10 things happen (when you give God money).

Here’s a picture of one of my pastors I saw on Facebook this week. The post, covering last week’s annual meeting, announced new officers and the budget approval. One big deal about the budget was that Pastor Roo, Pastor Josh and Heidi (the church admin) were all going to be able to return to full time paid status! It was happy news to everyone. I felt like I got a front row seat to what God was doing because of a Sunday morning message I was invited to give back in November.

Celebration Covenant is not a powerful mega-church in our community. God has placed us in a corner of the city where the mission of Jesus is greatly needed. But it is not what you’d consider prime church real-estate. I’ve benefitted greatly from Celebration Covenant after a decade of serving in a much larger, more prominent church came to an end in 2016. Roo and Dawn from the very beginning of my experience with them have been nothing less than wonderful friends, terrific team-mates in ministry and caring pastors for me and my family. They’ve found a place for me again and again to serve- mostly teaching and training.

So when I was invited to give the Commitment Sunday message on stewardship last Fall, I jumped on it! It was a delight to talk about one of my favorite topics. It was a little surprising that someone other than a paid pastor got to challenge the congregation to engage with financial giving. Roo and Dawn are co-pastors of Celebration Covenant (husband and wife as well). They trade off with Sunday morning preaching and occasionally invite me in to help. I jumped at the chance to give the last message in the series. 

Below is the message I gave that Sunday. I offer it here believing for certain that no PBR reader in their right mind will want to listen to a ten-point sermon on giving! May the Lord be with you if you do. BUT, it was merely a punchy summary of what Roo and Dawn had already spent a couple of months teaching about leading up to that week. 

Why share all this here, Tim? We are your donors and prayer partners. I hope you are not trying to get preachy…. or punchy…. or whatever with us!

No. I share it because I feel like your support of my ministry made the perfect platform for me to encourage a whole church to get on board with their mission and their budget. Because I am so blessed by my ministry partners in InterVarsity, I was the perfect person to encourage a congregation to give generously and cheerfully to its mission, its tangible needs and to providing for its paid leadership. 

Click here to watch the entire message on FB

Thank you for being the kind of people this message was about. My hope is that you DO experience all ten of these things (and more) when you give to God. I am in constant need of perspective on how Cheryl and I steward God’s blessing in our lives. I bet that’s true of you too. Thanks so much for your faithfulness. Thanks so much for your generosity. Thank you for the impact you make on the mission of Jesus in the University and in the community you live in.

“Thank God for this gift, too wonderful for words!”  2 Cor 9:15 NLT

PS – I would LOVE your prayers for me during the month of February. As I’ve hinted at in past posts, I am now in the midst of a 6 week focus on developing my funding. More details about that in posts to come! I’m off to a great start. AND I have taken on a very large funding goal. The response so far has been really encouraging.

tim.perry@intervarsity.org

Who am I?

Coming to you today from InterVarsity’s national Staff Conference 24. The last time our entire staff family gathered was right before the pandemic- January, 2020. We’re in sunny (at the moment) Orlando! We’re on a prayer and fasting experience today just about to conclude our last prayer session with a whole-group plenary.

The scriptures we’re studying this week are the opening chapters of the Gospel of Mark. Rich Villodos, pastor of New Life Fellowship in New York city challenged us yesterday with one of those deep questions that gets under your skin and won’t leave you alone. ”When you consider the core of your personal and professional identity, are you defined more by your successes or your failures?” We all constantly manage our image. Rich put it this way: ”There are lots of versions of ourselves that we negotiate: There’s the ME I want others to see, then there’s the ME that I don’t let others see. There’s the ME I want to become… but am not yet. There’s the ME my workmates know and there’s the ME my spouse and family knows. Which ME is ME?”

A we looked at the opening chapter of Mark, Jesus has an identity defining moment at his baptism. ”You are my beloved SON, with you I am well pleased.” Immediately the Spirit then drives Jesus to the wilderness where his freshly issued ID gets drug though the mud by Satan’s repeated temptations. Jesus weathers the aggression by staying focused on the Word of God.

Which is more dangerous to you? Your successes or your failures?

Maybe this is a question we should ask every time we start a fresh trip around the sun. Rich challenged us to rethink how we view success and failure. Success and failure can BOTH destroy our core identity. Failure seems obvious doesn’t it? We fear failure so much because we know how publicly damaging it can be to our image. But if we’re honest we’re not nearly as worried about the danger of success. Most of us are A-OK with success and how silently it distorts our sense of self. 

Pray for us as we meet God this week. Pray for scripture to speak. Pray for the Spirit to meet us, encourage us and reshape our mission on campus with faculty and students. I’ll try to post again before the week is up. I’m hoping your new year is off to a great start. A few things I’m grateful for as I think about your partnership with me:

  • Thank you for your gifts to my ministry support – December was a strong month!
  • Thank you for your prayers for our family- we enjoyed a lot time with our kids over break.
  • So thankful for health and healing from my accident in April (did a 60 mile ride in December to celebrate turning 60).
  • I’ve been able to clear away more space in Jan-March to work on finding more funding.
  • Really thankful for my awesome wife Cheryl and our home – a place where I love to work and live with my favorite person on the planet!
  • Phoebe and Cheryl planned a wonderful birthday celebration for me. Ouch, I’m 60!
  • Got to be with Aaron, Savannah and Poppy in Franklin for his 31st birthday.
  • Stopped in at Carter’s in Nashville to check out some instruments! That’s an Octave Mandolin I think.
  • Poppy trying out her new RC boat!

Click here to give to Tim’s ministry

tim.perry@intervarsity.org