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Janet T. Jamieson and Philip D. Jamieson: Money-talk

But since you excel in everything — in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in complete earnestness and in the love we have kindled in you — see that you also excel in this grace of giving. 2 Corinthians 8:7

“In our experience, many if not most pastors would avoid talking about giving altogether if they could. There are a number of reasons for this: (1) Money-talk does not fit one’s vocational understanding, (2) there is the bad example of television evangelists who seem (and do) constantly ask for money in order to continue the ministry, and (3) some clergy have a fear of rejection by congregation members… But we firmly believe that money-talk is an important part of the vocation, and… Christian leadership demands risking complaints and even rejection.”

Janet T. Jamieson and Philip D. Jamieson in Ministry and Money: A Practical Guide for Pastors (Louisville: WJKP, 2009) 165.

The Jamiesons paint an accurate picture. Most pastors and ministry administrators have the disconnect that money-talk is part of their vocation because they did not learn about it in seminary. Others don’t want to be associated with the TV evangelists. Some are just plain scared.

While at Sioux Falls Seminary this week, it’s been a privilege to interact with one of their administrators, Nathan Helling. He actively champions money-talk conversations at his local church. It’s been refreshing to be at a school where money-talk is both bold and biblical!

What about your church or ministry setting? To assist your money-talk, check out the resource that Greg Henson, the president of Sioux Falls Seminary, helped me produce and the one he commends to everyone his seminary serves, Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living.

Also, I’d appreciate your prayers as I head to Pittsburgh today to speak at an “Economic Concerns Facing Future Ministers” Forum hosted by the Association of Theological Schools. Pray for favor as I share about Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches. Thank you.

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Gemini Allen E. Ysao: Debt-free community

Dear friend, you are faithful in what you are doing for the brothers and sisters, even though they are strangers to you. They have told the church about your love. Please send them on their way in a manner that honors God. It was for the sake of the Name that they went out, receiving no help from the pagans. We ought therefore to show hospitality to such people so that we may work together for the truth. 3 John 5-8

“I want to improve my giving by saving a bigger portion of my income to bless and help others and to support different events and missions in spreading God’s Word… I’ve learned that we have to be wise in spending the money that has been entrusted to us by God, and budgeting is one of the effective tools that we can use to map out our income and expenses. Some people are enslaved to debt because of poor budgeting; they live beyond their means… If all Christians will understand the importance of budgeting, we will be able to grow what has been given to us, and it will be possible to have a debt-free community, generous community, community that abounds with love and a community that is wide open to God for service.”

Gemini Allen E. Ysao in “Meditation Journal #7” for my online course, Faith and Finances, in the MBA in Biblical Stewardship and Christian Management program at Asian Theological Seminary in Quezon City, near Manila, in the Philippines.

Notice that Gemini does not desire to apply budgeting skills for himself. He wants to use them to build a debt-free community that “abounds with love” and that is “wide open to God for service.” I designed Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches for helping leaders like him (and readers like you) to shepherd generous communities. The accompanying workbook, Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living, is for everyone, to equip God’s people around the world to grow as individuals or in small groups.

Today I get to team teach at Sioux Falls Seminary with Greg Henson, a dear friend who serves as president there. Pray for the wisdom for us as we lead students to explore what it means to serve as faithful stewards of congregations and organizations. We are testing the content for a forthcoming book that offers a biblical mindset on governance and oversight. We hope to learn from the students in discussion even as they learn from us. Make it so, Lord Jesus.

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Justin Hi Guo Shun: Faith-building exercise

Therefore, since we have so great a cloud of witnesses surrounding us, let us also lay aside every encumbrance and the sin which so easily entangles us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, fixing our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, who for the joy set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Hebrews 12:1-2

“I need to cease the gratification from short-term things but set my eyes upon the author and finisher of our faith and life. I need also to sacrifice which is a more radical discipline than simplicity to meet our needs rather than wants, it is a faith-building exercise that commits us to entrust ourselves to God’s care. The greatest adversary of love to God is not His enemies but His gifts. And the most deadly appetites are not from the poison of evil, but for the simple pleasures of the earth. For when these replaces an appetite for God Himself, the idolatry is scarcely recognizable, and almost incurable.”

