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  1. To add to the tension, a lot of pastors fear playing into the stereotype that the church is all about money. So they never talk about money in church or wait until they need it. That’s a mistake. The reason you need to talk about money is more about what you want for people than what you want from them.

    • Money Talkslink
    • Showing The Soullink
    • Not Greedy of Filthy Lucrelink
    • Root of All Evilslink
    • Cheerful Giverslink
    • God’s Money, Wise Managerslink

    It is “love of money,” but that might not create as much wiggle room as we first think. When Jesus explained the parable of the sower, he identified the thorns choking out his gospel as “the cares of the world and the deceitfulness of riches and the desires for other things” (Mark 4:19). “Love of money” wouldn’t be an unfair summary. When the apost...

    Christians, of all people, have come to know that our life does not consist in what we have on earth but whom we have in heaven. We look upward, with eternity in view, to “take hold of that which is truly life” (1 Timothy 6:19), not the temporal and earthly. And yet the money-loving world in which we live constantly dulls us to what is truly life. ...

    “Not a lover of money” is an especially vital qualification for Christian leaders. The way the leadership goes, the church soon will follow. God appoints a plurality of pastor-elders in the church (Acts 20:28; Titus 1:5; James 5:14; 1 Peter 5:1) not only to teach and govern together (1 Timothy 5:17), but also to serve as a collective example to the...

    At the heart of Christianity is the claim that God is our true life (Luke 12:15). It is tragic beyond words for a professing Christian to pursue life in more and more earthly possessions — and an even greater tragedy for leaders in the church. Modern society constantly inundates us with messaging that implies true life consists in more stuff and gr...

    But thankfully we have more to look for, and pray for — in ourselves and in our leaders — than simply “not a lover of money.” Hebrews and 1 Timothy both are explicit about the positive virtues as well: “be content with what you have” (Hebrews 13:5; also 1 Timothy 6:8) and “be generous and ready to share” (1 Timothy 6:18). Why line our lives with go...

    Note well the call is not to pinch every penny and refuse to spend God’s money, but to spend it well. Jesus wants his people to be spiritually smart with their cheerful generosity, righteous managers of his resources, using them with eternity in view, serving God, not sin (Luke 16:9). Pastors who love money cannot fulfill their calling to be righte...

  2. Apr 22, 2014 · The pastor should be above reproach in his personal finances. One of the biblical qualifications of a pastor is that “he must have a good reputation among outsiders, so that he does not fall into disgrace and the Devil’s trap” (1 Tim. 3:7). One of the ways a pastor fulfills this responsibility is by paying his bills on time.

    • People genuinely want to know what the Bible has to say about money. People come to your church to hear what the Bible has to say. They drove there, probably looked at your website, they drove past a sign that said church, so they are expecting for you to open the Bible and read it.
    • Get your financial house in order. Many pastors don't talk about money because many pastors aren't generous and don't give. Generosity doesn't come easy for me but preaching on what the Bible has to say about money has led me to grow in it.
    • Make sure you don't make promises God doesn't make. It's easy to make promises God doesn't make when it comes to money—especially with passages like Malachi 3.
    • Stewardship is more than money. While most pastors preach on money to get more people to give money, that isn't the goal. The goal is to help people follow Jesus when it comes to stewardship, and that includes money, but also includes how they use their time, house, car, and retirement.
    • The Building is Expensive & Beautiful. Okay, listen. Is it possible for a church to grow in numbers and still be devoted to God and not money? Sure. It's possible.
    • They Preach Tithing. While giving is a sign that a Christian is full of love and the Spirit, required or mandated giving by your church is a sign not only that they are legalistic, but also that they believe money is important to begin with.
    • There is No Financial Transparency. A church that goes silent when asked financial questions has a guilty conscience. Otherwise, they would just answer the questions.
    • There's a Cafe, Bookstore, Thrift Store, and/or Coffee Shop in Your Church or Owned by Your Church. There is one reason and one reason alone for why churches open stores, shops or cafes of any kind.
  3. Sep 30, 2022 · When you do, follow Paul’s example by making it clear that you’re not teaching about giving because your church needs the money; you’re teaching about giving because it’s good for your congregation to give. Giving loosens their heart’s grasp on the things of this world (Matt. 6:21); giving is an investment in an eternal reward (Phil ...

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  5. May 19, 2019 · 3. Paul is advocating that the church meet the basic needs of the pastor… he does not intend that the Word of God is a means to worldly wealth. D. Church Planting. 1. Many church planting movements strongly advocate BI-VOCATIONAL pastors, because the funding is such a problem. 2.

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