Mark 12:38-44
A
young girl got her first steady job. She
was playing piano at her church for worship, albeit not very well, but they
enjoyed having music in worship. The
church paid her ten dollars every week, even though she didn’t really want them
to pay her at all. After she was
confirmed she got her first offering envelopes.
She decided that was her chance to start giving back to the church. She could start showing them that she didn’t
really need to be paid to play piano. So
every week she would put a five dollar bill in her offering envelope and take
it to the church. Instead of giving ten
percent, she gave fifty percent. At a young age she learned what it meant to
give and to give generously. Sure, they
didn’t expect her to give that much, but it taught her a lesson. She was blessed to have job and therefore she
was called to respond by giving faithfully back to the place that had raised
her in the faith.
This
week our stewardship theme is “Give as you have been blessed.” This theme lines up well with the story of
the widow’s mite from our Gospel lesson.
Each copper coin that the widow gave was called a mite. Each one was worth about six minutes of an
average daily wage. She gave two
mites. She gave twelve minutes of an
average daily wage. The widow give out
of poverty. She gave everything she
had. Jesus claims that this woman has
given more than all the other people that have given. How is that possible? Others were putting in large sums of
money. They wanted others to see the large gift they had given. They still had money in the
bank. They didn’t choose to give it all
away. Jesus’ point here is that giving
isn’t so much about the amount given, but the reasons for giving or the reason
for keeping the remainder of our money for ourselves. Now, I don’t think Jesus is asking us to give
everything we have to live on. I think
he is asking us to consider why we give, what we give to, and what we do with the remaining money.
The
widow gave everything away. She kept
nothing for herself. In having nothing;
she had everything. There are other
stories we encounter in the Bible where the characters have nothing. The women at the tomb found nothing. The disciples as they headed out to follow
Jesus took nothing with them. When Peter
steps out of the boat to walk across the water there is nothing holding him
up. Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and
to God what is God’s and then we are left with nothing. In these moments of nothing that we realize
we have everything. We indeed have been blessed.
So
how are we being called to respond to the ways in which we have been
blessed? How are we going to give in
the upcoming year? A few weeks ago you
received your stewardship packet in the mail.
You were given a faith promise card and asked to return it to the church
telling us how you are going to give in the next year. Whether you have returned that card yet or
not, today I would like to give you some ways to think about how you can give
in the upcoming year. I would like to do
that by using the word mite – M I T E.
First,
M – “my resources are given.” The first
part of stewardship is sharing your resources.
Are you able to give some of your time to the ministries of this
congregation? Are you able to pray for
the ministry of South Canyon Lutheran, including its members and staff? Will you attend worship regularly and
participate in the sacrament of Holy Communion?
Will you share a portion of your financial resources with God to be used
through this congregation? However you
go about it, find a way to share your resources.
Next,
I – “in the interest of God.” All we
have belongs to God. We are simply managers
of what we have been given. Therefore,
we are called to give in the interest of God.
What would God give? Our giving
should reflect God’s interest. I really
think that is why the widow gave her last two coins. She understood that she was simply a manager
of what she had been given by God. She
wanted to give back to God what first belonged to God.
Now,
T – “to be a blessing.” We give because
we have been blessed. We give to be a
blessing to others. I recently read on
another church’s sign a quote from Winston Churchill. It said “We make a living by what we get, we
make a life by what we give.” It struck
me and has stayed with me for several weeks.
Sure the money we make allows us to put a shelter over our heads, food
on our table, clothes on our backs, but does making a living really give us
life. For the first time in my life I am
making a living. Yet, just making money
doesn’t make me feel complete. I think
the ability to share what we have been given with others gives our life
meaning. We make a life by what we
give. We make a life by being a blessing
to others.
Finally,
E – “earthly reality of the kingdom.”
Sharing our resources is a blessing to others, but it also creates an
earthly reality of the kingdom
of God. Over and over again Jesus talks about the kingdom of God.
The kingdom
of God is not a place
where we solely take care of ourselves.
It is not a place where we hoard what is ours. It is not a place where we flaunt our
riches. The kingdom of God
is a place where we share our food with the hungry. It is a place where we care for the widow and
the orphan in our midst. It is a place
where we clothe the naked. It is a place
where we share the good news of Jesus Christ.
It is a place where we pray for the enemy. It is a place where we love the unlovable. All of this cannot be done without our
resources of time, talent, and treasure.
Our giving can help to create and earthly reality of the kingdom of God that Jesus spoke about.
If
we put all of that together the acronym MITE stands for “My resources are given
In the interest of God To be a blessing and an Earthly reality of the kingdom.” I hope that as we think about what our giving
of time, talent, and treasure will look like for the upcoming year we can make
this our mantra. May we like the widow
be able to give a MITE. Amen.
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