Luke 20:45-47; 21:1-4
January 14, 2024
StewardshipWidow's Mite
Kathleen Peterson
When you think of
money, what is your initial feeling?
My guess is it’s not completely positive.
Lots of us have negative thoughts of money,
It’s a cause of stress for a lot of people,
and we think of greed, corruption, the root of all evil.
Maybe you think I’m going to ask you for some right now.
If you are like
me, or most people, you have a
complicated relationship with money.
It’s a joy, and a pain. It’s a source of pride, comfort,
and anxiety.
Habits and feelings about money are
hidden deep within the recesses of our brain
some where we aren’t even consciously aware of them.
Money is the cause of many family arguments
and many divorces.
It’s a motivator for crime, violence, and murder,
It causes wars, devastation and famines.
It can at once be freeing and constraining,
There is not one
life in here that is not in some way,
determined or influenced by money.
Money controls where we live, what we eat,
where we go, how much power we have or don’t have.
Money is a huge determinate in our lives,
in the lives of others, and in the world.
And yet many
people of faith feel like God doesn’t
have anything to say about money.
Like it’s outside of God’s concern.
I’ve told
you this tidbit, but it’s so good I have to tell you again.
Mark Allen Powell, professor at Trinity Seminary
who wrote a book about stewardship tells the story about baptism in the
first century.
New converts were devoting themselves to Christianity
and getting baptized.
But when
they were baptizing in Gaul
the men who were soldiers
would go into the water to be baptized and hold their
dominant hand up outside the water because
that was the hand that would hold their sword
when they went into battle.
They
wanted to reserve that piece of their lives
and not have it influenced by Christ’s teachings,
so they could go on and continue to do what they were doing.
Dr. Powell
says that this is how many people feel about money.
He said we want to hold our wallets outside of the waters of
baptism
so we can do whatever we want with it and not worry about God.
Never mind that money is mentioned over
800 times in the bible,
lots of us feel like money, and our struggles with money are
unholy,
are somehow outside of God’s realm.
But
obviously they are not.
The reading that we’re using for the next four weeks is just one
example.
Jesus and his disciples are in the temple.
Jesus is teaching them, but everyone can hear.
He’s verbally sparring with the chief priests, scribes, and
elders,
basically all the church leaders around him.
And he’s using the people around him as examples.
And he points out three things:
One the corruption
of the church leaders
and how they take money from the poor.
Jesus calls it devouring widow’s houses.
Obviously, a dishonest use of money.
Second
there’s the people who are visibly well off
and are putting lots of money into the offering box.
They got a lot of attention and recognition,
but their giving had little effect on their wallets and on their
hearts.
And then
there is the widow who comes to the temple.
to the temple and this woman only puts two small coins in
like two pennies, almost nothing into the offering.
But Jesus
says, in his estimation, she was the most generous
even though her gift was the smallest.
Now I
don’t know that Jesus was advocating
for giving your last dollar away to someone else.
I don’t think that this is about what percentage
of our gifts should go to the religious institution of your choice
-
Which is what most sermons about this story end up being about.
What Jesus
was lifting up, was the generosity of this woman’s heart.
She was living generously. She felt this gift when she gave it.
It meant everything.
The
scribes took from others.
The rich people gave and it possibly didn’t even challenge them at
all.
But when this woman gave, it was all she had. She felt it.
Maybe
because she gave that day,
she may not have eaten,
she might have gone without heat or water.
Maybe it was ridiculous of her to give it away,
Maybe Jesus was lamenting the fact
that the church didn’t take care of her like it should.
Those
things all might be true, but her gift was the
most generous and valuable in God’s kingdom.
Because it was the hardest to let go of,
it took all of her heart to do it, and the woman still did it.
Normally, no one would notice a gift that small,
But Jesus made sure that her gift didn’t go unnoticed.
And the
gifts that we give, that are a struggle for us to give
are the most generous.
Something that is hard for us to give up.
whether it’s time, efforts,
compliment, thanks,
patience, empathy, concern, forgiveness, time, assistance, or
money.
Whatever
is hardest for you to part with, that is generosity.
That is giving with your heart. And generosity is contagious.
There was another
woman here today.
A few years ago
in January, it was bitterly cold in Chicago,
like it is this
week, and while everyone was huddled in their homes
keeping warm,
this Chicago woman had heard about
a homeless group of tent dwellers were pushed from their
tents when a propane tank exploded and they had no were
to go.
The shelters were filled to capacity.
She was feeling terrible for them and wondering
what they were going to do with the cold and the shelters
filled
and didn’t get any
kind of answer.
So she impulsively, without too much thought,
put 20 hotel rooms onto her credit card for them.
Then, she was trying to figure out how to get all
these
people into those rooms. So she then asked people to help drive these people to
the hotel.
Eventually people started to offer their help too and eventually
they
got 100 rooms and rides for all these people.
Was it well
thought out plan? No.
Was this woman independently wealthy? Not at all.
At first she said she didn’t really know how she was going
to pay for it.
We all lament that people live in tents and there are
people who are cold.
But so few of us do anything about it even though we do have
the power to.
But this woman’s heart was filled with generosity.
And her generosity inspired other people’s generosity.
Generosity and sharing are contagious.
It spreads, once one person does it than other people do
it too.
It becomes a culture.
But the opposite is true too.
Remember at the beginning of the pandemic when the
word
got out that toilet paper was scarce and we all started
going to stores at 6:30 in the morning and buying in
bulk?
And we got it and said we were going to share with
everyone else,
but then we ended up keeping all the toilet paper for
ourselves,
because, what if we run out of toilet paper?
Generosity is contagious, and fear and hoarding are
also contagious.
There is no problem with us having or money,
or security, or the comfort and security
and power that comes along with that.
The problem comes when we hoard it.
When we refuse to share. Then everyone else doesn’t
share.
Then it becomes a problem.
And also when we have the power that money
brings,
and we don’t demand that corporations,
and governments and institutions share too.
That’s when it becomes a problem.
As people of Christ, we’re called to be the first to
share
even when it’s scary, and we don’t know how the story
will end.
We have to
make choices every day about
how we take and spend what we have.
To be honest, I don’t think anyone in here is
devouring widow’s houses, and I also don’t think anyone
here is giving their last penny to support a ministry.
Most of us
live in this gray area between those two poles.
But the good news is that we’re not alone there.
God is with us in that gray area.
God is with us in our decisions, in our work, and even in our
money.
Jesus sees
us across the temple making those tough decisions.
Jesus knows the injustice that many of us face.
Jesus knows the questions we deal with, the inner struggles.
Jesus knows how we worry about our past and our future.
God sees the gifts we give, no matter how small.
Even if it’s just two small mites.
But this
isn’t about giving to a church.
This is not about calculating a percentage of your income.
This is not about pledge cards and budgets.
It’s about discipleship. It’s about following Jesus.
It’s about the mission of the church as a whole,
and about each one of us individually.
Because God doesn’t just want our money.
God wants our hearts.
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