What if we took this principle to heart and believed that we are held personally accountable for our stewardship in all things. What if we knew there is a direct correlation between what we are given and what we give? That God looks not only at how well we open our heads, our hearts and our hands, but also at the attitude with which we do these things.
In 1994, Forbes magazine profiled a man who lived in the USA but was the son of a Czechoslovakian aristocrat who fled the Republic at the age of 10. When the Czech government was democratized he was able to reclaim his family's wealth and estates. His holdings are vast and include castles, artwork by the masters, a phenomenal library, original musical manuscripts by Mozart and Beethoven, thousands of acres, a vineyard and a brewery (dating from 1466) and well, you get the picture. The surprising fact is, rather than sell off the bulk of these holdings and make himself obscenely wealthy, he has taken a different approach: "We are merely custodians of the cultural treasures that must be preserved for future generations" (Berman, 1994). He feels it is his obligation to maintain all these irreplaceable objects for the people of the Czech Republic. Societal pressure here compels him to act selflessly and honorably—the very essence of noblesse oblige.
The strength and power of this concept
can be rightfully applied to Christians. If we know the depths of God's
love and mercy and if we know that His grace is available to all who
will call upon His name, then we are obligated by His word and this
concept to show the world "a life lived in Christ". Who among us can
deny that to call ourselves Christians is the very definition of noble?
..."possessing outstanding qualities"...Not through any work we
may have done but by the grace of God. