A spirituality of abundance
A theological framework for the Ministry of Planned Giving
Planned giving is about stewardship
Planned Giving is about stewardship and a recognition that stewardship
of God's creation is a life-long endeavour. Any understanding of stewardship
must begin with an awareness that God is "The Great Giver".
To be always giving is an essential part of God's nature. None of us
can ever "out-give" God. Consequently, we are not called to
extra-ordinary acts of generosity. However, we are called to be careful
and wise stewards of the resources God has given to us. Not just for
a time, but to steward these gifts throughout our lives.
A theology of the church
An understanding of the theology of Planned Giving must also include
a theological comprehension of the role of the church as the body of
Christ on earth. Each of us stands within a long line of a great Communion
of Saints stretching back to the formation of the early Christian Church
in Acts 2. As Anglicans, we are inheritors of a Gospel faith within
a specific liturgical and cultural tradition. It is a tradition rich
in worship, sacrament, fellowship, and service to each other and beyond
our faith communities. Throughout the 450+ year history of the Anglican
Church, each generation receives this Gospel tradition and is called
to steward it for a time and then pass it on to generations that follow.
Since everything comes from God and everything
belongs to God we are called to be faithful stewards of God's gifts
in this age and to pass these gifts on to the church that follows in
our footsteps. Remember this: we pass on only what we have ourselves
received. When we pass our spiritual gifts on to the church it is empowered
to be Christ in the world. We also have financial gifts we can provide
to give the financial resources needed for the ministry of the communion
of saints that follows us.
An invitation to the abundant life
Jesus regularly warned his audiences that to store up treasures is folly.
The gifts God gives are for use on this earth and cannot be taken with
us. The parable of the rich landowner (Luke 12:13-34) who tears down
old barns and builds a bigger barn to store more goods, though his life
is about to be taken from him that very night, is an example of Jesus'
teaching. Jesus understood that we worship a God of abundance and that
we must live out of a "spirituality of abundance".
Many of Jesus' miracles reinforced his understanding
of the abundant life. The changing of the water into fine wine in John
2 at the Wedding at Cana, the feeding of the five thousand from just
a few loaves and fishes, and his vast healing ministry all point to
the abundant life that God desires for all his children.
In John 10:10 Jesus tells the disciples why
he came to live among humans. He declares, "I have come that they
may have life and have it abundantly." Jesus teaches us that the
proverbial cup is not half empty or even half full, but overflowing.
That is the way our God has designed creation.
Sadly, Jesus seemed deeply troubled that
so many of us lack the eyes to see this. So many unwittingly live their
lives out of a "spirituality of scarcity". This is understandable
but so unnecessary. We fear that we will never have enough and worry
that, though we are doing fine now, at some point in the future we may
be in financial peril. Insecurity reigns. It seems it has ever been
thus throughout the history of humanity. In the story of the Exodus
the people cry out for food and lament that they are not back in Egypt,
under the chains of slavery, but at least with fish and grain and food
to fill their stomachs. Exodus 16 tells us that God heard the murmurings
of the people and provided quails and then manna from heaven each morning.
The people were told to take only what they needed and no more. God
guaranteed the people that there would be enough food each day and that
they would not go hungry. But anxiety and a spirituality of scarcity
reigned amongst many of the Israelites. Many took more food than needed
for each day and by the next morning they found that the excess had
become corrupted - filled with maggots.
Theologically we need to come to grips with
the knowledge that God gives us what we need. That enough is enough.
That the abundance of this earth is not to be hoarded but shared.
Human anxiety
Certainly, Jesus understood that people are anxious about their personal
financial security. A quantum leap for people in their spiritual faith
journeys is when they are able to trust that God will provide for them
in the future - that God has always provided for them in the past and
always will. In Luke 12:22 Jesus addresses this anxiety:
"Therefore I tell you, do not be anxious about your life, what
you are to eat, or about your body, or about what you shall have to
wear. For life is more than food and the body more
than clothing. Consider the birds of the air, they neither sow nor
reap, they have neither storehouse
nor barn, and yet God feeds them. Of how much more value are you than
the birds!"
Just a few short verses later Jesus reiterates
his point:
"For where your treasure is, there your
heart will be also."
