Monday, November 30, 2015

I'm dreaming of a stress free Christmas

“A Christmas miracle is when your family doesn’t get into a single argument all day.” Melanie White

For some reason, no other holiday seems to bring out the worst in us than Christmas. Hopefully…obviously, the number one way to keep Christ in your Christmas celebrations is to have Him present in your daily life and not just at Christmas. As believers, keeping Christ in Christmas is more about the way we live our lives than any of the things that we say—such as “Merry Christmas” versus “Happy Holidays.” Keeping Jesus in Christmas means living moment by moment in the power of the Spirit revealing the character, love and spirit of Christ that dwells in us, allowing these traits to shine through your actions. Probably, none of us this will be new, yet they’re good reminders to help us keep Christ the central focus of our lives this Christmas season, after all, it is OUR holiday. What other time of year can we walk into stores or the mall and hear music directing us to worship Christ the Lord? When else can we stroll through offices and see strings of cards depicting nativity scenes? Let’s be wise and take advantage of these seasonal opportunities, keeping our focus on Christ and sharing the gospel in the process.
  * Find a devotional guide or take the time to plan out a Bible reading schedule to carry you through Christmastime with daily meditations on Christ’s advent, incarnation, virgin birth, and Davidic lineage. If you haven’t already, memorize the Christmas story in Luke 2.
  * Pray. Make a list of the people in your life who need the Savior. Pray for them and ask the Lord to give you opportunities to share with them.
  * Have a family meeting. Talk about the fact that the Prince of Peace has come and you’re committed to having His peace in your home this season. Be honest about changes in the schedule with school out, late nights or extra activities. Enlist the whole family as an army of peacemakers.
  * Correspond. Include the gospel in annual Christmas letters. Choose cards with a message, or consider making your own. If you have young children, this might be a great family activity. If you support a child through an organization like World Vision or Compassion International, tuck in some Christmas-themed stickers with your greeting card.
  * Decorate. Let your Christmas tree serve as a reminder that Christ hung on a tree so that one day we might be invited to eat freely from the Tree of Life. You might place your crèche in a central location, yet leave the cradle empty until Christmas morning—when you make a grand celebration of the baby’s arrival.
  * Invite. Ask unchurched friends to join you in attending a Christmas production. Invite neighbors over for dinner and share what Christmas means to you. Take a child shopping with you to buy toys for underprivileged kids. Adopt a family that is struggling that you can be a blessing to. Be extra generous in your tip (and attitude) when you’re out to eat with the servers. Sometimes when we’re out, our family has looked for an individual or family who’s also there, and anonymously paid their bill.
  * Give wisely. For the people on your Christmas list, select gifts with eternity in view. Consider giving books, music, videos, subscriptions or even tickets to special events that will encourage each recipient in his or her relationship with Christ.
  * Give of yourself. USA Today reports that 30% of Americans spend $750 or more on Christmas presents. 19% say they’ll shell out over $500 for gifts, and 22% will buy $250 worth of stuff. A mere 8% expect Christmas spending to be less than $100. Instead of laying out so much cash consider meaningful gifts you can create. Make a gift certificate for three hours of free childcare for a friend or neighbor. Write your life story—including your personal testimony—and give copies to your children or grandchildren. Have your parents’ home movies transferred to video or disk and give copies to the whole family. Give an old family recipe in a basket full of all the ingredients. Record yourself reading a favorite Bible story and send it to your grandkids.
  * Give food. Take a basket of Christmas dinner food to someone in need. If you have children, take them with you and talk about the One who said, “It’s better to give than to receive.”
  * Take the whole family and carol a shut-in or elderly person who has difficulty going out during the winter. You could even encourage another family to join you, and go out for hot chocolate afterwards.
  * Clean out attic or closets. If you have extra bedding, pillowcases, or coats, take them to a place like the Milwaukee Rescue Mission that ministers to the homeless. Rather than saving it all for later, put it to a good use now.
  * Invest. If people ask what you want for Christmas, provide the name of your church or some other favorite charity and ask them to make a donation, instead of buying you another ugly sweater.
  * Spend time visiting shut-ins or teaching literacy. Build bridges so you can cross them to share Christ’s love. Please don’t limit yourself to Christian charities—your work in a secular setting could provide you with opportunities to share with other volunteers who might never go to church.
  * Give a surprise gift of service to each member of your family. Jesus taught us to serve by washing the disciples’ feet. The idea of giving an unexpected gift of service to members of your family demonstrates both Christ-like love and service. Maybe give a back rub to your spouse, run an errand for your brother, or clean out a closet for your mother. Make it personal and meaningful, and watch the blessings multiply.
  * Set aside a time for family devotions on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning. Before opening the gifts, take a few minutes to gather together as a family in prayer and devotions. Read the Christmas story again in Scripture. Perhaps have each family member read a portion. Then, take some time and discuss as a family the true meaning of Christmas.
  * Attend one of the Grace Church’s Christmas Eve Services together with your family. If you’re alone this Christmas or don’t have family living near you, invite a friend or a neighbor to join you. 
  Please plan now for a peace-filled, joyful holiday, before the craziness of the Christmas season consumes you and choose to truly keep Christ in Christmas this year! 