Justin Hi Guo Shun in “Meditation Journal #9” for my online course, Faith and Finances, in the MBA in Biblical Stewardship and Christian Management program at Asian Theological Seminary in Quezon City, near Manila, in the Philippines.

Notice Justin’s heart as it comes out. In going through Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches he has resolved to stop focusing on things and instead, set his eyes on Christ! What happens when we do that? Our faith grows stronger as we realize (experientially) God’s wondrous care for us.

He also acknowledges our greatest adversary as His gifts. In other words, we are prone, like God’s people in the days of Moses, to worship the gift of the golden calf rather than the God who gave that gift (cf. Exodus 32). Our appetite for the simple pleasures of the earth replaces our appetite for God.

Want to go through these lessons as individuals or in small groups? Check out Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living. This resource was designed, in Justin’s words, to help you both identify and cure our proclivity to desire things over God and to position you, as God’s stewards, to be found good and faithful.

I am Sioux Falls Seminary today and excited to deliver copies of these two resources to them. I would appreciate your prayers for fruitful time of teaching and discussion with students and non-profit ministry administrators. Thank you.

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Ramchand John Pribhdas: Collective obedience

This service that you perform is not only supplying the needs of the Lord’s people but is also overflowing in many expressions of thanks to God. Because of the service by which you have proved yourselves, others will praise God for the obedience that accompanies your confession of the gospel of Christ, and for your generosity in sharing with them and with everyone else. 2 Corinthians 9:12-13

“God blesses me so I can bless others. My giving is no longer based on percentage, but my responsibility is to give in proportion to my income. My giving is now motivated by love rather than duty or instruction. The prompting of the Holy Spirit, the burden placed by God in my heart and the love of Christ that constrains me are what motivate me to give. It is my responsibility to respond to these promptings not to free myself from guilt but to further experience the joy of aligning myself with God. I take it as my responsibility to give and share and help in any way I can in order to put a smile on my brother and on my sister and on my Father’s face…

From a selfish, greedy and idolatrous person, Christ has changed me into a generous person who shows love to needy brethren through the Holy Spirit working in me… Also, because of my frailty, I may be tempted to be self-centered at times and ignore the needs of others but being in a community and being stirred up by the collective efforts and burden by my fellow believers, the Spirit of love awakens me and stirs up in me again the generous spirit that God wants all His children to have. So in relation to this, my role is to always be part of this community or church and join the collective obedience of the brethren in responding to the call of God to help the needy.”

Ramchand John Pribhdas in “Meditation Journal #3” for my online course, Faith and Finances, in the MBA in Biblical Stewardship and Christian Management program at Asian Theological Seminary in Quezon City, near Manila, in the Philippines.

Want to go through this course? Click to learn about Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches or to order a copy for your church or school. Also check out the accompanying workbook I wrote for individuals or small groups, Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living. Both are hot of the press from Seedbed!

John works for Compassion Philippines as an accountant, and I am thrilled he is taking my class. He’s getting more than an MBA; he is taking hold of life in God’s economy. Specifically, the impact of “collective obedience” really resonated with me as I read his journal assignments.

At work, John’s collective aim with his colleagues is to serve the poor in a way that is Christ-centered, child-focused, and church-based. What’s encouraging to me is how his class work is stirring a movement among his colleagues at the office. When he shares what he is learning with them in the form of Scriptures and quotes from various writers, they are getting excited together about playing their part as catalysts of collective obedience.

Jenni and I return to Colorado this morning, while Sophie and Peter head off to worship at Rise City Church in Lakeside, California. We are thankful they are part of a community aimed at collective obedience in service to Christ, one another, and the needy around them.

