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Click to hear this sermon sermon071028
It was a
macho moment at a picnic. Some men were bragging about who was the strongest.
Great Giving - Exodus 36: 1-7; Luke 6: 37-38 - October 28,
2007 - Cicero United Methodist Church - Everett J. Bassett
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It was a
macho moment at a picnic. Some men were bragging about who was the strongest.
Finally, one of them picked up an orange and said, "I'm going to squeeze
the juice out of this orange. And I challenge anyone to squeeze one more drop
out of it when I'm done." So he squeezed and squeezed, and the juice
poured out on the ground. Then other strong men took turns trying to squeeze
more out of the fruit, but no one could. Finally, a wiry older man said,
"Let me try." Everyone kind of chuckled when they gave him the
orange, and then looked in shock as the little man coaxed two or three more
drops of juice out. "How did you do that!" they exclaimed. And he
said, ''I'm the treasurer of my Methodist
Church. I'm used to
squeezing out the last drop every week."
Ain't it
the truth that often times in our church financial life, we feel like we are
always squeezing? It's the end of October, and once again we are running way
behind.
So, given
the fact that our finances are always tight, and often behind, what would you
think if one day you got a phone call that went something like this: "Hi,
I'm calling from the Finance Team of the church, and we have a problem. Our
congregation is giving too much money. The offerings are so great, we don't
know what to do with it all. We're calling around and asking some of our bigger
givers not to give quite so much, if you don't mind, so we can catch up with
spending all we have." I think on the last day before I retire, I’m going
to make a phone call like that just for the fun of it. But until then you will
not be getting that call from your church; we are too busy squeezing oranges.
There was a
time, however, when the offering had to be shut off. It was back in the days of
Moses, and it was when the Hebrews were building the tabernacle. Moses gathered
all the skilled people to work on the tabernacle, and collected freewill
offerings from the others. Every day more came in, says Exodus 36, and
eventually the artisans came to Moses and said, "You're giving us more
money than we can use; we need to turn off the offerings." Exodus 36: 6-7
reads like this: "So Moses gave command, and word was proclaimed
throughout the camp: 'No man or woman is to make anything else as an offering
for the sanctuary.' So the people were restrained from bringing; for what they
had already brought was more than enough to do all the work." Wouldn't
that be amazing? "Please, no more. We don't know how to spend it
all!"
That was
great giving. And I ask, What was happening back then to call out such
generosity? Let me point out four things I see in this story. First of all,
they were great givers because they trusted in a great God. These were people
who had seen amazing things. They had seen God raise up Moses to lead them;
they had seen the Red Sea part so they could
cross over to freedom; they had seen bread fall from heaven, and water spring
from a rock; they had seen Moses come down from the mountaintop with the Law on
stone tablets. They had discovered that a great God provides - we can't
out-give God.
The lesson
could have gone the other way. They could have said to themselves, "Wow.
That was a close one. We almost ran out of water. From now on, we'd better
hoard it." Or, "We almost ran our of food. We'd better hide what we
have." Instead, the lesson they
learned was, “Wow. What an awesome
God. His grace is abundant, it’s
overflowing.” And that discovery filled them with a desire to give back.
As we kick
off our stewardship drive today, this fact undergirds our giving - God has
already out-given us. We live by His amazing grace. The world turns by grace;
all around us are the gifts of God. Certainly that is true in this land of
plenty and freedom. There isn't a person here who can't look over the sum total
of his or her life and not see plenty to be thankful for. And even when it's
not our best day, and we are facing steep challenges, and our world is rocked
by events, we can still count blessings beyond anything we could give back.
It's during those tough times that God is greatest of all. God is our shepherd
and our provider. It is only right that we should want to give back.
The second
reason the Hebrews wanted to be great givers was because they were joined
together in a great cause. They were building a tabernacle to worship God
together. No one of them could have built it. But together they could. In
Exodus 35, here is how their offering is described: “... they came, both men
and women; all who were of a willing heart brought brooches and earrings and
signet rings and pendants, all sorts of gold objects, everyone bringing an
offering of gold to the Lord. And everyone who possessed blue or purple or
crimson yam or fine linen or goats' hair or tanned rams' skins or fine leather,
brought them. Everyone who could make an offering of silver or bronze ...
anyone who possessed acacia wood ... brought it. All the skillful women spun
with their hands ... the leaders brought onyx stones and gems ... spices and
oil ..." This list goes on and on.
