There's an inside joke in the last season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer in which the title character tells a newcomer that her town of Sunnydale, which is located over a hellmouth, usually has an apocalypse every May. Of course that was when the broadcast TV season used to end and that's why Buffy always had her final face off with the big bad vampire, demon, goddess, witch or whatever that month. They wanted you to tune in. But you may have noticed that there are other times of the year when there are a cluster of TV characters getting married, or giving birth or dying. They are in November and February. TV networks use the ratings of those 3 months to set their advertising rates. So that's when they schedule major events to take place in regular TV series and why they often preempt poorly performing shows and replace them with specials. They call them Sweeps Weeks.
We have something similar in churches. In the first part of the calendar year, priests and pastors of large denominations have to compile their attendance numbers and financial numbers for their parochial reports. Besides the average Sunday attendance, I had to send in the attendance figures for Easter. And I used to have to do it for Christmas as well. The church doesn't call them the Sweeps, but oddly enough, that word has been used as an acronym for 6 important activities that Christians should carry out in or through the church: Stewardship, Worship, Education, Evangelism, Pastoral care, and Service. And since Lent is one of the seasons of the church year that is focused on spiritual disciplines, we are going to look at these for this and the next 4 Sundays.
We start with stewardship and you don't need to be psychic to hear the inaudible sighs of dismay. Sadly, stewardship has come to mean nothing more than the church begging for money. I have heard people say that religion is just a scam for making money. These people do not go to church. If they did attend the average church in America, which typically has less than 100 people, they'd realize that most clergy do not go into the ministry to make money. If we did so, then we're stupid. The Joel Olsteens in this profession are as few as are the Howard Sterns in my old profession of radio. The vast majority of people in ministry will never get rich. We do it because we are called to it and we love it.
And stewardship existed before money did. In fact, you could say it was humanity's first and primary duty. In Genesis 2:5, we are told that before the creation of humans, there was no one to work the ground. There was originally no gardener in the Garden of Eden. That was to be our role. (Genesis 2:15) And that fact makes God's command to subdue the earth sound a lot less rapacious. We're to take care of the earth and its inhabitants in the same way a gardener does. He imposes an appreciative order upon the flora and the fauna in his care. We are to be stewards of the earth, not destroyers of it.
The word “steward” comes from the Old English for “hall keeper.” The great hall was the home of a lord and the steward was the person who took care of his finances and property. This was to be our proper role in creation, and it is obvious that we have failed. We have not merely filled the earth; we have overrun it and blighted a good deal of it. Even leaving ecology aside, we have not taken care of its creatures, which includes our fellow human beings. In fact, we have treated each other as badly as we have treated non-human creation.
It is this behavior in particular that is given as the reason for the Genesis flood. It says, “The earth was ruined in the sight of God; the earth was filled with violence.” (Genesis 6:11) The Hebrew word for violence is used in other contexts to include injustice, cruelty, assault, murder and rape. When God commanded us to fill the earth, he did not mean to fill it with violence and evil. This is what makes God “grieve in his heart” and causes him to regret creating humanity. (Genesis 6:6)
So it's interesting that when Jesus, the firstborn of the new creation, is resurrected on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene originally thinks he is the gardener. (John 20:15) In a sense she is right. He is here to do what our ancestors didn't—put God's world right. And as his followers, Christ's body on earth, it becomes our task as well.
So stewardship can be seen as a broad mandate to treat all of creation, including our fellow humans, as belonging to God. Which means we do, too. So when we talk about stewardship we usually talk about how we as individual Christians deal with all that God has given into our care, especially our time, talent and treasure.
Time is what our lives on earth are made of. Time is a creation of the eternal God and so belongs to him. He has entrusted to each of us a certain amount of time at a certain point in history. We are to be stewards of however much time has been given to us and we are to use it for him. That means spending time not only worshipping him but obeying his commands to love others, to help the needy, to protect the oppressed, to act justly, to make peace, and to spread the gospel. Loving your spouse and family is a good stewardship of your time; working at the community food pantry is as well. Doing your job well counts too, as does signing up for activities listed in the church bulletin. And, yes, you need time to relax and rest. Bad stewardship of one's time would be devoting countless hours to activities that do not contribute to the long-term wellbeing of anybody or anything—or worse, spending time doing things that destroy people, other living things or our ecosystem.
