’Moreover, brethren, we
do you to wit of the grace of God bestowed
on the churches of Macedonia; 2. How
that in a great trial of affliction the abundance
of their joy and their deep poverty abounded
unto the riches of their liberality 3. For
to their power, I bear record, yea, and beyond their
power they were willing of themselves; 4. Praying
us with much entreaty that we would receive
the gift, and take upon us the fellowship of
the ministering to the saints 5. And this they
did, not as we hoped, but first gave their
own selves to the Lord, and unto us by the
will of God: 6. Insomuch that
we desired Titus, that as he had begun,
so he would also finish in you the same grace
also 7. Therefore, as ye abound in every thing,
in faith, and utterance, and knowledge, and in
all diligence, and in your love to us; see that ye
abound in this grace also 8. I speak not by
commandment, but by occasion of the forwardness
of others, and to prove the sincerity of
your love 9. For ye know the grace
of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He
was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor,
that ye through His poverty might be rich 10. And herein I give my advice: for this
is expedient for you, who have begun before,
not only to do, but also to be forward a
year ago 11. Now therefore perform
the doing of it; that as there was a readiness
to will, so there may be a performance also
out of that which ye have 12. For
if there be first a willing mind, it is accepted
according to that a man hath, and not according
to that he hath not.’ 2 Cor.
viii 1-12.
A collection from Gentile churches
for their poor brethren in Jerusalem occupied much
of Paul’s time and efforts before his last visit
to that city. Many events, which have filled
the world with noise and been written at length in
histories, were less significant than that first outcome
of the unifying spirit of common faith. It was
a making visible of the grand thought, ‘Ye are
all one in Christ Jesus.’ Practical help,
prompted by a deep-lying sense of unity which overleaped
gulfs of separation in race, language, and social
conditions, was a unique novelty. It was the
first pulsation of that spirit of Christian liberality
which has steadily grown in force and sweep ever since.
Foolish people gibe at some of its manifestations.
Wiser ones regard its existence as not the least of
the marks of the divine origin of Christianity.
This passage is a striking example
of the inimitable delicacy of the Apostle. His
words are full of what we should call tact, if it were
not manifestly the spontaneous utterance of right
feeling. They are a perfect model of the true
way to appeal for money, and set forth also the true
spirit in which such appeals should be made.
In verses 1 to 5, Paul seeks to stimulate
the liberality of the Corinthians by recounting that
of the Macedonian churches. His sketch draws
in outline the picture of what all Christian money-giving
should be. We note first the designation of the
Macedonian Christians’ beneficence as ‘a
grace’ given by God to them. It is twice
called so (vers 1, 4), and the same name is
applied in regard to the Corinthians’ giving
(vers 6, 7). That is the right way to look
at money contributions. The opportunity to give
them, and the inclination to do so, are God’s
gifts. How many of us think that calls for service
or money are troublesome obligations, to be got out
of as easily as possible! A true Christian will
be thankful, as for a love token from God, for every
occasion of giving to Him. It would be a sharp
test for many of us to ask ourselves whether we can
say, ’To me . . . is this grace given,’
that I should part with my money for Christ’s
sake.
Note, further, the lovely picture
of these Macedonian givers. They were plunged
in sorrows and troubles, but these did not dry their
fountains of sympathy. Nothing is apt to be more
selfish than grief; and if we have tears to spare
for others, when they are flowing bitterly for ourselves,
we have graduated well in Christ’s school.
Paul calls the Macedonians’ troubles ‘proof
of their affliction,’ meaning that it constituted
a proof of their Christian character; that is, by the
manner in which it was borne; and in it they had still
‘abundance of joy,’ for the paradox of
the Christian life is that it admits of the co-existence
of grief and gladness.
Again, Christian giving gives from
scanty stores. ‘Deep poverty’ is no
excuse for not giving, and will be no hindrance to
a willing heart. ’I cannot afford it’
is sometimes a genuine valid reason, but oftener an
insincere plea. Why are subscriptions for religious
purposes the first expenditure to be reduced in bad
times?
Further, Christian giving gives up
to the very edge of ability, and sometimes goes beyond
the limits of so-called prudence. In all regions
‘power to its last particle is duty,’ and
unless power is strained it is not fully exercised.
It is in trying to do what we cannot do that we do
best what we can do. He who keeps well within
the limits of his supposed ability will probably not
do half as much as he could. While there is a
limit behind which generosity even for Christ may become
dishonesty or disregard of other equally sacred claims,
there is little danger of modern Christians transgressing
that limit, and they need the stimulus to do a little
more than they think they can do, rather than to listen
to cold-blooded prudence.
Further, Christian giving does not
wait to be asked, but takes the opportunity to give
as itself ‘grace’ and presses its benefactions.
It is an unwonted experience for a collector of subscriptions
to be besought to take them ‘with much entreaty,’
but it would not be so anomalous if Christian people
understood their privileges.
Further, Christian giving begins with
the surrender of self to Christ, from which necessarily
follows the glad offering of wealth. These Macedonians
did more than Paul had hoped, and the explanation of
the unexpected largeness of their contributions was
their yielding of themselves to Jesus. That is
the deepest source of all true liberality. If
a man feels that he does not own himself, much less
will he feel that his goods are his own. A slave’s
owner possesses the slave’s bit of garden ground,
his hut, and its furniture. If I belong to Christ,
to whom does my money belong? But the consciousness
that my goods are not mine, but Christ’s, is
not to remain a mere sentiment. It can receive
practical embodiment by my giving them to Christ’s
representatives. The way for the Macedonians
to show that they regarded their goods as Christ’s,
was to give them to Paul for Christ’s poor saints.
