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Stewardship SundayWesleyan~15 minClaude Opus 4.6

Gain All You Can, Save All You Can, Give All You Can: Wesley's Stewardship Revolution

2 Corinthians 9:6-15Malachi 3:10

Wesley's three rules of money, generosity as a means of grace, and the sanctifying power of open-handed living

Arminian / Wesleyan

Grace, holiness, and personal transformation

Tradition vocabulary:means of gracesanctificationfor all peopleWesley's rules of moneyscriptural holinessopen-handed livingentire sanctification

Wesley's Three Rules of Money

John Wesley preached one of the most famous stewardship sermons in Christian history: "The Use of Money." In it, he laid out three rules that have shaped Methodist and Wesleyan giving for nearly three centuries: gain all you can, save all you can, give all you can. Gain all you can — not through exploitation, not through dishonesty, not at the expense of your health or your neighbor. Wesley encouraged industry, diligence, and the full use of God-given abilities. He was not suspicious of wealth. He was suspicious of wealth that did not flow outward. Save all you can — not to hoard, but to increase the capacity for generosity. Wesley railed against luxury, extravagance, and the desire for things that serve no practical purpose. He wore simple clothes, lived in modest rooms, and ate plain food — not because he was an ascetic, but because every penny saved on luxury was a penny available for giving. Give all you can — the climax of the triad. Wesley gave away the vast majority of his income. When his income was 30 pounds, he lived on 28 and gave away 2. When his income rose to 1,400 pounds, he still lived on 28 and gave away the rest. Wesley practiced what he preached: generosity is not about the percentage. It is about the trajectory. As God blesses you with more, give more — not proportionally, but progressively. Paul echoes the same principle: "Whoever sows generously will also reap generously." The Wesleyan understanding is that generosity itself is a means of grace — a channel through which God's transforming power enters your life. When you give, you are not just funding the church. You are opening your heart to the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit.
2 Corinthians 9:61 Timothy 6:17-19Luke 12:33-34

Wesley's Income and Giving

When John Wesley earned 30 pounds a year, he lived on 28 and gave 2. When Oxford raised his salary to 60 pounds, he still lived on 28 and gave 32. When his books made him 1,400 pounds a year, he still lived on 28 and gave away 1,372. Wesley was once investigated by the tax authorities because they could not believe someone earning that much could have so few possessions. He told them: "I have two silver spoons in London and two in Bristol. That is all the plate I have. I will not buy any more while so many around me want bread." That is Wesleyan stewardship.

Source: John Wesley, "The Use of Money" (1760) / Wesley biographies

Generosity as a Means of Grace

Wesley identified specific practices through which God's transforming grace enters a believer's life: prayer, Scripture, fasting, worship, communion — and generosity. Giving is not a tax on the Christian life. It is a means of grace — one of the channels through which God sanctifies you. Why is generosity sanctifying? Because it breaks the grip of mammon. Every act of open-handed giving loosens the hold that material security has on your heart. Every dollar released from your grasp is a declaration: "My security is not in my bank account. My security is in God." And as that declaration becomes habitual — as generosity becomes a pattern, a rhythm, a way of life — the heart is gradually freed from the anxiety of accumulation and the idolatry of stuff. Paul writes: "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 abundance for hoarding. It is abundance for abounding — having enough to do every good work God has prepared for you. The generous person does not worry about whether there will be enough. The generous person trusts that the God who provides seed for the sower will provide bread for the eater and seed for the next sowing. Entire sanctification — the Wesleyan hope of a heart fully surrendered to God — includes the wallet. You cannot be fully sanctified and tightly fisted. The open hand is the posture of the sanctified life. Giving is not something the sanctified do. It is part of how they become sanctified.
2 Corinthians 9:82 Corinthians 9:10Acts 20:35

