One year when I was on vacation, my brother who is also a pastor and I visited a church that was known for its excellent preaching. It’s not often that we preachers get to visit other churches so we were looking forward to being together for worship.
Of the countless number of churches that we could have chosen to attend together, we somehow picked a church that was having their pledge drive Sunday.
And it didn’t help matters when the preacher began his sermon by saying, “Well, first of all, I need to apologize to those of you are visiting this morning. We normally do not focus on money, but that’s what you’re going to hear me talk about for the next forty-five minutes this morning.”
My brother and I looked at each other in disbelief. We looked around for the nearest exit door. But God does work in mysterious ways because after that service, we both agreed that it was one of the best sermons we had ever heard, and it was on the topic of giving.
And all this preacher did was string together several stories of generosity. I have been thinking about that memory as I’ve been planning for this special Sunday here at our church.
My prayer is that we will leave here today thanking God that we were able to be here today. Maybe you’ll tell your friends, “You should have been in church this morning. Our preacher talked about money!!”
Friends, this is going to be a great Sunday of worship in celebrating God’s unbelievable blessings, God’s redeeming grace, and God’s immeasurable love that can’t help but to lead us to be the generous and joyful givers that God has created each one of us to be.
Let me first begin by thinking about what inspires people to be generous givers? I think we all are drawn to stories about sacrificial giving. The reason why I still watch the evening news is because of what comes at the end of that half-hour broadcast. No matter how bad the news was that day, we know that they are going to leave us with a glimmer of hope. They always end with a feel good story of how someone did something nice for someone.
And these same kind of stories happen a lot in our churches in big and small ways. They happen all the time because the God of resurrection is always showing up in beautiful and surprising ways.
These are the stories that inspire us and motivate us to be the gracious and generous givers that God has called us to be. Jesus taught us to look for these moments of generosity that are all around us, like the one from our Gospel reading today.
As Jesus is teaching, he decides to do a little people watching with his disciples. They were sitting across from where the Temple treasury was located.
The Temple treasury was most likely a large box that had a little opening at the top of it for people to drop in their money to support the work of the Temple. This offering box was out in the open where the crowds would walk, so this would have been a great location for Jesus and his disciples to do some people watching. Picture crowds walking by, and once in a while someone steps up to this treasury box to drop in some money.
Evidently, while they were watching all of this, they would spot a few people who had a lot of money to drop into the box. And because they had so much money to donate, they would stand there for a long time dropping in one coin at a time. But obviously, they didn’t give away everything they had because they were wearing nice clothes.
I can’t help but to think that the disciples would have been impressed as they sat there watching all of the rich people putting large sums of money into the Temple treasury. Who knows, maybe the disciples were feeling a little envious as they watched this impressive display of wealth and charitable giving taking place right before their eyes.
As one person after another makes their way to drop in their big payments, someone makes her way to the same treasury box, and in a very brief moment, she drops in two copper coins, and is lost in the crowd again.
Jesus, who always knew what to look for in a crowd, turns to the disciples, and makes sure they didn’t miss what this unassuming woman had just done. Jesus wanted the disciples to know who the big spender really was during their people watching exercise.
It wasn’t the one wearing the nicest clothes and who gave the highest dollar amount. It was the one who gave all that she had to her name. Two copper coins.
The people who gave the most still had plenty in their savings account. But this woman, who probably won’t know how she will get her next meal, gave out of her poverty.
What does it mean to give out of our poverty like the poor widow, rather than out of our abundance like those who were rich and put in large sums of money?
Like so much of our faith, it really comes down to our willingness to trust in what God wants to do in and through us to be a blessing through our church and community.
This reminds me of the story of the successful millionaire businessman who was giving a testimony at his church one night. He said how as a young man he was struggling financially and he only had a few dollars to his name. So he prayed to God and he felt that God was calling him to give away all that he had and to trust God completely with his life.
So he took the remaining few dollars he had in his wallet and put it in the offering plate the following Sunday. And then this man went on to say that by giving to God all the money he had, that’s why he was now a millionaire.
A lady who was listening to this man’s testimony wasn’t impressed and she stood up and shouted, “I dare you to do it again!”
It’s difficult for us to trust God with ALL that we have. We’re afraid we’re going to lose even the little that we have. We want to hang on to what we have instead of using our resources to be a blessing to others. So we end up holding back.
I think that the important part of the story of the widow who gave everything she had was that we are told that she gave out of her poverty, not out of her abundance.
I have always found it interesting that the year that marked the highest level of giving to charity in this country was during one of the worst economic times our nation has ever faced. In 1933 and during the Great Depression people gave the highest percentage of their income to charity than in any other year.
