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Amy Carmichael: Trust is the safest posture

“As the needs of all living things must, we have proved that it is a very safe thing to trust in the Lord our God.”

Amy Carmichael (1867-1951) in Gold Cord: The Story of a Fellowship (Fort Washington: CLC, 1996) 15.

As generosity is rooted in trusting God to provide, growth in generosity can only be nurtured by learning to trust more fully, more deeply. Is there any aspect of life that you find it difficult to entrust to God? Ask God to help you in that area (cf. Mark 9:24).

Carmichael “proved” the trustworthiness of God in her day, and that’s one of our aims in ours. Why? More is caught than taught. The reason we must model the life of trust in God is so that the world may see and know that He is faithful.

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George Müller: Trust in God as your banker!

“Aug. 17, 1883…Think of this, dear reader! Day by day about 2,100 persons are to be provided for in the Orphan Institution…and £10 was all that was in hand to do this. You see we are just in the same position in which we were 46 years since as to funds. God is our banker. In Him we trust, and on Him we draw by faith…God is pleased continually to vary His mode of dealing with us, in order that we may not be tempted to trust in donors, or in circumstances, but in Him alone, and to keep our eye fixed upon Him. This, by His grace, we are enabled to do, and our hearts are kept at peace.”

George Müller (1805-1898) in Answers to Prayer ed. by E.C. Brooks.

I had the privilege of flying all the way around the world in only six days. No kidding. If I could have, I would have trailed a banner behind the plane that proclaimed these words (in the spirit of Müller): “Trust in God as your banker!”

Is that how you live and serve? Do you trust God for your daily provision? We find that sometimes He gives us work. Often it results in more than enough, so we are positioned to share. Other times it’s less than enough, so He provides through other channels.

Thankfully God varies His mode of dealing with us to keep us on our toes, or rather, on our knees. That’s the posture He taught us to take (cf. Matthew 6:9-13), and we have found as a family that there’s no other way to live!

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Hudson Taylor: The impact of generosity

“The less I spent on myself and the more I gave to others, the fuller of happiness and blessing did my soul become.”

Hudson Taylor (1832-1905) missionary to China, as recounted by Randy Alcorn in Treasure Principle (Sisters: Multnomah 2001) 21.

Together with my long-time friend, Chi-Chung Keung, it’s been amazing to spend time with Chinese missionaries and church planters, both indigenous servants of Christ and internationals who have ministered in Asia for many years.

They give of themselves and their resources sacrificially, and the joy of the Lord shines from their lives. They have inspired Chi-Chung Keung and I to serve and support the growing church in China together and rally others to join us.

What opportunities has God put in front of you and your friends, that if you spent less on yourselves and served together 2×2, would return a blessing to your souls and touch countless lives for Christ Jesus? You might become the next Hudson Taylor!

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Martin Buber: Give the greatest gift

“Meeting a person [is] a great thing, but it’s not the greatest thing. The greatest thing any person can do for another is to confirm the deepest thing in him, in her–to take the time and have the discernment to see what’s most deeply there, most fully that person, and then confirm it by recognizing and encouraging it.”

Martin Buber, Jewish Theologian as quoted by Eugene Peterson in Leap Over a Wall: Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (New York: HarperCollins, 1997) 54. Special thanks to my friend and brother, J.D. Walt, for encouraging me to check out this book in his blog!

I have met some incredible Christ followers on this trip to Chiang Mai and Hong Kong. In the words of Buber, meeting them has been a great thing, but I pray by the Holy Spirit that by listening to them and celebrating how God is at work in their lives, that I have been able to affirm their giftedness and participation in God’s work.

Does someone come to mind for you today along these lines? Can you think of specific people that you could reach out and confirm the deepest thing in their lives? Follow the leading of the Spirit and give them this gift the next time you see them.

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David Livingstone: Let’s show our attachment to the cause of Christ

It is said that David Livingstone’s made this statement in response to hearing of the spiritual needs in China.

“It is my desire to show my attachment to the cause of Him who died for me by devoting my life to His service.”

David Livingstone (1813-1873) as quoted by William Garden Blaikie in The Life of David Livingstone (London: John Murray, 1903) 12.

Like Barnabas and Paul sojourned together encouraging Christians around the ancient world, Chi-Chung Keung and I traveled from Hong Kong to Thailand to meet missionaries and church planters who have dedicated their lives in service to Christ in China. May God give us eyes to see, ears to hear, and a heart to discern how we might best serve and support them.

Halfway around the world my daughter, Sophie, is visiting Asbury College in Wilmore, KY, with my wife, Jenni, and sister-in-law, Joanna. Why consider a school like that? I am thankful that she desires to study creative writing and performing arts in service to Jesus Christ with the same zeal that Livingstone exhibited as he put his medical skills to work for God.

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Adoniram Judson: Trust in God from day to day

“Never lay up money for yourselves or your families. Trust in God from day to day, and verily you shall be fed.”

