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I would like you to turn to those very familiar scriptures there in Deuteronomy 16.
My approach toward an offering sermonette is that it is a time of instruction regarding some of the elements of a specific God-given responsibility. My purpose is not to ring every last penny from you but to show principles of what God expects of us if we are going to be in His image. These two verses are very clear that God requires an offering during holy day observances because that is what it means, "You shall not appear before the LORD your God empty-handed." With most of us on each holy day there is an element of sacrifice in our offering and that is as it should be. But with that sacrifice there is sometimes also an element of fear too—as Richard spoke about last Sabbath—the fear that now that I am giving an offering, am I going to have enough for myself? Let us see what God has to say about this by beginning in Proverbs 11.
This proverb is drawn from a simple truth that is observed from agriculture and that is that the farmer who sows few seeds reaps a small harvest, a farmer who sows a generous amount of seeds has a larger harvest. The harvest increases exponentially according to the number of seeds, not mathematically. However the proverb places that simple truth into a human family and community service circumstance in which a person uses his wealth, whatever level it might be to perform services to others. Thus the proverb is showing that generosity of spirit in the use of wealth, for benevolent purposes also produces an abundant result in the community, the family, and in personal well-being. In fact the proverb focuses on personal well-being. It is a truth that if one limits himself to verses of this sort without seeking other scriptures, scriptures that deal with charitable acts, it can easily be construed that one should use charitable giving as a means of increasing personal wealth. Just like investing in the stock market. You put so much in, you get so much out, if you put a lot more in, you get a lot more out. It is really nothing more than a business transaction. Well, with God it is an awful lot more than just a business transaction. So the approach here could, if a person wanted to interpret it that way, reduce benevolence to nothing more than a mathematical equation. One thing we can always do in order to get a correct balance on concepts is to look to the New Testament and to the New Covenant where God ratchets responsibility up to a spiritual level.
One thing this context addresses that almost all Old Testament contexts fail to address is that God is aware of our fears in sacrificial giving. That is the fear that if we do give to others we will not have enough for ourselves. In addition He addresses our attitude—the spirit in which the sacrifice is made—and thus God addresses what is righteousness in His sight, and at the same time He encourages us by letting us know what we can expect. Does God ever go back on a promise? There are several principles to learn from these scriptures. Let us go back to verse 6
What He is saying here is that it is righteousness to give generously within the bounds of what we do have because the more one sows the more one reaps. You would not sow more if you did not have it. God is expecting that we are going to draw from what we do have. So this verse actually shows us, by introducing the same concept we saw in the Old Testament there in Proverbs, that this generosity of spirit and cheerful giving applies both physically and spiritually.
We can add to this that it is righteousness to give cheerfully. A grudging giver meets the letter of the law and at that point we are just as righteous as the Pharisee. Not a very high level but there is some righteousness there. The cheerful giver has gotten the wisdom of God's image and keeps the law in its spirit as well as its letter. In other words: generosity adds the spirit that God wants an offering given and that is good. We will add one more thing and that is that this verse shows that the gift given is neither impulsive (that is based on emotion) nor compulsive (it is not just a grudging obligation met) and this is what the verse then implies as right. There is a right balance between the two.
These two verses are really wonderful. Because God loves the cheerful giver He responds with all grace. In other words: He does not limit His response to the people merely to money. He starts giving other gifts as well—all grace. And the implication is with both physical and spiritual blessings God will give back physical and spiritual blessings so that we will have even more to work with. What a promise! And we will have all sufficiency in all means given to us. Which is a further expansion the gifts He gives back are not limited to money. He wants us to be sufficient in giving of ourselves in a generous spirit to every aspect of Christian life. And so what happens comes up in verse 10.
So because the sacrifice is given in the right attitude God promises it will produce. It will increase our fruits of righteousness. Do you know what the fruits of righteousness are? That is the fruits of the Spirit. God is responding to generosity of spirit, to a cheerful attitude in giving by saying, "I'm going to make it even more possible for you to increase in love, joy, peace, gentleness, goodness, meekness, self-control, and on and on." He does not limit it to things that are physical.
Paul is saying that because others are benefited they will recognize God's hand in it and glorify Him with thanksgiving. In other words: cheerful generosity promotes God's glory. Hey, that is what we are here for—to promote the glory of God.
What he is saying there, very simply, is that our giving will result in more people praying for our welfare. We want to do well in this, do we not? There is an awful lot tied to keeping this simple command in Deuteronomy 16:16-17 in the spirit rather than merely the letter. I want to read verse 13 again this time out of the Revised Standard Version because it puts an interesting twist on the verse:
I am going to close this by reading this entire series from the Moffatt. Listen carefully. He does a good job.
Now we are going to be taking up an offering and for offertory music I thought we would do something that is appropriate to the day—since this is the day that Israel really left Egypt on. They just left central Egypt on the first day but on the seventh day they went through the Red Sea and were out and on their own all together. So we are going to have the Ferrante and Teicher arrangement of the main theme from the movie, Exodus. JWR/stf/drm ![]() Start Your Day with ScriptureBegin your day with God's Word the Berean brings Scripture and commentary every morning. Join 150,000+ subscribers growing daily in God's Word.
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