Showing posts with label generous. Show all posts
Showing posts with label generous. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Fight to sow generously for God is the Generous Giver (2 Corinthians 9:6-15)

Cornerstone Mission Church, Sunday Sermon March 22, 2009

Eunice Pike has worked for forty years with the Mazatec Indians in Southwestern Mexico. She has learned great deals about how they do their social relationship. Very beautiful people, but seldom they wish someone well. Having heard the gospel, they are hesitant to teach or share it with others. If asked, “Who taught you to bake bread?” the baker answers, “I just know,” implying that he has gained the knowledge on his own without anyone passing it on to him.

Behind this odd social behavior was the strong belief in “limited good.” It is a belief that there is only so much good, so much knowledge, so much love to go around that to give generously, to pass on knowledge, to love much would bankrupt them of these. Even to love a second child would mean having to love your first child less. To wish wellbeing to someone else, to simply greet, “Have a good day” means you give away your own wellbeing, your happiness.

Can you imagine what kind of relational atmosphere would exist in this environment of selfish withholding? Can you imagine if all of us would work out of this belief that there is really only so much good, so much knowledge, so much love to go around?

To sow our lives on the strict principle of conservation on this belief that that there is only so much to go around makes sense if our resources are limited indeed.

For example, it makes absolute sense for too many people not to have more than one or two child for this very reason. They wonder if they would be able to provide the best education, the best experience, the best house to live, the best car to ride to school for their children if they had more than one or two. They wonder if they would be able to love them all if they had more than one or two. To maintain a certain level of lifestyle, to avoid the inconvenience and having to make sacrifices, it just makes sense to do away with just one or two. When this thinking is pushed to its limit, the logical conclusion is to abort babies by simply taking some pills or even to kill beyond the third trimester at whim for convenience. With this logic, God must have been out of his mind to bless Adam and Even and tell them in Genesis 1:27, “Be fruitful and increase in number.” Our so called modern sophistication questions God’s wisdom on this, even Christians do that, after all isn’t there only so much to go around?

This is the accepted and valued pattern of thinking and behavior of today. Christian call is to actively reject this unbiblical and ungodly and unnatural urge to sow sparingly only to reap sparingly.

  • Give generously to reap generously.

You may remember the context for this passage from my sermon from last month when I covered 2 Corinthians 8:1-15. The Jerusalem Christians were hit hard by famine and Paul was rounding up Christians in other areas to give generously to meet their needs. In chapter eight, Paul’s encouragement was to excel in giving by patterning after Jesus who even though was rich, yet for our sakes he became poor, so that we through his poverty become rich (1 Corinthians 8:9). Paul is continuing his exhortation for the Corinthians to be generous in giving and he builds his exhortation on further theological grounds.

Paul grounds us to embrace and pattern after the natural law of God, to sow generously to reap generously rather than unnaturally to sow sparingly only to reap sparingly. Farmers know this truth in their heart and they live by it. You may have the best weather outlook with just the right amount of rain, sunshine and temperature, but if you started off on the wrong course by sowing little, you will end up with little harvest. But, if you start off right by sowing plentifully, even if you are hit hard by foul weather, you could still have enough harvest. And, if the condition is right, you will have bountiful in your harvest.

So, much of our spiritual impoverishment might be the direct result of believing there is only so much to go around. The path to the spiritual enrichment is to reject this false and demonic belief, but to embrace God’s truth of right spiritual investment method of giving generously to reap generously.

  • Give generously with cheerful happiness for God is the cheerful Giver.

Paul exhorts in 2 Corinthians 9:7 the kind of mindset that is required in giving generously. He gives two negative qualifiers and one positive qualifier in how not to give and how to give.

The first two negative qualifiers are not to give reluctantly or under compulsion. To give reluctantly is to have regret, to feel unhappy in result of giving. You will feel unhappy about giving if you focus on having less or what you cannot spend your money on. To give under compulsion is to give out of sense of obligation. To give because others are giving, to give because you feel you have to give, any of these “should,” “have to,” “since others are doing” yields sense of obligation. Paul says reluctance and obligation are not the right mindset for giving.

Instead, the right mindset for giving that makes God crazy is the mindset of being cheerfully happy in giving. Unless you find reasons to feel cheerful and happy in giving, your giving is not credited as generous giving. If not cheerful, then it is reluctant and obligatory giving.

