Showing posts with label 2 Corinthians 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2 Corinthians 8. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Excellence in Generosity (2 Corinthians 8: 1-7)

When the rules of the game are to get and keep as much as you can, everyone realizes there isn’t enough for this to happen.  If everyone’s goal is to get and keep as much money as possible, well, there isn’t enough money for everyone to do that.  If everyone’s goal is to get and keep as much real estate as possible, as much stock as possible, as much food as possible… people will realize that there is a limited amount of these things, and so the focus will be on scarcity.  When everyone tries to get and keep as much as they can, there will be a scarcity of resources.
People who live in a scarcity mindset become afraid.  And that can be dangerous.  When is a wild animal most dangerous?  When it is afraid. 
It’s the same with people.
Thousands of years ago, Pharaoh was afraid.  Pharaoh, Pharaoh, oh, baby! 
Pharaoh was afraid, because it seemed to him that there weren’t enough good things to go around.  And since there weren’t enough good things to go around, he was going to use his power and his might to get all the good things for himself.
Soon Pharaoh owned all the land.  Soon Pharaoh owned all the food, and the people had to rely on Pharaoh’s distribution of the food in order to live.  Pharaoh owned a good many of the people as well, having made them his slaves. 
But still, Pharaoh was afraid.  He still had that scarcity mindset.  He became mean, brutal, and ugly.  The people suffered.
Until Moses and Aaron led them out of Egypt and out of slavery.
But leaving Egypt meant leaving behind all that wealth.  The wealth may have belonged to Pharaoh, but at least with Pharaoh, there was a steady supply of food:  a steady supply of bread. And even though they were oppressed, the people weren’t sure they wanted to leave Pharaoh and all that wealth.  Pharaoh’s rules on how to play the game was so ingrained in them, that they weren’t sure they could live without them.
So God decided to teach the people new rules to a new game.  Every day, in the wilderness, God sent to them this bread-like substance that they could eat. 
It was different, this bread-stuff.  The people didn’t have a name for it.  They only said, “What is it?” a phrase which, in Hebrew, is “manna.”  That’s what they called this bread stuff; they called it, “what-is-it.”
And every day, this “what-is-it” appeared, and every day they could gather enough “what-is-it” for that day, and that day only.  Each person could gather just what was needed. 
Sometimes someone would worry that, perhaps, there wouldn’t be enough.  Sometimes someone would become afraid – like Pharaoh – that there wasn’t enough to go around.  And that someone would try to gather more of the “what-is-it” for himself. 
But the extra amount always spoiled. 
In this way the people learned new rules to a new game.  Instead of a game of scarcity, it was a game of abundance.  Instead of trying to horde it all for oneself, the people learned to gather only what they needed; and that if they gathered only what they needed, then there was plenty to go around.  If they shared, and made sure everyone had what they needed, there would always be enough.
And so, the people learned to move from a mindset of scarcity to a mindset of abundance.  They learned that when it came to food and money, there would always be enough if their economics was characterized by love and sharing.  But if their economics was characterized by selfishness and hording, everything would spoil and go rotten.
It’s not easy to learn new rules to a new game.  In fact, after leaving Egypt, it took the people an entire generation to stop playing by the old rules, and start playing by the new rules.  God led them through the wilderness for forty years.  That’s how long it took.  Because change is never easy.
Isn’t the same true for us?  I mean, are we any different?  We still haven’t got used to the new rules of the new game; we find it so hard to live by the rules of abundance and sharing…
In Jesus’s time, people were back to playing by the old rules.  Old habits die hard.  Now, instead of Pharaoh, it was Herod who was in control, Herod who lived in fear, Herod who felt he never had enough, Herod who worked to control all of the assets, Herod who distributed bread to the people. 
And it was Herod who dictated the rules.
Then came Jesus.  Jesus knew that God’s rules were different. 
One day, something happened out there in the wilderness.  Note the symbolism of the location: the wilderness is where the people of Israel wandered in the wilderness, receiving manna.  This is not a coincidence.
Out there in the wilderness, Jesus was teaching a huge crowd of people when, suddenly, it was mealtime and there was no food to be had … except, as far as anyone could tell, five loaves of bread and a couple of fish.
The disciples started panicking.  “What are we going to do?  There’s not enough!  We’ll have a riot on our hands!”
