“Man
sees your actions, but God your motives.” Thomas à Kempis
Okay,
now that Christmas and the Christmas shopping season are here, can I make a
little confession? Many years Jane and I make a deal on how much we’re going to
spend on each other and what the budget is. When it comes to Jane, I’m a
“dirty” dealmaker. We’ll set a certain amount and Jane will honor it, BUT it
nearly kills me. And I nearly always break our deal. Why? Well, I love giving gifts to Jane. I love making her
happy….because I love Jane and I am so thankful for her! I consider myself one
of the most blessed men in the world.
I agree with Winston Churchill’s classic line.
Towards the end of his life, when Churchill was honored at a banquet, someone
asked him, “If you could come back as anyone after you die, who would it be?” He
thought for a second, stood up, turned to his wife, and said, “Mrs. Churchill’s
second husband.” One of my biggest
regrets over the course of my life is that I haven’t done more for Jane during our
thirty plus years of marriage. Remember that line from It’s a Wonderful life: “George lassoes the moon for Mary.” If I
could, I’d lasso the moon for Jane.
Though there are many reasons that I love
giving Jane gifts and doing things for her, two stand out in my mind. First, Jane
gives and gives and gives so much to me. I want to give; I want do things for
Jane. Second, Jane is thankful for everything and every gift that I give her.
One of the frustrations and even
exasperations for many of us at Christmas are the obligatory gifts. Those are
gifts that you feel you have to give,
yet don’t necessarily want to give.
Sometimes your family has a huge gift giving tradition that probably should be
retired now that everyone is grown and the list of relatives who you’re
purchasing gifts for has become onerous. You hardly know your second cousin’s
wife and other than Christmas, never see them or have any contact with them,
yet still there is that pressure to have a gift for them. Or, you have a
co-worker who daily wears on your last nerve but every year they bring you a
gift. You find that you feel obligated to give them a gift in return. But guilt
and obligation are terrible motivations for gift giving. Rather than feeling
joyful that we can give, we find that we feel resentful.
It’s the difference between Law and Grace, or
even tithing and grace-giving. Under the Law or Old Covenant, Jews were
required to tithe. It was obligatory. It was something like a tax. It’s obvious
that they began resent it and obeyed the letter
of the Law but missed the spirit of
the Law. For example, Jews were required to bring an animal sacrifice in
worship to God. They obeyed the letter of the Law, but began bringing rejects
from their flocks. Malachi 1:8 records God’s rebuke of this practice, “When you offer blind animals in sacrifice,
is that not evil? And when you offer those that are lame or sick, is that not
evil? Present that to your governor; will he accept you or show you favor?”
The people of Malachi’s day were giving God the leftovers. They had no use for
a blind, lame, or sick animal, so they’ d give it to God. But God tells them
that He’d rather that they close the doors of the Temple than to have them offer these junk and
cheap sacrifices to Him.
Can you imagine a husband going down to the local
thrift store to buy his wife a Christmas gift? He doesn’t even go to the higher
quality displays but goes to the bargain bin to find his wife her gift. And
then he’s surprised that her response is a little south of less than thrilled
with his junky gift.
Our culture takes for granted that which is
free. But just because something is free doesn’t necessarily mean that it’s cheap.
Salvation is a free gift. You cannot earn it or pay for it. You can only accept
it freely, BUT it cost God everything. It cost the Father the life of His
beloved Son. Once you accept such a precious gift, it demands everything you
have in response. And when you recognize that you are not your own, you were
bought with a price, and that all that you have has been freely given to you by
God, how can you hold back anything from Him?
The only thing that a holy God owes us is His
justice and judgment. Instead, He freely gave His own Son to die on the Cross
for us. God’s justice was satisfied as our judgment was poured out on Jesus. He
died in our place and took our Hell. Is it any wonder that Paul says of God’s
gift for our salvation? “Thanks be to God
for His indescribable gift!” (2 Corinthians 9:15, NASV).
When I begin to comprehend how much I am
loved by God and how gracious and generous God has been with me, giving back to
God becomes one of the greatest joys of my life. I love to give because I am
giving in gratitude. And I proactively look for ways that I can give more.
Somehow though in the Church we’ve
communicated that giving is similar to courtesy. For example, frequently we
teach children to say please and thank you as a matter of courtesy—as a way of
teaching them how to get along in society. It’s the price they must pay to get
their milk and cookies. We’re more concerned with the outward performance of
good manners than we are with true gratitude.
There’s a great chasm of difference between giving
thanks and having a thankful heart. Our Heavenly Father cares more about
thankfulness that flows from the inside out than obedience we wear like a cheap
suit. We have missed the gratitude that God desires in our giving when we focus
on a tithe, or worse, wonder if we tithe on the gross or the net.
Giving is an act of worship. It’s
demonstrating gratitude to the One who has given so greatly to us that it will
take us all of eternity just to begin to thank Him. If we want to receive the
blessing that God wants us to receive from giving, rather than hearing it as a
command, we need to hear it as an invitation. It’s our opportunity to say thank
you back to God for His love and generosity to us. God is honored (and we are
healthiest) when our hearts and minds flow naturally with His and we give from
a heart overflowing with gratitude and generosity just as His does toward us.
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