“THE COST OF FAITHFUL STEWARDSHIP”
(Luke 16:10-13; Luke 17:7-10; John 11:1-44)
“Jesus said to her, ‘I am the resurrection and the life. The one who believes in me will live, even though they die; and whoever lives by believing in me will never die. Do you believe this?'” – John 11:25-26 (ESV)
After Jesus tells us to seek the lost, He immediately asks a penetrating question: What are we actually willing to give? The parable of the dishonest manager isn’t primarily about money—it’s about where our loyalty lies. We can’t serve two masters; we’re either serving wealth, comfort, and self-preservation, or we’re serving God’s kingdom. This tension isn’t new. When King David surveyed all the resources God had given him—the wealth, the power, the blessing—he recognized something crucial: “All things come from you, and of your own do we give you” (1 Chronicles 29:14). Everything we steward is already God’s. We’re not owners protecting our own; we’re managers of what’s been entrusted to us. And then Jesus tells us something that might feel discouraging: even when we give everything—our time, our resources, our intercession for the next generation—we’re just doing our duty. We’re unprofitable servants who’ve done only what was required. But here’s the beautiful tension: faithfulness isn’t about the return we see now.
Look at Lazarus. Jesus loved him deeply, yet He waited. Mary and Martha were confused, even angry. “If you had been here, our brother would not have died.” But Jesus knew something they didn’t: God’s story extends beyond what we can see in this moment. The prophet Malachi saw this too—he spoke of a future where the hearts of parents would be “turned toward” their children and the hearts of children “toward their parents” (Malachi 4:6). That turning of hearts requires sacrifice, requires us to release what we’re holding. Stewardship of the next generation of believers works the same way. We invest our presence in a teenager who seems unreceptive. We pray for a neighbor’s family without seeing immediate results. We mentor a young adult whose path looks uncertain. We give sacrificially when our own resources feel stretched. We stand in the gap through intercession when we’d rather rest. And we do it not because we’ll see the harvest tomorrow, but because we trust that the God who raises the dead is working in ways we cannot yet comprehend.
Simple Truth:
Faithful stewardship means investing in the next generation not for the results we see today, but for the resurrection hope we trust God is building toward.
Reflections:
- What are you holding onto—time, money, comfort, energy—that prevents you from full investment in God’s kingdom and the next generation? What would it look like to release it?
- When you think about the young people and families God has placed in your sphere of influence, where do you need more faith to trust that God is working even when you can’t see results yet?
Application:
- If you have time and presence: Identify one relationship where you can commit consistent investment—whether it’s mentoring, prayer, or simple presence. Consistency matters more than perfection or visible results.
- If you’re standing in the gap through prayer: Your intercession is not insignificant spiritual work. Commit to praying for one person or family in the next generation by name, trusting God’s timeline over your impatience.
- If resources feel stretched: Your faithful stewardship of what you have—even if it’s small—is seen by God. Ask: What small offering of time, attention, or presence can I give, trusting the Holy Spirit to multiply it?
- If you have financial resources: Ask yourself: Am I stewarding what God has given me primarily for comfort and security, or am I strategically investing in next-generation ministry? Consider one concrete way to redirect resources this month.
Closing Prayer:
Lord, forgive us for holding so tightly to what we think we need to keep us safe. Give us vision beyond what we can see today. Help us trust that when we steward our resources—time, gifts, prayers, presence—for the next generation of believers, You are working in ways we cannot comprehend. Give us faith like the disciples had when Jesus raised Lazarus. Help us invest faithfully, not for the harvest we see, but for the resurrection hope You are building. Strengthen us when the cost feels high. Amen.
About our Author
Vanessa Abrisqueta serves as the Children and Family Pastor at Transformation Life Church. Born in Caracas, Venezuela, she brings a multicultural perspective to her child discipleship ministry.
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