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Bryandel Nozares: Living testimony

The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full. John 10:10

“Jesus was contrasting what He offers with what the devil offers. The thief mentioned here speaks of the enemy of our soul, Satan. He comes only to steal, kill, and destroy. But Christ has come that we might have life and that we might have it more abundantly. And there we have a choice. The same could be said of a lot of people today. They have the house, the car, the spouse, and the kids. They have the career. They have money in the bank. They have everything going the way that things ought to go to supposedly live life to its fullest. But there is that is something still lacking. They are still lacking life…

My role is to be a living testimony to people that Jesus Christ is the only one who satisfies my soul, my great joy, my delight, my treasure and more than enough for me to live in a day. And there is an abundant life in His presence and I can bear good fruit through abiding in Him. My responsibilities include becoming a good steward of the assets God has given me, having a commitment to biblical giving in missions, ministry and churches, and even to the poor, loving service and Christ-like living.”

Bryandel Nozares Dean in “Meditation Journal #2” for my online course, Faith and Finances, in the MBA in Biblical Stewardship and Christian Management program at Asian Theological Seminary in Quezon City, near Manila, in the Philippines.

As I shared yesterday, click to check out Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches or to order a copy for your church or school. Also check out the accompanying workbook I wrote for individuals or small groups, Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living. Both of these books are hot of the press from Seedbed!

Today is the second in a series of posts that feature meditations from my current cohort of students. Bryandel is a vibrant young lady from the Philippines who lives in Tuscany, Italy. She provides care to a couple in a villa where she has lived for the last few years. She’s doing her degree from a distance while serving as a “living testimony” where God has planted her.

Last night, Jenni and I flew to San Diego to see our daughter, Sophie, and her boyfriend, Peter, who are both studying at San Diego Christian College (which is a great school, pictured above). Sophie has the role of stage manager for the fall production, California Bonez, and we have not seen her in nearly two months, so we are excited to visit for the weekend.

Sophie is a junior. She serves as a resident assistant, helping a building full of her peers grasp abundant life in Christ, while also serving as a writing tutor assisting students with their papers. Peter is also a junior. He’s interning at a local church and enjoying that mentoring as he hopes to serve as a pastor in the future. We got to have dinner with them last night. It was great!

Why mention Sophie and Peter today? They exemplify the abundant life that Bryandel celebrates. Abundant life is not found by living in exotic places like Tuscany or San Diego. Many people think that. It’s only found in Jesus Christ, and one of our greatest acts of generosity is simply bearing fruit and abiding in Him wherever we are, so that others may find life in Him too.

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Dean Esabillio Ferrez: Beacon of hope

Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. He chose to give us birth through the word of truth, that we might be a kind of firstfruits of all he created. James 1:17-18

“God is the giver of all good gifts. His heart has always been to share His very life with us and this was perfectly demonstrated when He created a world that was designed to express His heart of generosity. This is contrary to what many people, even believers, think – that God is someone whose interest is to take away from His children and that His pleasure is to watch humans prove with their sacrifices just how much they love Him.

My role is to be a receiver of the life that God wants me to have in Jesus. I am to constantly remind myself that I am God’s beneficiary and that at no point in my life should I declare that I am a self-made man. I am to see all of the other “lesser” gifts that I have in the context of my relationship with God which is the greatest gift of all. I am to shun the notion that I can use these gifts apart from Him… My role is to be a faithful steward whose life is characterized by obedience to God’s commands regarding possessions. I am to avoid pathways that lead to idolatry, selfishness and materialism.

It is my responsibility to appropriate God’s grace in areas of my life where I have failed as a steward. It is also my role to be a beacon of hope to others who are poor – spiritually or otherwise, by becoming a conduit of God’s gifts so that people in my sphere of influence can experience through me the kind of life that Jesus offers them.”

Dean Esabillio Ferrez in “Meditation Journal #1” for my online course, Faith and Finances, in the MBA in Biblical Stewardship and Christian Management program at Asian Theological Seminary in Quezon City, near Manila, in the Philippines.

