Many Christians live as though faith occupies a particular compartment of life — Sunday mornings, Bible study, church activities. Work is work. Family is family. Ministry is ministry. The sacred and the secular sit in separate rooms, and we move between them without recognizing that Scripture never drew that line. From Genesis to Revelation, one thread runs through every story, command, warning, parable, and promise — not as a theme among themes, but as the operating logic of everything God does and everything He asks of us: Love God above all. Love your neighbor as yourself. Steward everything He entrusts to you toward that end. These are not three separate commands. They are one integrated reality. Stewardship is what love looks like when it moves from feeling into action. What Stewardship Actually Means Stewardship is not a financial term. It is not a church program. It is the active expression of what you actually value given what you have — not what you say you value, but wh...
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