Joe Kapolyo: Urgency and Support

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Joe Kapolyo: Urgency and Support

Do not get any gold or silver or copper to take with you in your belts—no bag for the journey or extra shirt or sandals or a staff, for the worker is worth his keep. Matthew 10:9-10

“The disciples were to travel light so that they could get on with the task and not worry about material provisions. This sense of urgency may have come from Jesus’ own sense of the shortness of his time on earth. Yet perhaps all those who engage in mission should have this sense of urgency, for we do not know when the end will come. The Twelve were not to worry about their material needs, for those who benefited from their ministries were expected to support them by supplying what they needed so they could concentrate on their work. This principles still applies today.”

Joe Kapolyo in Africa Bible Commentary: A One-Volume Commentary Written by 70 African Scholars, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006) 1157-58.

This next week I am heading on GTP trip to Egypt from 1-17 December 2020.

God has opened some fantastic doors of opportunity with NABLA Initiative to help representatives from 20+ ministries understand the biblical and practical value of standards and start the pathway toward accreditation. I will also co-facilitate four other sets of meetings over that timeframe. It’s a really good kind of busy.

While traveling, I will also be praying that those I have invited to support GTP will do so before year-end.

Perhaps you can identify with this feeling? God has opened urgent doors for ministry, and you could be tempted to focus on raising resources instead of ministering. Or maybe you are a supporter? Many are asking for gifts and you are not sure which efforts to support.

Sure, I’d love for each meditations reader to give to GTP, but do so only from this perspective.

Think about all the people that minister to you, starting with your church and others. Look at what you have and deploy resources to all those areas. Don’t hold back. Give generously so God’s workers can concentrate on their work and trust God to supply your needs. He wants all of us to travel light through life.

Soon I will start packing once I hear I have negative COVID test and a GO sign to travel.

 

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Paul John Isaak: Storing and Independence or Sharing and Interdependence

Then he said, “This is what I’ll do. I will tear down my barns and build bigger ones, and there I will store my surplus grain.” And I’ll say to myself, “You have plenty of grain laid up for many years. Take life easy; eat, drink and be merry.” But God said to him, ‘You fool! This very night your life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what you have prepared for yourself?” This is how it will be with whoever stores up things for themselves but is not rich toward God. Luke 12:18-21

“The wealthy farmer, who thinks that he need not fear shortage of harvests for many years, is a man who wants to live without God and his fellow humans. But God’s comment to him is you fool, reminding us that a fool is a person who lives without God. Instead of sharing his blessings with God and humanity, he decides to store the crops as a security for an early retirement and a life of ease. So he tore down his old barns and built new and bigger ones. The treasure in the barns would be his lifelong security.

He is completely self-centered, separated from God and others by his love for earthly possessions. He falsely assumes that human life can be measured and secured by wealth, and regards his life and property as his own. In doing this he fails to honor the doctrine that tress, rivers, mountains, forests, birds, night and day, and everything within the creation speaks a godlike language, praises God, and should be used with awe and reverence.

God has created us as human beings who are meant to be interdependent, to live in a fellowship. By his actions, this man denies the principle, which is well illustrated in the following story:

‘There once was a man who was a staunch churchgoer and a deeply committed Christian. He supported most of the activities of the local church. And then, for no apparent reason he stopped attending church and became just a hanger on. His minster visited him one wintry evening. He found him sitting before a splendid fire with red glowing coals, radiating lovely warmth around the room. The minister sat quietly with his former parishioner gazing into the fire. Then he stooped with the tongs, removed one of those red glowing coals from the fire and put it on the pavement. The inevitable happened. That glowing coal gradually lost its heat, and turned in a while into a grey lump of cold ashes. The minister did not say a word. He got up and walked away. On the following Sunday, the old man turned up in church.’

A solitary Christian is a contradiction in terms. As human beings we are meant to live harmoniously with God, with our fellow human beings, and with the rest of God’s creation. Artificial barriers that separate human beings on the basis of economic status, gender, race, or age are contrary to God’s will. Our souls can only relax, eat, drink, and be merry together with all other human souls in the presence of God.”