Click to learn more about Faith and Finances: A Stewardship Curriculum for Schools and Churches or to order a copy today for your church or school. Also check out the accompanying workbook I developed for individuals or small groups, Good and Faithful: Ten Stewardship Lessons for Everyday Living. Both of these resources are hot of the press from Seedbed!

Few places have experienced tragedies worse than the Philippines. They’ve had earthquakes, typhoons, and other storms wash through their islands and leave a wake of destruction. I’ve been blessed to teach a wonderful cohort of students there this month, so over the next few days, I’d like for you to hear from the hearts of a few of them.

Dean celebrates the good gifts of God and our role as stewards. His point about being a “beacon of hope” struck me. In a world filled with destruction, many blame God. Instead, Dean acknowledges all God’s gifts, our role as stewards, and specifically our responsibility to serve as beacons of hope for the poor and needy as a conduit of God’s gifts.

Father, bless Dean today as these truths take root in his heart and cause them to bear fruit in his life. Make this so in the lives of everyone reading this so that in a world filled with troubles, we can make You known as good and faithful conduits who share Your love with those who need it most. Do this by your Holy Spirit we ask in the name of Jesus. Amen.

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Douglas M. Jones: The way of sharing

Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. Colossians 3:5

“The way of the Trinity is the way of sharing. Father, Son, and Spirit live in sacrifice and self-denial toward one another. The way of greed, the way of Mammon, focuses on the health of one part of a community, while letting others go without clothing and water. The way of greed is not the way of sharing. It is the way of self-interest, not self-denial. In that sense, then, the way of greed and self-interest depict the life of another god or gods. Greed is idolatry. God’s people are supposed to image the life of the Trinity on earth, and when instead, we say we follow the Trinity but actually build communities that politely neglect those in need, we actually image….a social system grounded in self-interest.”

Douglas M. Jones in Dismissing Jesus: How We Evade the Way of the Cross (Eugene: Cascade, 2013) 69.

In the wake of hurricanes and other disasters, Jones helped me see why some people get help and others don’t. The social system of the world is grounded in self-interest. Who is to blame? All of us. It’s the product of our earthly nature, which is why followers of Christ must put that thinking to death.

That’s a powerful word picture. How do we do that? Think of it this way. The Apostle Paul tells us literally to mortify or kill greed, which is the desire for money and things, because if we don’t kill it, it will kill us. If it is present in our lives it will lead us to allegiance to Mammon rather than God. What’s this got to do with generosity? 

Generosity is the key to putting greed to death. Followers of Christ put the earthly nature of self-interest to death by living openhanded lives as workers, whose labor meets there personal needs and who deploy any surplus income as sharers with a keen eye for others in need, who do not have clothing, or who need food and water.

This is precisely what the Apostle Paul instructed all the churches to do when some people were starving in the first century (cf. 1 Corinthians 16:1-4). Ask God today what it means for you today to stop politely neglecting those in need and instead walk in the way of sharing.

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Jamie D. Aten and David M. Boan: Solutions

Instruct them to do good, to be rich in good works, to be generous and ready to share. 1 Timothy 6:18

“In the event of a major disaster, it is common for Christian disaster relief organizations to deploy to communities significantly affected to provide aid and organizational support. Many of these service groups have identified community needs and have built the expertise to provide solutions. Thus, you might also consider working with or through one of these groups.”

Jamie D. Aten and David M. Boan in Disaster Ministry Handbook (Downers Grove: IVP, 2016) 87.

Want to help your church be “ready to share” and help “provide solutions” in the wake of tragedies? Check out this resource to help prepare your congregation, get practical guidance for offering physical, emotional and spiritual care, and find resources and worksheets for emergency preparedness.

Not sure what organizations to support in the wake of hurricanes and other difficulties? I urge people to visit ServantMatch on the ECFA website. For example, you can locate ECFA-accredited organizations that offer hurricane relief. Visitors to the site can scroll through the list and pray about supporting one of the ministries.

What is the difference between giving aid to an ECFA-accredited organization versus other organizations? ECFA members annually demonstrate compliance with seven standards of responsible stewardship. That means gifts for crisis situations go where they are supposed to go. You can trust organizations with the ECFA seal!

