The Common Table: Stewardship as Economic Justice
2 Corinthians 9:6-15 • Malachi 3:10
Stewardship as economic justice, the early church's radical sharing, and the prophetic challenge to wealth accumulation
Anabaptist / Peace Church
Radical discipleship, peace, and community
Stewardship Is a Justice Issue
The Acts 2 Economy
The first church practiced radical sharing: "All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need." The result: "There were no needy persons among them." Zero poverty in the community. This was not communism imposed by the state. It was generosity inspired by the Spirit. And it produced a community so distinctive that the watching world was amazed. The question for the modern church is not "Is this practical?" The question is "Is this what we are called to?"
Source: Acts 2:44-45, Acts 4:34-35
The Prophetic Challenge to Wealth
Building the Common Table
Applications
- 1Give for equality, not just generosity. Paul's goal was "that there might be equality." Ask: does my giving close the gap or maintain it?
- 2Examine the systems, not just the symptoms. Stewardship includes advocacy — challenging the structures that create poverty, not just funding the programs that treat it.
- 3Build the common table in your community. Start a mutual aid fund, a community meal, a resource-sharing group. Make Acts 2 practical.
- 4Let your giving be an act of solidarity. Give directly to someone in need. Give to organizations that address root causes. Give as if the common table matters — because it does.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of justice, Your prophets challenged wealth accumulation and demanded care for the poor. Give us ears to hear and hands to act.
- God of the common table, You envisioned a community where there were no needy persons. We confess we are far from that vision. Move us closer.
- God of equality, Paul collected for Jerusalem so that there might be equality. Help us give not from surplus but toward solidarity.
- Build the world of shalom through us. One gift. One act of solidarity. One meal at the common table. Until everyone has enough. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The Pursuit of Happyness (2006)
Chris Gardner sleeps in a subway bathroom with his son while holding down an unpaid internship. He is not lazy. He is not irresponsible. He is trapped in a system that punishes poverty. The question the movie raises — and the question the church must answer — is: should Chris and his son have to eat at a soup kitchen, or should the community ensure that every family has enough? Stewardship as justice does not ask 'Who deserves help?' It asks 'Who needs help?' — and then builds a table big enough for everyone.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
Paul's goal was not charity from surplus but equality — isotes. He wanted the gap between rich and poor closed within the Body of Christ. That is stewardship as justice.
If your giving feels distant — writing checks to abstract causes — make it personal. Give to a face. Give to a name. Give to a family. Solidarity is not impersonal.
The first church had zero poverty. Acts 4:34: 'There were no needy persons among them.' The modern church has fundraising campaigns. Something went wrong.
More Titles
Frequently Asked Questions
Is stewardship about church budgets or economic justice?
Both — but the biblical emphasis is on economic justice. Paul's collection (2 Corinthians 8-9) was explicitly about equality between rich and poor communities. The early church practiced radical sharing (Acts 2, 4) that eliminated poverty within the community. Stewardship that ignores justice is incomplete.
What is mutual aid and how does it relate to stewardship?
Mutual aid is the Anabaptist practice of community resource-sharing: when one member suffers loss, the community covers the cost. It reflects Acts 2:44-45 and embodies Paul's vision of equality. It is stewardship beyond the offering plate — the community functioning as an economic body where no one goes without.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the stewardship sunday sermon.