
God has made of each of us a steward. He is both the maker and owner of all things. As owner it is His prerogative to place what is His under the care of whomever He wishes. His stewards, in turn, will answer to Him. Thus far I can’t think of any reason any believer could have to object to anything. Let me know if I missed something.
Despite all of us agreeing on the above I found myself disagreeing with an old friend not long ago. A gifted young man, a writer and a speaker in the homeschool circuit, a friend. He recounted an experience he had wherein he witnessed another man buying a fishing boat for close to $60,000. He pointed out the man paid cash. While acknowledging that he didn’t know if the boat buyer was a Christian, he rightly pointed out that this man would one day answer to God. For this and every other purchase he makes. No objection here. Everything thus far fits in the above paragraph.
What followed, however, was judgment by my friend against this man. My friend was practically incredulous that a man would spend $60,000 on a fishing boat. Didn’t that man know, my friend wanted to know, of all the good that $60,000 could do if funneled in a more “spiritual” direction? Lest we think my friend forgot that it is God who judges, he quoted for us his readers the tenth commandment, God forbidding coveting.
As sound as my friend is, as carefully as he typically thinks through matters of a Christian worldview, he succumbed to what we all succumb to. He mistook his rules for God’s rules. He assumed that his priorities were already in line with God’s. Not only that but he assumed that this man was bound, with the real money God placed in his care, to have the same priorities my friend has with imaginary money. I do not doubt my friend is an outstanding steward of all God has placed in his hands. But God didn’t place that $60k in his hands.
As God’s stewards we are told we must not be wasteful. We are told we must be generous. We are told we must give cheerfully. What we are not told is that we may not buy a fishing boat. Or a hand tailored suit. Or a steak and lobster dinner. In fact, we are, in a manner of speaking, told we must buy those things, if we have met our obligations and want those things. God commands:
And you shall spend that money for whatever your heart desires: for oxen or sheep, for wine or similar drink, for whatever your heart desires; you shall eat there before the Lord your God, and you shall rejoice, you and your household (Deut. 14:26).
God is no stingy master. Remember that He has no need of all that He’s placed under our care. He wants from us obedience to His commands, and that we would feast in His presence. He delights when we submit to His Word and respond to His faithful provision with joyful gratitude.
If two men had an equal amount of God’s wealth to steward, and both met all their God given obligations, and one man wrote a check to some ministry for $60k and the other bought a fishing boat for $60k, is one more pleasing to God than the other? What if the first did so with a grumpy disposition, and the second sang praises to God while reeling in a hefty catfish?
Two things. Don’t judge God’s stewards with your law. Do delight in all of His good gifts, without shame or fear.