These are thoughts of fear, thoughts based on the old rules and the old game, the game of scarcity, the game of Herod and Pharaoh, the game in which there is never enough.
But Jesus took the bread.  He blessed it, giving thanks to God for God’s abundance.  Certainly the disciples and anyone else playing by the old rules wondered, “what abundance?”
Then Jesus broke the bread and told the disciples to give it to the people. 
It didn’t look like there would be enough.  Certainly the temptation for anyone who recognized this scarcity would have been to horde what little there was for oneself.  But Jesus understood that God’s economics were different.  It was a different game, with different rules, rules that said you should love and share, always.
And when the disciples shared the bread with the crowd, lo and behold, there was enough.  There was an abundance.
What an important lesson they learned, that day, out there in the wilderness.
On another occasion Jesus told a story about a man who hadn’t learned this lesson, and who still lived by the old rules.  This man was rich.  He owned a lot of land that produced an abundance of crops.  In fact, he ran out of room to store all crops. 
He said, “What should I do?”  Did he decide to share his wealth?  No!  Even with all his wealth, his mind was focused on scarcity, and he thought that it still might not be enough. 
So he said:  “I know what I’ll do!  I’ll tear down my barns and build bigger barns!”  For this man, life was all about accumulating more and more for himself.
But God said to the man, “You fool!  Tonight, this very night, your life will end.  And your barnful of wealth: who gets it?  You’re living by the old rules to the old game.  You’re relying on your stockpile of wealth to save you, rather than God’s day-to-day providence.”
In his 2nd letter to the Corinthians, the apostle Paul wrote about the churches in Macedonia.  Paul was so excited to tell the news of these churches, because they had learned to live by the new rules of God’s economics. 
The churches in Macedonia had experienced a very difficult trial, an ordeal that pushed them to the very limit.  It’s not clear what these difficulties were, exactly, but the churches did face great opposition in their communities, and they were exceedingly poor.  “Dirt poor,” I think, is how Paul describes it in Hebrew. 
It was no doubt a stressful time, a time of uncertainty.
In circumstances like that, it would certainly have been tempting for the churches in Macedonia to want to hold on to what little money they had, for their own ministry, their own members, their own needs. 
But having learned the new rules of God’s economics, they begged Paul for the privilege of making a generous contribution to the needs of other churches in other regions.  They truly believed that only if they could show love to others by sharing generously what they had, would they be able to experience the abundance of God themselves.  Their true colors showed through even in their time of trial, for even then, they refused to live by the old rules, and instead embraced the new rules of God’s economics.
And because they believed so strongly in the new rules of God’s economics and the new kingdom these rules represented, it was vitally important for them to invest in it.  It was essential that they not just speak of this new kingdom, this new way of living, this new game with its new rules, but that they “put their wallet where their mouth is,” so to speak.
Their actions were a sign of trust in God.  If they had believed that their future depended on their ability to hold on to what little they had, that would be a demonstration of a very weak faith. 
Instead, they trusted in the God who provided for God’s people time and time again in the desolate, barren wilderness, a place symbolizing scarcity and lack of resources, a place that, through God’s grace, became a place of abundance.  They trusted in the God who provided manna in the wilderness.  They trusted in the God who provided abundant loaves of bread and fish in the wilderness.  This same God, they believed, would provide for them, and so they insisted on being a part of that; they insisted on living by the rules of abundance, rather than the rules of scarcity; they insisted on sharing and loving, even though they had so little.
The gift they made impressed the apostle Paul, who was so overjoyed at their generosity that he told the story of their generous sharing to churches in other regions, to inspire them, and encourage them to also live by the new rules and new economy of God’s kingdom. 
Then Paul said to these other churches:  “You have excelled in so many things.  You have excelled in faith; you have excelled in speech; you have excelled in knowledge; you have excelled in enthusiasm; and you have excelled in love. 
“Now, excel in living by the new rules of God’s economy.  Excel in generosity, excel in giving, excel in sharing.”
This, of course, is the challenge for us.  In our modern society, the old rules are drilled into our minds in a way that far surpasses even the efforts of Pharaoh and Herod.  Mostly, this takes place through advertising, nearly all of which tells us we should be living by the old rules, the rules of scarcity, the rules of “too much is never enough.” 
