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For to this you were called, because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example, that you should follow in His steps. 1 Peter 2:21
This call to stewardship is about a life change...a journey to recognize that all we have belongs to God who provides leadership in the placement of His resources. In our call to stewardship, the ultimate goal is for each one of us to live beyond the grip of resource slavery. We are invited by those nail pierced hands to a life characterized by God-led management of our Time, Money, Opportunities, Skills and Relationships.


If you are reading this, you posses a call to life and have been entrusted with breath, time, resources, skills, opportunities and relationships. You're probably very familiar with the 'American Dream' that generally refers to the idea that one's prosperity depends upon one's own abilities and hard work. This ideal has granted mankind the 'right' to pursue happiness...a happiness that we seek through successful careers, skilled sports, community status and possessions. Through it all we have become drunken in pursuit and have lost sight of the happiness we seek. 

At New Life, we are learning that happiness, joy and true peace come from letting it all go. This is a figurative letting go in our heart and mind of everything that is 'ours' and opening our hands in a spirit of absolute trust, total dependence and complete obedience to God. Along the continuum of eternity, we walk this earth for a very short period of time and the things that we hold in our trust, are just that, held in our possession as managers.  I Corinthians 4:7 says, "What do you have that you did not receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if you did not receive it?"

So where does that leave us? I repeat that in this life we've been entrusted with breath, time, resources, skills, opportunities and relationships. As such, we have a call greater than the American Dream...we have a call to the very stewardship of life! The title of steward, doesn’t necessarily conjure up the greatest associations of status and success, but as I Corinthians says, we don't have anything that hasn't been given to us anyway; therefore, it's up to you and I to accept our role as entrusted managers of the time, site, breath and energy it’s taken to read this page. Even more, we have time, resources, skills, opportunities and relationship in our trust to be used as God leads for His glory. 

What does this mean?

Time – There are 60 seconds in every minute, 60 minutes in every hour, 168 hours in every day, 365 days in every year and an average of 80 years for every human. You and I are not guaranteed any of them and can never get any of them back. Spend wisely on what matters most.

Resources – Money, materials, stocks and land are just a few of the different resources at our disposal. This area, possibly more than any other, can cloud our mind and life pursuits as we achieve what is 'ours'.  Manage wisely and hold your hand open...what has been entrusted to you is not yours. 

Skills – Each of us have talents, training, strengths and experience that don't belong to us. We should be about the business of using them to follow God's call, "love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind and strength and love your neighbor as yourself".

Opportunities – As we journey through life, we will encounter opportunities to impact or impress people. Whether this is a position at work, an act of service, a place of leadership in sports or others functions, we all too often get caught in the endless cycle of trying to impress people and make little or no lasting difference. We’ve been called to teach people what God has taught us as we go through our life, and as we follow this call, we will leave an eternal impact on mankind.

Relationships – marriage, co-workers, friends and family are relationships that most would place great value on for support, livelihood and training.  In addition to these, is the gas attendant, the airlines stewardess, grocery store checkers, etc.  We are called to care for each relationship with highest regard, because we will one day return them to God. 

In the book, In His Steps, Charles Sheldon writes, “Are we ready to make and live a new discipleship? Are we ready to reconsider our definition of a Christian? What is it to be a Christian? It is to imitate Jesus. It is to do as He would do. It is to walk in His steps.” “What would be the result if all the church members of this city tried to do as Jesus would do? It is not possible to say in detail what the effect would be. But it is easy to say, and it is true, that instantly the human problem would begin to find an adequate answer.”

Matthew 6:33 says, “Seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.”  So, we have a new journey before us, to follow in Christ’s steps on a faith journey. The journey will take us to places we have never been and stretch our faith.  Throughout the journey he is making us into his image, by transforming, strengthening and regenerating us through the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.  In this way, we live as stewards of life and live life the way it was meant to be!

In conclusion, I would like to reflect on the feeding of the five thousand.  God used a boy with a five loaves and two fish to feed five thousand men and their families.   He used something that the boy had in his possession.  Something that would have, at best, limited use in addressing the appetite of the enormous crowd, but at the right time he obeyed the call to give all he had to Christ.  The result was incredible, because not only did the entire crowd get fed, but they were filled and collected over twelve baskets of left-overs.  So it is with you and I.  We are not asked to give anything that we do not have.  We are asked only to be ready to return what has been entrusted to us and He will use you to do supernatural things.  

I invite you to join the many who have made a commitment to the Stewardship of life by printing off and signing the New Life Stewardship Commitment Card, and then placing it in a place as a reminder that you are a manager of the time, resources, skills, opportunities and relationships that have been set before you.  I look forward to hearing the stories from your journey.
I surrender every one of the 186 hours in my week to God.
Every week I give God my blank schedule and He gets priority. This means that when He calls, I listen
and obey, even if it means sacrificing something important to me.
I make financial decisions with the Kingdom in mind.
I give God the first part of my income...not the leftovers. I trust I can live on as little as possible so I can give as much as possible.
I am attentive and responsive
to opportunities God provides.
Every day I have opportunities to further the kingdom. These opportunities are as simple as a smile and a kind word, to sharing the love of Jesus through my spiritual journeys.
My time belongs to God.
My money belongs to God.
My opportunities belong to God.
I surrender the gifts and talents that God has given me.
God has gifted me with skills that are significant to the body. My responsibility is to discover those gifts, refine those gifts and ultimately to use those gifts to bring glory to God.
I consciously point others to God in my relationships.
Every current and potential relationship should be viewed in light of this call to stewardship. This will affect what I say, how I act and the effort I invest into people.
I embrace a life of faith...
the way Life is meant to be!
I have been handcrafted by God for God. My life is a journey packed with daily discoveries and subsequent steps of faith that gradually reveal God’s purpose for me. 
My skills belong to God.
My relationships belong to God.
My life belongs to God.
Are you living the way Life is meant to be? Check all that apply.
Download the New Life Stewardship Commitment Card,