This was originally meant to be a response to “prosperity preaching,” but I think it is also good for us to consider in our own lives and ministries. #4 is especially poinant in our country where so many Christians have great wealth. We need to know how to instruct them, and what to do with our own. Here is an excerpt:

Don’t develop a philosophy of ministry that makes hard work a means of amassing wealth.

 Paul said we should not steal. The alternative was hard work with our own hands. But the main purpose was not merely to hoard or even to have. The purpose was “to have to give.” “Let him labor, working with his hands, that he may have to give to him who is in need” (Ephesians 4:28). This is not a justification for being rich in order to give more. It is a call to make more and keep less so you can give more. There is no reason why a person who makes $200,000 should live any differently from the way a person who makes $80,000 lives. Find a wartime lifestyle; cap your expenditures; then give the rest away.

Why would you want to encourage people to think that they should possess wealth in order to be a lavish giver? Why not encourage them to keep their lives more simple and be an even more lavish giver? Would that not add to their generosity a strong testimony that Christ, and not possessions, is their treasure?

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