What Does It Mean to Steward Well?

Steward. In the verb form, it means “to manage.” Essentially it means to oversee, govern, and regulate.

Question: I appreciate the image above of a man tenderly placing a young plant into the hands of a younger generation. The young hands, like the plant, are young ones. An investment is being entrusted into the next generation with the lesson of stewardship front and center.

With stewardship comes the reality of wisdom. There is a proper way of doing things. The new plant needs shepherding, tender and loving care, the right environment, nutrition, light, light, and more light. It needs water. It needs to be guarded from invasive species. It needs to be pruned and fertilized. It needs to be equipped to do what it is intended to do–reproduce and replicate.

Connection: In 1 Peter 4:10, the apostle of hope writes, “As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace.” Peter’s initial audience circa A.D. 62-63 was 1st-century Christians who were enduring suffering because of their faith in and allegiance to Christ amidst pagan authorities in what is much of present-day Turkey. They were trying to be salt and light in their generation. But they needed encouragement. That’s where Peter’s epistle comes in.

Peter reminds them that each Christian “has received a gift.” Some of those God-given gifts include prophecy, teaching, exhortation/encouragement, service, leadership, giving, and mercy. There are other spiritual gifts but those are just some of them according to Scripture.

Since each believer has received at least one God-given spiritual gift, how is he to steward well? In verse 11, Peter tells us: “whoever speaks, as one who speaks oracles of God; whoever serves, as one who serves by the strength that God supplies–in order that in everything God may be glorified through Jesus Christ.”

In short, don’t forget verse 10: use our gifts to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace. Our gifts are for the body. We’re to be like the man pictured above. We are to equip the body in wise stewardship by teaching, modeling, serving, showing hospitality without grumbling (v. 9), etc. Wise stewardship takes many forms. That’s what Peter means by “God’s varied grace” (v. 10).

I have one or more spiritual gifts as a believer, and my brother or sister in the faith has a different one (or several). I am not a math guy, but I’m blessed to have a fellow elder in my congregation who very much is. That’s by God’s design. I’m equipped to teach and to shepherd, whereas others in the body are gifted in hospitality and prayer. But the goal, according to Peter in verse 11, is that “God may be glorified.”

This is why the church, when it is healthy, is unlike any other body in the cosmos. It’s unstoppable. Why? Because it’s comprised of those who’ve been ransomed from futile ways to serve the living God. They put their spiritual gifts into practice. The body is nourished, it grows, it reproduces, it matures, and it entrusts wise stewardship to the next generations via its visible theology. Doctrines are not just intellectual concepts to be mastered but they have practical implications for the ways we live and are to steward.

We are to “entrust [our] souls to a faithful Creator while doing good” (1 Peter 4:19). Stewarding well is to be one of the Christian’s aims. The quality of our work, the quality of our service, the manner in which we treat believers and unbelievers, the ways we use our tongue/speech, etc. all reveal our theology.

When I get home in the evenings, very often my bride is at her keyboard–practicing songs that she and others will sing at our church each Lord’s Day. She sings, plays, prays, and serves the body. In other words, she’s stewarding well. Her theology is made visible via her behavior.

We should learn much about what it means to steward well from Peter, the apostle of hope. Peter definitely had some moments where he failed to live up to the high calling of biblical stewardship, but he persevered. He revealed himself to be the apostle of hope. He equipped the saints. He suffered on their behalf in ways they were unaware. He wrote to them. He preached to them (but first to himself). He served the body for whom Christ died because he had been served by the King of kings. He stewarded well.

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