Looking for quality used Christian books and other types of books at prices lower than even Amazon. Check out our family's online used bookstore at resurrectedreads.com or visit our store at the Waterford Unique Antique Market at 209 North Milwaukee Street in Waterford, WI -- 262.534.3500

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Sometimes my wife, Jane, can be so annoying...

“Is it not lamentable that men will never thank God for the countless blessings He confers upon them, and then remember Him only to complain of the evils which they have brought upon themselves, and which are never half so great as their misconduct deserves?” 
John Broadus

  Thanksgiving is that season of the year when my wife, Jane, can be a real source of irritation for me. Complaining about Jane is not something I typically do, yet most people have no idea of how much I suffer. The Thanksgiving Season highlights this obnoxious behavior of hers more than any other time of year. So let me share my “thorn in the marriage.”
  All of us have our standard approach to life…and that’s where we have an issue. Jane habitually approaches life with gratitude whereas I, sadly, too often approach life with grumbling. Since we first got married, I’ve grown and become much, more quiet about it. And I don’t mean to shock any of you, but when Jane and I were first married, there were times when we’d be out shopping and the ineptness and incompetence of some local store (at least in my professional opinion J) irritated me. So I’d become a little loud in letting those around me know that I thought that this was completely unacceptable. Rather than chiming in and supporting my whining, Jane would hurry her pace and walk quite a bit ahead of me…almost like she didn’t know me or want to be seen with me. It was completely gauche but I soon got the hint.
  Praise the Lord! I’ve come a long way since then…unfortunately, I still have a long ways to go. Yet, I’m very thankful that both the Lord and Jane are so patient. Maybe that’s why I’m so thankful that in heaven we’ll spend so much time being thankful and praising the Lord. I’ve got a lot of catching up to do.
  God’s Word commands us to be consistently thankful (Ouch!). In writing to the Thessalonian Christians who were suffering intense persecution, the Apostle Paul wrote, “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you” (1 Thessalonians 5:18). I wonder how they received that. It sounds nice enough in church, until you find yourself in difficult, even painful circumstances. Then, God’s Word can feel a bit like an insensitive platitude.
  “How can I be thankful when _________?” Countless scenarios complete the sentence. “How can I be thankful when this is the first Thanksgiving since my Mom died? How can I be thankful when I’m so depressed? How can I be thankful when I’m in the middle of chemotherapy? How can I be thankful when I’m not even sure if I’ll have food for dinner tonight?”
  Those are honest questions, ones honest believers have asked throughout the ages. Add to that, some of us struggle more with gratitude than others. Yet, as believers, most would really like to feel grateful, yet their life circumstances seem to make genuine gratitude impossible. They feel stuck in discouragement and despair.
  If we take the book of Psalms as a model for prayer, then we should certainly feel free, even obligated, to share with the Lord our hurts, frustrations and disappointments. Genuine prayer is not putting a happy face on our true feelings. If you’re grieving the loss of a loved one, or feeling afraid because you’re facing a serious illness, you should certainly share those feelings with your Heavenly Father. Being thankful in all circumstances doesn’t mean pretending or denying.
