God's Heart for JusticeНамуна
This text might well be familiar to you. For those who spend much time in church, you are likely to hear a talk on the importance of giving. This is not because your pastors are greedy (I hope!), but because any church needs to raise money to fund its ministry. This passage from 2 Corinthians, indeed all of chapters 8 and 9, is a favorite location for many a “giving” sermon.
Yet their original meaning was not raising funds to pay the local pastor. Paul is appealing to the Corinthians to be generous to the Jerusalem church. Under the generous reign of God, the surplus wealth of one group of Christians can meet the needs of poor Christians a long way away. There is more than enough in God’s economy when we learn to excel in the grace of giving.
As if to show us this is not some new dimension to the character of God, v.15 closes with a quote from Exodus 16. It comes from the period when Israel was sustained by manna in the desert. During that time God always gave enough to supply the needs of everyone, but never so that they could hoard.
It’s not mine.
It’s not yours.
It’s his, and we get to bless each other by sharing it all around.
Reflection and Response:
1. Watch the video on the practice of charity in the Old and New Testament
Scripture
About this Plan
Our God is a God of justice! From the beginning to the end of the biblical story, God desires that all people will know him, and that humans would serve, not oppress; share, rather than hoard; and empower, rather than demean. This 7-day study takes you on a brief journey through both the Old and New Testament, and shares important examples from Christian history.
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