7 Now as you excel in everything--in faith, in speech, in knowledge, in
utmost eagerness, and in our love for you--so we want you to excel also in this
generous undertaking. 8 I do not say this as a command, but I am testing the
genuineness of your love against the earnestness of others. 9 For you know the
generous act of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your
sakes he became poor, so that by his poverty you might become rich. 10 And in this
matter I am giving my advice: it is appropriate for you who began last year
not only to do something but even to desire to do something-- 11 now finish
doing it, so that your eagerness may be matched by completing it according to
your means. 12 For if the eagerness is there, the gift is acceptable according to
what one has--not according to what one does not have. 13 I do not mean that
there should be relief for others and pressure on you, but it is a question of
a fair balance between 14 your present abundance and their need, so that
their abundance may be for your need, in order that there may be a fair balance.
15 As it is written, "The one who had much did not have too much, and the one
who had little did not have too little."
Step 1: Initial Diagnosis (External Problem) - Love or Earnestness
Our lives in Christ begin with God giving us Christ, so that we may be able
to give Christ to those who are in any affliction with the Christ whom we
ourselves have been given by God (2 Corinthians 1:4). God consoles us in all our
afflictions so that we may be able to console others with the consolation we
first got from God. Jesus makes us wealthy by giving us his love so that we may
love one another (v. 9). Yet our inward-curved hearts take this gift and
construe that gift as something we deserve. We become "earnest" (v. 8) or
anxious, or we fear the future and all its "what ifs." How can we be generous if
the future may have an economic downturn or a drought or a loss of consumer
confidence? How can we continue to volunteer at the hospital or church if our
kids get involved in sports? Instead of acting out of the richness of love, we
compete out of earnestness. Some will even compete at being more Christian
than others.
Step 2: Advanced Diagnosis (Internal Problem) - Tipping the Scales in Our Favor
Our earnestness about not being poor in the future increases our
self-concern. To make the future more secure we add to the side of the scale that
guarantees us a better future. We save for a rainy day. We save six months pay in
case we lose our job. We save for the kids' college education. We rearrange
our investments for our retirement. We listen to financial advisers.
Congregations cut back on programs, on their gifts to their synod, and switch their
world hunger money to current expenses (see vv. 10-11). We think we are doing
the best we can to be responsible. We think we are practicing our best stew
ardship of limited resources. We, in our earnestness, have put our trust in our
own arrangements for our future. We have failed to trust in a God who gives
so that we can give. We have failed to trust in a God who consoles so that we
can console others with God's consolation. We offer condolences instead of
consoling others with the gift of Christ's resurrection. Our genuine love for
God and others has been reduced to love for ourselves.
Step 3: Final Diagnosis (Eternal Problem) - Weighed and Found Wanting
Though we thought we were simply acting to our advantage, God's law is still
imposed on us like an annual review. We can tell ourselves we are following
God's will, but meanwhile we have completely disregarded God's will that we
have faith only in God. God's will is not something we can follow in order to
become rich in God's favor and grace. God wills to show us that we are
accountable to God for all we do. God wills to make us guilty. No one can escape
this final judgment. Our poverty is that our cupboard of faith is bare, and our
pantry of love for others is empty. Death, by God's judgment, comes to
everyone.
Step 4: Initial Prognosis (Eternal Solution) - His Death Is Our Righteousness Before God
Jesus comes to everyone with a new judgment from God. Jesus, instead of
making demands of and requiring that we pay God what we owe, does an act of
gargantuan generosity. He became poor on the cross for our sake. He was poor, for
he forfeited his life. He was poor, for he received only God's condemnation.
He was poor, for he received no mercy because the law of God has no mercy and
allows no excuse. Then God, by grace, raised Christ from the dead! And for
Christ's sake God promises us that all who trust Christ receive the riches of
forgiveness, righteousness, and eternal life. Christ gives us his cross so
that it is our own. We are made wealthy with the cross of Christ. Wealthy
because the cross of Christ gives us Christ's mercy, Christ's forgiveness, and
Christ's resurrected life. By Christ's poverty on the cross we become rich in
God's mercy! Death is overturned. God's condemnation is overturned, all for
Christ's sake.
Step 5: Advanced Prognosis (Internal Solution) - His Poverty Is Our Richness
The poverty of Christ's cross becomes the riches that redeem us. For by faith
God regards what Christ has done as something we have done. We have died
with Christ. Therefore we will be raised with Christ. Our wealth is the
resurrection. We have died with Christ. Therefore we become righteous before God
for Christ's sake, when we believe that Christ died and rose for us and that for
his sake we are forgiven and become righteous before God. For God regards
that faith as our riches, because our faith is in Christ. God no longer regards
us as poor, miserable sinners, but as rich, thankful saints.
Step 6: Final Prognosis (External Solution) - Genuineness of Our Love
We have the riches of Christ-mercy, forgiveness, and righteousness before
God. We are rich! With our new hearts of faith, such hearts are not curved in
on themselves, but act with the love Christ gives us. We act with the mercy
Christ gives us. Just as God consoles us so that we can console others, Jesus
gives us his love so that we can give his love to others. Jesus gives us his
forgiveness so we can give his forgiveness to others. Our riches in Christ are
for others for Christ's sake. We do not give because others deserve it or
earn it. We get to be generous! The gift we give is acceptable because of what
we have. Our abundance of mercy frees us to be merciful to those who are in
need of mercy, so that when we are in need of mercy, they can be generous with
the mercy of Christ too. Trusting that Christ's mercy is for us, that heaven
is our future, we can give when we have money and others are in need. We can
give with what we have so that when we are in need others can give out of
what they have. This giving starts, not with what we own, but with Christ making
us rich. Our riches are faith in God's goodness. Our riches are trust in God
because of Christ's death and rising. It is the richness we have in Christ
that frees us to act richly in feeding our neighbors. We can give because
Christ makes us rich, not our money or time. We can give without asking for
anything in return. For Christ will keep giving us mercy and we can draw upon him
whose generosity knows no end.
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