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Episode Title: Happy Managers 1 of 2—God Owns, We Manage
Episode Summary
W. D. Frazee presents Christian life as stewardship under God’s ownership, showing that happiness comes when we manage ourselves, our money, our time, and our love according to the Creator’s law and purpose.
Show Notes / Description
“Everybody here is a manager.”
With that simple but searching premise, Pastor W. D. Frazee opens this 1978 study on Christian stewardship and happiness. From Proverbs 29:18—“he that keeps the law, happy is he”—he argues that life works best when it works the way God designed it to work. The same Creator who wrote the Ten Commandments also wrote the laws of nature, physiology, mind, and moral life. Happiness is not found in escaping law, but in harmonizing with the Lawgiver.
Working from Revelation 4:11, Pastor Frazee shows that human beings were created for God’s pleasure. Yet God’s pleasure is not selfish; His delight is our highest good. He is happiest when His creatures freely choose His plan because they trust His wisdom and love. That choice makes every person a manager: God remains the Owner, but He entrusts precious gifts to us to administer.
The sermon develops four major areas of management:
Self — God has turned each person over to himself or herself to manage. We can ruin what He has entrusted, but we can also consult the Owner, follow His directions, and receive His power.
Money — Haggai 2:8 declares that the silver and gold belong to God. Tithes and offerings are signs that we recognize His ownership, but even after tithe and offerings, the remaining money is still God’s.
Time — the Sabbath is the sign of God’s ownership of time. The Fourth Commandment does not merely claim one seventh of our time; it teaches that all our time belongs to God, including the six days of labor and the seventh day of rest and worship.
Love — the most precious stewardship of all. “Love is of God,” and therefore love must be bestowed according to His plan, His timing, and His will. Mismanaged love brings sorrow; consecrated love brings the true joy of life.
The message closes at the mercy seat, where Christ, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world, brings us back into harmony with God and His law. Jesus did not come to excuse self-ownership; He came to restore us to the joy of living as happy managers under the direction of the true Owner.
Key Scriptures
Proverbs 29:18
Revelation 4:11
Haggai 2:8
Malachi 3:10
Philippians 4:19
Exodus 20:8–11
1 John 4:7
Ecclesiastes 3:1–8
Matthew 22:37 / Mark 12:30
Revelation 13:8
Key Themes
Happiness through harmony with God’s law
God as Creator, Owner, Lawgiver, and Redeemer
Human beings as managers rather than owners
The stewardship of self and personal choice
Tithes and offerings as signs of God’s ownership
All money as God’s property, not merely the tithe
The Sabbath as the sign of God’s ownership of time
The stewardship of love and the danger of misdirected affection
Christ’s redemption as restoration to harmony with God’s law
Fidelity in commonplace duties rather than craving spectacular experiences
Memorable Line
“Things work best when they work the way they were made to work.”
About
To My Dear Friends brings the timeless messages of Pastor W. D. Frazee to a new generation of listeners. Visit WDFsermons.org for the full sermon library.
By WDF SermonsEpisode Title: Happy Managers 1 of 2—God Owns, We Manage
Episode Summary
W. D. Frazee presents Christian life as stewardship under God’s ownership, showing that happiness comes when we manage ourselves, our money, our time, and our love according to the Creator’s law and purpose.
Show Notes / Description
“Everybody here is a manager.”
With that simple but searching premise, Pastor W. D. Frazee opens this 1978 study on Christian stewardship and happiness. From Proverbs 29:18—“he that keeps the law, happy is he”—he argues that life works best when it works the way God designed it to work. The same Creator who wrote the Ten Commandments also wrote the laws of nature, physiology, mind, and moral life. Happiness is not found in escaping law, but in harmonizing with the Lawgiver.
Working from Revelation 4:11, Pastor Frazee shows that human beings were created for God’s pleasure. Yet God’s pleasure is not selfish; His delight is our highest good. He is happiest when His creatures freely choose His plan because they trust His wisdom and love. That choice makes every person a manager: God remains the Owner, but He entrusts precious gifts to us to administer.
The sermon develops four major areas of management:
Self — God has turned each person over to himself or herself to manage. We can ruin what He has entrusted, but we can also consult the Owner, follow His directions, and receive His power.
Money — Haggai 2:8 declares that the silver and gold belong to God. Tithes and offerings are signs that we recognize His ownership, but even after tithe and offerings, the remaining money is still God’s.
Time — the Sabbath is the sign of God’s ownership of time. The Fourth Commandment does not merely claim one seventh of our time; it teaches that all our time belongs to God, including the six days of labor and the seventh day of rest and worship.
Love — the most precious stewardship of all. “Love is of God,” and therefore love must be bestowed according to His plan, His timing, and His will. Mismanaged love brings sorrow; consecrated love brings the true joy of life.
The message closes at the mercy seat, where Christ, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world, brings us back into harmony with God and His law. Jesus did not come to excuse self-ownership; He came to restore us to the joy of living as happy managers under the direction of the true Owner.
Key Scriptures
Proverbs 29:18
Revelation 4:11
Haggai 2:8
Malachi 3:10
Philippians 4:19
Exodus 20:8–11
1 John 4:7
Ecclesiastes 3:1–8
Matthew 22:37 / Mark 12:30
Revelation 13:8
Key Themes
Happiness through harmony with God’s law
God as Creator, Owner, Lawgiver, and Redeemer
Human beings as managers rather than owners
The stewardship of self and personal choice
Tithes and offerings as signs of God’s ownership
All money as God’s property, not merely the tithe
The Sabbath as the sign of God’s ownership of time
The stewardship of love and the danger of misdirected affection
Christ’s redemption as restoration to harmony with God’s law
Fidelity in commonplace duties rather than craving spectacular experiences
Memorable Line
“Things work best when they work the way they were made to work.”
About
To My Dear Friends brings the timeless messages of Pastor W. D. Frazee to a new generation of listeners. Visit WDFsermons.org for the full sermon library.