Everyone bringing what they had, including skills and time and labor. They were
part of something great, and their offering overflowed.
I believe
that here in this church, we are part of something great. The past two Sundays,
at some point in the 8: 45 service, those doors in back have opened, and our
Senior High youth have come in to hear the sermon - 25 to 30 of them. I have
never seen such a group - something great is happening. Wonderful Sunday School
teachers, beautiful music, evangelistic outreach, care and healing ministries,
missions to inner Syracuse and Sabine Pass and Africa, community presence - all
vital parts of something great that is happening here at this church, and I've
only touched the tip of the iceberg. No one person could ever accomplish
something like this. But a family of people who have pledged to one another
their prayers, presence, gifts, and service, believing in a great God, can
witness amazing things as they bring their offerings forward.
The third
reason the children of Israel
were great givers is that they were stirred by a great passion. We see it again
and again in the story in Exodus 35 and 36. I count at least five times that
the author uses a phrase like, "everyone whose heart was stirred." I
think that is a great phrase to describe the heart of Christian giving. Someone
who returned from Zaire
told me that the thing that impressed them the most about worship there was the
offering. He said the folks can't wait for it. They bring their offerings
forward dancing and singing - it is the high
point of their week. Many of them live in poverty;
they have little to live on. But instead of that fact making them stingy and
fearful, it makes them generous and appreciative. They relish everything they
can give more than what they have to keep. They understand fully what was one
of the central
teachings of Jesus, repeated again and again: that you only
truly possess what you give away. Jesus called that treasure in heaven, kept
secure for you. Treasure on earth will rot and decay. But what you give is
secure. We read it this morning in Luke: “... give, and it will be given to
you. A good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put
into your lap; for the measure you give will be the measure you give
back." Those folks in Zaire
get it. Giving to the Lord is a great passion for them.
There are many
churches today that are sad places to be; they are struggling, and a big part
of the struggle is financial. One way I think we could describe them is that
instead of hearts stirred by a great passion, they have heads stifled by a
great worry. When they think of church, they think of financial shortfalls
rather than spiritual abundance. It's pretty hard - no, impossible - to get up
much passion for financial shortfalls. But there is for a Savior who can stir
our hearts. If I had one wish this stewardship season, it would be that the
first step all of us would take after this service is not to go home and take
out our calculators and study the numbers and decide how much we can spare for
the church. Rather, my prayer would be that we would go home and take out our
Bibles, and study the 23rd Psalm, and how our cup of grace runneth over; or
Matthew 6, starting with verse 25, and how if we put God's kingdom first, our
worries will be taken away; or the first eleven verse of Romans 5, and how when
we were still sinners, Christ died for us. When those things truly take hold in
your heart, we'll be stirred by the greatest passion we've ever known. And we
won't have any trouble giving; we'll have trouble holding back.
There is a
fourth reason the Hebrew people were great givers: they were obeying a great
command. This is a recurring theme in these chapters in Exodus as well - that
the Hebrew people were giving "in accordance with all that the Lord (had)
commanded." We're not supposed to preach heavy on that in today's church.
In today's church we're supposed to focus on those other things - passion and
thanksgiving and the joy of giving, and so on. People don't want to hear about
obedience anymore. But it's not fair to the message of the Bible to ignore the
fact that one of the main reasons we give is that God requires it. It's a
matter of being obedient. We might fairly say that the reason God requires it
is He knows we need to give in order to be happy. But that doesn't change the
fact that giving is a matter of being obedient to what God expects of us.
What's
more, God has made the math easy. We receive abundantly from the hand of the
Lord. 90% of what we receive is for us to use and to save for our own needs.
10% is for us to return to the Lord. This is the standard the Bible puts before
us, and, as we heard earlier, it is the standard we will focus on during our
stewardship drive.
There is a
story about a man who woke up after a major surgery, and the first place his
eyes focused was on his pastor, who was sitting there in his hospital room.
Highly drugged up, and responding to long years of habit, the first words the
man said were, "Hi, Preacher. Put me down for the same as last year."
There may be some people here who will make the same sleepy stewardship
decision they've made year after year. But I pray it will be something more
profound than that. I pray it will be about stepping up to be great givers --
trusting in a great God, joining friends in a great cause, stirred by a great
passion for Christ who saves us, and obedient to a great command.
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