And it’s impossible to avoid all these ads.  A recent New York Times article mentioned that “Supermarket eggs have been stamped with the names of CBS television shows. Subway turnstiles bear messages from Geico auto insurance. Chinese food cartons promote Continental Airways. US Airways is selling ads on motion sickness bags. And the trays used in airport security lines have been hawking Rolodexes.”  A person living in the city sees over 5,000 ads a day… and nearly all of them, in some way, reinforce the old rules.
In the face of this onslaught, what chance do a couple of stories from the Bible have?  How can we ever hope to find people in the world who excel in generosity, who live with a mindset of abundance and faith in God’s goodness?  How can we ever hope to find people in the world who are willing to live by the new rules of sharing and loving?
I don’t know if we ever will find such people “in the world.”  But I do know that we find them in God’s church.


Monday, July 2, 2012

Abundance and Generosity (2 Corinthians 8:7-15)


In this section of scripture, the apostle Paul is writing to the Christians in Corinth – the Corinthians – because he wants to tell them about the Christians in Macedonia.  The Macedonians have just been through what Paul calls a “severe ordeal of affliction.”
I’m not sure what that “severe ordeal of affliction” was, but it doesn’t sound good.  Probably, it involved harsh treatment from the non-Christians in Macedonia, as well as a great challenge of finances.  The Macedonian Christians were persecuted, and they were poor.
Yet, during this “severe ordeal of affliction,” the Macedonians’ “abundant joy” and their “extreme poverty” have come together in a “wealth of generosity.”
Abundance and generosity.  Paul repeats those two words several times.  Abundance and generosity.  He talks about the abundance and the generosity of the Macedonians, despite their poverty and their need.  And he talks about the abundance of the Corinthians, and how they can help the Macedonians as well as Christians in other cities.
Paul talks about Christ, who “for your sakes became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich.”
Paul talks about the Israelites who discovered manna in the wilderness. When they gathered the manna, everyone had enough.  The one who had much did not have too much, and the one who had little did not have too little.  Everyone had just the right amount.
This is the ideal that is lifted up by scripture.  It’s the reason God commands his people to tithe.  It’s the reason for the year of jubilee, when slaves are set free and debts are forgiven.  The abundant resources God has provided are to be generously shared, so that everyone has enough.
Unfortunately, we have strayed wayyy off track.  There is a great chasm between where we are today, and the society envisioned by God.  Theologian Walter Brueggemann calls this the great contradiction, that we have more and more money and less and less generosity.  He says that “we have invested our lives in consumerism.  We have a love affair with ‘more.’  Consumerism is not simply a marketing strategy.  It has become a demonic spiritual force among us.”
We think we will have happiness only if we have more.  More candy.  More money.  More, more, more.  And so, as a society, we do whatever it takes to get more.
The Bible calls this greed; and greed, the Bible says, is idolatry [Colossians 3.5].
Greed is the cause of the bank failures and mortgage crisis which contributed significantly to our ongoing economic troubles.
Greed has led us to a society where one man has eight pieces of candy, while the other nine have just two pieces among them… and yet that one man pays no more in taxes than do those other nine.
And yet that one man – and probably most of the other nine as well – still seek more.
If this pursuit of more was making them happy, perhaps one could find a way to justify it.
But it’s not making them happy.  The love affair with more isn’t making any of us happy.
So why do we keep going after more?  One reason is that we think there might not be enough to go around; and if there isn’t enough to go around, we better start hoarding what they can for ourselves.
Walter Brueggemann calls this the myth of scarcity.  It is in direct contrast to the idea of abundance that is found in scripture.  When we think in terms of abundance, we become generous, but when we think in terms of scarcity, we become fearful.
The Bible begins with abundance in the Garden of Eden.  But scarcity gets introduced when Pharaoh sees a famine coming, and begins hoarding crops and resources.  By the time we get to the book of Exodus, Pharaoh is so fearful that he commits genocide against the Israelites, seeking to destroy them.  He believes there just aren’t enough resources to go around, and so the Israelites are a threat that must be removed.
Walter Brueggemann says Hitler did the same.  Hitler saw a world of scarcity, and as a result he was a fearful man.  He was a man full of fear.  He was afraid.  His fear gave way to his ruthlessness and the evil he committed.
Pharaoh tried to destroy the Israelites, but that plan failed, so he sent them away.  The Israelites ended up in the wilderness, where they discover something new:  They discover abundance.  They discover enough.
