The
reason for the blessings
Nothing interferes more with Christians’ ability
to serve God than their need to earn, in order to pay
and buy. An observer from 100 years ago would be awestruck
by the improvement in our living standard and by the
amount of leisure time our technology now provides us.
In addition, we now live an average of 18 years longer
than we did 100 years ago and have at least one-third
more disposable income per family. When all of these
factors are weighed, together with the fact that in
America alone there are perhaps 20 million Christians,
it seems clear that Christians ought to be spreading
the message of the Gospel of Jesus Christ throughout
the world much better than they are presently doing.
The
simple truth is that most American Christians are too
busy to be involved in fulfilling Jesus’ Great
Commission, as recorded in Mark 16:15. We have grown
complacent and comfortable in God’s blessings
and have forgotten Jesus’ mandate. Since God asks
for obedience rather than demanding it, many Christians
have simply ignored the very reason for God’s
blessings: to glorify Him and to honor His commandments.
God
calls each of us to fill the gap in order to spread
His Gospel to all parts of the world. Like Esther, every
believer must decide either to be used of God or to
be bypassed and allow another to be chosen instead.
Most American Christians would never refuse to do God’s
will; it’s just that the timing is not right.
They allow the urgent things of this society to overshadow
the important things of God.
We
have enough money in North America to fund all the Christian
work in the world if the people of God would just give.
But although the desire to give may be there, most Christians
in America are so caught up in making money and buying
bigger and better things, and paying for the things
that they already have, that they have lost their focus
on the unsaved world. They feel that they cannot give
because they are so encumbered by debt that they cannot
see how they can give. In essence, the Gospel has literally
become shackled because money needed for worldwide ministry
is tied up in personal debt and large monthly payments.
Seek
first His kingdom
The very best investment a person can make is an investment
in the kingdom of God. The Lord admonishes us to seek
first His kingdom instead of worrying about material
possessions. “Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness,
and all these things will be added to you” (Matthew
6:33). American Christians today have a greater abundance
available to them on a day-to-day basis than any previous
generation. On the other hand, there has never been
a generation of Christians so caught up in worry about
possessions as this present day generation. However,
it’s not the material things that cause the difficulties;
it is materialism, which is a matter of heart attitude.
Basically, materialism means that a person is more dedicated
to accumulating material things than in serving God.
Without a doubt, the evidence of the lives of most Christians
in America shows that this generation’s dedication
is to materialism. “For where your treasure is,
there will your heart be also” (Matthew 6:21).
I
believe that the admonition to “seek first the
kingdom of God” is given by the Lord as a contrast
to worrying about material possessions. I am convinced
that the ministry of Crown Financial Ministries has
been brought into existence by God to teach God’s
people God’s principles of finance so that they
can be free of debt and the worry that accompanies debt,
in order to help fund the spread of the Gospel worldwide.
Once Christians become financially free of personal
debt, he believes that they will have a greater abundance
for which to fund the Gospel’s outreach to the
“remotest part of the earth” (Acts 1:8).
Ownership
or stewardship?
Although giving so that God’s servants can take
His message throughout the world is an outward material
expression of a deeper spiritual commitment and is an
indication of a willing and obedient heart, making such
a commitment is almost impossible unless Christians
take the first step in becoming financially free and
transferring ownership of all material possessions to
God. This means money, time, family, material possessions,
education—even earning potential for the future.
God’s Word says that we must be willing to transfer
ownership of every material thing in our possession
to Him if we truly want to be financially free.
When
we recognize that God owns everything and all blessings
come from Him, our role as managers, or stewards, becomes
evident. When we view ourselves as owners and not managers,
we’ll look at every other aspect of our lives
the same way. Each of us will see himself or herself
as the person in charge, but that can change quickly
in the face of circumstances beyond our control. But
if God is the owner and we are simply His stewards,
we need only to be concerned with how best to manage
His possessions. In so doing, money is no longer our
possession, it is God’s possession, which we hold
in trust. But because we will have to give an account
of how well we managed His material goods and possessions,
we must to the best of our ability use the money as
we feel He would use it and in a manner that is pleasing
to Him.
As
stewards of God’s possessions that have been entrusted
to them, Christians must ask whether God would be pleased
with their stewardship or with the way that they have
spent His money. Would God be pleased with His steward
indulging in material excess, while His servants who
are striving to take His Gospel to the far corners of
the earth, are in need and in want? Would God be pleased
with His steward using His money to satisfy personal
selfish desires at the expense of the unsaved? Would
He be pleased that His stewards all too often choose
to fulfill their own directive rather than to fulfill
His Great Commission?
Conclusion
There is no greater investment than an investment into
the kingdom of God. But today so many Christians are
so far in debt that they cannot even begin to honor
God’s mandate, although they might truly want
to. But debt is a mountain that can be overcome—one
step at a time. Step number one is to give all possessions
to God. Step two is to manage His possessions in a way
that is pleasing to Him, in accordance with His principles
of finance. Then once debt has been brought under control,
the Gospel must be liberally funded throughout the world.