The Three Things We Can
Give to God This Year
As we enter into a new
year, here is something to remember: When it’s all said and done, we have three
things we can offer God—our treasure, our talent, and our time. Each of these
is given to us by God, and each of them should be given back in generous portions.
First, there is
our treasure. I urge you to commit yourself to give faithfully and
generously to the Lord in this coming year. Jesus said, “Where your treasure
is, there will your heart be also” (Matthew 6:21 NKJV). Whenever we put our
money into something, we develop a vested interest in it. It makes sense to us
that we would place our treasures where our hearts are. If we love reading
books, or being entertained, or the latest technology, we spend our treasure on
those things. And if our heart’s desires change, that changes where we put our
treasure.
But it works the other
way too: Where we put our treasures, our heart will follow. Do you want your
heart to be in the things of God? Then put your treasures in the things of God!
Develop a vested interest in God’s kingdom.
The second thing we can
give to God is our talent. God has gifted each believer in
different ways. Everyone has something to offer for the work of the kingdom.
Romans 12 says, “Just as our bodies have many parts and each part has a special
function, so it is with Christ’s body. We are all parts of his one body, and
each of us different work to do” (NLT).
Finally, there is
our time. Let’s say that one day your phone rang and it was the
president of the bank that you use. He told you that an anonymous donor who
loved you very much had decided to deposit 86,400 pennies into your bank
account each and every morning. At first, maybe that didn’t seem like a lot.
But then you figured out that it was $864 a day. At seven days a week and 52 weeks
a year, those pennies add up to almost $315,000 each year! But the bank
president added one thing: “The anonymous giver said you must spend all of the
money on the day you receive it! No balance will be carried over to the next
day. Each evening the bank must cancel whatever sum you failed to use!
Remember, what you don’t spend is lost.”
That may sound like
fantasy, but here’s the reality: Every morning, Someone
who loves you very much deposits into your “bank of time” 86,400 seconds, which
represent 1,440 minutes, which of course equals 24 hours each and every day.
God gives you that much to use each day. Nothing is ever carried over on credit
to the next day. There is no such thing as a 27-hour day. It’s
called time, and you can’t escape it. Time is ticking away right now. The Bible tells us to “redeem the time”—to make sacred
and wise use of every opportunity.
Offer God your
treasure, your talent, and your time. Live this next year as if it were your
last, because it could be. Make those minutes count!