As I serve part-time as ECFA International Liaison, reply to this email if you want to to know more about helping your church or ministry become an ECFA-accredited member. The ECFA seal enhances trust and rallies people to participate with you in God’s work through giving and service.

And I shot the new meditations photo yesterday on a three-hour fly fishing break with friends from Milwaukee. There was snow up in the mountains, but the sun was shining brightly. God blessed us with 16 trout. As my son Sammy says, “A fish is a glimpse of God’s extravagance, the only person enjoying that fish before we caught and released it was God.” Enjoy the view.

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Roberto Clemente: 3,000

The faithful love of the Lord never ends! His mercies never cease. Great is His faithfulness; His mercies begin afresh each morning. Lamentations 3:22-23

Today marks the 3,000th daily meditation. To celebrate, let’s honor the memory of the generosity of Roberto Clemente (1934-1972), a major league baseball player who was known for his charity work. He reached the milestone of exactly 3,000 hits in 18 seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Only 30 other players have reached that mark. 

The Baseball Almanac ascribes this quote to Clemente, “Any time you have an opportunity to make a difference in this world and you don’t, then you are wasting your time on earth.” Clemente did not waste his time and literally died trying to make a difference in this world for people who were in great need.

After an earthquake on 23 December 1972 left many in need in Managua, Nicaragua, his plane, overloaded with aid by some 4,200 pounds crashed into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after take-off from Puerto Rico on 31 December 1972. Clemente is also quoted as saying, “I want to be remembered as a ballplayer who gave all he had to give.”

I never dreamed I’d post 3,000 daily meditations, and I pray I am able to post more than 3,000 more in the future. But way more important than that, I pray that God’s faithfulness empowers each of us to leave a similar charitable legacy as Clemente, so we are remembered for our skill in our work and our Christian generosity toward others.

And there’s never been a better time for it. Hurricanes, earthquakes, wars and other tragedies cause many to suffer, but as my brother, Dr. David Hoag, president of Warner University, whose campus was hit by Hurricane Irma, recently told me, the poor suffer far worse because in their poverty, the crisis wipes them out. Getting going again is far more difficult.

Let’s resolve to follow Clemente’s example. Offer a helping hand to a neighbor in need according to your ability. Send financial assistance or teams of workers from your church to aid those who have been wiped out. Let’s be known as Christ followers who make a difference by giving all we have to give, including our lives as an offering.

Father in heaven, thanks for 3,000 daily meditations. I’m grateful for the Scriptures and for the inspiring and often convicting quotes You have set before me to contemplate and share. Empower us by your Holy Spirit to make a difference on this earth for you. Help us not waste a day but leave a generous legacy! Make it so we pray in the name of Jesus. Amen.

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Tim Keller: Identity

Now may our Lord Jesus Christ Himself and God our Father, who loved us and through grace gave us eternal comfort and good hope, comfort your hearts and strengthen them in every good work and word. 2 Thessalonians 2:16-17

“When you make your work your identity … if you’re successful it destroys you because it goes to your head. If you’re not successful it destroys you because it goes to your heart — it destroys your self-worth … Faith gives you an identity that’s not in work or accomplishment, and that gives you insulation against the weather changes. If you’re successful, you stay humble. If you’re not successful, you have some ballast.”

Tim Keller as cited by interviewer, Joseph Sunde, in “Timothy Keller on Work as Service vs. Idolatry” in the Acton Institute Blog dated 12 December 2012.

My weekend men’s retreat at Camp Spofford on Faith & Work wrapped up nicely, but we had flight complications, so Jenni and I were stuck in Hartford, Connecticut, last night. Lord willing, we will return safely home to Colorado on an early flight this morning.

As today marks the start of another work week, I want to remind you to place your identity in Christ as a basis for serving as a generous worker. If your identity is in your work, it will destroy you, but when it is Christ, you are positioned for generous service empowered by the grace and strength of God.

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