Adoniram Judson (1788-1850) missionary to Burma (Myanmar) in “Advice to Missionary Candidates to the Foreign Missionary Association of the Hamilton Literary and Theological Institution” June 25, 1832, in The Life of Adoniram Judson, Volume 3, by Edward Judson (New York: Anson D. F. Randolph & Company) 577.

I arrived safely in Hong Kong today with my good friend, Chi-Chung Keung. We will meet church planters this weekend that serve God throughout Asia. If they ask my advice, I will likely share something similar to this statement that Judson gave with nine other brief statements to missionary candidates. Why? There’s no other way to live than to depend on God from day to day.

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William Carey: Christians must use means for the conversion of the heathen

“I wish with all my heart, that everyone who loves our Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity, would in some way or other engage in [missions]…In respect to contributions for defraying the expenses, money will doubtless be wanting; and suppose the rich were to embark a portion of that wealth over which God has made them stewards, in this important undertaking, perhaps there are few ways that would turn to a better account at last. Nor ought it to be confined to the rich; if persons in more moderate circumstances were to devote a portion…of their annual increase to the Lord…here would not only be enough to support the ministry of the gospel at home, and to encourage village preaching in our respective neighbourhoods, but to defray the expenses of carrying the gospel into the heathen world.”

William Carey in “An Enquiry into the Obligations of Christians to Use Means for the Conversion of the Heathen” (Leicester: Ann Ireland, 1792) 84-85.

Over the next week I will be traveling to Hong Kong and Thailand with Pioneers Hong Kong. Consequently, the focus of my meditations over the next week will center around comments from noteworthy missionaries and Christian servants who spoke of the connection between the resources in our stewardship and the deployment of the same toward missions. The apostle Paul described this engagement as “partnership in the gospel” (cf. Philippians 1:3-6)

Few make this connection more clearly than Carey, whose two points are both profound and pointed. First, he argues that “there are few ways” funds could be used better. Seriously, can you think of a better use of funds than helping a spiritually dead person find life in Jesus Christ? Second, he says that if the rich and those of moderate means all participated, then money would not be an issue at all, in the work of the gospel both at home and abroad.

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Ronald Vallet: What is stewardship?

“Stewardship is nothing less than a complete lifestyle, a total accountability and responsibility before God. Stewardship is what we do after we say we believe, that is, after we give our love, loyalty, and trust to God, from whom each and every aspect of our lives comes as a gift.”

Ronald Vallet in “The Church: Its Mission and Its Funding” in Journal of Stewardship (Indianapolis: Ecumenical Center for Stewardship Studies, 1994) as recounted by Wesley K. Willmer in God & Your Stuff: The Vital Link Between Your Possessions and Your Soul (Colorado Springs: NavPress, 2002) 53.

I am working on an outline that I will co-teach with mentor and friend, Wes Willmer, so I was re-reading parts of his classic book, God & Your Stuff: The Vital Link Between Your Possessions and Your Soul, which is must-read if you have not already read it.

I appreciate Vallet’s definition because when we understand our role as stewards and embrace the attitude that everything is a gift, it changes how we interact with God, with others, and how we handle all that God has placed in our stewardship. We take a step toward becoming grateful, generous stewards.

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Alexander Schmemann: Everything is a gift for the life of the world

“All that exists is God’s gift to man, and all exists to make God known to man, to make man’s life communion with God. It is divine love made food, made life for man. God blesses everything He creates, and in biblical language, this means He makes all creation the sign and means of His presence and wisdom, love and revelation.”

Alexander Schmemann (1921-1983) in For the Life of the World: Sacraments and Orthodoxy (Crestwood: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2000) 14.

Tonight Jenni and I will begin attending a seven-week video series with couples at our church called “For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles” inspired, at least in part, by this classic book. Schmemann’s thesis is that everything is a gift from God to man to be enjoyed and shared for the life of the world. The video series presents this idea with contemporary genius! Schmemann does it with celebration and caution: spelling out the implications of both living and not living in accordance with this reality.

Schmemann adds “as long as we live after the fashion of this world, as long, in other words, as we make our life an end in itself, no meaning and no goal can stand, for they are dissolved in death. It is only when we give up freely, totally, unconditionally, the self-sufficiency of our life, when we put all its meaning in Christ, that the ‘newness of life’ – which means a new possession of the world – is given to us. The world then truly becomes the sacrament of Christ’s presence, the growth of the Kingdom and of life eternal” (90).

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Jan Johnson: Die to self

“To die to self is to set aside what we want in this moment and to focus instead on loving God with everything we’ve got and valuing others as highly as we value ourselves (Matt. 22:37-39). This moves us away from self-centeredness and closer to becoming open-hearted followers of Christ who care deeply for others. It’s much easier to pay attention to the concerns, interests, and needs of people when our own interests no longer consume us.”

Jan Johnson in “Discovering Much More: Moving Away from Self-centeredness to Caring Deeply for Others” in Christian Leader magazine, January/February 2015.

What consumes your thoughts? I’m serious. What stuff dominated your mind yesterday? The day before? God desires us to think about Him and those around us. Do we? Why or why not? And if we are honest with ourselves, what do our answers to these questions reveal about us?

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