Paul John Isaak in Africa Bible Commentary: A One-Volume Commentary Written by 70 African Scholars, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006) 1255.

It’s Black Friday. Merchants in the USA and many other countries will try to entice us to buy many things. They will tell us that life consists in the abundance of possessions. They will say that security is found in independent living, and that storing up treasures for ourselves is the wise course to take in crisis.

Don’t be fooled. Instead, I pray this powerful story convicts everyone to put their coal back in the fire. I pray each of us chooses sharing and interdependence. And I pray our Friday is filled with sweet fellowship with God and people, and that our lives exhibit gratitude and generosity.

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Tewoldemedhin Habtu: Paradoxical

24 One person gives freely, yet gains even more;another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty. 25 A generous person will prosper; whoever refreshes others will be refreshed. 26 People curse the one who hoards grain, but they pray God’s blessing on the one who is willing to sell. 27 Whoever seeks good finds favor, but evil comes to one who searches for it. Proverbs 11:24-27

“Next, we come to another cluster of proverbs, this time on the topic of generosity. 11:24 appears to be paradoxical — how can giving away wealth increase wealth? — but the paradox is resolved if we remember that the Lord is the source of wealth and the one administering justice (see Matthew 16:25; Luke 6:38). 11:25 is a synthetic proverb, developing further in the second line, the idea mentioned in the first line. What is being commended in these verses is sharing one’s resources with others. Hoarding and selfishness are condemned. 11:26 brings this into a sharp focus. The word ‘sell’ suggests that what is going on here is speculation at the expense of others. Hubbard says, ‘This saying assumes that normal business practices were being suspended for some devious purpose of the seller’. While 11:27 does not specifically mention generosity, similar principles apply in this verse. As Kidner says, ‘What you seek for others, you will get yourself.'”

Tewoldemedhin Habtu in Africa Bible Commentary: A One-Volume Commentary Written by 70 African Scholars, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006) 790.

Generosity is paradoxical. Few texts illustrate this better than this collection of four proverbs. On this Thanksgiving Day in America, I am thankful that we serve a God who administers justice for the the generous and who supplies for them what they seek for others.

Habtu is a biblical scholar who teaches in Nairobi, Kenya. He’s from from Eritrea. I had to look up where to find that country. For GTP it’s in the EPSA (English, Portuguese, and Spanish speaking Africa) region. We had a paradoxical thing happen in that region this month.

A businessman who grasps the paradox in EPSA gave a $10,000 gift in support of the GTP regional campaign that will benefit AfCAA (African Council for Accreditation and Accountability). The goal for the region was $10,000 and he made a gift to cover the entire match.

He heard that if they met the match, an extra $1,000 would also be added to their total. Why mention this? He’s praying others will join him. Find the campaign here to support it if you have a heart for Africa. But I say this because only a person who has learned the paradox would give so generously in pandemic times.

If you have been blessed in this hard season, please pull out the stops and give generously. Do this remembering that we serve a God who administers justice for the the generous and He will enrich the supply of those who empty themeselves in service to others.

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Brian C. Wintle: Attitude of People

Listen, my dear brothers and sisters: Has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom He promised those who love Him? But you have dishonored the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who are dragging you into court? Are they not the ones who are blaspheming the noble name of Him to whom you belong? If you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” you are doing right. But if you show favoritism, you sin and are convicted by the law as lawbreakers. James 2:5-9

“What James has to say in this passage may be stated succinctly as: “Riches are worthless in the face of death and judgment.” This truth has contemporary relevance, especially in a country like India, where we have a minuscule minority of people who are very wealthy, and a vast majority of people who are impoverished. But a careful consideration of what James says indicates that the problem is not with wealth in itself, but with the attitude of people in possession or lack of wealth.