Jesus has His representatives still, and it is useless
for people to talk or sing about belonging to Him,
unless they verify their words by deeds.
Verse 6 tells the Corinthians that
the success of the collection in Macedonia had induced
Paul to send Titus to Corinth to promote it there.
He had previously visited it on the same errand (chap.
xii 14), and now is coming to complete ‘this
grace.’ The rest of the passage is Paul’s
appeal to the Corinthians for their help in the matter,
and certainly never was such an appeal made in a more
dignified, noble, and lofty tone. He has been
dilating on the liberality of others, and thereby
sanctioning the stimulating of Christian liberality,
in the same way as other graces may legitimately be
stimulated, by example. That is delicate ground
to tread on, and needs caution if it is not to degenerate
into an appeal to rivalry, as it too often does, but
in itself is perfectly legitimate and wholesome.
But, passing from that incitement, Paul rests his
plea on deeper grounds.
First, Christian liberality is essential
to the completeness of Christian character. Paul’s
praise in verse 7 is not mere flattery, nor meant
to put the Corinthians into good humour. He will
have enough to say hereafter about scandals and faults,
but now he gives them credit for all the good he knew
to be in them. Faith comes first, as always.
It is the root of every Christian excellence.
Then follow two graces, eminently characteristic of
a Greek church, and apt to run to seed in it, utterance
and knowledge. Then two more, both of a more emotional
character, earnestness and love, especially
to Paul as Christ’s servant. But all these
fair attributes lacked completeness without the crowning
grace of liberality. It is the crowning grace,
because it is the practical manifestation of the highest
excellences. It is the result of sympathy, of
unselfishness, of contact with Christ, of drinking
in of His spirit, Love is best. Utterance and
knowledge and earnestness are poor beside it.
This grace is like the diamond which clasps a necklace
of jewels.
Christian giving does not need to
be commanded. ’I speak not by way of commandment.’
That is poor virtue which only obeys a precept.
Gifts given because it is duty to give them are not
really gifts, but taxes. They leave no sweet
savour on the hand that bestows, and bring none to
that which receives. ‘I call you not servants,
but friends.’ The region in which Christian
liberality moves is high above the realm of law and
its correlative, obligation.
Further, Christian liberality springs
spontaneously from conscious possession of Christ’s
riches. We cannot here enter on the mysteries
of Christ’s emptying Himself of His riches of
glory. We can but touch the stupendous fact,
remembering that the place whereon we stand is holy
ground. Who can measure the nature and depth of
that self-denuding of the glory which He had with
the Father before the world was? But, thank God,
we do not need to measure it, in order to feel the
solemn, blessed force of the appeal which it makes
to us. Adoring wonder and gratitude, unfaltering
trust and absolute self-surrender to a love so self-sacrificing,
must ever follow the belief of that mystery of Divine
mercy, the incarnation and sacrifice of the eternal
Son.
But Paul would have us remember that
the same mighty act of stooping love, which is the
foundation of all our hope, is to be the pattern for
all our conduct. Even in His divinest and most
mysterious act, Christ is our example. A dewdrop
is rounded by the same laws which shape the planetary
spheres or the sun himself; and Christians but half
trust Christ if they do not imitate Him. What
selfishness in enjoyment of our ‘own things’
could live in us if we duly brought ourselves under
the influence of that example? How miserably
poor and vulgar the appeals by which money is sometimes
drawn from grudging owners and tight-buttoned pockets,
sound beside that heart-searching and heart-moving
one, ’Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ!’
Further, Christian liberality will
not go off in good intentions and benevolent sentiments.
The Corinthians were ready with their ‘willing’
on Titus’s previous visit. Now Paul desires
them to put their good feelings into concrete shape.
There is plenty of benevolence that never gets to
be beneficence. The advice here has a very wide
application: ’As there was the readiness
to will, so there may be the completion also.’
We all know where the road leads that is paved with
good intentions.
Further, Christian liberality is accepted
and rewarded according to willingness, if that is
carried into act according to ability. While the
mere wish to help is not enough, it is the vital element
in the act which flows from it; and there may be more
of it in the widow’s mite than in the rich man’s
large donation or there may be less.
The conditions of acceptable offerings are twofold first,
readiness, glad willingness to give, as opposed to
closed hearts or grudging bestowals; and, second,
that willingness embodied in the largest gift possible.
The absence of either vitiates all. The presence
of both gives trifles a place in God’s storehouse
of precious things. A father is glad when his
child brings him some utterly valueless present, not
because he must, but because he loves; and many a
parent has such laid away in sacred repositories.
God knows how to take gifts from His children, not
less well than we who are evil know how to do it.
But the gracious saying of our passage
has a solemn side; for if only gifts ‘according
as a man hath’ are accepted, what becomes of
the many which fall far short of our ability, and
are really given, not because we have the willing
mind, but because we could not get out of the unwelcome
necessity to part with a miserably inadequate percentage
of our possessions. Is God likely to be satisfied
with the small dividends which we offer as composition
for our great debt?