I understand that the broadness of that last statement may leave some folks raising questions about using animals for medical research or developing land. However such things should always be evaluated as to whether they qualify as valid exceptions to the general rule. For example, we are supposed to consider whether an act of killing is self-defense or some other valid exception to the commandment not to murder. (Numbers 35:22-25)
Talent has come to mean an “ability of a superior quality” according to the American Heritage Dictionary. It often refers to an artistic ability. And defined that way, it leaves most of us out. For our purposes, let's define a talent as something you can do well. It doesn't mean you are necessarily better at it than others. Not everyone in a choir is a soloist but they are able to sing well enough and blend harmoniously with others. That's a talent. Some people have a talent for words without rising to the level of a Shakespeare. Others have a talent for numbers, though they may not be able to chart the trajectory of a space launch. And there are talents that might not be recognized as such. A talent for encouraging people or for helping them articulate what they mean to say or for just listening can be incredibly valuable. The talent for seeing what others don't is also vital. I think there is a talent for knowing when to say, “Enough discussion; it's time to decide.” There are lots of talents out there that we might not put on a stage or in front of a camera. There are talents that might not be easy to define but they are important nevertheless.
God's Spirit has distributed countless talents among us. (1 Corinthians 12:7) With his help, we need to discover and develop them. And then use them as part of our stewardship of this earth. We should be on the lookout for the talents of those around us. We should point them out to the persons who display them and encourage them to nurture and grow them. And spotting talent is itself a talent.
As for being a good steward of our treasure, money is one way of quantifying how much we value an item, experience, service, talent or period of time. Admittedly it is a very imperfect form of measuring value. We pay celebrity sports figures much more than we pay P.E. teachers. For that matter, we pay people who play teachers, cops, and healthcare professionals in movies and TV way more than we pay real teachers, cops and healthcare professionals. And that calls into question how much we understand the actual value of things.
I remember reading an article years ago that said the Great Recession of 2008 was even hurting strip clubs in Las Vegas. It gave as an example a club filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy because it was only making between $20,000 and $26,000 a week! That's a minimum of $1,040,000 a year! A Google search didn't give me the average income of a church in this country but I did find a statistic that the average amount that a typical church member gives comes to just over $1000 a year. And since 68% of American churches have less than 100 members, most must operate on less than $100,000 a year. That's a tenth of the income of a failing strip club. And it has to cover the pastor's salary and housing, utilities and maintenance of the church building, and any staff like a paid secretary. So what does this say about the relative value we place on these two establishments?
Should churches follow that model? Should they serve more than wine? Should they put more attractive talent up there in the pulpit? Should they have private rooms where you can take communion alone? Should they care more about appearances? The problem is that a strip club is really about fantasy. A church should be about truth.
Churches don't have a cover charge or a membership fee. They don't, like colonial churches used to, make you pay more for a private pew. What they do offer you is time to pray to God and to praise him. Churches using the lectionary offer you 4 generous helpings of God's word as well as insights into it and into what it says about God's holy, just, loving and forgiving nature. They offer you a time to sing out loud, regardless of your talent in that area. They offer you a cross section of your community, people you otherwise might not get to know. They offer you a place to celebrate births, bless marriages and commemorate deaths, opportunities to share your joys and sorrows with a community that will support you and pray for you. They offer you a place to bring your children to learn a worldview based on reverence, compassion, morality, self-control and love.
They offer potluck meals for the price of bringing one dish, with opportunities to enjoy what others have lovingly prepared. They offer you the Lord's supper, his body and blood, to strengthen you for the week ahead. They offer you absolution and blessings. They offer you a place to come for encouragement, comfort, counseling and community.
What's that worth to you? Remember, stewardship is a spiritual discipline. While most of your income is probably spent on the physical basics, such as food, clothing and shelter, how much of your time, talent and treasure do you spend on the spiritual basics? How much instead do you spend on entertainment, electronic toys, junk foods and other things you consume purely for personal pleasure?
Speaking of which, everyone has noticed how the stuff you view on your phone or even talk about in its presence tends to follow you around on the internet. Bots listen and the cookies that websites embed in your device make sure that the ads you see reflect your interests. They are evidence of what you really value and spend your time, talents and money on, as advertisers know. Which brings to mind the old saying: “If being a Christian were a criminal offense, would there be enough evidence to convict you?” Relying on the evidence of how you used your time, talents and treasures, would you feel comfortable making an accounting to God on your stewardship of the life and gifts that he has given you?
Originally preached on February 21, 2010. It has been revised and updated.