Stewardship of Gifts Exercise
Christians
believe that everything we have is a gift of God. We also believe that God has given all of us
innumerable gifts and has asked us to be faithful stewards of those gifts
(Please note: We are not only talking here about what are often called
“spiritual gifts,” but a much, much broader notion of gifts that God has
entrusted to us.) But what does it
actually mean to be a faithful steward of these gifts? A faithful steward is one who acts in
place of the owner in full keeping with the desires of the owner. As we have talked about in class, Scripture
suggests that God’s deepest desire is to mend the universe, to restore
wholeness (shalom) to all of
creation. Every time some measure of
wholeness is restored to God’s creation, God’s will is done and God’s reign or
kingdom is extended. (“Your kingdom
come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”) Yet God hasn’t chosen to mend the universe
apart from us. Instead, God has called
all of us in Jesus Christ to be part of this amazing and beautiful restoration
project. Moreover, God has graciously
empowered us to participate in that project by breathing Christ’s Spirit into
us. Every good gift that God has given us, therefore, has been given to us not
simply so that we can enjoy those gifts, but even more importantly, so that we
can experience a deeper joy by using those gifts as partners in God’s work of
mending.
As
a way of exploring this understanding of stewardship, you are being asked over
the course of the next month or so to 1) consider thoughtfully and prayerfully
how you might more intentionally use one or more of your gifts to participate
in God’s work of mending; and 2) find some small, but concrete way to put that
gift (or gifts) to use in service of God’s work of shalom. Ideally, you will seek to do this in a way
that brings together your unique combination of gifts, passions, daily
opportunities, and your own sense of the world’s brokenness.
Here
is one way (but by no means the only way) to approach this exercise:
1)
Make a list of the gifts that God has given you. Obviously, you will have to be somewhat
selective, but do your best to include a range of things, including such things
as your time, health, energies, passions, specific talents and abilities,
relationships, resources (financial and otherwise), etc. In each of these areas (and others), work to
name the gifts you have been given as specifically as possible.
2)
Reflect on the current shape of your daily life. Where are the places in which you sense that
God is already using your gifts to bring some greater measure of wholeness to a
broken world? These need not (and likely
won’t be) big and dramatic things, but it is important to recognize that God is
already working in and through your life to extend God’s reign of shalom.
3)
Next ask yourself these questions: In my daily life, when and where do I most
frequently and concretely experience the world’s brokenness? Where are the broken places where I most long
to see God’s reign of wholeness come?
Again, work to be as specific as you can.
4)
Prayerfully discern how one or more of the gifts you’ve listed in #1 might be
used in some small way to address some of the brokenness you’ve noted in #3.
5)
Prayerfully (and joyfully!) respond to what you discern in #4 by taking a
concrete step of faith. Your response
might entail doing something very specific as a one time affair, or doing
something several times over the next several weeks. That is for you to determine.
Remember: Never underestimate what God can do
through seemingly small and insignificant gifts. Five loaves and two small fish didn’t look
like much either!

Instructions for Stewardship of Gifts Essays
On the assigned date in
the syllabus, please turn in an essay (1-2 pages, single-spaced) explaining how
you carried out this exercise and what you learned as a result. The essay should have four paragraphs, one
devoted to each of the following:
1)
Begin by giving an account of some of the ways you believe God may already be
using your gifts to bring some greater measure of wholeness to a broken world.
2)
Explain which gift (or gifts) you chose to focus on for this exercise and how
you came to decide to use that gift (or gifts) to be part of God's work of
mending in the world.
3)
Explain in some detail how you intentionally sought to use this gift (or gifts)
during the past several weeks to be part of God's work of mending in the world.
4)
Explain what you learned about stewardship through this experience. For example, you might consider what
difference it might make in your life if you considered yourself a steward of all that you have been given, including
all that you are.