The Widow's Mite / A Lesson On Giving: I. Where Jesus SAT
The Widow's Mite / A Lesson On Giving: I. Where Jesus SAT
The Widow's Mite / A Lesson On Giving: I. Where Jesus SAT
During Jesus visit to the Temple He was asked four questions leading
2.
3.
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Following all the argument in the Court of the Gentiles, Jesus walked by
the Temple treasury.
I.
Where Jesus SAT (v. 41"Jesus sat over against the treasury.").
II.
What Jesus SAW (vs. 41-42"Jesus... beheld HOW the people cast
money into the treasury...").
watching people give their offerings like He would watch a dramatic playIntently and deliberately.
The operative word in verse 41 is the word "HOW." The Lord was
not as interested in what people gave, as He was in the way they
gave. He was looking at the motive behind their giving. 1 Samuel
2:3 says, "By him [God] actions are weighed."
ILLUS: The man who gave $10 thinking he was only giving $1.
The Lord still observes how we give. The IRS may not get an accurate report about your giving, but God sees it all. If you are
stingy, God sees. If you give sacrificially, God sees that, too.
2. He saw her plight (v. 42)Widows in those days were especially in difficult situations regarding money. There was no
social security or pensions or government welfare that could
support them when their husbands died. Without a husband,
she had little means of support. Yet she gave.
3. He saw her sacrifice (v. 42). The widow did not give much in
terms of amount. But Christ took note of it, for He looks at
the heart.
The rich cast in MUCH (v. 41). She cast in ALL (v. 44).
"She of her want did cast in all that she had, even all her
living." She gave her livingnot just partBUT ALL!
The rich cast in out of their ABUNDANCE. She cast in out
of her DEFICIENCY.
The Lord measures the offering, not by its SIZE, but by
its SACRIFICE.
Sacrificial giving costs something. What the rich gave
did not cost them nor hurt them. But not the widow.
She gave up something in order to give.
4. He saw her faith (v. 44). She literally gave all that she had to
live on. She gave to the point that required her to trust God
to supply her needs. If God didnt provide, she would starve.
Two needs were being met.
(1) The needs of God's temple. The widow gave to help
carry on the ministry of the Temple.
(2) The needs of the widow. She took her need (money) and
gave it to supply the needs of Gods temple. By giving
her all she was trusting God to supply her need.
a) By giving all she had she was saying, "God, I have a need
its money. I dont know where my next meal will come
from. If I am to eat, You have to provide. Here is all I have.
Take my small offering for the needs of Your temple. Now
Im trusting You to take care of my needs." She gave, believing Gods promise to provide (Phil. 4:19 - context is
giving an offering).
B. He spoke of the SUPERIORITY of her offering (v. 43). God assesses our giving far different than man. Man looks at how much
is given. God looks at how much we keep for ourselves.
Those who only give a tithe will fall short in this respect, for
that leaves 90% for the giver. This widow had 0% left. If a
person with a thousand dollars tithes, he still has nine hundred dollars left. A person who tithes on ten dollars only has
nine dollars left. In God's assessment, the person who gave a
dollar gave more than the person who gave one hundred dollars.
SUMMATION: How does God assess your giving? God considers what we
keep for ourselves, not what we give. He counts the amount of sacrifice,
not the amount of money. The offering that matters is the offering that
costs the giver to give.
Frances Haverhill wrote Take My Life, and Let it Be (#39) in 1874. It was
not until 1878 that the lyrics were put into print. When she read the second stanzaTake my silver and my gold, Not a mite would I withhold,
she was suddenly convicted of her failure to do just that. She had an
amazing collection of exquisite jewelry, most of which she received as a
gift or inheritance.
Immediately, she packed the jewels and sent them to her church as a
missionary offering. Then, just to be sure, she included a check to cover
the monetary value of some jewels she had chosen to keep. She wrote
this note with the package: I dont think I need to tell you I have never
packed a box with such pleasure!