STEWARDSHIP-MONEY
God owns it
all and [you] are stewards of His resources... Because you are stewards of the
resources God has entrusted to you, every financial decision you make is actually
a spiritual decision. For many, that's a revolutionary concept. How you manage
your finances is a pretty good barometer for the condition of your spiritual
life.
Preparing for Marriage, 1997, p. 195,
198, Gospel Light/Regal Books, Ventura, CA 93003, Used by Permission.
If God was
the owner, I was the manager. I needed to adopt a steward's mentality toward
the assets He had entrusted – not given – to me. A steward manages assets for
the owner's benefit. The steward carries no sense of entitlement to the assets
he manages. It's his job to find out what the owner wants done with his assets,
then carry out his will.
Randy Alcorn
Excerpted from The Treasure Principle by
Randy Alcorn © 2002 by Eternal Perspective Ministries, p. 24.
Your children
should love the Lord, work hard, and experience the joy of trusting God. More
important than leaving your children an inheritance is leaving them a spiritual
heritage. If you left your children money they didn't need, and if they were
thinking correctly, wouldn't they give it to God anyway? Then why not give it
to God yourself, since He entrusted it to you?
Randy Alcorn
Excerpted from The Treasure Principle by
Randy Alcorn © 2002 by Eternal Perspective Ministries, p. 70-71.
You may
think, No problem there. I'm putting my church and ministries in my will. By
all means, do your estate planning and give heavily to God's kingdom. But what
kind of trust does it take to part with your money once you die? You don't have
any choice! Death isn't your best opportunity to give; it's the end of your
opportunity to give. God rewards acts of faith done while we're still living.
Randy Alcorn
Excerpted from The Treasure Principle by
Randy Alcorn © 2002 by Eternal Perspective Ministries, p. 68.
God doesn't
look at just what we give. He also looks at what we keep.
Randy Alcorn
Excerpted from The Treasure Principle by
Randy Alcorn © 2002 by Eternal Perspective Ministries, p. 63.
We cannot
give God anything; for everything is already His, and all we have comes from
Him. We can only give Him praise, thanks, and honor.
Martin Luther
There cannot
be a surer rule, nor a stronger exhortation to the
observance of it, than when we are taught that all the endowments which we
possess are divine deposits entrusted to us for the very purpose of being
distributed for the good of our neighbor.
John
Calvin
Let us walk as stewards
and not act as owners, keeping for ourselves the means with which the Lord has
entrusted us. He has not blessed us that we may gratify our own carnal mind but
for the sake of using our money in His service and to His praise.
George
Muller
The Autobiography of George Muller, 1984, p. 195.
All quotations taken from books published by Whitaker House are used with
permission of the publisher. Whitaker House books are available at Christian
bookstores everywhere.
God judges
what we give by what we keep.
George Muller
It’s not what
you do with the million if fortune should ere be your lot, but what are you
doing at present with the dollar and quarter you got.
Author Unknown
It is common
for Christians to foolishly mismanage their money and then blame God for not
blessing them financially.
Rod
Rogers
Copied from: Pastor Driven Stewardship: 10 Steps to
Lead Your Church to Biblical Giving by Rod Rogers, © 2006, p. 196. Used by
permission of Rod Rogers – www.DynamicGiving.com.
All rights reserved.
Six
principles of wise money management:
1.
Use
a budget (Pr. 21:5a).
2.
Have
a savings plan (Pr. 21:20).
3.
Don’t
cosign for someone else’s loan (Pr. 6:1-5; 17:18; 22:26-27; cf. 11:15; 20:16).
4.
Stay
out of debt (Pr. 22:7).
5.
Avoid
get-rich-quick schemes (Pr. 29:19-20, 22).
6.
Don’t
buy on impulse (Pr. 21:5b).
Rod
Rogers
Copied from: Pastor Driven Stewardship: 10 Steps to
Lead Your Church to Biblical Giving by Rod Rogers, © 2006, p. 184. Used by
permission of Rod Rogers – www.DynamicGiving.com.
All rights reserved.
1. The
Principle of Non-Attachment – I will purchase or receive nothing that I cannot
give away (Lk. 12:15; cf. 12:32-34; 16:13-25; 1 Jn. 2:15-17).
2. The Principle of Liberty – I will owe no man anything but to love him (Rom.
13:8; cf. Pro 22:7).
3. The Principle of Liberality – I will constantly seek to give away
possessions for God’s glory (2 Cor. 8:3-5; cf. 2 Cor. 9:7; Luke 6:38).
4. The Principle of Recall – I will keep accurate records of God’s dealings
with me financially in order to show others that God answers prayer and
provides for His own (Mt. 5:16; Pro. 27:23-27).
5. The Principle of Security – I will save and invest only if God is leading,
with the understanding that I will give it all away at His slightest
instruction ( Mt. 6:19-20; cf. Prov. 28:8; 1 Tim. 6:9-11).
6. The Principle of Compassion – I will not pray for someone’s needs
financially unless I am willing to be the instrument God uses to meet that need
if He should desire (1 Jn. 3:16-18; cf. Jam. 2:15-17; Lk. 6:30, 38;2I Cor.
9:6-15; Prov. 28:27).
7. The Principle of Contentment – I will be content to live on whatever God
chooses to provide, whether little or much (Phil. 4:11-13; cf. Prov. 30:7-9;
Matt. 6:24-34; 1 Tim. 6:8).
Jim Elliff
Seven
Principles of Finance for the Believer, Christian Communicators Worldwide, www.CCWtoday.org. Used by Permission.
How could we
enjoy heaven…if during our lifetime we had used most of our time, treasure, and
talents for ourselves and our select group?
Daniel Fuller
The Unity of the Bible, Zondervan, 1992, p.
163.
Many are poor
because they rob God.
C.H.
Spurgeon
We should use
all our money for the Lord. This is, we should use all
our money in a way that God would approve. In that sense, all of our money is
to be given to the Lord. Stewardship is to be total, not partial.
Wayne Mack
Strengthening Your Marriage, 1999,
P&R, p. 104, Used by Permission.