  It does mean though that we must look beyond our circumstances. Gratitude comes when we look at the bigger picture, when we remember the multitude of ways in which we’re blessed, even if we’re also feeling sadness, fear or whatever else seems inconsistent with being thankful. It means realizing that everything we experience in this life is temporary!  
  As I was writing this, I received a phone call that my adopted Mom (Mary Cummins) had been rushed to the hospital. Last week she had a stroke. She was doing better and had been moved to rehab. Yet, now she has pneumonia, is having trouble breathing and has congestive heart failure. It’s very likely that she’ll be going Home soon. None of us who love her would for the briefest moment want to prolong her suffering. Ever since the Lord called Dad Cummins Home, she’s been lost without him. In recent years she’s suffered from dementia and confusion. I’ve wondered if possibly her heart was so broken with the loss of the love of her life, that it was God’s gift to her to help her cope with a broken heart.
  Yet, I praise God for Mom Cummins. At some of the lowest points of my life, she and Dad Cummins were there for me with grace and strength. So I’m able to offer genuine thanks without denying the sadness of loss.
  Yet, what about believers who are in the midst of suffering right now? Can they be truly grateful? My answer is “Yes.” How do I know this? Because I’ve seen it time and again in God’s Word, in my own life and in my pastoral ministry. I’ve watched people in the midst of a horrible crisis nevertheless be able to express authentic thanks to God.
  That ability to look beyond our immediate circumstances is itself a gift of God’s grace. If you’re struggling to be grateful, ask the Lord to give you a fresher and truer perspective on your life, to help you see life from His perspective. Allow yourself enough time to remember and reflect upon God’s innumerable gifts. Most of all, think about who God is – that He’s your Father. Meditate upon His mercy and love. The more you do, the more you’ll find true gratitude growing and flowing from your heart.
  So while we don’t thank God for all things, we can thank Him in all things. When we pray, we can pray with thanksgiving. The healthiest human emotion is not love, it’s gratitude. As we cultivate an attitude of gratitude, of being thankful in everything, God in turn gives us more grace. It reduces both the pain and stress in life.
  And it’s not enough to pray and give thanks. We must follow up with that by choosing to change our mental diet. Most of us “meditate” on the negative. It’s imperative that we change the way we think, because the way we think determines how we feel. The way we feel determines how we act. 
  Scripture teaches that if you want to change your life, you must change what you’re thinking about. It requires a deliberate, conscious choice where you choose to think about the right things. We must choose to think on God, hope, His grace and Word. We must choose to think of God’s blessings and what we have to be grateful for. It’s simply obeying Philippians 4:8, Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.”

Looking for quality used Christian books and other types of books at prices lower than even Amazon. Check out our family's online used bookstore at resurrectedreads.com or visit our store at the Waterford Unique Antique Market at 209 North Milwaukee Street in Waterford, WI -- 262.534.3500

Sunday, November 15, 2015

One man and One red cup

“I’m glad Jewish people didn’t get upset at Starbucks. Just imagine how tough it’d be for baristas to write ‘Happy Hanukkah’ on every cup.”

