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Stewardship SundayAnglican~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Generous Hearts: Stewardship in the Rhythm of Common Prayer

2 Corinthians 9:6-15Malachi 3:10

Stewardship within the rhythm of common prayer, the collect tradition on generosity, and the via media between duty and delight

Anglican / Episcopal

Scripture, tradition, and reason in balance

Tradition vocabulary:Book of Common Prayervia mediaoffertory sentencescommon prayeralms basinduty and delightbeauty of worship

The Prayer Book Pattern

The Book of Common Prayer embeds generosity into the rhythm of worship. The offertory sentences — read before the collection — are not appeals for money. They are Scripture: "Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven." The giving is framed as worship, as witness, as the visible expression of invisible faith. The Anglican approach to stewardship is characteristically measured: neither the guilt-driven urgency of some traditions nor the dismissive silence of others. The via media applies to money too. Paul provides the framework: "Not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver." The Anglican stewardship sermon holds the tension between the clear call to give and the clear prohibition against coercion. Cranmer's collects model this balance. The Collect for the Tenth Sunday after Trinity: "Let thy merciful ears, O Lord, be open to the prayers of thy humble servants; and, that they may obtain their petitions, make them to ask such things as shall please thee." The prayer does not demand. It asks. It humbly positions itself before the God who gives and the God who receives. Stewardship in the Anglican tradition has the same posture: humble, beautiful, clear, and free from manipulation. The offertory hymn — often "All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine own have we given thee" — captures the entire theology of stewardship in one sentence. Everything comes from God. Everything we give is already His. We are not donors. We are returning.
2 Corinthians 9:7Matthew 5:161 Chronicles 29:14

The Offertory Sentences

The 1662 Book of Common Prayer includes twelve offertory sentences — Scripture verses read before the collection. They range from direct ("Give alms of thy goods") to reflective ("He that hath pity upon the poor lendeth unto the Lord"). Together they build a biblical case for generosity that does not rely on a single proof text. The genius of the Prayer Book approach is that Scripture makes the case. The preacher does not need to twist arms. The Word does the work.

Source: Book of Common Prayer (1662), Offertory Sentences

Between Duty and Delight

The via media holds duty and delight together. There is a duty to give — the biblical pattern of the tithe, the apostolic practice of the collection, the church's need for resources to carry out its mission. And there is a delight in giving — the joy of participating, the freedom of release, the cheerfulness that Paul describes. The Anglican Christian does not choose between duty and delight. Both are real. Both are valid. The mature Christian feels both — the weight of responsibility and the lightness of joy — and lets both inform the giving. Some weeks you give from duty. Some weeks you give from delight. Both are acceptable. Both are faithful. What Paul prohibits is reluctance and compulsion — not duty. "God is able to bless you abundantly, so that in all things at all times, having all that you need, you will abound in every good work." The promise is not prosperity. It is sufficiency for the sake of abundance in good works. The Anglican middle way trusts this: God provides enough for you to have enough and to give enough. Not lavishly. Not stingily. Enough. And "enough" is one of the most deeply Anglican words in the English language. The prayer after the offering in many Anglican churches includes: "All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine own have we given thee." This prayer is the theological guardrail of stewardship: nothing we give is originally ours. We are stewards, not owners. Managers, not masters. And the God who entrusted us with these resources receives them back — not because He needs them, but because the giving transforms us.
2 Corinthians 9:81 Chronicles 29:142 Corinthians 9:7

The Beauty of Generosity

The Anglican instinct is to make generosity beautiful. The alms basin is polished silver. The offertory procession is dignified. The hymn is carefully chosen. The prayer is centuries old. None of this is mere formality. It is the Anglican conviction that form and content are inseparable — that how we give shapes what we become. Beauty serves generosity by elevating it from transaction to worship. When the offering is accompanied by a beautiful hymn, when the alms basin is carried to the altar with reverence, when the prayer of dedication echoes the saints of centuries past, the act of giving is transformed. It becomes participation in something larger than a church budget. It becomes participation in the economy of the kingdom. Paul says "thanks be to God for his indescribable gift" — and the Anglican tradition takes the "indescribable" seriously. Some things cannot be argued. They can only be shown. The beauty of the offertory is the showing — the visible, tangible, audible demonstration that giving is not a burden but a privilege, not a payment but a praise, not a loss but a gift returned to the God who gave it first. So give generously this morning. Give with the dignity and beauty that the Anglican tradition has cultivated for centuries. Give as an act of worship, embedded in the rhythm of common prayer, accompanied by Scripture and hymn and the ancient words: "All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine own have we given thee."
2 Corinthians 9:151 Chronicles 29:14Psalm 96:8

Applications

  • 1Let the offertory sentences speak this week. Read one each day from the Prayer Book. Let Scripture — not guilt — shape your generosity.
  • 2Hold duty and delight together. If you give only from duty, ask God for delight. If you give only when it feels good, embrace the faithful discipline of regular giving.
  • 3Give beautifully. The "how" of giving matters. Let your offering be an act of worship — intentional, reverent, accompanied by prayer.
  • 4Pray the ancient words: "All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine own have we given thee." Let those words reframe your understanding of ownership.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, all things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee. We are returning, not donating. Stewards, not owners.
  • Hold us in the via media — between duty and delight, between weight and lightness, between the call to give and the freedom of cheerfulness.
  • Make our generosity beautiful. Let the offertory be worship, let the giving be praise, let the stewardship of this community reflect Your glory.
  • Almighty and merciful God, receive our offerings as You receive our prayers — not because You need them, but because the giving transforms us. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Chariots of Fire (1981)

Eric Liddell, the Scottish runner, says: 'God made me fast. And when I run, I feel His pleasure.' Liddell's running was worship — not because running is inherently sacred, but because Liddell offered it to God. The same principle applies to giving. When you give with your whole heart, intentionally, beautifully — you feel God's pleasure. The polished alms basin is not decoration. It is dignity. It says: this act matters. This moment matters. And the God who receives it is pleased.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

"All things come of thee, O Lord, and of thine own have we given thee." One sentence. The entire theology of stewardship. Nothing we give is originally ours.

Pastoral

The via media holds duty and delight together. Some weeks you give from discipline. Some weeks you give from joy. Both are faithful. Both are acceptable.

Edgy

The Prayer Book includes twelve offertory sentences — Scripture read before the plate passes. Cranmer knew: let the Bible make the case. The preacher doesn't need to twist arms.

More Titles

Generous Hearts: Stewardship in Common PrayerBetween Duty and Delight: The Via Media of GivingThe Beauty of the Offertory: Why How We Give MattersAll Things Come of Thee: The Ancient Prayer of StewardshipTwelve Offertory Sentences: Cranmer's Stewardship Strategy
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Frequently Asked Questions

How does the Anglican tradition approach stewardship?

Through the rhythm of common prayer: offertory sentences (Scripture read before the collection), the offertory hymn, the prayer of dedication, and the alms basin carried to the altar. The approach is measured, beautiful, and free from manipulation — a via media between duty and delight.

What are the offertory sentences?

Twelve Scripture verses in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer read before the collection. They build a biblical case for generosity without relying on a single proof text. The sentences range from Matthew 5:16 to Galatians 6:10, and together they embed giving in the fabric of worship.