Where do you base your cheerfulness? You base it on the fact that you are for-given much. In Christ, you are birth into the new identity not as people who must expect God’s wrath, but people who live by God’s abundant gift, his grace. In Christ, you move from being God’s enemies to his beloved who have received his gift of forgiveness.

Deuteronomy 15:1-11 is about the year of canceling debts, in which God commanded, “At the end of every seven years you must cancel debts” in verse 1. Forgiving any outstanding debts at the end of seven years was the act of giving grace.

A commentator says that in giving generously to the poor, the church continually celebrates her own “year of remission” by remembering her deliverance at the cross, while at the same time anticipating her final redemption on that “year of Jubilee” when Christ returns.[1]

To be in Christ is all about receiving God’s extravagant grace who gave his Son freely to die at the cross to for-give us. And, in Christ, we are called to for-give and give freely, generously, not out of obligation or duty. “God loves a cheerful [for-]giver.

  • Give generously because God’s graces you to be content and overflow in good work.

To give generously because generous sowing yields generous harvest and to give generously with cheerful heart, these are both related in that they build on the assumption that harvest will be plentiful.

Paul explains in 2 Corinthians 9:8 why giving generously make sense. It is because God of grace is in the picture. When you hear grace, another word that needs to pop in your mind is gift. When you hear grace, you think gift.

This God who bestows us his gift as his beloved is “able” God to ensure “at all times, having all that you need… abound in very good work.” “At all times” means none of those limited guarantee, but unlimited, unrestricted guarantee that cannot be revoked. It is perpetual and constant.

In Greek, “having [what] you need” is autarkeian which means contentment. So, literally, it would read, “having contentment.” God’s abundant gift of grace results in godly contentment. Contentment is the sense of wellbeing that comes from feeling that you have “enough of everything” (NRSV).

Not only does God’s gift, his grace gives us the feeling that we have enough of what we need, he gifts us to “abound in every good work.” Here, we see God’s purpose for our lives. While the world wants you to store for yourself, your own family, God’s purpose is that you overflow in good work, good morally and generous in spirit; good work that become ministry.

Why give generously? It is because you have God who relates to you in Christ as his beloved; he gifts you his grace to abound, so that you would always have enough of what you need and to feel content and so that you overflow in good and generous work of blessing others with generously giving of yourself.

Indeed, you can expect plentiful harvest when you sow generously because God of grace is generous to you.

  • Give generously for it is the expression of your righteousness grounded in God’s righteousness.

Paul in 2 Corinthians 9:9 quotes from Psalm 112 which describes a person who is righteous and blessed by the Lord. Psalm 112:9 reads, “He has scattered abroad his gifts to the poor, his righteousness endures forever.” Here, we see a connection between generous gifts to the poor and status of righteousness. Psalm 112:5 further describes this generous spirit and act of a righteous person; “God will come to him who is generous and lends freely, who conducts his affairs with justice.” And, going back to Psalm 112:1, this righteous person is described as, “Blessed is the man who fears the LORD, who finds great delight in his commands.”

Here is the connection between giving generously with being righteous. A person who fears the Lord is a person who takes God seriously and allows God’s word to make claims upon him. Not only does this person take God’s word seriously and is claimed by his word, he delights and enjoys in God’s commands. And, this trusting in God’s word as truly life giving and living it out become the expression of righteousness. And what flows out of this trusting and living out is generous giving. Another word, when God grips you with his word and have you abide in Jesus, you begin to walk in his Spirit. And, when you walk in the Spirit of God, righteousness is manifested in the way you care for the poor, in the way you give generously.

To this righteous response, God’s response in Psalm 112:5 is, “God will come to him.”

  • Give generously for it generates thanksgiving, praises and glory to God.

Last thing, the reason to give generously is because it generates thanksgiving, praises and glory to God.

2 Corinthians 9:11 says generous act prompts “thanksgiving to God” and verse 12 “overflowing in may expressions of thanks to God.

Paul also frames giving generously as in “obedience that accompanies your confession of the gospel of Christ,” which then becomes a reason for others to praise God in verse 13 as well as for the reason of their “generosity in sharing.”

What happens ultimately in your act of generosity is that we point people to God’s “surpassing grace, “his incredible gift” and we bring glory to God.

  • Conclusion

Hosea 10:12 says, “Sow for yourselves righteousness, reap the fruit of unfailing love, and break up your unplowed ground; for it is time to seek the LORD, until he comes and showers righteousness on you.”