Over the last week a red cup/Christmas controversy about Starbucks and their purported anti-Christmas conspiracy exploded on social media. It all started after former pastor, Joshua Feuerstein, posted a viral video to Facebook stating the company was removing “Christmas from their cups because they hate Jesus.” But what most don’t realize is that Josh Feuerstein has been at this for years, posting hundreds of videos of himself screaming mini-sermons into his smartphone camera. While he has almost 2 million followers on Facebook, (it’s not clear how many became fans after the Starbucks takedown went viral) most had no idea who Feuerstein was before his video. Feuerstein’s often incendiary views are part of his whole public persona. Apparently, he loves to fan the flame of public opinion.
  Yet, to my knowledge, no notable Christian leader or group has joined his one man boycott. On the contrary, most Christians are vocally opposing it. Many have watched Feuerstein’ grandstanding from the sidelines and even had some fun with the silliness of it all. His “anger” gave billions of dollars of free advertising to the very company he supposedly disdains. There are though important lessons for us as Bible-believers from this entire stunt.
  Too often outrage is our default mode. It seemed that most Christians who were “outraged,” weren’t outraged at Starbucks but were outraged at the supposed Christians making this an issue. Liberal media outlets like The Huffington Post had a field day ridiculing Christians incensed over this, but they’d have real difficulty finding those legions of Christians who were so angered over this. Most were just outraged that someone had made it an issue. Anger is dangerous, yet that seems to be the first weapon of choice for the average Christian whether it’s toward the secular media, the devolving of the culture, government, etc. Many will rationalize that Jesus got angry. That’s true but the reason that Jesus’ anger was so powerful and garners our attention is that anger was so rare with Jesus. It was anything but His default mode. He truly lived out His name, “the Prince of Peace.”
  There is true power even in one voice. With a world population of 7 billion and some 320 million Americans, most of us feel very, very small, even minute. Yet, just one man, Josh Feuerstein, literally caused social media to erupt. English poet, John Donne was right, “No man is an island.” Or, as the Bible insightfully reminds us, “For none of us lives to himself, and none of us dies to himself” (Romans 14:7). You are the only Dad or Mom that your children will have. Even if you’re past the childrearing years, you’re still influencing them. Our family, friends, neighbors, co-workers even our Facebook friends are watching. Yet, what are they learning about Jesus, life, and what has true value from us?
  Those don’t know Jesus will usually act like people who don’t know Jesus. America is not a Christian nation. If it is, why do you lock your doors at night? Starbucks has never claimed to be a Christian company. Howard Schultz, the founder and CEO of Starbucks is not a Christian, so why would we expect him to live by biblical values? He is not only a coffee aficionado, he’s a true humanitarian who passionately seeks to take care of his employees and have a positive work environment. I find that his dedication to what he believes, puts me to shame as a Christian. His books, Onward and For Love of Country are powerful books and challenged my own heart. Add to that, many believers are employed by Starbucks. I have a childhood friend who manages one and uses her position as an opportunity to share the light of the gospel. We quickly forget that for us to be effective as “salt” in a decaying world, we must get out of the saltshaker. Both biblical heroes, Daniel and Joseph, were leaders in pagan cultures, using their positions to do God’s will and bring Him glory! God has placed you and me where we are for the same purpose.  
  The media has far too much influence on us. Most of us are far more familiar with current events or celebrities than we are with the eternal God or His timeless Word. Media is part of “a-muse” which means to “not think.” Biblical Christianity demands “musing” or “thinking.” The media whether it’s a news report, sitcom or movie communicates primarily to our emotions, not our intellect. The vast majority of it is little more than mental junk food. While feelings are part of God’s design, they’re not to be in the driver’s seat of our lives. First our intellect, then our will and finally our emotions are to direct us. Unfortunately, when most watch the media, they stop thinking and thus are manipulated. Add to that editing and censorship of only what fits the worldview of those in control, and you’re frequently only receiving a fraction of truth and reality. So we must stop and think.
  The war on Christmas is an old one. I’m not sure why the new red cup is even an issue. In the past, the Starbuck’s holiday cups had nothing to do with Christmas. There were snowflakes, ornaments, snowmen and sledding pictures. Other than the ornaments, those are staple items wherever there is winter and snow for several months each year. Add to that, we don’t know when Jesus was actually born. Most scholars think that He was born in the fall, not the winter. But Christmas is really about Christ-mas, not all of the other traditions that have squeezed Jesus out of the picture.
  Some ingenious marketers from the Victorian era began the trend of turning Christmas into a gift buying commercial event. In 1939 President Roosevelt moved the Thanksgiving holiday back a week to extend the Christmas shopping season. Today Christmas has very little to do with the birth of Jesus. Walk through the aisles of most stores and you’ll have difficulty finding a nativity scene. Recently, when I was at Home Depot, I saw Star Wars figurines that you can decorate your lawn with during the Christmas Season. I still haven’t figured out what Yoda has to do with Christmas, but I’m sure that they’re selling tons of them.  
  But the real war on Christmas takes place in our own hearts. Most of us feel overly stressed during the Christmas season – to buy the right gift, send out all the cards, to have a Norman Rockwell family Christmas feast, etc. I know that I do. We quickly forget and miss the opportunity to thank God and share with a lost world that Christmas is not about red cups or all of the other hype. Christmas is about a loving Father sending His only Son to take on the form of a man so that He could die a horrible death for our sins. Christmas is about giving that one gift 2,000 years ago – God’s gift to us! “Thanks be to God for His inexpressible gift!” (2 Corinthians 9:15). 

