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The Steward and the Master

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Title: The Steward and the Master


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The Steward and the Master
  • Eleven of Christs thirty-nine parables deal
    with finances and asset management.

3
  • Steward One entrusted with anothers wealth or
    property, and charged with the responsibility of
    managing it in the Owners best interest.

4
  • Jesus told his disciples There was a rich man
    whose manager was accused of wasting his
    possessions. So he called him in and asked him,
    What is this I hear about you? Give an account
    of your management, because you cannot be manager
    any longer.
  • The manager said to himself, What shall I do
    now?..
  • Luke 161-13

5
  • I tell you, use worldly wealth to gain friends
    for yourselves, so that when it is gone, you will
    be welcomed into eternal dwellings.
  • Luke 169

6
  • In my Fathers house are many dwellings if it
    were not so, I would have told you. I am going
    there to prepare a place for you. And if I go and
    prepare a place for you, I will come back and
    take you to be with me that you also may be where
    I am.
  • John 142-3

7
  • Well done, my good servant! his master
    replied. Because you have been trustworthy in a
    very small matter, take charge of ten cities.
  • His master answered, You take charge of five
    cities.
  • Luke 1917,19

8
  • The Stewardship Parables
  • The Shrewd Manager
  • Luke 161-8
  • The Faithful and Wise Servant
  • Matt. 2445-51 Luke 1242-48

The Watchful Servants Mark 1334-37 Luke
1235-40
9
  • The Talents/The Minas
  • Matt. 2514-30 Luke 1911-27
  • The Sheep and Goats
  • Matthew 2531-46
  • The Tenants (Vineyard Renters)
  • Matthew 2133-44
  • Mark 121-11 Luke 209-18

10
  • The Unworthy Servant
  • Luke 177-10
  • The Rich Fool
  • Luke 1216-21
  • The Rich Man and Lazarus?
  • Luke 1619-31

11
  • Rich man lived in luxury, while Lazarus was
    covered with sores and longing to eat what fell
    from the rich mans table.
  • Abraham to rich man Son, remember that in
    your lifetime you received your good things while
    Lazarus received bad things. Now he is comforted
    here and you are in agony.

12
  • Question Based on your reading of the
    stewardship parables, what lessons do they teach
    about
  • The Master?
  • The Stewards?

13
Lessons Concerning the Master
  • His ownership
  • The master is the owner of all assets.
    Everything belongs to the master. Therefore He
    alone has the right to do with it whatever He
    wishes.

14
  • To the Lord your God belong the heavens, even
    the highest heavens, the earth and everything in
    it.
  • Deuteronomy 1014

The land is mine and you are but aliens and my
tenants. Leviticus 2523
15
  • Yours, O Lord, is the greatness and the power
    and the glory and the majesty and the splendor,
    for everything in heaven and earth is yours.
    Yours, O Lord, is the kingdom you are exalted as
    head over all. Wealth and honor come from you
    you are the ruler of all things.
  • 1 Chronicles 2911-12

16
  • Who has a claim against me that I must pay?
    Everything under heaven belongs to me.
  • Job 4111
  • The earth is the Lords and everything in it,
    the world, and all who live in it for he founded
    it upon the seas and established it upon the
    waters.
  • Psalm 241-2

17
  • For every animal of the forest is mine, and the
    cattle on a thousand hills. I know every bird in
    the mountains, and the creatures of the field are
    mine. If I were hungry I would not tell you, for
    the world is mine, and all that is in it.
  • Psalm 5010-12

18
  • The silver is mine and the gold is mine,
    declares the Lord Almighty.
  • Haggai 28
  • You are not your own you were bought at a
    price.
  • 1 Corinthians 619-20

19
  • The Masters power.
  • The masters will is authoritative. Behind his
    words there is ultimate power.

20
  • The Masters trust.
  • He has delegated to his servants authority
    over his money and possessions. This shows a
    trust in their ability to manage them. And
    willingness to take the risk of delegating
    responsibilities to people who may fail.

21
  • The Masters expectations.
  • The master has high expectations of his
    stewards. Hes not easy, but Hes fair. He has
    every right to expect his stewards to do what
    hes told them.

22
  • The Masters temporary absence.
  • The master is away for a season. The
    relationship is long-distanceconsequently, there
    is delayed accountability. Its a test of each
    servants devotion to see if the masters
    standards are maintained even though he isnt
    there to give immediate reward or correction.

23
  • The Masters imminent return.
  • The master will come back. It may be sooner, it
    may be later, but he could return at any time,
    likely when least expected.

24
  • The Masters generosity.
  • He has the right to expect the servant to do
    what he commanded without reward. Yet the master
    graciously promises reward and promotion to
    faithful stewards.

25
  • The Masters strictness.
  • The masters instructions were reasonable.
    Hes not one to accept excuses. The servants know
    his high standards. They shouldnt presume upon
    his grace by being lazy and disobedient. The
    master will take away whatever reward he would
    have given the servant who is unfaithful. And He
    will discipline the servant for poor stewardship.

26
Lessons Concerning the Servant
  • Stewardship. Servants should be acutely aware
    that they are not owners, or masters, but only
    caretakers or money managers. Its their job to
    take the assets entrusted (not given) to them and
    use them wisely to care for and expand the
    masters estate. If a servant does not fully
    grasp the implications of the masters ownership,
    he will not be a faithful steward.

