. Conversion like this leads to a greater desire to know God and his will. We seek what God wants, to know how he wants us to use and share our gifts. The gift of life itself and our faith. What about our relationships and the gift of each day? Our talents and abilities; our individual opportunities; and all the material goods that we have.  How does God want us to steward it all? Seeking God’s will and being obedient to it is the way to stewardship that has impact! Impact in our own lives and those around us.

    Seeking God’s will and being obedient to it is the way to stewardship that has impact!

    A person can be sure that you know God by the example of your life. To know God is to obey his commandments. Knowing him also means to be in relationship with him that involves intimacy and experience. The deeper our relationship with Jesus the stronger our desire to be obedient – to be the best stewards and disciples we can be! Born out of our love for Jesus, our obedience never feels legalistic or burdensome. The opposite is true, it is freeing and rewarding. Obedience in stewarding God’s gifts as he wants is always joyful!

    Finally, in the Gospel Jesus commissions us to “proclaim in his name to all nations” (Luke 25:47). Conversion – knowing – obeying – these all instill in us a compelling desire to proclaim. The Church encourages us in our call as lay faithful to proclaim. “The laity likewise share in the priestly, prophetic, and royal office of Christ and have their own share in the mission” (Vatican II Decree on the Apostolate of the Laity).

    We are stewards of the gift of faith that we have received.

    In what ways are you joyfully proclaiming the hope that you have in the resurrection to the people you meet every day?

  • Radical Stuff

    Radical Stuff

    This Sunday’s reading from The Acts of the Apostle is Radical Stuff!

    – “Everyone who owned land or houses would sell them and bring the money to the apostles” (Acts 4:34).

     

    For Sale For

    What was it that inspired the first Christian community to embrace such radical stewardship? None of the early Church members claimed that their possessions were their own. They understood the truth about stewardship – we don’t really own anything, it all comes from and belongs to God. One of the joys of stewardship comes from the confidence in knowing that God always provides for our material and spiritual needs (Matt 6:33). This belief frees us from uselessly worrying about of having enough!

    “The kingdom is where God provides for all that we need. It is the realm of sufficiency where we are no longer pulled here and there by anxiety about having enough” (Henri J.M. Nouwen).

    Armed with a God-grounded confidence, and inspired by the Holy Spirit, the first Christians embraced radical stewardship and shared everything they had!

    Believing that everything we possess is a gift from God stirs up the virtue of gratitude in our hearts. Gratitude to God then inspires us to make a conscious and confident decision to share our gifts.  Stewardship is sharing in gratitude not out of obligation or duty. When grateful hearts inspire giving, joy always accompanies the gift. Imagine how grateful the first Christians were? They had just received the incredible gift of a new life in Christ. The first followers were “all in” and their stewardship was rewarded both personally, “God greatly blessed his followers, and no one went in need of anything” (Acts 4:34) and as a community of believers, “each day the Lord added to their group others who were being saved” (Acts 2:47).

    The example of stewardship we see in the Acts of the Apostles reminds us that stewardship is not new. Stewardship is God’s idea. It’s radical stuff, God likes it.

    The first followers were “all in” and their stewardship was rewarded!

    The first Christians were responding to God’s goodness. A great way for us to respond to God’ s goodness is to consider tithing. God’s word on tithing remains valid today and we can trust in his word.  For someone new to tithing they may well see it as monumental leap in their giving. I recall the first time Lynn and I considered making the move to tithing. We thought how can we ever do this! However, we were encouraged to simply start…start small and work our way to 10%. It took a few years but we got there, and we have never looked back. Moreover, we have never been better off! We are better off not just because of the ten percent we give, but because of how we steward the 90% we keep. Stewardship is about how we care for 100% of our gifts. God wants it all stewarded well. The day to day choices that stewardship inspires us to make are what have contributed to us being “better off”. Still, there are those out-of-nowhere rewards that we can only explain as God-incidences. Seems he will simply not be outdone in giving.

    What has been your experience with tithing? How or why did you start? If you haven’t tried it, give it go! It’s radical stuff, and God does indeed honor it, we have his word on that!   “I am the Lord All-Powerful, and I challenge you to put me to the test. Bring the entire ten percent into the storehouse, so there will be food in my house. Then I will open the windows of heaven and flood you with blessing after blessing” (Malachi 3:10).

     

  • Dying to self…we can trust that it is good for us!

    Dying to self…we can trust that it is good for us!

    “Deny ourselves!”

    Jesus tells us that we must be willing to “hate our life in this world to keep it for eternal life”.  Dying to self is an essential element of discipleship and we can trust that it is good for us! Elsewhere in the Gospels Jesus says we must “deny ourselves” to be one of his followers.

    Deny Selfluke9_23b

     

    Dying to self is an essential element of discipleship and we can trust that it is good for us!

    How does any of this play a role in stewardship? It’s simple; stewardship declares that my life, and my possessions, are not mine; they are gifts given to me by our good and gracious God. Christian Stewards deny any self-confident pride in their accomplishments in this world and give all the credit to God. Stewardship places Christ at the center of how I choose to share and use my gifts. Stewardship is living Christ-centered, not self-centered in this life to keep our eternal reward. Moreover, Jesus promised an abundant life here and now. (John 10:10) Admitting that I utterly depend upon God for all that I have and all that I am is very freeing. To be a steward is not to hoard my life, but to live it joyfully and generously! This is the abundant life we are created for.

  • Created to do Good – A Gift Shared is a Gift Multiplied!

    Created to do Good – A Gift Shared is a Gift Multiplied!

    “We are what he has made us…” St. Paul tells us in this Sunday’s second reading. All that we are ever able to accomplish and accumulate in our lifetime is all possible by God’s grace.

    “All temporal and spiritual goods are created by and come from God. That is true of everything human beings have: spiritual gifts like faith, hope, and love; talents of the body and brain; cherished relationships with family and friends; material goods; the achievements of human genius and skill; the world itself.”

    1992 USCCB Pastoral Letter – Stewardship A Disciple’s Response

    Our good and gracious God is incredibly generous in his distribution of gifts. The big question is how are each of us going to steward these gifts? The first step in being good stewards of God’s gifts is to acknowledge that these gifts are not ours, and they are not for our glory. They come from and belong to God, and are for his glory. St. Paul gives us some direction, saying we are “Created in Christ Jesus for good works.”

    There is much joy in seeing that a gift shared

    is a gift multiplied!

    What are the gifts God has entrusted to you? Each of us has unique talents and abilities that we can share in a life of good works. There is much joy in seeing that a gift shared is a gift multiplied!