Looking for quality used Christian books and other types of books at prices lower than even Amazon. Check out our family's online used bookstore at resurrectedreads.com or visit our store at the Waterford Unique Antique Market at 209 North Milwaukee Street in Waterford, WI -- 262.534.3500

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

The Invisible Poor

“A rich man is nothing but a poor man with money.” W.C Fields

  In a recent interview Donald Trump shared that he’s been told “no” his entire life. He then went to on say that his father gave him a “small loan of a million dollars” that he had to repay with interest at the start of his career.
  Very few people would classify a million dollars as a “small loan.” Yet, at the same time, most of us really don’t understand true poverty and what it means to be poor. I know that I don’t. 
  Because of media caricatures and sometimes generational bigotry, assumptions are often made about the poor that have little validity. Politicians use the poor as pawns, advancing political agendas, with little regard for assisting those who truly need it. Most in the middle class or above rarely personally know any poor people, at least with any depth.
  That’s one of the wonderful benefits of a local church in that those from all economic classes are present, welcomed and accepted. A biblical church must be classless, ageless, raceless and genderless. As Galatians 3:28 states, “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.”
  Yet, most of what we know about those outside of our normal social circles, we learned second hand. As a result, we tend to develop stereotypes of what poor people are like that have little validity and are certainly not universal. There’s a tendency to imagine our own socio-economic group to be diverse, even “normal” while we imagine “other” people belonging to a another group with which we’re less familiar, as being, for all intents and purposes, all the same.  
  The end result though is that there’s a tendency to draw stereotypical conclusions. Please be honest. Are these assumptions that you have made? While I won’t elaborate on these, I do want to challenge our preconceptions. 1. Poor people are uneducated and often stupid. 2. Poor people are lazy. 3. Poor people are substance abusers. 4. Poor people are limited in their use of the English language and poor communicators. 5. Poor people are ineffective and inattentive parents.
  The fact is that you will find poor people that fit some or all of those five statements. You will also find rich people who fit some or all of those statements. They’re stereotypes that often have little reality or validity. For example, just because someone has a Ph.D. doesn’t mean that they’re smart. They may just be an educated fool.
  My reason for pointing this out is that as believers, we have a biblical responsibility to assist the poor, Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the Lord, and He will repay him for his deed” (Proverbs 19:17), but we rationalize not fulfilling our biblical obligations based on our stereotypes.
  We’re also entering the season when many are looking for more opportunities to be generous to those that are economically challenged. Yet, because the plight of the poor has been so politicized and we are more stereotypical than biblical, few of us have taken the time to really think through “Who are the poor? How can I truly help someone who is poor?” So let me share some practical suggestions.
  Make it personal. The American approach of delegating responsibility has sidelined the average Christian and caused us to miss being a blessing and in turn being blessed. Most of us, if we’d stop, pray and think – already have someone in our social circle who’s economically challenged. Begin by praying for them. Invest some time to really get to know them. Hopefully, it will challenge you to be something very, very biblical – Incarnational. Rather than loving someone poor from a distance in a sanitized way, you enter their world, know them, love and serve them as Jesus would.
  Let God stretch and humble you…and grow your gratitude. The most common sin in the Church today and the average Christian, and one rarely considered is PRIDE. It is easy to be thankful we’re not impoverished. But we wrongly conclude that it’s because of our own initiative, hard work and biblical obedience. We often also judge those in poverty.
  Everything we have is because of God’s grace. While following biblical principles can lead to stable or fruitful lifestyles, all people living in poverty have not been the cause of their situations. Many are born in poverty, many for generations, sometimes because of unjust societal structures or oppression. This may have left them without the resources and/or knowledge to escape it. Remember what Scripture tells us about wealth, “Beware lest you say in your heart, ‘My power and the might of my hand have gotten me this wealth.’ You shall remember the Lord your God, for it is He who gives you power to get wealth…” (Deuteronomy 8:17-18).
  Take care of your own first. It’s not first the responsibility of government or even the church to take care of the poor. It’s first the family, 1 Timothy 5:3-4 & 8. Sadly, government stepped in because the family and church failed. I’m thankful for government programs that help the truly poor, yet it’s first the responsibility of the family and then the church. If someone is part of the church, and they don’t have family, it’s our responsibility as a family of believers to care for them. We’re to also care for brothers and sisters (Galatians 6:10), before those outside the church family.
  Be creative and help, don’t just enable. It is easier to write a check or give groceries, than it is to take the time to teach someone life skills, like how to get a job, how to keep it, how to budget, how to discern the difference between needs and wants, or even to encourage someone to break addictions that keep them in the cycle of poverty. To do this takes commitment, prayer, wisdom and a heart investment. Yet, the end results are worth it. It’s the fulfillment of the old adage by Maimonides, “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime.”
  Remember Jesus’ commission is the main thing. The greatest need everyone has is not what they have in their stomach but what they have in their heart. Whether they are rich or poor, healthy or sick – everyone’s greatest need is to hear and accept the gospel. It’s what Jesus commanded us to do first and it must be our top priority. All mercy ministries must be first gospel focused. While we must not ignore physical needs, we just can’t ever forget what the greatest need is. It’s very tempting to neglect the spiritual for the physical because physical results are more evident.
  This issue of the needy can’t be avoided by Christians. We can’t stay silent on the problems of the impoverished, hoping governmental programs will absolve us of responsibility. It’s tragic that, by and large, too often we’ve virtually ignored the very people with whom Jesus spent the bulk of His ministry while we retreat within our stained-glass walls to sing about becoming “more like the Master.” It’s time every believer, every Bible-believing Church once again take seriously the command of Jesus to care for the needy and support those among us who are less fortunate.

