STEWARDSHIP
AND DISCIPLESHIP TOGETHER
FINANCIAL HEALTH
Over the last couple of weeks, we focused
on customizing the approach to discipleship[1]
based on life stages and spiritual maturity. This week we’ll talk about
customizing our approach to financial health.
The article from Christian
Stewardship Network lays out four levels of financial health:
· Struggle
· Stable
· Solid
· Surplus
Their definitions identify struggling
as those in the midst of financial crisis and in need of financial health; stable
are those living from paycheck to paycheck; solid are those who have
learned the basics of budgeting and are now debt free with margin.; and surplus
are those with more resources than needed to basic needs and wants.
Most likely, you have people in all
four of these stages of financial health, just as you have people in all stages
of life and all stages of spiritual maturity. People in every stage looks at
stewardship; at discipleship, and at life differently. We, therefore, need to
approach this differently as well.
One thing I have learned is not to
assume someone is struggling and not ask them to commit, or vice versa. But if
you are aware someone is struggling and in the midst of crisis, then we have a responsibility
to help them through that. To move from struggling or stable to solid may
require teaching and training. A financial program, or how to budget program,
or how to get out of debt program would be of great help to many. Anyone can
and should budget, not just people with money.
It is hard to focus on making a
financial commitment when someone may be worried about even putting enough food
on the table, or to pay their rent. Helping someone out of that stressful situation
will go a long way toward helping them care for themselves and to commit to a
generosity program. Also, people who are focused too much on money may have
great difficulty in even focusing on anything else, even discipleship or
worship or prayer.
Like last week, let’s start with
ourselves. Where do you fall in each of these areas? How do you know? What are
the things that you can work on for each item. I attended a workshop that
included completing a money autobiography that helped me understand why I
believe what I do about money, why I spend money or save money. Start with that
for yourself. If you’d like a pdf to a money autobiography to start your own
work, please let me know. It will help you face your own financial health, but
also to help others. A wonderful small group study could start with money
autobiographies.
When we’ve helped our folks care for
themselves financially, other steps will fall into place.
If you wish more information on money
autobiographies, or would like to discuss stewardship and its relationship with
discipleship, please feel free to contact me at (315) 427-3668 or sranousacctg@twcny.rr.com. I’d be happy to help.
[1] Stewardship
Education that Builds Disciples, Furlong, Jessica and Dick, Don (Christian
Stewardship Network), https://www.christianstewardshipnetwork.com.
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