Welcome

About Us

Resources

2005 Index

Links

Contact Us

Home

Humor

'The Treasure Chest'


ELCA Home

 

At its heart, stewardship does not flow out of oughts or shoulds, or even the best of advice.  It flows out of the outpoured love of God.  It flows in grateful response to the incredible gifts that we have given. it.


Weekly Reflection: Pastor Dana Reardon
Aug. 15, 2005

Read
Archived
Columns


Not pushed, but empowered by love

We have started reading through Proverbs for our daily devotions.  Proverbs has lots of wisdom and good advice -- much to which  we ought to listen.  As stewards of God's Kingdom we can use all the wisdom and good advice on how to care for and nurture and grow this Kingdom, and how to share and how to live.
 
But at its heart, stewardship does not flow out of oughts or shoulds, or even the best of advice. It flows out of the outpoured love of God. It flows in grateful response to the incredible gifts that we have given.
 
When we consider all that God has done for us, all that God has given us, we just naturally want to say thank you.
 
When we consider the abundance of what we have been given we just naturally want to share.
 
If sometimes we don't know how to say thank you, or sometimes we aren't sure of the best way to care for all that has been given us, then we look around for the care instructions like we do with the new beautiful sweater we got for Christmas.  And maybe we come up with some wisdom from the book of Proverbs, and often we come up with some wisdom that science has given us for how to care for the earth or how to grow more or distribute it better to feed all of God's people.
 
Sometimes we can get so caught up in the advice and the shoulds and the oughts that we can feel pushed instead of empowered by love.  Then we go back to the source of it all to remember why we do what we do, why we care and why we share.  There is one who first loved us and gave us everything including life.
 
Lord, with our lives and with our goods and with every breath which comes form you, may we give thanks.  Amen

 

 

 Copyright (c) 2005, The Rev. Dana Reardon. All rights reserved. Used by permission. Email her at mspastor@aol.com.
 

The Rev. Dana Reardon is pastor at St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church, Warwick, RI.  A lifelong Lutheran, she came to ordained ministry after 21 years in nursing, mostly in pediatric intensive care.  She graduated from Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia in 1998 and served 4 ½ years in Upstate New York before becoming a New Englander.  She is still trying to understand the accent.  While in the Upstate New York Synod she chaired the Stewardship Team.  That began her fascination with what makes stewards -- and more, what makes for generosity. She has three amazing daughters: Pastor Reardon says much of what she knows of life she learned from them.