This post explains how the early church shared the burden of Christian mission by "giving God what they had." It reveals a model for promoting polycentric participation “from everywhere to everywhere” in Christian mission today.
Read this post or share it with anyone you know looking to launch a church building project. It shows how common practices that may work don’t align with our Christian faith and offer an alternative biblical example that works worldwide.
What mindset should stewards have regarding the sustainability of operations? Churches and ministries need funding to fulfill their purpose. Consider six passages from Scripture. See how Kingdom thinking can be applied by stewards. Explore next steps as a church or ministry worker.
Want to leave a legacy of Christian generosity? Gary Hoag suggests that you tell stories, set an example, teach your children and grandchildren how to steward assets and how to give, pass on a rich inheritance in the biblical sense of the word, and store up everything in heaven.
The mistake most stewards make? Not living on a budget. To help you think about your own stewardship, read this post. It shares four benefits to living on a budget and points you to four free resources to help you as a steward to do it.
God cares that pastors and ministry administrators have their house in order. How do we know this? Jesus put the temple in order twice. Read the biblical reflection and get a practical tool to help you put your house in order and position you to increase your ministry reach and impact.
This post offers a biblical solution to the global problem of dependency. To gain biblical insight for addressing it, let us look at the interaction between Jesus and the disciples in the account of the feeding of the five thousand in Mark 6:35-40.
Does your church or ministry engage in an independent financial audit? Let's look at four lessons from how Ezra stewarded temple resources. Remember: an audit is worth the effort, because when everything is accounted for, the clean result preserves God’s honor and reputation.
God wants all stewards to participate in spreading the good news of Jesus. Consider His 4-step approach and how you might multiply stewards at your church or ministry: 1) I do. You watch. 2) I do. You help. 3) You do. I help. 4) You do. I watch.
This post explains how the early church shared the burden of Christian mission by "giving God what they had." It reveals a model for promoting polycentric participation “from everywhere to everywhere” in Christian mission today.
Read this post or share it with anyone you know looking to launch a church building project. It shows how common practices that may work don’t align with our Christian faith and offer an alternative biblical example that works worldwide.
What mindset should stewards have regarding the sustainability of operations? Churches and ministries need funding to fulfill their purpose. Consider six passages from Scripture. See how Kingdom thinking can be applied by stewards. Explore next steps as a church or ministry worker.
Want to leave a legacy of Christian generosity? Gary Hoag suggests that you tell stories, set an example, teach your children and grandchildren how to steward assets and how to give, pass on a rich inheritance in the biblical sense of the word, and store up everything in heaven.
The mistake most stewards make? Not living on a budget. To help you think about your own stewardship, read this post. It shares four benefits to living on a budget and points you to four free resources to help you as a steward to do it.
God cares that pastors and ministry administrators have their house in order. How do we know this? Jesus put the temple in order twice. Read the biblical reflection and get a practical tool to help you put your house in order and position you to increase your ministry reach and impact.
This post offers a biblical solution to the global problem of dependency. To gain biblical insight for addressing it, let us look at the interaction between Jesus and the disciples in the account of the feeding of the five thousand in Mark 6:35-40.
Does your church or ministry engage in an independent financial audit? Let's look at four lessons from how Ezra stewarded temple resources. Remember: an audit is worth the effort, because when everything is accounted for, the clean result preserves God’s honor and reputation.
God wants all stewards to participate in spreading the good news of Jesus. Consider His 4-step approach and how you might multiply stewards at your church or ministry: 1) I do. You watch. 2) I do. You help. 3) You do. I help. 4) You do. I watch.
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