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The Standing Commission on Stewardship
and Development is concerned that the high vision of stewardship
is often seen only in part, as the practice of church support. To
clarify this issue, the commission offers the following theological
statement about stewardship written at the request of the commission
by the Rev. Dr. Charles W. Taylor, Professor of Pastoral Theology
at the Church of Divinity School of the Pacific, Berkeley, California:
The Book of Common Prayer teaches
us that "The Mission of the Church is to restore all people
to unity with God and each other in Christ" and that "the
Church carries out its mission through the ministry of all its members."
The unstated but clear implication of this teaching is that the
main work of the Church is involving people in using all that is
entrusted to them in carrying out the mission. Said simply, stewardship
is the main work of the Church.
Thus, stewardship is more than church
support, it is the use of "the gifts given to us to carry on
Christ's work of reconciliation in the world." Therefore, the
way we use or do not use resources to further unity and reconciliation
in our homes, our communities, and our occupations is our stewardship.
Yet, stewardship is not less than church support. Our worshipping,
working, praying, and giving within the Church provide the
support that we and others need to engage in the often difficult
and lonely tasks of proclaiming the good news, loving our neighbors,
and striving for justice and peace.
Stewardship is more than a duty:
it is a thankful response to God's graciousness to us. As such,
it is an opportunity to praise God with our lives in thanksgiving.
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for the blessings of creation;
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for the birth, life, teaching,
death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ and our redemption;
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for the gift of the Spirit;
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for the Word, sacraments, and
fellowship that sustain and transform us as the Church.
Stewardship is an adventure, an expedition
into the kingdom where we find our lives through losing them for
the sake of the Gospel. It is an invitation to offer our gifts for
the purpose for which we were created - the only purpose that will
fulfill us. It is a challenge to refocus our lives by designing
our budgets around tithing. It offers us a way to begin breaking
the bonds of consumption that involve us, often unwittingly, in
perpetuating injustice and oppression.
All of God's people, within and without
the Church, can learn that to held accountable for our lives as
stewards of God's gifts is to discover our own true great worth
before God. We believe that discovery, too, is a gift, a gift that
brings unspeakable joy. The main work of the Church is to bring
its people, and through them all people, to this joyful knowledge,
which will...."restore all people to unity with God and each
other in Christ."
Respectfully submitted for your prayerful
consideration by:
The St. Dunstan's Stewardship Committee
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