Cheerful Givers: Why Generosity Is the Antidote to Anxiety
2 Corinthians 9:6-15 • Malachi 3:10
Cheerful generosity, God's abundance, investing in the kingdom
Sowing and Reaping: The Agricultural Law of Generosity
The Dead Sea Principle
The Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea are both fed by the same river — the Jordan. But the Sea of Galilee is teeming with life: fish, birds, vegetation along its banks. The Dead Sea is, well, dead. Nothing lives in it. The difference? The Sea of Galilee has an outlet. Water flows in and water flows out. The Dead Sea has no outlet. Water flows in and stays there. It becomes stagnant, toxic, too salty for life. The principle is simple: what flows through you gives life. What you hoard kills you. Generosity is the outlet that keeps your financial life — and your spiritual life — from going stagnant.
Source: Geographical metaphor
God Loves a Cheerful Giver
God's Indescribable Gift: Why Generosity Is a Response, Not an Obligation
Applications
- 1Evaluate your posture toward giving. Is it reluctant, obligatory, or cheerful? If it is not yet cheerful, ask God to change your understanding of ownership.
- 2Try the Malachi challenge: for the next three months, tithe consistently and see what happens — not just to your finances, but to your anxiety, your generosity in other areas, and your relationship with God.
- 3Teach your children about generosity by modeling it. Let them see you give. Let them participate in deciding where the family gives. Generosity, like faith, is caught more than taught.
- 4Give beyond your church. Find a cause, a family, a need in your community and invest in it. Generosity is not limited to the offering plate.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord, loosen our grip on the resources You have entrusted to us. Help us see ourselves as stewards, not owners.
- Make us cheerful givers — not reluctant, not compelled by guilt, but joyful. Let giving feel like participation, not loss.
- For those in seasons of financial strain: remind them that You see the heart, not the amount. The widow's mite was the largest gift in the room.
- Thanks be to God for His indescribable gift. Everything we give is an echo of what You gave first. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Schindler's List (1993)
At the end of the film, Oskar Schindler — a man who spent his fortune buying Jewish workers to save them from the Holocaust — breaks down. He looks at his car and says, "This car. Why did I keep this car? Ten people right there." He pulls off his Nazi pin: "Two people. This is gold. Two more people." In that moment, Schindler is not lamenting what he gave. He is lamenting what he kept. He sees his possessions not as wealth but as lives he could have saved. Stewardship is the moment when your possessions stop looking like security and start looking like potential — potential to feed, to shelter, to save, to invest in the kingdom. The question is not "How much do I have to give?" It is "What am I holding on to that could be doing something eternal?"
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The Sea of Galilee gives and lives. The Dead Sea hoards and dies. Your financial life follows the same principle.
God does not measure your giving by the amount. He measures it by the heart. The widow's two coins outweighed the bags of gold. Breathe.
Hilaros — the Greek word for 'cheerful giver' — is where we get 'hilarious.' If your giving doesn't make you laugh with joy, you haven't understood the gift yet.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I preach about money without sounding manipulative?
Be transparent about the tension: 'We know this is uncomfortable.' Let Scripture lead — 2 Corinthians 9 explicitly says 'not under compulsion.' This template addresses the manipulation concern directly and focuses on heart posture rather than specific amounts.
Should a stewardship sermon discuss specific amounts or percentages?
This template references the tithe (Malachi 3:10) but emphasizes heart posture over amount. Paul says 'what you have decided in your heart' — not a mandated percentage. Different traditions handle this differently; this template gives you room to add your tradition's guidance.
When is the best time for a stewardship sermon?
Most churches preach stewardship during an annual giving campaign (often fall). Some preach it during the first quarter when budgets are top of mind. This template also works as a standalone communion-adjacent message since it connects giving to God's 'indescribable gift' (Christ).
This Sermon in Your Tradition
A stewardship sunday sermon sounds different depending on your theological tradition. See all 17 versions.