Our Charge: To Do God's Work
By David Penman
Any statement on stewardship must be kept in the context
of who and whose we are. We are
charged with taking care of
things until Jesus comes again. But
this is certainly not a passive
supervision of God's creation. We are
all charged with doing his
work.
Our Lutheran Book of Worship
(LBW), page 199, says in
part, "In Holy Baptism our Lord
Jesus Christ received you and
made you members of his church."
(Notice the action is strictly on
the part of Jesus, not us.) The LBW
continues, "In the community of God's people, you have learned from
his Word God's loving purpose for you and all creation. You have been
called to be witnesses to the Gospel
of Jesus Christ."
So, stewardship is a question of what
we do with what we are given, and the
foremost gift we have been given
is the Gospel. It should be easy to see then that as "our selves, our time
and our possessions" are truly signs
of our Lord's gracious love to us. We are
strictly accountable for the use of
each gift toward the accomplishment of our mission and to God's
service.
Each of us should ask ourselves what
we are doing with the gift of the Gospel. Are we watering and
fertilizing the seed so that
it will grow
and bear fruit? Are we letting the light shine into the world around us
so that it will be a
testimony
to Jesus?
As adult members of the church
we make the following affirmation
about the aforementioned
mission:
"...To live among God's faithful people,
to hear his Word and share in
his
supper, to proclaim the good news of
God in Christ through word and
deed,
to serve all people following the
example of our Lord Jesus, and
to strive
for justice and peace in all the
earth."
Jesus knew his disciples each
had their own gifts, unique and
different as our individual spiritual gifts are today. He
continually prodded them into action through the parables he told, arming
them with the knowledge they needed to spread the good news with strength
and courage after he went away.
This same challenge remains for us.
In a recent letter, Tom O'Brien
summarized the stories and letters of the Bible by writing,
"All of this is to help to move God's people into action. To: 1)
help them to realize
how important they are in God's plan;
2) help them to realize what
they have and who it came from; 3) challenge
them to make a decision and set some
priorities in their lives so that God's
will be done (recognizing whose they
are); and 4) taking what they have been blessed with (the Gospel)
and sharing it every way possible so that all of humankind can ingest it.
That is the challenge for all of us, to take the love and joy and peace
and justice that is the hope for all of humankind out there
... to all of
humankind."
We must provide a way for each member of the body of Christ to
exercise his or her gifts, including
the gift of financial support
to the church. We believe it is essential to ask for regular
commitments which address the basic needs of the church. The
early church took care of the basics
by the people sharing everything they had, something that is
probably not practical with today's
lifestyle, but the concept provides the foundation for the
commitments we make today.
Acts
4:32-35 speaks clearly on the
subject: "All the believers were one in
heart and mind. No one claimed that
any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had.
With
gnat power the apostles continued to
testify to the resurrection of the Lord
Jesus, and much grace was upon them
all. There were no needy persons among them. For from time to time
those who owned lands or houses sold
them, brought the money from the sales
and put it at the apostles feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he
had
need."
So it should be with our weekly
tithes. We give them to be distributed
as necessary to take care of the basic needs of the church.
But in the same way as the apostles
realized there are special
needs, we should provide for them as
well. It is commonly held that
some of the most informative writing on the issue of stewardship
for the early church is found in Paul's two letters to the
church at Corinth. Therefore, it is
of particular note that when
Paul writes, "Each man should give what he has
decided in his heart to give, not
reluctantly
or under compulsion, for
God loves a cheerful giver. And God
is able to make all grace abound
to you, so that in all things at all
times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good
work" (2 Cor.9:7-8). And later, "You will be made rich in every way so
that you can be generous on every occasion,
and through us your generosity will
result in thanksgiving to God" (2
Cor.9:ll). Paul was actually
addressing the special gifts he wanted to take to
the church in Jerusalem!
In closing, let me refer to Tom
O'Brien's questions: "If Jesus walked
through the door right now ... would
he be really interested in our
investments and savings accounts?
Or, would we be held accountable for
the injustice in the world?"
Doing all we can to spread the good
news, acting with the conviction of our
faith, carrying out God's plan for each
of us as an important part of the plan,
is how we should address our
stewardship of our gifts - "our selves,
our time and our possessions, signs of
your gracious love."
From the Spring 1995 edition of
Faith in Action, the publication of the Lutheran Laity Movement for
Stewardship. At the time,
Lt. Col. David Penman, USMC, was stewardship chairman of
St. Peter Lutheran Church, Stafford,
Va.
© Copyright 1995, Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America.
This essay first appeared in the Spring 1995 issue of Faith
in Action. Articles in Faith in Action may be reproduced for use in ELCA
and ELCIC congregations provided each copy carries the note:
©
Copyright 1995, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Reprinted with permission.