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In our spiritual journey, we face three competing idols that vie for the throne of our hearts: Appetite, Busyness, and Mammon. While we can address physical appetites through fasting and combat busyness by prioritizing prayer, the idol of Mammon—our relationship with money and material wealth—requires a different approach: biblical generosity.The concept of first fruits comes from ancient agricultural practices where farmers brought the very first portion of their harvest to God before knowing if the rest would survive. This wasn't about giving leftovers or surplus, but about trusting God with the unknown. These farmers demonstrated radical faith by giving their first and best to God, believing He would protect and bless the remainder of their harvest even when locusts, worms, or pestilence could destroy everything left in the field.Jesus taught clearly about generosity, promising in Luke 6:38 that by our standard of measure, it will be measured back to us. Paul reinforced this teaching, emphasizing that God loves a cheerful giver. True biblical generosity flows from an encounter with God that transforms our hearts, not from obligation or rules. Our giving reveals who we truly believe is our source of provision. When we give, we're declaring that God is our provider, not our job or paycheck. The goal isn't to find a comfortable percentage we can budget and forget about, but to cultivate a generous heart that trusts God enough to give sacrificially, requiring faith rather than surplus.🌐 Websitehttps://theshed.church📘 Facebook / theshedatprovence 📷 Instagram / theshed.church 🎵 TikTok / theshed.church 📺 YouTube / @theshedatprovence
By Eythan TibbsIn our spiritual journey, we face three competing idols that vie for the throne of our hearts: Appetite, Busyness, and Mammon. While we can address physical appetites through fasting and combat busyness by prioritizing prayer, the idol of Mammon—our relationship with money and material wealth—requires a different approach: biblical generosity.The concept of first fruits comes from ancient agricultural practices where farmers brought the very first portion of their harvest to God before knowing if the rest would survive. This wasn't about giving leftovers or surplus, but about trusting God with the unknown. These farmers demonstrated radical faith by giving their first and best to God, believing He would protect and bless the remainder of their harvest even when locusts, worms, or pestilence could destroy everything left in the field.Jesus taught clearly about generosity, promising in Luke 6:38 that by our standard of measure, it will be measured back to us. Paul reinforced this teaching, emphasizing that God loves a cheerful giver. True biblical generosity flows from an encounter with God that transforms our hearts, not from obligation or rules. Our giving reveals who we truly believe is our source of provision. When we give, we're declaring that God is our provider, not our job or paycheck. The goal isn't to find a comfortable percentage we can budget and forget about, but to cultivate a generous heart that trusts God enough to give sacrificially, requiring faith rather than surplus.🌐 Websitehttps://theshed.church📘 Facebook / theshedatprovence 📷 Instagram / theshed.church 🎵 TikTok / theshed.church 📺 YouTube / @theshedatprovence