Anchor Verses
2 Corinthians 9:7, Matthew 6:21, Philippians 4:17
Focus Statement
Generosity is where trust in God moves from a statement on our money to a practice in our lives.
Introduction: What is Written on Your Heart?
- The words “In God We Trust” are printed on our money.
- But the deeper question is whether trust in God is being formed in our hearts.
- Money is one of the places where our trust is most tested.
- For many, giving can feel complicated:
- Some have been jaded by leaders who misused money.
- Some have been misled by transactional teaching.
- Some have become apathetic, wondering whether generosity matters.
The Jaded Heart Needs Justice, But Also Stewardship
- Scripture does not ignore the pain of financial manipulation or spiritual abuse.
- Jesus warned against religious leaders who exploited people in Mark 12:38–40.
- God is not indifferent toward greed, manipulation, or misuse.
- However, the misuse of generosity by others does not release us from the call to stewardship.
- In Matthew 25, Jesus teaches that each servant is responsible for what has been entrusted to them.
- The failure of others may explain our caution, but it cannot become permission to bury what God has entrusted to us.
- At ZEALHOUSE, we want to steward trust carefully through trustees, budgets, counsel, and accountability.
The Misled Heart Needs Truth, Not Transaction
- Some have been taught that giving is a transaction: give this amount, and God owes you an outcome.
- But Scripture never teaches us to treat God like a vending machine.
- 2 Corinthians 9:7 teaches that giving should not be reluctant or under compulsion.
- Cheerful giving is:
- free, not forced,
- worshipful, not manipulated,
- grateful, not transactional,
- trusting, not coerced.
- God is not honored by money squeezed out of fear.
- He loves generosity that flows from trust.
- At ZEALHOUSE, we do not want to manipulate giving or pressure guests.
- We want giving to be worship, discipleship, gratitude, and trust.
The Apathetic Heart Needs Purpose, Not Just Information
- Some have simply lost sight of why giving matters.
- If giving is only presented as paying bills, it is easy to lose vision.
- In Philippians 4:15–17, Paul says he is not seeking the gift, but the fruit that generosity produces.
- Generosity produces fruit in us:
- trust, gratitude, freedom from control, eternal perspective,
worship.- Generosity produces fruit through the mission:
- discipleship, outreach, care for the hurting, ministry to kids and students, people meeting Jesus.
- When we invest in the house of God, we invest in people, our city, and the mission of God.
The Deeper Question
- In Matthew 19:16–22, Jesus speaks with the rich young ruler.
- The man was moral, religious, and sincere, but Jesus exposed the place where he still wanted control.
- Jesus was not fundraising. He was revealing where the man’s trust truly rested.
- It is possible to have “In God We Trust” written on our money while control is still written on our hearts.
- The question is not simply, “Do I give?”
- The deeper question is, “What does my relationship with money reveal about my relationship with God?”
Walking It Out
- Trust in God is not something we only reach for when the moment feels important.
- Trust is something we practice consistently when no one is watching.
- Jesus does not expose our hearts to shame us; He exposes our hearts to free us.
- Conviction is not condemnation. It is an invitation.
Final Thought
- This is not about funding a building.
- It is about forming a people who trust God, give with joy, steward faithfully, and participate in His mission.
- It is about forming a church who can truly say: “In God We Trust.”
Next Week…
- Next week, we’re talking about the danger of pastor kings — when spiritual leaders build their own kingdoms instead of serving under the true King.
