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Augustine of Hippo: What do you want?

“It’s easy to want things from the Lord and yet not want the Lord Himself; as though the gift could ever be preferred to the Giver.”

Augustine (354-430) Bishop of Hippo, in The Westminster Collection of Christian Quotations, ed. Martin H. Mansur (Louisville: WJKP, 2001) 122.

Lately I have been praying for my used car to sell on Craigslist and my home to move on the real estate market. No movement on both fronts. I have come to realize that my focus has been off. That’s part of what I love about Augustine, his sermons and quotes help me think straight.

Father, I want You today. Or in the words of Matthew in his Gospel, I seek you first (6:33). Should you shower me with other gifts, well, I will endeavor to enjoy and share them as your Word instructs, but I choose to be content with You alone.

 

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Francis Quarles: Faith toward God and charity toward neighbor are inseparable

“Flatter not thyself in thy faith to God if thou wantest charity for thy neighbor; and think not thou hast charity for thy neighbor if thou wantest faith to God. Where they are not both together, they are both wanting: they are both dead if once divided.”

Francis Quarles (1592-1744) as recounted in The Christian Register on 26 November 1908, vol. 13: 1285. Quarles was an English poet known for his famous work, Emblems.

In modern terms, Quarles is saying Christ-followers must also be neighbor-lovers. The two ideas cannot be separated. My prayer this season of Lent is both that we grow in faith toward God and that we serve as conduits of God’s material and spiritual blessings to those around us, which includes the destitute and the undeserving.

Why? As we approach the cross we realize how destitute and undeserving we were when the generosity of God was extended toward us! Without this faith or understanding of grace, there can be no charity. With it, the potential for generosity and charity becomes limitless because the cross is for everyone!

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C.S. Lewis: What is charity?

‘Charity’ now means simply what used to be called ‘alms’–that is, giving to the poor. Originally it had a much wider meaning. (You can see how it got the modern sense. If a man has ‘charity’, giving to the poor is one of the most obvious things he does, and so people came to talk as if that were the whole of charity. In the same way, ‘rhyme’ is the most obvious thing about poetry, and so people come to mean by ‘poetry’ simply rhyme and nothing more.) Charity means ‘Love, in the Christian sense’. But love, in the Christian sense, does not mean an emotion. It is a state not of the feelings but of the will; that state of the will which we have naturally about ourselves, and must learn to have about other people.

C.S. Lewis in Studies in Words (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1960).

Lewis always has good things to say.

When I researched to see what he thought of alms, he again impressed, or rather, blessed me, and I pray his thoughts touch you. Charity is not merely giving to the poor, it is expressing love, and it is something we have to learn.

I pray this Lent has been a training ground for each of us to grow in charity, or rather, love.

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Pope Francis: What do you treasure and hold close to your hearts?

In a recent interview between Pope Francis and a group of young people, listen to how it concluded:

“When his guests said they were ready to ask the last question, the pope laughed, “Ah, the last! The last is always terrible.” They asked the pope to pose a question for them.

He said his question came from the Gospel, when Jesus says to not store up treasure on earth, but in heaven, “For where your treasure is, there also will your heart be.” The pope asked them: What do you treasure and hold close to your hearts?

Is it “power, money, pride or goodness, beauty, the desire to do good?” “It can be many things,” he said, and he asked them to find the answer for yourselves, alone, at home.”

Pope Francis in “Be Honest, discover what you hold dear to your heart” as reported by Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service, 4 April 2014.

When the pope had the opportunity to ask a group of young people anything, I love two things about his response. First, it came from the heart of the gospel. Second, he urged them to think honestly about what they were treasuring in their hearts.

So whether you are reading this meditation on your iPhone en route to work, in the privacy of your home, or elsewhere, take a moment to be honest and ask yourself: What do you treasure and hold close to your hearts?

Why do this? Where your treasure is, there also will your heart be. And Jesus cares about where your heart is.

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Sarah Kehrberg: Mercy and grace to me. Mercy and grace from me.

“I find gratitude to be the best antidote to swelling anger. In the past I’ve tried naming the things I’m supposed to: family, friends, health. I am thankful for all those things, but sometimes the rote list seems ineffective. It is tempting to believe I somehow deserve all those things. (I’m healthy because I eat right and exercise. I have friends because I’m a good friend in return. And so on.)…

I have learned I cannot offer genuine mercy and grace to others if I haven’t gratefully accepted it from God first. So when I feel anger rising or note its ongoing presence, I make a simple plea: Mercy and grace to me. Mercy and grace from me. A burden is always lifted.”

Sarah Kehrberg, author and frequent contributor to Mennonite World Review, from a column titled “Antidote to Anger” posted on 3 March 2014 and brought to my attention by Rebekah Burch Basinger.