Wealth leads the wealthy to arrogance, pride, ruthlessness, and to have faith in themselves instead of God; it works against their citizenship in God’s kingdom. Wealth can lead a poor person to envy, sycophancy, and obsequiousness. It is not, however, wealth that is the problem; rather, ti is the rich person’s attachment to it and the poor person’s lust for it, a confidence in it rather than in God, and a rich person’s self-exultation above the concerns of the poor.”

Brian C. Wintle in James: An Exegetical and Contextual Commentary (India Commentary on the New Testament; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2020) 35.

This statement from a professor who is writing from North India rings true globally. The problem is not wealth, but rather, the attitude of people toward wealth. It leads us to the sin of favoritism rather than faithfulness in our treatment of others.

We must ask ourselves some tough questions. Do we working to gain advantage over others in our dealings or to serve them and care for their needs ahead of our own? Do we act proudly? Are we living dependent on God and showing love to our neighbor?

In America we are approaching a season of spending. If you are reading these posts daily, you will notice I’ve been inviting people to give to GTP regional efforts around the world. If you have been blessed, consider making a gift to build up others.

Thanks to all those who have made one or more gifts!

Today I want encourage your support of the South Asia campaign which includes India. The funds will be used to help kickstart efforts in Nepal. I was just speaking with the CEO of Bibles for the World yesterday who aims to assist us there.

God has used His Word to raise up believers in difficult places who need stewardship instruction and help to set up ministry standards. Support this effort in South Asia or any other region in the world during this season of spending.

As of today we are 25 days into the 60 day campaign to help build regional capacity around the world. To support a region, click here. By God’s grace we have received $20,576 toward the goal of $50,000. Give according to your ability as God leads.

Let us together resolve to be rich in faith and generosity.

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Andrew Spurgeon: Six Principles Concerning Offerings

With regard to the collection for the saints, please follow the directions that I gave to the churches of Galatia: On the first day of the week, each of you should set aside some income and save it to the extent that God has blessed you, so that a collection will not have to be made when I come. Then, when I arrive, I will send those whom you approve with letters of explanation to carry your gift to Jerusalem. And if it seems advisable that I should go also, they will go with me. 1 Corinthians 16:1-4

“Paul gave the Corinthians six principles concerning offerings: (1) gather the money in an orderly fashion—on the day they all meet together, (2) each person must contribute to the collection, (3) each person must contribute from everything he or she treasured, (4) the gifts must be what he or she deemed a ‘blessing’ from God, (5) collections must be taken before needs arose, and (6) collections must be handed over to trustworthy people. These were the same principles Paul taught all the churches, including the Galatian churches and the Corinthian church.”

Andrew Spurgeon in 1 Corinthians: An Exegetical and Contextual Commentary (India Commentary on the New Testament; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2017) 185.

Spurgeon serves as a professor at East Asia School of Theology in Singapore. In this piece he provides six solid principles concerning offerings. They are fantastic! Let’s look more closely at three of them.

Firstly, every person received the same directions and was instructed to contribute. To give or not to give is NOT the question for followers of Christ. We must all make margin for giving.

Secondly, I like the NET translation of this text which brings out the lingustic nuance of ‘blessing’ as Spurgeon notes. When God blesses us with resources we are to set aside a portion to bless others.

Thirdly, collections must be handled by trustworthy people. That’s what the work of GTP is all about: multiplying stewards and mobilizing peer accountability groups to build trust and grow local giving.

Singapore is part of the Southeast Asia region of GTP. Our work in this region serves Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.

To support GTP’s work of growing stewards and helping ministries follow standards this region, check out the Southeast Asia Regional Campaign. It has 8 givers so far and is at $1,682 toward a goal of $5,000.

If you have been blessed, consider blessing brothers and sisters in that region by making a gift today.

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Graham Simpson: Acting in Tune

Command those who are rich in this present world not to be arrogant nor to put their hope in wealth, which is so uncertain, but to put their hope in God, who richly provides us with everything for our enjoyment. Command them to do good, to be rich in good deeds, and to be generous and willing to share. In this way they will lay up treasure for themselves as a firm foundation for the coming age, so that they may take hold of the life that is truly life. 1 Timothy 6:17-19

“Many no doubt think that true life is experienced in the acquisition and selfish use of material possessions. Here the opposite is said: true life is experienced in the generous sharing of our possessions. We grasp the life that really is life by acting in tune with the character and will of God. To be truly alive is to be like God; as He generously provides humans with all things for their enjoyment, so we are most truly alive when we act in the same way.”