There will be couple opportunities that are coming to respond to God’s call for you to be generous.

  • March 27, Friday: "Bring Your Own Friend" Barbecue... The Family Life Group will provide the dinner, you bring your friends and your donation… all donations will be given to the Mercy Ministry.
  • March 29, Sunday: We will collect donation for the Mercy Ministry.
  • April 4, Saturday: We are going to host dinner for House of Prayer church in Chicago who serves the Homeless people.

May the Lord enable you to fight to sow generously this week.


[1] Hafemann, Scott J. “The Theological Ground and Purpose of the Collection (9:6 – 15)” In NIV Application Commentary, New Testament: 2 Corinthians. By Scott J. Hafemann, 367. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, © 2000.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Fight to excel in generous giving (2 Corinthians 8:1-15)

Cornerstone Mission Church, Sunday Sermon February 1, 2009

God’s been incredibly gracious to me these days for capturing my heart and growing it to fight for the faith. There has been this deeper stirring inside of me that says there’s got to be more for my marriage, for my parenting, for my calling as a pastor, for my flock, you guys. So, I’ve been fighting for the things that are worth fighting for with God’s help.

One of the ways I’ve been fighting these days for my marriage is to fight for true fellowship as husband and wife. Biblical fellowship happens when God takes the center stage of our conversations. So, I’ve been sharing intentionally with Lyn what God’s doing in me. And, Lyn’s been doing the same. By sharing deeper about what God is doing in us, we’ve been fighting for authentic fellowship in our marriage.

So, it was during these conversations last couple weeks I shared with Lyn my reflection on what we are missing. What we are missing is the element of living on the edge beyond our comfort zone. Living on the edge as in doing things that are difficult, that requires determination and perseverance and stretch me to the breaking point, that unless I learn to depend on God and unless I learn to walk with God and work with his enabling power, things won’t get done. Am I engaged in the things that will stretch my faith? Am I engaged in the things that will make me uncomfortable because it requires deeper trust in Jesus? Am I engaged in the things that require boldness? Am I engaged in the things that deeply matter to God?

How much boldness, courage, and faith do I need to love myself, pamper myself? Not too much! We don’t need to live on the edge when life is about creating comfortable and exclusive cocoons for ourselves and for the select few individuals we may care. Everybody does that, Christians or not.

But, as Christians, we cannot simply engage in creating comfortable spaces for ourselves. That’s not the way Jesus went about living. 2 Corinthians 8:9 says, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.” Now, this is what I am talking about when I speak about living on the edge. Living on the edge that demands boldness, courage, perseverance, patience, deeper trust in God of hope and transformation… living on the edge happens when you and I live beyond the comfort zones of ourselves.

God has highlighted for me last year in the month of December one specific area that he wanted us to work on that will require from us sacrificing our time, effort and money to take care of the poor. Last year, I took Mike, Adelaide and Sarah to a church called, House of Prayer in Chicago. It is a church ministering specifically to homeless people. And, this coming Saturday, we are going to have an opportunity to prepare dinner for about 50 people and bring it to the church to serve the homeless while celebrating God’s grace with them in their vibrant worship service.

God wants us to live counter-culturally. While everyone is scrambling to take care of themselves in recession, we as a church is going to take a baby step to come out of our cocoons to live out God’s love for the poor. It’s going to require generous giving of our time, energy, effort, money and it is going take some good recipes and creativity to serve well.

2 Corinthians 8 & 9 explains what God wants to do through you and me. He wants to raise us to fight for generous giving. In these two chapters, Paul gave reasons why the Corinthians must excel in grace of giving, specifically for the poor living in Jerusalem.

1. Fight to excel in generous giving because God is generous to you.

2 Corinthians 8:9 sums it up for us. God’s call, his expectation, his command to fight for generous giving is based on the reality of what he has done for us through his Son Jesus Christ. “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might become rich.”

What is the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ? It is the fact that although he was rich as God’s Son came down and took on human body, became poor for our sakes, lived as God-Man subjecting himself to humility, suffering and ultimately facing death on the cross and in three days being raised from the dead by God the Father. Jesus did this for our sakes so that we through his poverty become rich.

