meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

Spiritual Disciplines Ep. 6: Giving

Ask the Pastor with J.D. Greear

J.D. Greear

Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.9624 Ratings

🗓️ 18 March 2024

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Show Notes:

Matt: J.D., today we’ll cover our next spiritual discipline, and this week, we’re talking about giving. Everyone loves talking about money, right?



J.D.: 

Let’s start with the assumption that God doesn’t need our money. In Psalm 50, God says, “I don’t have needs… and if I did have one, I wouldn’t come to you.” God owns the cattle on a thousand hills… The question of money is what it shows about where your heart is.
First of all, money reveals, more than anything, what we treasure and trust most. Our mouth can talk a big spiritual game all day long, but it’s what we do with our money that shows where our heart actually is
Which is why Jesus talked about money all the time. It was his most frequently addressed subject. 16 of his 38 parables were about money. He talked about handling money more than he did about relationships; talked about money than he did about heaven and hell. 500 verses in the Bible are about prayer; less than 500 are about faith. More than 2000 are about money. An astounding 1 out of 10 verses in the Gospels talk about money! 
Jesus didn’t talk about money because he needed it--I mean, he could multiply bread loaves and fish or pull gold coins out of fishes’ mouths whenever he wanted--no, he talked about money because he knew money was the most reliable indicator of where our heart actually was.
In Matthew 6, Jesus warned that money ends up serving as the PRIMARY substitute in our hearts for God. He said, in no uncertain terms, that we couldn’t serve God and money. (That’s the only thing he ever spoke like that about! He never said that about power or sex or anything.) Money is the one thing, he said, that if you love it, you won’t care about God; and if you love God, you won’t care that much about it.

MATT: That brings up a comment from a listener named Rita, who said one of the things she’s been learning regarding the spiritual discipline of giving is how “James urges us to consider why God gave us our money in the first place.”

JD: Yeah, that’s right. And also in Matthew 6, Jesus talked about two different personality types and different ways they have problems with money.
For some, money is their security. It’s their safeguard against tragedy or a rainy day. And so, when they get an extra $1000 in their paycheck, they want to save it. For others, money is their significance, their means of a happy and pleasurable life. So, when they get an extra $1000 in their paycheck, they want to spend it. New TV. New drapes. Go on vacation. Btw, in God’s providence, these two different personality types always marry each other! And here’s the irony—each think the other has a problem with money. But Jesus said they actually have the same problem—in that both look to money to provide something only God can provide. 

To those who think of money as security, Jesus says, “Consider the ravens…” To those who think of money as significance, he says, “Consider the lilies…” 
To both of them he says, “Seek first the KoG…” “All these things” means all the security or the significance we crave.


So one of the reasons Jesus talked about money all the time is that it reveals the truth about what we treasure and trust most. Where your money is, Jesus said, that’s where your heart will be, also. 
The second reason Jesus talked about money so much is that what we do with our money shows whether or not we see ourselves as owners of our lives or stewards. At our church, we often talk about the “Five Identities of a Disciple.” One of them is steward. And that’s very different than owner. An owner believes his resources belong to him. A steward sees all his resources as belonging to God—he’s merely the caretaker. When you become a disciple, you cease to see yourself as an owner of anything in your life, only a steward.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey everybody, welcome to Ask the Pastor. My name is Matt Love. I'm here with Pastor J.D. Greer.

0:13.3

And if you are just listening to us, I just want to say, before we dive in, if you're just

0:17.1

listening to us, I just don't big mistake, all right? Because you could be listening and watching at the same time.

0:22.6

We are on YouTube now.

0:23.8

I think we've said that.

0:24.6

So I'm sure most of you guys have checked that out.

0:26.2

But we're on YouTube.

0:27.0

It's called Watch the Pastor and his friend.

0:29.6

Exactly.

0:30.2

Watch the pastor and his friend answer questions.

0:32.4

It's really good.

0:33.0

And you never know. We might do some... We need to get to a place we're doing some bonus content. You know, maybe we just, like, stick around and have, like, a different conversation

0:39.9

where I just asked J.D. questions about, you know, how he picks his clothes or how he styles

0:44.7

his hair or something like that.

0:45.8

Well, maybe for every one thing I say that you don't think is good, you could, like, put a black

0:49.3

mark on your face.

0:50.2

That's exactly right. And at the end, it'd be a declaration of how well I did in the answer.

0:54.7

Just so everyone, there's a scorecard that only the YouTube people get.

0:57.7

So, Jady, we've been doing this, we've been doing the series, kind of start the year on spiritual

1:01.7

disciplines.

1:02.3

I think it's been really good.

1:03.1

I've actually had a lot of people just mention it to me in conversation and how helpful

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from J.D. Greear, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of J.D. Greear and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.