We have a wonderful opportunity to grow beyond
our anxiety to a place where the knowledge of God's abundance overflowing
in all our lives creates genuine transformation. Our hearts do not have
to remain in bondage to a spirituality of scarcity.
Understanding that God's creation is teeming
with abundance for all creates a freedom that can bring a deep inner
peace to many Christians. When we have a felt experience of God's abundance
and generosity we can only respond in thanksgiving.
People have a need to give thanks to God
We must understand a basic aspect of human nature. Scholars incorporate
this understanding into a branch of theology called "The Theology
of Man". People want to make generous acts of thanksgiving to God.
They have a deep spiritual need to do this. Experience has shown that
many truly do treasure their relationship with Jesus Christ and their
hearts are firmly grounded in God's love. The biblical record overflows
with the joy in the hearts of ordinary people finding creative ways
to give thanks to God for his many blessings in their lives.
In the story of the Flood, Noah's first act
upon finding dry land and exiting the ark in Genesis 7 is to build an
altar to the Lord and make offerings of thanksgiving. When Hannah conceives
a long-awaited son in 1 Samuel 1 her joy and ecstasy overwhelms her
and she offers the boy Samuel to the Lord for service under the High
Priest Eli in God's temple. In 1 Chronicles 16 David recaptures the
Ark of the Covenant from the Philistines and rejoices as it is carried
back into Jerusalem. To the scorn of some, David himself is singing,
dancing, and making merry. He threw a great party of thanksgiving to
God "distributing to all Israel, both men and women, a loaf of
bread, a portion of meat, and a cake of raisins."
Solomon is so overwhelmed with God's many
gifts in his life that he undertakes the building of the most marvellous
temple of its time and joyfully dedicates it to God and asks that God
might make his home there. People from around the Mediterranean world
travel great distances to marvel at its beauty and grandeur.
In the New Testament more stories abound
of peoples' need to give thanks to God for God's blessings in their
lives. In John 9, the man born blind is so thankful he risks his life
as a member of his family and is cast out of his community for testifying
on Jesus' behalf before the Pharisees. Joseph of Arimathea donates
his
family's newly dug tomb for the body of Jesus, he has been so impacted
by Jesus' life and teaching. In Acts 8, we encounter the story of Philip
and the Ethiopian eunuch. The Ethiopian is so overjoyed with the Good
News explained to him by Philip that in thanksgiving he asks for immediate
baptism and goes on his way rejoicing.
Planned giving as Jubilee
Ancient Israel held the principle of Jubilee as sacred. In Leviticus
25 and 27, especially verses 16-25 and in Numbers 36:4 the principle
of Jubilee is articulated. Every 50 years the people of Israel were
commanded by the law to return the land and other property to its original
owners, to redistribute wealth that the poor might have a share in the
bounty of the Lord.
Jubilee laws call on Israel to restore an
equitable distribution of land and property and there is much evidence
in the ancient world that this redistribution was reality and not fiction.
This concept of Jubilee unfolds for us a world in which God (acknowledging
reality) has a plan to provide equitably for all. The world, it is recognized,
will continue to veer off into imbalance. At least there are concrete
actions devoted Christians can take to be true to the knowledge that,
in fact, all the world and all that is in it is from God and owned by
God and not by us.
We know God puts it in our hearts to want
to give. Certainly we want to know that our family members will be taken
care of but we want to give. Throughout our lives as members of the
church we are regular supporters of its ministry and display consistent
generosity over time. Almost always it is from our cash flow or family
operational budgets. The Planned Gift is almost always a gift of assets.
In many ways the Planned Gift can be seen
from a theological perspective as a form of individually declared Jubilee.
A returning to God for redistribution to those in need. But there is
a sacred trust at stake. The donor is trusting the church to redistribute
assets acquired, often over a lifetime, to those truly in need, to ministry
that honours the passions and intentions of the donor - to ministry
that honours the concept of Jubilee. Thus, through our Planned Gift
we become agents of Jubilee together - true stewards of the gifts of
God.
All of this becomes possible as we move forward
in our spiritual journeys from scarcity to abundance, to the life Jesus
calls us each to and the inner peace and freedom it brings.
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