Together, we all gave $60,850! Wow! What Extravagance!

from Scott Johnson

Dear Partner, 

Extravagant gifts originate from grateful hearts! Thank you for having such grateful hearts and giving so extravagantly toward the television outreach of BWC, Sunday, February 22.

Together, we all gave over $60,000 Wow! What extravagance!

God loves extravagant givers…and while the Bible has many examples of extravagant financial givers…

·       Solomon sacrificed 1,000 bulls when his tithe was only 1 bull. That was an extravagant gift.

·       King David gave more than $21 billion to build God’s House. That was an extravagant gift.

·       Abraham—like God Himself—gave his one and only son. That was an extravagant gift.

·       The poor widow in the New Testament gave her 2 pennies. Yes! Even that was an extravagant gift.

Yet, the greatest gift we can ever give God is ourselves.  Have you given Him all of you? Are you generous to a God who is excessive in His love, grace and generosity toward you?

Always Give Your Best

A story that demonstrates giving the most important gift is found in John 12:1-8. It was six days before Passover. Jesus had arrived at Bethany, where Lazarus—who had been raised from the dead—lived. Mary and Martha, as well as Lazarus, hosted a dinner in Jesus’ honor.

While they were all gathered there—disciples included—Mary poured an expensive perfume over Jesus’ feet and wiped them with her hair. It was an act of honor.

But one of Jesus disciples, Judas Iscariot—the same one who betrayed him later—objected: “Why wasn’t this perfume sold and the money given to the poor? It was worth a year’s wages.”

Sounds pretty righteous and levelheaded, doesn’t it?

But it was selfish. While Judas pretended to care for the poor, at heart, he was a thief, and as keeper of the moneybag, he would help himself to what was in it. So, when Mary poured the perfume on Jesus’ feet, all Judas saw was money leaving his pocket. His outward façade of supposedly caring for others is the oldest cover-up in the book for selfishness.

You’ve heard Judases before:          

·        “How could anyone own such an expensive car?”

·        “She could have helped a lot of people with the money she spends on clothes!”

·        I sure could do a lot with the money that they spend on….”

But what did Jesus say?

“Leave her alone. It was intended that she should save this perfume for the day of my burial. You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me.”

Selfishness will often be couched in false spirituality. Jesus saw through Judas and defended Mary’s actions. God wants us to have the best and He wants us to give our best.

The Most Extravagant Gift

Both Mary and Judas had their own relational approach to Jesus. Mary’s was extravagant and Judas’ was selfish. It’s interesting how two people, both in an up-close relationship with Jesus, could view Him so differently…and treat Him so differently.

Mary’s extravagant gift was worth a year’s wages. What generosity!

But is that how we evaluate what an extravagant gift is? What size gift would impress a God who owns everything?

The most extravagant gift you could ever give is yourself. All He wants is all you are and all you’ll ever be.

That’s really what Mary gave that day…and that’s what you gave Sunday, February 22, toward our television outreach. You gave of yourself to help reach the world with a message of hope and life.

Thank you, Partners for making a difference. Thank you for always giving so faithfully. Thank you for caring more about others and always being others-minded. Our focus is outward, searching for the lost and introducing them to our God of hope and love.

Experiencing the Power of Possibility!

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