Read through the Bible in 2 Years: 2 Corinthians 8-9
Have you ever thought about the idea that true love cannot be forced? I can make my kids do lots of stuff. Sometimes all I have to do is ask, but sometimes my request needs more incentives, maybe offering a reward (or a punishment) for compliance.
“Sweetheart, would you please go empty the dishwasher?”
“Honey, please go clean your bedroom?”
“After you finish mowing the lawn, I’m going to take you out for ice cream.”
“If you don’t get all your schoolwork finished by 4 o’clock, there will be no media for the rest of the day. Get going!”
But, does love work that way? Can I compel my children to love something… Or someone? I may be able to force some kind actions, but genuine love from the heart, by definition, requires a person to freely and willingly give of themselves.
Likewise, genuine generosity can never be forced. If your parents, or your pastor, or your government, demand that you share your stuff with someone else, then you are no longer being generous.
Part of what makes the Macedonian churches’ generosity in 2 Corinthians 8 so remarkable is that they were giving generously “beyond their means, of their own accord.” (2 Corinthians 8:3) I want to be more like that. I want to give generously, willingly, and cheerfully, of my time, treasures, talents, and testimony, in both my abundance and my lack.
Heavenly Father, You delight in a cheerful giver. Help me to give sacrificially and cheerfully. Help me to give freely, rather than under compulsion. Help me to be generous with my time as well as my money. Help me to remember how much You have given to me, that there is nothing I have that I have not been given. Make me more like Jesus and less like the world. In the name of Jesus Christ I pray. Amen.
By the way, if you’d like to hear a great sermon on this topic, please take a listen to my church’s sermon from Sunday, October 15, which was in God’s providence on this very topic!