Looking for quality used Christian books and other types of books at prices lower than even Amazon. Check out our family's online used bookstore at resurrectedreads.com or visit our store at the Waterford Unique Antique Market at 209 North Milwaukee Street in Waterford, WI -- 262.534.3500


Monday, November 2, 2015

Generosity and Stephen King

No man was ever endowed with a right without being at the same time saddled with a responsibility.”  Gerald W. Johnson

Bestselling author, Stephen King, is most famous as the writer of horror novels. Sometime back he spoke to the graduates of Vassar College and offered some profound advice:
  “A couple of years ago I found out what ‘you can’t take it with you’ means. I found out while I was lying in a ditch at the side of a country road, covered with mud and blood and with the tibia of my right leg poking out the side of my jeans like a branch of a tree taken down in a thunderstorm. I had a MasterCard in my wallet, but when you’re lying in a ditch with broken glass in your hair, no one accepts MasterCard. We all know life is fleeting, but on that particular day and in the months that followed, I got a painful but extremely valuable look at life’s simple backstage truths. We come in naked and broke. We may be dressed when we go out, but we’re just as broke. Warren Buffet? Going to go out broke. Bill Gates? Going out broke. Tom Hanks? Going out broke. Steve King? Broke. Not carrying a dime. 
  All the money you earn, all the stocks you buy, all the mutual funds you trade—all of that is mostly smoke and mirrors. It’s still going to be a quarter past getting late whether you tell time on a Timex or a Rolex. No matter how large your bank account, no matter how many credit cards you have, sooner or later things will begin to go wrong with the only three things you have that you can really call your own: your body, your spirit and your mind.
  So I want you to consider making your life one long gift to others. And why not? All you have is on loan anyway. All that lasts is what you pass on….We have the power to help, the power to change. And why should we refuse? Because we’re going to take it with us? Please. Giving is a way of taking the focus off the money we make and putting it back where it belongs—on the lives we lead, the families we raise and the communities that nurture us.”
  Wow! Not exactly the stuff you’d expect to come out of Stephen King’s mouth. “A life of giving—not just money, but time and spirit—repays.”
  We’re now officially in the “giving season,” yet giving is something that most of us struggle with. American culture is about getting not giving. Rarely, does someone downsize…until maybe they’re nearing the end of life. Instead, they expand for that promotion, upgrade to that next car, go on a more expensive vacation, and purchase a better media center or cell phone. It’s about getting more space, more me-time, more down time and recreation for me. We’re much better at getting than giving. Giving is an afterthought for most of us, getting is a top priority.
  Be honest. When was the last time that you wrote down a giving goal? When was the last time you dreamed about how much you can give away? When was the last time that you even prayed about being able to give more? Or, when was the last time you excused, rationalized, or justified what you’re giving now because you feel guilty? Perhaps you justified not giving at all.
  What about giving away time? Do you look for ways to serve, to help, to minister to others? When was the last time you volunteered? Or, when you are asked, do you open your mental file, looking for that “answer” that will get you off the hook yet not make you look self-absorbed?