27
  • Industriousness. The servants must work hard,
    and not slack off.
  • Accountability. The stewards will one day
    stand before the Master to explain why they did
    what they didand didnt dowith His assets.

28
  • Faithfulness. Servants seek to handle their
    masters estate in a way that will please him.
    They do this until the master returns or until
    death, no matter how many years. Stewardship is
    the servants life calling. Resignation isnt an
    option. Where else would he go?

29
  • Wisdom in investing. Because they are managing
    the masters assets, servants must choose
    investments carefully. They cant afford to take
    undue risks. Nor let capital erode through
    idleness. The goal isnt merely to conserve
    resources but to multiply them. Servants must be
    resourceful and strategic thinkers finding the
    best long-term investments.

30
  • Readiness for the masters return.
  • When do you expect the owner to return?
  • The caretakers reply Today, of course.

31
  • Fear of the master. The stewards know the master
    is just. His instructions were explicit. If the
    stewards work wisely, they know theyll fare
    well, because the master is generous. But they
    also know that if theyre unfaithful they will
    feel the masters wrath. This healthy fear
    motivates them to good stewardship.

32
  • Individual standing before the master. Reward is
    not to the group but to the individual. The
    master has a keen eye. An individual servants
    efforts will not be negated by the unfaithfulness
    of others. Each servant must do the job given
    him, and will be rewarded justly.

33
  • Single-mindedness in service. The wise stewards
    life revolves around service for the master. All
    side interests are brought into orbit around this
    one consuming purpose in lifeto serve the master
    well.

34
  • John Wesleys questions about spending
  • 1) In spending this money, am I acting as if I
    owned it, or am I acting as the Lords trustee?
  • 2) What Scripture requires me to spend this
    money in this way?
  • 3) Can I offer up this purchase as a sacrifice
    to the Lord?
  • 4) Will God reward me for this expenditure at
    the resurrection of the just?

35
  • Asceticism?
  • If silver and gold are things evil in
    themselves, then those who keep away from them
    deserve to be praised. But if they are good
    creatures of God, which we can use both for the
    needs of our neighbor and for the glory of God,
    is not a person silly, yes, even unthankful to
    God, if he refrains from them as if they were
    evil? Martin Luther

36
  • Away, then, with that inhuman philosophy which,
    while conceding only a necessary use of
    creatures, not only malignantly deprives us of
    the lawful fruit of Gods beneficence but cannot
    be practiced unless it robs a man of all his
    senses and degrades him to a block.
  • John Calvin

37
  • Richesare morally neither good nor bad, but
    things indifferent which men may use either well
    or ill.
  • William Ames, Puritan

38
  • Deuteronomy 14
  • But if that place is too distant and you have
    been blessed by the LORD your God and cannot
    carry your tithe (because the place where the
    LORD will choose to put his Name is so far away),
    then exchange your tithe for silver, and take the
    silver with you and go to the place the LORD your
    God will choose.

39
  • Use the silver to buy whatever you like cattle,
    sheep, wine or other fermented drink, or anything
    you wish. Then you and your household shall eat
    there in the presence of the LORD your God and
    rejoice.
  • Deuteronomy 1424-26

40
  • Jesus said to his disciples, I tell you, use
    worldly wealth to gain friends for yourselves, so
    that when it is gone, you will be welcomed into
    eternal dwellings.
  • Luke 169

41
  • When you come, bring the cloak that I left with
    Carpus at Troas, and my scrolls, especially the
    parchments.
  • 2 Timothy 413

42
  • I say to you that many will come from the east
    and the west, and will take their places at the
    feast with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in the
    kingdom of heaven.
  • Matthew 811

43
  • 1 Timothy 41-5
  • The Spirit clearly says that in later times
    some will abandon the faith and follow deceiving
    spirits and things taught by demons. Such
    teachings come through hypocritical liars, whose
    consciences have been seared as with a hot iron.
    They forbid people to marry and order them to
    abstain from certain foods

44
  • which God created to be received with
    thanksgiving by those who believe and who know
    the truth. For everything God created is good,
    and nothing is to be rejected if it is received
    with thanksgiving, because it is consecrated by
    the word of God and prayer.
  • 1 Timothy 41-5

45
  • Poverty also hath its temptations. For even the
    poor may be undone by the love of that wealth and
    plenty which they never get and they may perish
    for over-loving the world, that never yet
    prospered in the world.
  • Richard Baxter, 1675

46
  • some women who had been cured of evil spirits
    and diseases Mary (called Magdalene) from whom
    seven demons had come out Joanna the wife of
    Cuza, the manager of Herods household Susanna
    and many others. These women were helping to
    support them out of their own means.
  • Luke 82-3

47
  • While Jesus was in Bethany in the home of a man
    known as Simon the Leper, a woman came to him
    with an alabaster jar of very expensive perfume,
    which she poured on his head as he was reclining
    at the table.
  • When the disciples saw this, they were
    indignant. Why this waste? they asked. This
    perfume could have been sold at a high price and
    the money given to the poor.

48
  • Aware of this, Jesus said to them, Why are you
    bothering this woman? She has done a beautiful
    thing to me. The poor you will always have with
    you, but you will not always have me. When she
    poured this perfume on my body, she did it to
    prepare me for burial.
  • Matthew 266-12
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