Generosity for All People

Wesley did not give only to the church. He gave to the poor, the sick, the imprisoned, and the orphaned. His stewardship was not institutional — it was incarnational. He saw every person in need as a person for whom Christ died, and every act of generosity as a continuation of the Gospel. Paul's teaching in 2 Corinthians 9 is set within a larger context: he is collecting an offering for the impoverished believers in Jerusalem. The Corinthian church — a relatively prosperous Gentile congregation — is being asked to give to Jewish Christians they have never met, in a city they have never visited. This is cross-cultural, cross-ethnic, cross-geographic generosity. It breaks every barrier the world erects between "us" and "them." The Wesleyan understanding of "for all people" extends to stewardship. If God's grace is for all, then our generosity should reach all — not just the people who attend our church, not just the people who look like us, not just the people who live in our zip code. Generosity, like the Gospel, has no boundary. "God loves a cheerful giver." The cheerful giver is not the person who gives the most. It is the person who gives the most freely — without calculation, without strings, without the expectation of return. Cheerfulness is not about the amount. It is about the heart. And the heart that has been sanctified by grace gives with the freedom of someone who has been set free from the tyranny of "mine."
2 Corinthians 9:72 Corinthians 8:1-5James 2:15-17

Applications

  • 1Apply Wesley's three rules this month: gain all you can (through honest, diligent work), save all you can (cut one unnecessary expense), give all you can (increase your giving by one step).
  • 2Treat generosity as a means of grace. This week, give something away — money, time, a possession — and pay attention to what happens in your heart.
  • 3Give beyond the church. Find one need in your community — a family, a shelter, a cause — and invest in it. Wesleyan generosity is incarnational, not institutional.
  • 4Let giving sanctify you. Every open hand loosens the grip of mammon. Practice the discipline of unclenching your fingers.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, we confess that we hold too tightly to what is Yours. Loosen our grip. Open our hands. Sanctify us through generosity.
  • Wesley gave away everything beyond 28 pounds. We are not there yet. But move us in that direction — from cautious to generous, from calculating to cheerful.
  • Make our giving a means of grace. Let every dollar given be a channel through which Your sanctifying Spirit flows into our hearts.
  • For all people — extend our generosity beyond our church, our community, our comfort zone. If Your grace has no boundary, neither should our giving. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Gandhi (1982)

Gandhi owned almost nothing when he died: a pair of sandals, his spectacles, a pocket watch, a few books. When the British offered him luxury during negotiations, he refused — not because he was anti-material, but because every rupee saved on himself was a rupee available for India's liberation. Wesley operated on the same principle: two silver spoons, no plate, a life stripped to the essentials so that the surplus could serve others. Both men understood that radical generosity begins with radical simplicity.

3 Voices

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

Classic

Gain all you can. Save all you can. Give all you can. Wesley's three rules are still the most practical stewardship sermon ever preached.

Pastoral

Generosity is a means of grace — a channel through which God sanctifies you. Every open hand loosens the grip of mammon. Let giving change your heart.

Edgy

Wesley earned 1,400 pounds and lived on 28. The tax authorities investigated him because they couldn't believe it. When was the last time your generosity raised suspicion?

More Titles

Gain, Save, Give: Wesley's Stewardship RevolutionGenerosity as a Means of GraceTwo Silver Spoons: The Radical Simplicity of Wesleyan GivingOpen-Handed Sanctification: How Giving Changes Your HeartFor All People: Generosity Without Boundaries
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Frequently Asked Questions

What are Wesley's three rules of money?

From his sermon 'The Use of Money' (1760): 1) Gain all you can — through honest, diligent work without harming others. 2) Save all you can — by avoiding luxury and extravagance. 3) Give all you can — pouring the surplus into the kingdom. Wesley himself lived on 28 pounds/year even when earning 1,400.

How is generosity a means of grace in Wesleyan theology?

Wesley identified specific practices through which God's transforming grace enters a believer's life. Generosity is one: it breaks the grip of mammon, trains the heart in trust, and opens the soul to the sanctifying work of the Spirit. Giving is not just funding ministry — it is part of how God makes you holy.