I Chronicles 29:1-9
Introduction
Jesus said in Matthew 12:34-35
". . . out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh.
A good man out of the good treasureof the heart bringeth forth good things:
and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things."
Our heart attitude reflects our spiritual condition and spills out into our character and eventually our actions.
What God wants most from us is a willing heart. A heart willing to hear and heed his word and his Spirit.
King David had a number of ups-and-downs in his life but now near the end of this life he focuses on his Lord once more as he turns over what he considered to be the most important work, the building of the temple of the Lord.
From this text we get an insight in his heart and can learn a lesson on having a willing heart.Especially concerning stewardship and giving because no place in our walk with God nor in our actions towards others is attitude of the heart clearer than in the area of giving.
One man said: The problem with our giving is that we too often give the widow's mite, without the widow's spirit.
David had a willing heart to give and not just with his riches but with
his life. Let's examine David and learn how we too can have a willing
heart.
I. A willing heart begins with a willing Acknowledgement of Ownership. (verses 10-14)
We acknowledge God as owner when we
A. Worship his Lordship
Psalm 24:1-2
The
earth is the LORD'S, and the fullness thereof; the world, and they that
dwell therein. 2
For he hath founded it upon the seas, and established it upon the floods.
Romans 14:8
For
whether we live, we live unto the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto
the Lord: whether
we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord's.
B. Recognize Our Purpose
Even the IRS knows their purpose.
Like
them or not, they know their purpose for existing. In the 1976 IRS Handbook
it states:
"During a state of national emergency resulting from enemy attack, the
essential functions
of the Service will be as follows: assessing, collecting, and recording
taxes." So while
everyone panics, they'll be about doing what they always do-taking our
money. They know
their purpose.
What is our purpose?
Deuteronomy
10:12-13
And now, Israel, what doth the LORD thy God require of thee, but to
fear the LORD thy God,
to walk in all his ways, and to love him, and to serve the LORD thy God
with all thy heart
and with all thy soul, To keep the commandments of the LORD, and his statutes,
which I
command thee this day for thy good?
II. A willing heart begins will a Passion for the things of God (verse 3)
Psalm 42:1 As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.
Illus. As the woman sought to touch Jesus
As Zec sought to see Jesus
As Paul was determined to preach at Rome THUS WE SHOULD LONG TO DO THE
THINGS
OF GOD!
Let me share with you a perfect illustration of Stewardship................
In his book of sermons "The Living Faith," Lloyd C. Douglas tells the
story of Thomas Hearne,who, in his journey to the mouth of the Coppermine
River, wrote that a few days after they had started on their expedition,
a party of Indians stole most of their supplies. His comment on the
apparent misfortune was: 'The weight of our baggage being so much
lightened, our next day's journey was more swift and pleasant."
Hearne was in route to something very interesting and important; and the
loss of a few sides of bacon and a couple of bags of flour meant nothing
more than an easing of the load. Had Hearne been holed in somewhere,
in a cabin, resolved to spend his last days eking out an existence, and
living on capital previously collected, the
loss of some of his stores by plunder would probably have worried him
almost to death.
How we respond to "losing" some of our resources for God's work depends upon whether we are on the move or waiting for our last stand.
A willing heart has a passion for the things of God.
III. A willing heart stirs others
Conclusion
In "Run with the Horses," Eugene Peterson tells how he saw a family of birds teaching theiryoung to fly. Three young swallows were perched on a dead branch that stretched out over a lake. "One adult swallow got alongside the chicks and started shoving them out toward the end of the branch--pushing, pushing, pushing. The end one fell off. Somewhere between the branch and the water four feet below, the wings started working, and the fledgling was off on his own. Then the second one.
"The third was not to be bullied. At the last possible moment his grip
on the branch loosened just enough so that he swung downward, then tightened
again, bulldog tenacious. The parent was without sentiment. He pecked at
the desperately clinging talons until it was more painful for the poor
chick to hang on than risk the insecurities of flying. The grip was released,
and the
inexperienced wings began pumping. The mature swallow knew what the
chick did not--that it would fly--that there was no danger in making it
do what it was perfectly designed to do.
"Birds have feet and can walk. Birds have talons and can grasp a branch securely. They can walk; they can cling. But flying is their characteristic action, and not until they fly are they living at their best, gracefully and beautifully.
"Giving is what we do best. It is the air into which we were born. It
is the action that was designed into us before our birth....
Some of us try desperately to hold on to ourselves, to live for ourselves.
We look so bedraggled and pathetic doing it, hanging on to the dead branch
of a bank account for dear life, afraid to risk ourselves on the untried
wings of giving. We don't think we can live generously because we have
never tried. But the sooner we start, the better, for we are going to have
to give up our lives finally, and the longer we wait, the less time we
have for the soaring and swooping life of grace."
Some of you are same way concerning salvation. Attempting to hold onto a dead life. Not letting go. Not accepting Christ as savior