Actually, it was more of a re-discovery, since abundance was there at creation, but it was new for the Israelites.  Every night, this strange stuff appeared on the plants, something that the Israelites could gather and eat.  But they could only gather enough.  Everyone could gather up what they needed, but no one could gather up more than they needed.  Anyone who tried to gather up more discovered that more would quickly spoil and rot.
This was a whole new paradigm for the Israelites.  They were not used to a mindset of enough.  They were used to a mindset of not enough, a mindset of scarcity.  But the idea of enough – of just enough – was completely new. 
So they called it manna, a word which means, “What is it?”  Everyone had enough to be satisfied, enough to be happy, but no more.  There was enough for everyone’s need, but not everyone’s greed. 
What a concept!
The apostle Paul is speaking to those who are trying to hoard the manna, keeping more than they need, while others do not have enough.  Stop acting as if the world God created is a world of scarcity, he says.  God’s world is a world of abundance.  And a world of abundance calls for sharing.  It calls for generosity.  Stop grabbing more money than you need, because – like the manna – it will spoil and rot in your hands.
And guess what?  That is exactly what is happening.  Our nation’s money is spoiling in our hands.  It is poisoning our society.  Our desire for more has made us uncivil toward one another as we ruthlessly pursue more for ourselves.
No one pursues more better than we Americans.  We earn more, spend more, eat more, consume more, and pollute more than any other nation.
We also have, at the same time, one of the highest rates of diagnosed depression and anxiety.  This is not a coincidence.  More does not make us happy.
Living with a scarcity mindset, always trying to get more and more, is terrible for one’s mental health.  At a deep, basic level, we know that living like this isn’t right.  We know that we are called to live with generosity and kindness.  When we give, when we share, our mental health improves.
Let’s say I work ten hours for ten dollars an hour.  A lot of people would be very happy to work ten hours at ten dollars an hour.
At the end of those ten hours, how much would I have? 
$100.
That $100 equals ten hours of my life, the ten hours I gave in order to earn it.
Now I get to spend that $100.  What should I spend it on?  What is worth $100? 
An even better question to ask is, “What is worth ten hours of my life?”  Because that $100 equals the ten hours of my life that I gave in order to earn it.
So, whenever I spend money, I’m spending my life.  So now the question becomes, “What is worth my life?”
I personally don’t like to spend more than I have to on things like clothes, electronics, cars … because things like these, I feel, are usually not worth the life that I have given in order to be able to pay for them.
On the other hand, I do like to spend money on things that are important and meaningful.  I give money to the church, because the church is something I believe is worth a part of my life.  I know I don’t give as much as some, but I am able to give more than I used to, and I feel good about that.  Given that we are continuing to run a deficit, I’m considering increasing what I give to the church, and I encourage you to do the same.
Knowing that my life is being used in this way makes me happy and brings me satisfaction.  Spending my life this way gives my life meaning.
The medical doctors and the psychiatrists prescribe drugs for the chemical imbalance in the brain that contributes to things like depression and anxiety, and that’s good.  Drugs that are used carefully under the guidance of a doctor can work wonders.
But there is also a spiritual factor here, and I believe that the best way to lift yourself out of depression or anxiety is to do something for someone else; to break off your love affair with “more” and to recognize that the gifts of God are meant to be shared; to spend your life energy on things that are meaningful to you and beneficial to the world.
For the past four days, I’ve been going back and forth to Los Angeles, where an event called Miracle on 43rd Street has been taking place.  I’ve been helping out with the youth program; nearly 80 youth and youth leaders from around the country came to work hard for four days, giving their time, their money, their lives, to help renovate a church and serve in an economically challenged urban community.
Every time I saw them, they were smiling.  They had paid money to be there, many even paying expensive airfare.  They had given up a week of summer vacation, a week of working summer jobs.  They had said goodbye to friends, boyfriends and girlfriends, and families.  They exchanged their comfortable beds for sleeping on a hard church basement floor.
And they were smiling.  They felt really good, having found a way to share their life’s energy with the world.
Seeing them reminded me of the world of abundance in which we live.  It reminded me of the joy that comes from giving, that it’s not just something we say, but that it is really, actually true:  joy does come from giving.  It reminded me that when we share generously, miracles really do happen.  It reminded me that God calls me to help create a world of abundance and generosity, and that doing so is what makes life worth living.