  Getting is the American way; it’s just not God’s way. And the more that we know God, the more that we love Him, the closer we walk with Him, then the more that we will be like Him. God is the epitome of generosity.
  Unbeknownst to him, Stephen King is simply echoing what the Bible teaches over and over again. It’s generosity that gives purpose and meaning to our lives. Whereas, getting leaves us empty and feeling meaningless.
  Think of the people that you know who are truly generous. Aren’t they usually characterized by joy, contentment, a spirit of gratitude? Others are drawn to them. Yet, what about those focused on getting? Usually, you will find that they are critical, complaining and discontent. They are miserable and miserable to be around.
  No wonder Jesus said that it’s more blessed to give than to receive. Do we believe that? To be blessed is to be happy. Giving generously brings greater happiness than stockpiling for ourselves. If it’s true that we’re more blessed when we give than when we receive, then it’s reasonable to expect blessing when we give to God’s purposes. Giving generously to God’s kingdom allows us to lay up treasures in heaven. These treasures are part of our rewards as Christ-followers and one of the many blessings of a life of generosity.
  More importantly, our generosity makes a difference for the cause of Christ. Lives, eternal destinations can be changed for eternity as a result of the money and time we give back to God. Changing lives is one of the reasons we exist. As long as we’re on the earth God has a purpose for us. Ephesians 2:10. “For we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” The message is clear. We’re created and regenerated in Christ to do good works—and part of those good works includes helping others to fall in love with Jesus. We do this one-on-one with people we come in contact with. One of the best ways to reach those who do not yet know Christ is through our giving. Our generosity allows us to partner with other believers so that together we change the world for Jesus Christ.
  To become generous requires a work of God’s grace. Generosity is unnatural. God must change us from our natural selfish inclination so that we become generous and become more like Jesus. 2 Corinthians 8 tells of this inner transformation in a group of Christ-followers in Macedonia. These believers were very poor, yet despite their poverty, they’re one of the most beautiful models of generosity in Scripture.
  It is impossible to grow to spiritual maturity until we become generous. There’s a spiritual axiom that says Jesus can have our money and time and not have our heart, but Jesus cannot have our heart without our money and time. God wants us to excel in every area including the grace of giving. 
  Grace-giving is motivated by gratitude to God for the gift of His Son and for His work in us. In response to all that He has done we give ourselves fully to Jesus Christ. Then, in response, as an act of worship, we give generously to advance the cause of Christ. In the end being generous will bless us infinitely more than we ever dreamed. Jesus was right: It is much more blessed to give than to receive! Do you really believe that? Then, show it! 

Looking for quality used Christian books and other types of books at prices lower than even Amazon. Check out our family's online used bookstore at resurrectedreads.com or visit our store at the Waterford Unique Antique Market at 209 North Milwaukee Street in Waterford, WI -- 262.534.3500