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FAQ: What is biblical stewardship?

david flowers David Flowers
3 min

Although “stewardship” sounds like a bible word, it isn’t. But it is a bible concept. The concept of biblical stewardship is twofold – there’s stewardship of what’s been given particularly to you and there’s stewardship of everything else. Stewardship is the way we look after things – not the way we own things. We are stewards, or trustees, or custodians – of something that belongs to someone else but which has been put into our charge. Stewards are not owners, they are guardians.

In the ethical investment world they talk about “safeguarding the future” – we don’t own the future, we are looking after it for others.

Recognising that God owns it all

Biblical stewardship recognises that God owns it all (“The earth is the Lord’s and everything in it” Psalm 24:1): including (but not restricted to) our bank balances and mortgages, houses and cars, the money in our Stewardship Giving Account, earnings, pensions and pets, the birds, the beasts and even black holes. But what gives rise to stewardship is that God places many of these things into our custody. Right at the beginning He says to mankind, “take charge” (Genesis 1:28). Biblical stewardship is to look after the world in which we are placed (“A righteous man cares for the needs of his animal”. Proverbs 12:10). The goal is to develop and sustain the world.

This is the particular sense in which we are called to be stewards of what has been entrusted to us. We are given resources for a noble cause. Biblical stewardship does not decry money and possessions but it does recognise that they have a purpose. This means that before we can work out how to be good stewards we have to discover our purpose, our God-given goals in life.

Identifying our God-given goals

You may have several God-given goals, some overlapping, some which last a lifetime and some which last only for a few years. Goals such as: significant generosity; raising a family; working part-time or earning less so that you can give time elsewhere; building a business to provide employment or launch a great product; write a book; compose an opera; paint a portrait; play for England; clear your mortgage; support the vision of your church; have fun.

God gives us resources appropriate to the goals He ordains. So biblical stewardship means looking after those resources well: spending less than you earn; avoiding the use of debt; saving for the future; giving generously. Good stewards think about and use money (and resources such as time, gifts, energy, skills, possessions) in an intentional way - which means they reach toward their life purposes with greater efficiency and fewer stumbles along the way.

So you could define successful biblical stewardship as, “the continued achievement of God-given goals, using God-given resources, in the most efficient way”. (Ron Blue)

Paul provides an example of this sort of biblical stewardship in 1 Corinthians 16:2, “On the first day of every week, each one of you should set aside a sum of money in keeping with your income, saving it up, so that when I come no collections will have to be made.” There’s the resources given by God - money. There’s the purpose, also given by God - to send emergency relief to the church in Jerusalem. There’s the care - in regular thoughtful saving.

Biblical stewardship is: recognising that we have been made custodians; discovering our God-given purposes; and then taking charge, taking care, so that those purposes may be fulfilled.

What steps can we take to better steward our finances?

Money is mentioned over 800 times and is one of the most referenced topics is the bible. Download our Guide to Budgeting and unlock 6 Biblical Principles to get a grip on your budget, manage your finances and learn to live generously.

A Stewardship Giving Account can help you better manage your giving by providing one place to manage your charitable giving and tithing. It puts you in control and lets your chosen charities and causes benefit from Instant Gift Aid and reduced admin.

 

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Written by

David Flowers

David Flowers is co-Senior Pastor of the Leeds Vineyard church and a director of Flowers McEwan Ltd, a financial planning firm in Leeds.