GIVING
Those who are poor in pocket, if rich in faith, will be accepted none the less because
their gifts are small; but, poor reader, do you give in fair proportion to the Lord, or is
the widow’s mite kept back from the sacred treasury? ME289
Honesty first, and then generosity. PT83
He who tries to cheat the Lord will be quite ready to cheat his fellow men. PT136
Giving is true having, as the old gravestone said of the dead man, “What I spent I
had, what I saved I lost, what I gave I have.” PT147
Brethren, I do not think much of a conversion where it does not touch a man’s
substance; and those people who pretend to be Christ’s people, and yet live only for
themselves, and do nothing for him or for his Church, give but sorry evidence of
having been born again. 544.690
Let us learn then, from the analogy of nature, the great lesson, that to get, we must
give; that to accumulate, we must scatter; that to make ourselves happy, we must
make others happy; and that to get good and become spiritually vigorous, we must do
good, and seek the spiritual good of others. 626.230
There is not a flower that blooms but its very sweetness lies in its shedding its
fragrance on the air. All the rivers run into the sea, the sea feeds the clouds, the
clouds empty out their treasures, the earth gives back the rain in fertility, and so it
is an endless chain of giving generosity. Generosity reigns supreme in nature. There
is nothing in this world but lives by giving, except a covetous man, and such a man is
a piece of grit in the machinery; he is out of gear with the universe. Man is a wheel
running in the opposite direction to the wheels of God’s great engine. He is a jibbing
horse in the team. He is one that will not do what all the forces of the world beside
are doing. He is a monster; he is not fit for this world at all. He has not realised the
motion of the spheres. He keeps not step with the march of the ages. He is out of
date; he is out of place; he is out of God’s order altogether. But the cheerful giver is
marching to the music of the spheres. He is in order with God’s great natural laws,
and God therefore loveth him, since he sees his own work in him. 835.571
Passion seldom gives so acceptably as principle. 1834.199
God will often look upon our work in giving, not according to how much we give, but
I think that the Lord’s rule is to take notice of how much we have left. That woman
who gave all her living, gave more than all the rich men gave, because she had
nothing left. It was but two mites that make a farthing; but then it was all her living;
and so she goes into the front rank. My lord has given a thousand pounds, and we
are very much obliged to him. He must go into the back rank, for all that; for he has
so much left. 2221.477
Our gifts are not to be measured by the amount we contribute, but by the surplus
kept in our own hand. 2234.625
We want personal consecration. I have heard that word pronounced “purse-and-all
consecration,” a most excellent pronunciation certainly. He who loves Jesus
consecrates to him all that he has, and feels it a delight that he may lay anything at
the feet of him who laid down his life for us. 3112.476