Stewardship Quotes

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Stewardship: Motives of the Heart Stewardship: Motives of the Heart by John Mathews
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Stewardship Quotes Showing 1-12 of 12
“Godliness with contentment is great gain”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“Biblical stewardship produces a spiritual fragrance in the people who live it.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“The Bible speaks negatively of all debt.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“This tire, represents stewardship. We are all stewards who make contact with the world in every kind of situation.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“wheelwright, the person who makes a wooden wheel.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“Tasting God is having a personal experience with Him.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“The motive for giving, whether in time, money, or objects, is one of the most frequent internal spiritual struggles that a Christian goes through. Actions will reveal the motives of our heart.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“God loves to give. It’s part of His nature, and He does it freely.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“Returning the tithe is a statement of faith in God.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“Christians have not always been good stewards of the message of salvation in Christ. Religious persecution, injustice, and wars have all been committed in His name. We should not partake in that spirit. When our responsibility is rightly understood, we will practice it now, and we will spend eternity studying this mystery of love.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“We travel, work, and have friends, and though Jack is dependent on us, he has his own personality. Animals know their owner.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart
“Prayer is a ubiquitous practice in nearly all religions, but it is seldom understood. Prayer is not magic, meditation, or positive thinking. It remains a puzzle to science and a paradoxical discipline to psychology.”
John Mathews, Stewardship: Motives of the Heart