rhythms of grace
Dear Church Family,
This week in Rhythms of Grace, we continued exploring the spiritual practices that help shape our lives as we follow Jesus. This Sunday we focused on the practice of generosity and how it teaches us to live open-handed toward God and others.
Jesus invites us into a different way of living. In Matthew 11:28–30, He says, “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened… and you will find rest for your souls.” One of the ways we experience that lighter life is by learning to release the things we tend to grip too tightly.
In the message, I shared a simple illustration about how monkeys can be trapped by grabbing fruit inside a hollow coconut. The trap itself is not what holds them. Their grip does. All they would have to do to escape is let go.
In many ways, our hearts can work the same way. We can hold tightly to money, possessions, control, or security. But often the tighter we grip those things, the heavier life becomes. Generosity loosens our grip and teaches us to live open-handed.
One of the reasons generosity matters so much is because of what God does in us, through us, and for us when we practice it.
First, generosity changes something in us.
Jesus says in Matthew 6:21, “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” Our hearts tend to follow what we value. When we practice generosity, it begins to reshape what we trust and what we treasure. It trains our hearts to trust God as our provider rather than trusting what we hold in our hands.
Second, generosity works through us to bless others.
In 2 Corinthians 9, Paul reminds us that God enriches His people so that they can be generous on every occasion. Through the generosity of God’s people, needs are met, ministry expands, and lives are changed. God often chooses to work through open hands.
Third, generosity does something for us.
Jesus warned that possessions can easily become masters. We cannot serve both God and money. Generosity helps break that grip. It restores perspective and reminds us that life is not built on what we accumulate but on our relationship with God. Generosity brings freedom, joy, and a healthier perspective on what truly matters.
Toward the end of the message we looked at Jesus’ parable of the treasure hidden in a field. When the man discovered the treasure, he joyfully sold everything he had to obtain it. The treasure changed how he viewed everything else.
When we clearly see the treasure we have in Jesus and His Kingdom, letting go of lesser things becomes joyful rather than painful.
This week, consider taking one small step toward practicing generosity:
• Start with gratitude
• Start somewhere
• Stay consistent
• Stay ready to bless others
Generosity is not ultimately about an amount. It is about the posture of our hearts.
The greatest act of generosity the world has ever seen was the cross. Jesus opened His hands and gave Himself for us so that we could receive the life we could never earn. Because He lived open-handed toward us, we can learn to live open-handed toward God and others.