Showing posts with label Charity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charity. Show all posts

Saturday, November 25, 2023

day no. 16,469: never little where much is needed nor more where less is required

“Give not little to whom you should give much, nor much to whom little, nor nothing to whom something, nor something to whom nothing.” — Asser, The Life of King Alfred (attributed to Pope Gregory therein)

God is not a skinflint but neither is He a spendthrift; that is to say, He does not waste anything or withhold anything good. He provides for His people. He determines the portion appropriate and provides no less than necessary nor more than needful. He does not spoil or spurn His children. He never gives little where much is needed nor more where less is required.

Proverbs 3:27
Withhold not good from them to whom it is due, when it is in the power of thine hand to do it.

A good and godly man, like God, provides for his people. He works hard and procures the means necessary to bless them. He does not leave their welfare to chance or leave their nourishment to nuance. He makes his disciples his duty and his people the object of his piety. 

Romans 13:8
Owe no man any thing, but to love one another: for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law.

A good king gives what he can, pays what he owes, and does his duty before God and man. He does not skimp or soil. He does not set a table of crumbs, but neither does He scold when a crumb falls to the floor. He gives something to all and all to some. He withholds nothing from anyone and gives everything to no ones. 

A man must know what needs to be given, where to give it, how much of it is needed, and how to get it. Like David, he must work hard to set aside the right amount of the right things in order to have the best amount of everything.

1 Chronicles 29:2
Now I have prepared with all my might for the house of my God the gold for things to be made of gold, and the silver for things of silver, and the brass for things of brass, the iron for things of iron, and wood for things of wood; onyx stones, and stones to be set, glistering stones, and of divers colours, and all manner of precious stones, and marble stones in abundance.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Going without without Christ

In My Utmost for His Highest this morning I read the following words:

"God never tells us to give up things just for the sake of giving them up, but He tells us to give them up for the sake of the only thing worth having, namely, life with Himself."

I used to have the distorted notion that my going without was of some inherent value (regardless of the motivation and application of my foregoing the thing), as though me not having something was a benefit to you (and by you and mean y'all).

The person who counts their life as nothing, but also does not count Christ as everything has merely thrown their life away.  Paul tells of scenarios where a person could be burnt at the stake or impoverished of basic necessities both without love and without God's blessing upon them.  You can sell all that you have and martyr yourself for the wrong reasons or with the wrong motivations apparently and that is not something to which our thoughts often gravitate.  We typically reward the foregoing as virtuous without requiring its end to be virtuous.

God's "love tank" (a la Love in 5 Languages) is never on "E."  He does not NEED  your love, your stuff, your anything.  He gives you everything you could ever give to Him.  He desires your love, sacrifice, devotion, and self-denial as acts of genuine, cheerful worship. 

Your religious exercises,  your "if you only come through for me this time Lord I will never _____ again(s)," your attempts to impress men (including yourself) are more often than not merely mirages (check me and my alliteration machine out).  You usually give things up to get something else, not Someone else.   You seek to find yourself by giving up other things rather than seeking to know God by casting off that which He commands.  We often give up more than He asks in our efforts to earn favor before Him and then hold too tightly to that from which He clearly has commanded us to abstain. 

You going without is of no value to me (or God).  Neither of us care really if you went the last 2 years without eating chocolate.  It is sort of interesting, I guess.  Perhaps good conversations filler.  I am fascinated in a way by giving stuff up.  It is going against the grain to deny yourself in a culture of hedonism, but aeceticism is really just self-indulgent exercise of self control in some ways.  Whether the emphasis is on controlling or liberating one's self, the giving or getting is not about God, but about some isolated self-exalted self.

We should give things up because God in Christ gave His all.  We get the order wrong . We give up things to get God.  We need to get that God gave up Jesus for us, first loved us, was generous with us.  In response to this lavish goodness and grace in giving generosity, we respond by following Him diligently and giving up our rights, money, time, and lives to Him.  Love begets love.  Giving begets giving.

May you dwell richly in His love for you in Christ that in response you gladly give up all He demands and freely enjoy that which for you He has provided.