Graham Simpson in The Pastoral Epistles, 1-2 Timothy, Titus: An Exegetical and Contextual Commentary (India Commentary on the New Testament; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2017) 120.

Simpson has taught New Testament in India since 1977. He articulates a powerful biblical idea from India which is particularly relevant in the States during this season.

The day after Thanksgiving is Black Friday. Already the marketers have started to bombard us with messages that life is found in buying all the things they have to offer at the lowest prices.

Don’t tune to their messages or your life will be off key. If you want to be most truly alive, act in tune with the character of God. Imagine instruments tuning for a Christmas concert.

Tune yourself to the character and will of God and take hold of abundant life. He will lead you to a place of enjoyment and sharing that you never dreamed imaginable rooted in His faithful provision.

Want to practice. GTP invites you to join our work in South Asia. To help us strengthen stewards and set up a peer accountability group in Nepal, make a gift to the South Asia campaign. It’s at $205 toward a goal of $1000.

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Babu Immanuel Venkataraman: Interior

All the believers were one in heart and mind. No one claimed that any of their possessions was their own, but they shared everything they had. With great power the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus. And God’s gracewas so powerfully at work in them all that there were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned land or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales and put it at the apostles’ feet, and it was distributed to anyone who had need. Acts 4:32-35

“There was more ot the economic koinōnia of the early Christians than meets the eye. If the outsiders saw just their seeming sense of oneness in heart and mind and their willingness to sell and share everything they had, to the extent that there was no needy among them, they would have thought of it as the microcosm of an ideal society. However, there was something in the interiors of the members that was not public knowledge: a cognitive dissonance or a mismatch between motives and actions.

Ananias and his wife Sapphire, being true to the spirit of their community and emulating Barnabas, sold a piece of their property intending to contribute to care for the needy. But they had second thoughts. They colluded with each other to keep part of the money from the property for themselves, and brought the rest to the apostles. It is not possible to pinpoint from the narrative the motive Ananias and Sapphira had.”

Babu Immanuel Venkataraman in Acts of the Apostles (India Commentary on the New Testament: Primalogue, 2015) 57-58.

This scholar from India helps us see that even when people are following God’s design, there can be more going on than meets the eye. There is always more going on in the “interior” of the members.

What’s going on in your interior? Are you enjoying and sharing God’s blessings richly? Special thanks to those who shared with the GTP South Asia campaign to build up God’s workers there.

Whether or not you give to this effort, attune to what God is doing in your interior. Is He nudging you to a deeper level of trust and generous giving because He wants you to depend on Him?

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P. K. D. Lee: Effective

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

“Fundraising has been a neglected task within the churches in the Third World because of the free flow of funds from the western world…The ability to raise my support becomes the test of my ministry. If I raise funds from some other country, where they cannot see and assess my ministry, the support is purely by faith. When visits are made, those receiving the support put on their best show and the reality of the ministry is never seen.

I am speaking of sincere and godly ministries. The scams of course take the foreigners for a ride. Whether my ministry strategy is effective or not, the money keeps flowing and I have no pressure on me to develop the most effective strategy for the ministry. This absence of pressure due to an inadequate measure of the effectiveness of the ministry makes the ministry inefficient and sloppy.

Putting our ministry to the test of raising funds locally is vital to be able to assess whether what is being done is effective for the kingdom of God. This is the only test that provides both a quantitative and qualitative measure of one’s ministry. To be able to raise finances, we need both a large number of faithful supporters as well as spiritual supporters who can give liberally. So if my fundraising is effective, it means that I am reaching people and they are growing spiritually.”

