“As steward leaders we have a mandate to rule over and subdue this creation according to God’s vision for a redeemed world...” Dr. R. Scott Rodin, author of The Steward Leader: Transforming People, Organizations and Communities
What would happen if this type of stewardship actually took place – if the people of God recognized and appropriately acted on this mandate? Do we truly believe that it is our responsibility to affect all of life – not just the hereafter? Just how would having stewardship as our mission impact our message and action?
I think the people of God need to recognize their purpose of being an extension of God’s mission (mission Dei), which the scriptures indicate restores all of creation. Perhaps a renewed theology of stewardship in the Church can be developed through a practice of reflecting on the needs of the world and our duty to live out Christ to the world as stewards of all that He owns – for which we are responsible. It is our role to serve the community in which we find ourselves – engaged and unselfishly serving the needs of others as though serving Christ – as Matthew 25:40 states, “to the extent that you did it to one of the least of my brothers, you did it to me.”
I would like to take this
discussion one step further, into a broader stewardship role for the Church
with a view of our effectively serving this world through our charity:
Dallas Willard makes an
excellent point in The Spirit of the Disciplines that “charity and
social welfare programs, while good and clearly our duty, cannot even begin to
fulfill our responsibility as children of the light to a needy world.” Rather than reject wealth, he then boldly calls upon the people of God to
“assume the responsibility, under God and by his power, of owning and directing
the world’s wealth and goods” (1988:202). He points out that by doing so, with Christ,
the Church would be able to reduce the causes of poverty.
That is a level of stewardship the Church has
not attempted on such a large scale – and likely will not without
realizing that the sacred calling of God is not just within the Church, but in
all vocations and careers. The Church should commission men and women into
“farming, industry, law, education, banking, and journalism with the same zeal
previously given to evangelism and missionary work” (1988:214).
Once the people of God are
involved as stewards in influencing the marketplace for the community’s good,
they will have a hand in advising public agencies in appropriately serving the
truly needy. This culminates in the
people of God showing how the Church “enters into full participation in the
rule of God where they are” (1988:218). That is true stewardship of all that God has
made and put under our authority.
The Church needs to recognize
its responsibility to offer the Kingdom life: reconciliation to God,
to self, to society, and creation. In
order to provide the “full” gospel the people of God must become stewards, and models,
of the grace of God in their own lives—our time, treasure, and talent—in
order to fully practice stewardship toward others. This requires a new perspective on possessions,
ownership and personal stewardship.
Willard, Dallas. The Spirit
of the Disciplines: Understanding How God Changes Lives. New York:
HarperCollins, 1988.
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