Some gravely misinterpret and misuse this verse to argue that God wants us to become rich financially. So, they argue that giving gets you rich. But, this is far from the plain teachings of the Scripture. Jesus didn’t die for us so that we can be all rich people. He died for us so that we can live in his grace to be generous giver. The goal is not about getting rich materialistically, but it is about being generous giver out of God’s abundant supply that meet all our needs; it is about being generous giver as Jesus gave up his rich and took on poverty in order to enrich us with spiritual blessings.

I love how God has more than one way to help us understand the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ for us. How do we go from the status of being poor, spiritually bankrupted, to being rich, saved and delivered from sins into abundant life of Jesus Christ? We don’t go from being poor to rich by the conventional wisdom of working really hard and saving enough to be rich. No, we go from being broke and destitute, from being nobody to the royal sons and daughters of the Almighty God by trusting in Jesus Christ for forsaking his rich and taking on poverty for us.

And, this work of God in Jesus Christ, this grace is the reason for our generous giving. Because God has given us so much, we as his sons and daughters give much out of God’s abundant blessing. Because God is the generous giver, we fight to excel in generous giving.

2. Fight to excel in generous giving because it is your privilege.

Paul highlighted to the Corinthians about the Macedonian churches to illustrate how generous giving works. Paul speaks in 2 Corinthians 8:1 about how the grace that God has given the Macedonian churches manifested in their lives.

Grace of God did two things for them. They were generous out of the most severe trial meaning they didn’t wait until it was safe to give. They were also generous out of their overflowing joy that resulted from their relationship with God. God’s grace enabled them to experience joy and out of this joy, they gave generously.

For Paul, the amount they gave wasn’t important because what mattered to him was how they gave as much as they were able and even beyond their ability, meaning they gave the maximum they could give and top of that gave even more although it affected them financially. And it was entirely on their own; they weren’t responding out of guilt or grudgingly, but simply in response to God’s abundant grace in Jesus.

Here is what’s remarkable in verse 4, “they urgently pleaded with us for the privilege of sharing in this service to the saints.” They did it not out of guilt, nor grudgingly, but out of their deep conviction that it was their privilege to share for those in need. English Standard Version, translates NIV’s “urgently pleaded” as “begging… earnestly.” Do you get how different this is? When the Christians from the Macedonian churches learned about the poverty of the Jerusalem Christians, they saw it as their problem that must be addressed. It is like us begging the House of Prayer for us to come down and to share meals with them, to have heartfelt fellowship with them, to share what God is doing in us, because we are convinced that it is our privilege to do so.

Paul says in 2 Corinthians 8:8, “I am not commanding you, but I want to test the sincerity of your love by comparing it with the earnestness of others.” Paul was not commanding them because giving generously isn’t something that God expects out of us. God does expect us to be generous giver because he is the generous giver. But, what Paul was getting at was the spirit of generous giving that flows out of deep and sincere gratitude and love for God’s grace through his Son Jesus. Paul didn’t want the Corinthians to do merely what they were expected to do as Christians. Paul wanted not just duty, but privilege, thankful delight to meet the needs of others that flows out of living relationship with gracious God.

3. Fight to excel in generous giving through the principle of willing and proportional giving

Paul says in 2 Corinthians 8:12, “For if the willingness is there, the gift is acceptable according to what one has, not according to what he does not have.”

The principle of proportional giving is very important. Even in our midst, we have varying degree of income levels. If we were to measure generous giving in terms of dollar amount, whoever gives more would be considered generous giver. But, Paul tells us that this isn’t the way it works. Generous giving is measured by willingness and proportional giving.

In order to give because God is generous to you and to give because it is your privilege to give, it requires your willingness to give. No one needs to compel or motivate to give, to share, because you are more than willing. And, giving proportionally to what you have equals the plain field. It doesn’t matter how much you earn, you can contribute and share meaningfully and generously if you give from what you have. If you have $100 and you need $50 to meet your needs, to give $20 will be giving 20% of what you have. But, if you have $10,000 and need $5000 to meet your needs, to give $500 although so much more than giving $20, it will be only giving 5% of what you have. What counts is how much you give out of what you have that will please the Lord.

Conclusion

I am very excited to see what God’s going to do as we take baby steps out of our comfort zone and live on the edge where we cannot do things on our own, but we must seek God’s grace and work together.

More I explore God’s word, more I become convinced that fight to excel in giving generously to meet the needs of the poor will not only fulfill our duty as Christians, but it is going to revive us because it is going to move our hearts to deeply rejoice in God’s abundant grace, enable willing spirit, deep gratitude and love for God and to give generously.