P. K. D. Lee in Be Rich in Good Works (PDF) 58-60. Lee is a fellow Lausanne Global Classroom instructor with Ministry Fundraising Network. I also count him as a trusted friend in India. Learn about him here.

He paints the picture for the kind of giving we should stop doing to the majority world. We must stop making gifts to places like India that create dependencies, but rather give to build up effective disciples.

God’s servants everywhere must grow people so that effective ministry is locally funded. God’s design is not for church or parachurch work in one place to depend on ongoing support from others.

GTP has helped activate EFAC to help ministries follow standards for effectiveness and sustainability. Our efforts in South Asia next aim to strengthen stewards and set up a peer accountability group in Nepal.

So far the South Asia campaign effort is at $0 toward the goal of $1000. Consider a gift today. And to watch any or all of the four trainings we’ve done at GTP to help grow God’s workers in South Asia, check out this list.

Please, of give to ministries in India or Nepal, don’t feed the dependency for outside funds. Give capacity building gifts to entities like GTP to grow disciples who can to raise local funds through effective ministry.

 

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Youssouf Dembele: Looking

Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the LordI will be joyful in God my Savior. Habakkuk 3:17-18

“The prophet places his entire confidence in the Lord and draws his strength from Him. He recognizes that God is the source of salvation. What an encouragement for us in Africa! In the midst of wars, famine, and social injustice, we can still rejoice on the basis of our trust in the sovereign God. God is doing great works in our continent. He is looking for men and women who will build up the wall and stand before Him in the gap on behalf of the continent so that he will not have to destroy it.”

Youssouf Dembele in Africa Bible Commentary: A One-Volume Commentary Written by 70 African Scholars, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006) 1092.

Few books in the Bible have encouraged me more than Habakkuk during COVID. If you have not read it. Read it. It begins with lament, which feels fitting for the times, and ends with hope and praise.

While I don’t know this scholar from Mali, I appreciate his depiction of the Lord when all is crumbling around Him. He is “looking for men and women who will build up the wall.”

So what does this have to do with generosity? Don’t miss it. If you and I give our lives to building up what is broken, our generous God will meet our needs, replenish what we share, and refill what we dispense. It’s how God works!

What I’ve found in my global work is that when we help such people, God helps us. This isn’t prosperity gospel but God’s design for providing. So, again I invite you to join me in supporting the Francophone Africa regional campaign for GTP.

The aim is to raise $2,000 USD to build up these builders. They need stewardship resource and help setting up a peer accountability group. God supplied a gift yesterday but we are only at $131 toward the goal. Pray and give as God leads.

Let me add this about Mali. GTP’s programs have touched people there. Of the 155 givers to GTP last year, one gift came from Mali. That giver was so blessed they wanted others to be helped as they were served. All glory to God.

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Issiaka Coulibaly: Increasing Closeness

Now He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food will also supply and increase your store of seed and will enlarge the harvest of your righteousness. 2 Corinthians 9:10

“God loves a cheerful giver. In other words, there is no blessing for those who give against their will. But God will give a harvest of blessing to those who give joyfully to his work. In fact, He is able to give them all that they need to face any and every situation…God will supply and multiply the seed and increase the fruits of righteousness for those who give generously. God gives to us so that we can share what He gives with others, and our harvest of righteousness is an increasing closeness to God that expresses itself in prayer and fasting, which remind us that He alone is the source of the blessings we enjoy.”

Issiaka Coulibaly in Africa Bible Commentary: A One-Volume Commentary Written by 70 African Scholars, edited by Tokunboh Adeyemo (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2006) 1433.

While I don’t know this scholar from Côte d’Ivoire, I appreciate his description of the harvest of righteousness. It’s an “increasing closeness to God that expresses itself in prayer and fasting.” Think about that.

In setting aside our desires and communing with Him regarding the deployment of His resources to the things He cares about we draw closer to Him. Let’s all give generously so that we can experience this.

And speaking of Côte d’Ivoire, the Francophone Africa regional campaign for GTP needs help. We are trying to raise $2,000 to strengthen stewards there. Could you consider prayerfully joining me in this effort and making a gift?

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