Deep down, people want to make a difference in our world. We will give as long as we know that our gifts are making a difference.
Here’s another story that inspires me to give. It’s the story of the Christians in Macedonia who we read about in II Corinthians, our other scripture reading this morning. The Macedonian Christians were living in poverty.
It’s interesting that Paul uses this story to inspire the wealthier congregations in Corinth to follow their example of generosity. He writes,
“We want you to know brothers and sisters, about the grace of God that has been granted to the churches of Macedonia; for during a severe ordeal of affliction, their abundant joy and their extreme poverty have overflowed in a wealth of generosity on their part. For, as I can testify, they voluntarily gave according to their means, and even beyond their means, begging us earnestly for the privilege of sharing in this ministry to the saints.”
And a few verses later, Paul goes on to use another example of how someone gave out of their poverty in overflowing generosity on behalf of others. He writes,
“For you know the generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich.”
These inspiring stories of generosity have something in common. They all involve how generosity does not come from our abundance, but it comes out of our poverty and our willingness to trust God by sharing what we have with others.
These stories are all rooted in God’s overflowing love for the world. This is why I began my sermon by saying that this is going to be a great Sunday of worship in celebrating God’s unbelievable blessings, God’s redeeming grace, and God’s immeasurable love that can’t help but to lead us to be the generous and joyful givers that God has created each one of us to be.
We are each called to be an expression of Christ’s self-giving love for the world. Athens First United Methodist Church is called to be an expression of Christ’s self-giving love for the world.
Which leads me to share one more story of generosity that continues to have a big impact on my life. I’ll never forget it.
During the early years of our marriage, my wife and I didn’t give all that we could have given to the church. We didn’t feel like we were in a position to be as generous as we wanted to be. At the time, I was the only one working because Penny had gone back to college to complete her undergraduate studies. And we also had two small children to raise at the time so money was really tight, really tight.
One day, as the two of us were standing in the hallway of the church where I was serving at the time, a lady in the church came up to us and handed us an envelope stuffed with lots of money in it. And this woman said, “I want you to have this money to help you pay for child care this weekend.”
She knew that we would be leading a church retreat that weekend and that we would need to pay a baby sitter while we would be away. And of course, I said what many of us would have said in that situation, “Oh, this is so nice of you, but we really can’t accept this. This is a lot of money.”
And I will never, ever, ever forget her response to me. She left me speechless. She said, “Oh, this isn’t my money. It’s a portion of our tithe money and we’ve already prayed over it and God wants you to have it.” Now, how are you supposed to argue with that kind of a response? She was basically saying that if I had a complaint, I should take it up with God.
It was that experience that led Penny and me to become more generous in our giving and to begin tithing our money to Christ and his church in our early years of marriage. This woman showed us what it means to trust God with all that we have, and to give out of our poverty rather than out of our abundance, kind of like the poor widow who gave all that she had. And kind of like the Macedonian Christians who gave out of their poverty.
These are the stories that inspire us to be the generous givers that God is calling us to be. That might mean that we begin living out the biblical principle of tithing and giving 10% of our income to the work of Christ and his church. It might mean that we move from giving 2% this year to giving 3 or 4% of our income for next year. That is between you and God. All I know is that these stories of generosity have an impact on us.
This week is an opportunity to take that next step increase by trusting God with our resources so that we can fulfill the mission God has given this church to make disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of the world. And that is an awesome mission, to be part of sharing God’s healing love here in Athens and beyond.
This week we will be sending a mailing out to the congregation that will include a 2022 Estimate of Giving card. We invite you to prayerfully complete that card and either send it back to the church in the mail or you can bring it to church with you next Sunday and place it in the offering plate.
As we prepare to take that next step of faith as we make our financial estimate of giving for 2022, I’m reminded of a story told by famous radio personality, Garrison Keillor. He said how a letter was sent from a church to those members who were not present on Pledge Dedication Sunday and therefore did not fill out their pledge cards.
Here is what the follow-up letter from the church stated:
"Dear Ann and Joe: We missed you last Sunday which was Pledge Sunday. Since you were not present to fill out your pledge card and to make it easy for you, we have completed a pledge card for you. Thank you for being so generous. Signed, Your Finance Committee"
And may it be said of each and every one of us, “Thank you for being so generous.”
Stories of Generosity
Gracious God, everything we have belongs to you. You have given us many gifts, but we forget to be generous. Forgive us for holding onto our gifts too tightly. Teach us to release our gifts so that we can be a blessing to others. Thank you for your example of generosity by sending Jesus who is the greatest gift we can ever receive. We offer this prayer in his name. Amen.
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