
Home Page
Mass Times
Stewardship
Stewardship Articles
Our Catholic Parishes
Our Catholic Schools
Catholic Devotions
Catholic News
Evangelization
Evangelization links
Contact us
Comeau Campus
Center
Immaculate Heart of Mary
Our Lady of Help Church
St. Anthony Church
St. Catherine Church
St. Francis Church
St. Joseph
Church
St. Nicholas of Myra
Introduction |
What is Stewardship |
Steward versus
Fund-Raising
Spiritual
Importance of Stewardship |
Time, Talent, &
Treasure | Conclusion
As we begin the Third Millennium, Pope John Paul II has called us to strengthen and renew our faith; to "open wide the doors to Christ" and to bring about "a new springtime of Christianity." Catholic stewardship a journey of inner conversion will enable the Church to usher in this new era of holiness and fidelity to God.
Stewardship is a Catholic Christian way of life
based on the spiritual principles of the Old Testament and the
teachings of Jesus in the Gospels. When lovingly embraced, Christian
stewardship produces a spirituality that refreshes our lives with
the Holy Spirit, deepens our relationship with the Lord Jesus
Christ, and glorifies our Heavenly Father.
Simply stated, stewardship is an expression of gratitude to God. It
reminds us that we are the administrators, not the owners, of our
assets. It fills a need deep within each of us to worship God and to
thank Him for the abundant blessings He has showered upon us.
The "Stewardship: A Holy Way of Life" effort outlined on this
website presents all Catholics with a very realistic and
easy-to-understand opportunity to worship God and to express
gratitude to Him through the intentional, planned, and proportionate
contribution of time (prayer & worship), talent (ministry &
service), and treasure (income & assets) to the Church and other
charities.
We realize that some people in
the Heartland Parishes of Ellis County will try to equate the idea
of stewardship with fund raising. This is erroneous. Stewardship's
true purpose is to promote the spirituality of "[seeking] first the
kingdom of God." The effort's first concern is not money, but to
speak to the heart of the individual about seeking always the will
of the Father in our day-to-day living. Stewardship includes careful
money administration, but stewardship is not about "fund raising."
Stewardship is the Christian way of life. Its principles leap out at
us from the very pages of Scripture. Starting with the story of a
creation lovingly entrusted to Adam and Eve, and fulfilled in the
life and mission of Christ, who desired that his mission be
consummated in the ultimate act of self-giving, we too are called to
be loving, giving Christians. Sacred Scripture teaches that it is
only in such sacrificial loving that we find out what it means to be
fully human.
Stewardship is based on the fact that all that we have and all that
we are comes from God. We commit ourselves to stewardship as a way
of thanking God for all his blessings; returning to him a portion of
the time, talent, and treasure he has allotted to us:
The stewardship vision is an expression of basic discipleship. If the vision is understood as a scheme for simply meeting financial needs, it loses its essence and its power and it is no longer stewardship.
Christian stewardship can be identified by several meaningful characteristics, the most important is that it strengthens our relationship with God.
Christian stewardship is a holy way of life that expresses gratitude to God through the intentional, planned, and proportionate giving of time, talent, and treasure:
Intentional: Guided by prayer, each Catholic makes a decision to live out the Christian life as a good steward. This decision is an intentional act intended to thank God for all of His blessings by returning to Him a portion of the time, the talent, and the treasure He has given to us.
Planned: Once a year, usually during an effort in the parish, each Catholic household in the Heartland parishes should plan how the stewardship of time and talent will be a part of its lifestyle and how the stewardship of treasure will be a part of its budget. This plan is then lived throughout the year in a regular, consistent manner.
Proportionate: The stewardship plan includes a commitment to donate a tithe of one's time, one's talent, and one's income to the Church and other charities.
As we begin the new millennium approaches, the
opportunity dawns for all people of the Heartland parishes of Ellis
County to see the call to Christian stewardship as an integral part
of their response to the Lord's call to mature discipleship. As we
seek to answer Christ's critically important question, "Who do you
say that I am?" (Matthew 16:15), we need to see the Lord Jesus as
the supreme teacher of Christian stewardship. Our response
necessarily entails a vision of sharing, a generous accountability
for the gifts we've received and, in turn, rendered back as
offerings to the church and the community.
Living, teaching, and enabling others to embrace this vision is the
mission of the diocesan and parish stewardship committees as well as
the purpose of this stewardship effort in the Diocese of Salina.
"Others have said, 'We must give until it hurts'. "We believe it's
better for us if, instead, we learn to give until it makes us holy."