This is going to be my new centering prayer when I feel like wringing someone’s neck for wronging me: “Mercy and grace to me. Mercy and grace from me.” How true is this! Only after we realize all God has extended to us, none of which we deserve, can we become generous conduits of mercy and grace. I have a lot to learn in this area. “Mercy and grace to me. Mercy and grace from me.”

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Halford Luccock: Has your pocket-book been baptized?

“You remember among the Franks, whole armies were sometimes given baptism at one stroke, and many warriors went into the water with their right hands held high so that they did not get wet. Then they could say, “This hand has never been baptized,” and they could swing their battle axes just as freely as ever. The modern counterpart of that partial baptism is seen in many people who have been baptized, all except their pocket-books. They held these high out of the water.”

Halford Luccock as recounted by Randy Frazee in The Connecting Church 2.0: Beyond Small Groups to Authentic Community (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2013) 134.

Has your pocket-book been baptized? Has it been cleansed of old man, pre-Christian thinking? Have you instead embraced the red letters of Jesus?

Jenni and I began really wrestling with this back in 2009 and it continues to emerge in conversations. It took us a good six months to muster the courage to re-align our thinking and practice linked to money with that which is Christian rather than what is accepted in this culture or even in the church today.

Why talk about this now? Someday each of us will give an account to God.

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Gerhard T. deBock: We must renew our minds before we can revise our financial practices

“The spirit of Mammon utters blasphemies such as “The Almighty Dollar” or “financial independence” or “I am self-sufficient” or “I am a self-made person.” In what way do statements like these [from our lips] reflect that our minds have not yet been renewed?

Mammon promises us those things that only God can give: security, significance, identity, independence, power, and freedom. Until we expose these as lies, what level of impact will changing our financial practices really make?”

Gerhard T. deBock in Simple Books: A Study Guide through the Principles and Practices of being a Steward of God’s Money entrusted to our Care (2010) 10.

Gerhard is a pastor. With passion, he exposes the lies that prevail in our culture as a basis for helping people reform their practices. Why go this route? Our actions always flow from our beliefs. If we shine light on the false narratives that prevail in our lives, that is the critical first step to change. Listen to yourself. Are you seeking anything from money that only God can provide?

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Randy Alcorn: How we see the present shapes how we handle possessions

“The single greatest contributor to our inability to see money and possessions in their true light is our persistent failure to see our present lives through the lens of eternity.”

Randy Alcorn in Money, Possessions and Eternity revised and updated (Tyndale: Wheaton, 2003) 108.

I wear reading glasses. I keep them on a lanyard around my neck so they are always with me. They also catch a lot of dust and get dirty as a result, so I often get to clean them. There is nothing better than looking through clear lenses when it is time to read. Imagine having lenses that could help us see everything, including money and possessions, in light of eternity. How would such glasses change how we live? What would change for you?

Paul’s words to the Christians in Rome recorded in Romans 12:1-2 ring in my mind on this point. When we choose not to be conformed to the world but transformed by renewing our minds with truth, we are able to literally “scrutinize” or in plain terms “see” or “discern” what is the good and acceptable will of God. Want to see things clearly in light of eternity? Look through the lens of Scripture rather than culture!

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William F. High: We are called to live a freely generous life

“As followers of Christ, we are called to live a freely generous life. God uses generosity as a catalyst for healing, an agent of change, and a builder of faith. Even the smallest gifts have the power to affect eternity and radically transform people’s lives. In His Word, God tells us to store up treasure where moth and rust cannot destroy and where thieves cannot break in and steal.

Generosity is a lifestyle of giving your resources, your expertise, and your love to influence eternity. We may recognize this call to give, but in the chaos of the everyday, we are tempted to accumulate stuff and hold on to our lives just as they are. We often lose sight of the generous life, and we can’t imagine giving our money or our time without calculating what it may cost.

However, if you desire to leave a legacy for the next generation and to see see people’s lives transformed during your lifetime, if you want your business and your ministry to count for all eternity, take a risk and plunge into the generous life. Just be prepared, this journey will change you as you discover true life is found when you give yours away.”

William F. High in Stories of the Generous Life: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Generosity (WinePress Publishing, 2013) xv-xvi.

If stories inspire you, this collection is for you. Read it and you will be blessed. As you explore the stories of others, may you discover true life as you learn to give yourself away.

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George Stack: Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are not optional for followers of Jesus

“We become more truly like Jesus if we are not preoccupied or identified with material possessions…Fasting and abstinence, Lenten alms, giving to charity. These are not optional extras for the follower of Jesus. They are the very condition of being his disciple.”

George Stack, Archbishop of Cardiff, at CBC on 2 March 2014.

I cannot get the words of Jesus from Matthew 6 out of my mind this Lent. “When you give alms…” (6:2), “when you pray…” (6:5), and “when you fast…” (6:15). Jesus explains what it looks like to follow Him.

Recently, I appreciated how candid the Archbishop of Cardiff depicts these activities as “the very condition of being” a disciple of Jesus. If you think they are optional extras, perhaps revisit Matthew 6.

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