My husband and I have just experienced the wonderful joy of
giving to another. You see, several years back we bought a timeshare in a ski
town in our beautiful state of Colorado. We (almost) immediately regretted the decision,
but decided to make the best of it. In the past years we haven’t used the
timeshare much and rather it has begun to feel like a weight around our necks
with the homeowner’s fees, etc, etc. So this year we decided to rent out our
week since we wouldn’t be able to use it anyway. After a few weeks, many of the days were not
rented, so we began to offer the time to friends, so that at least it wouldn’t
just sit empty.
Then, last Sunday, I met a lady who goes to our church at
the Christmas choir practice. She introduced herself and said she was getting
married in six days and that consumed her thoughts. Later during practice I
asked if they were going anywhere and she mentioned a casino town that they
would stay at for one night. Later that day it hit me: we had the timeshare
time.
It was probably one of the most random voice messages I have
ever left: “Hi, are you the one singing in the Christmas choir that’s getting
married this weekend? If you're not, this message won’t make sense. I was one of
the sopranos singing with you and I got your number from the church directory.
I wanted to offer you our timeshare in Breckenridge for the four days after
your wedding…” She called me back later, ecstatic! Her joy, and the joy I felt,
moved me to tears.
In Acts 20:35, Paul reminds his audience that “It is more
blessed to give than to receive.” Before this last weekend, I knew it. I
believed it in my mind as a truth. Now, I know it in my heart! I have experienced
it! But what I have realized is that this is how we are to conduct all our
giving. We give to others because we are not bothered if we lose it. It was
easy to offer the timeshare to my new friend because it was not a loss anyway –
it would have sat empty, not earning us money. As God’s stewards, this is how
we are to treat all our possessions. They aren’t ours, they are our Master’s,
and He doesn’t mind if we offer them to others freely. The mill stone around
our necks, a.k.a. timeshare, has been turned into a blessing, because we were
able to use it to bless others.
When we hold things so tightly, we miss out on joy and
blessing. When we say, “This is mine,”
we are carving out an area of our lives that we refuse to give to God. So God
can’t use it to bless others, or to bless us. Believe me, this is no easy
thing. We all have debts to pay, bills to pay, hobbies to fund, and at this
time of year, Christmas presents to buy. The question is, do we want man’s
blessing and gifts, or God’s? This is not prosperity gospel. When we turn our
entire selves and all we have over to God and depend on Him to provide for us
we are blessed because our worth, value, and identity are now found in God, and
not in what others think of us, or what we have. This is what it means to be
blessed: our identity and inheritance are found in God and cannot be taken
away. So when we hear that it is more blessed to give than to receive, it is
because giving is a characteristic of God. When we become givers, we become
more Christ-like, and we look to God to give us worth and an identity.
So, be blessed and joyful, and be wise, but generous givers.
Great use for it and someone in need is blesed. Hard to beat that.
ReplyDelete-Ryan