Sunday, October 16th, 2022 – Stewardship Sunday
Philip’s Reflection: “According to what one has” (2 Cor. 8:12)
Let us pray – Loving God – “We give you but your own, whate’er the gift may be; all that
we have is yours alone, we give it gratefully.” (VU 542). Amen.
The words we just sang were written in 1858 by William How, who became the Bishop
of East London, in England; he was known as the “poor man’s bishop”, because he
dedicated most of his life to working among the poor and destitute of the inner-city
slums of that time. Bishop How’s words remind us that all things come from God – “we
give you but your own” – that when we give to the Church, or to the Mission & Service
Fund, or to charities or not-for-profit community or global relief organizations, we give
back to God what is already God’s, “whate’er the gift may be”, however large or
small, for “all that we have is yours alone” – or in today’s parlance, we are “paying it
forward” – we share God’s gifts with others in need. And “we give it gratefully” – we
give back in gratitude for the abundant gifts that each of us has already received.
It’s not an accident therefore that, here at St. David’s, we have chosen to designate this
Sunday as “Stewardship Sunday”, the first Sunday after Thanksgiving. Last Sunday we
gave thanks to God for all the many blessings in our lives – for the gifts of friends and
family, for the love we experience in this community, for our health and education, for
the “daily bread” that sustains us, and – as we are reminded again this morning – for the
fruits and beauty of God’s creation. Stewardship Sunday is a time when, again, we take
time to reflect on these God-given gifts – and on how we are called to respond: and
living and giving gratefully, lives lived in “thanksgiving”, is surely our first response.
What does it mean to “live and give gratefully”, how do we individually and as a
community of broken but faithful believers, best express our thanks to God? Let’s turn to
today’s reading from Paul’s second letter to the Corinthian church for some answers.
Paul is organizing a collection from the Gentile churches in Asia Minor to distribute
among the Jewish poor in Jerusalem. He tells the Corinthians how other Gentile
churches have already stepped up and contributed to the collection, despite their
extreme poverty. And now we want you, he tells the Corinthians, who “excel in
everything – in faith, speech, in knowledge” to excel in your generosity. It’s not a
command, says Paul, but a “test” of “the genuineness of your love against the
earnestness of others.” How much you give to this collection for the poor and destitute,
he might have said, is a measure of how sincere you are in your love for those less
fortunate than yourselves; and of how that generosity compares, in Paul’s words, with
“the earnestness of others.”
Now we might be tempted to push back at what seems like the competitive undertone of
Paul’s approach to fund-raising – and none of us responds to financial appeals out of a
sense of shame or guilt. Paul understands this – it’s a question of motivation, he says -
“eagerness” as he calls it - “for if the eagerness is there, the gift is acceptable according
to what one has, not according to what one does not have” (8:12). In other words, what
matters is why and how you give, and this can’t be measured only by the size of your
financial gifts. The supreme example of generosity, says Paul, is Jesus Christ, “though
he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might
become rich.” (8:9) – Jesus wasn’t “rich” or wealthy in a financial sense, but he was
“rich” in the abundance of God’s grace; he gave away those riches so that others might
receive this divine grace – to save and reconcile the world. For Paul, Jesus’ death on
the cross was the example beyond example, the death beyond all deaths, of the
emptying of goodness and richness for the sake of the world.
In other words, stewardship, and “Stewardship Sunday”, are not only about money – but
also about giving from our other gifts – of our time and attention, of our love and
compassion, of our education and experience and our God-given talents. Yes, of
course, “money makes the world go “round”, money pays the bills, keeps the lights on,
covers the expenses of a part-time staff, helps to finance our programs of worship and
music, and pastoral care, and learning and community outreach; and as a community
we are incredibly grateful to all of you who “give back” to support the mission of St.
David’s as a community of faith. For many of you on fixed incomes, at a time of very
high and rising costs, this giving is sacrificial, it is voluntary, and it makes an essential
difference to our ability to offer a Christian ministry here in West Vancouver.
But hear this, says Paul, “The point is this: the one who sows sparingly, will also reap
sparingly; and the one who sows bountifully will also reap bountifully”. The more we can
give, the more we receive – not in financial terms, not in a transactional sense such
that, in giving more we expect to receive more, nor that we are entitled to more; and
certainly not, as Paul says, “regretfully or under compulsion”. But gratefully, joyfully, with
glad hearts because “God loves a cheerful giver.” And so, we do give gratefully, from
the abundant gifts we have already received, from the overflowing grace of Christ; and
how we use our resources of “time, talent and treasure” is a very personal decision and
reflects not only our faith but also our many individual commitments and priorities. As a
faith community, “good stewardship” at St. David’s also means making effective use of
our property and facilities – to maintain them responsibly, to make them available for a
wide range of community users, and to generate funds in support of our mission and
ministry. And so, we also take a moment to thank all those who maintain, and decorate,
and manage and administer these facilities, as well as the many tenants and renters
who have chosen to partner with us; for we are all the beneficiaries of faithful
stewardship, we all, as Paul says, “share abundantly in every good work” (9:8).
As we presented our offering we sang - “all that we have is yours alone, we give it
gratefully.” We give thanks to God for all we have been given for, in the prophet Isaiah’s
words, we have “bought wine and milk without money and without price” (Is. 55:1); we
sow because we have already reaped the priceless blessings of God’s rich harvest –
and “we shall go out in joy, and be led back in peace; the mountains and the hills before
you shall burst into song, and all the trees of the fields shall clap their hands.” (Is.
55:12).
May God receive the thanksgiving of our glad hearts for what comes from God
alone; may our joyful stewardship bring the sound of music to God’s ears!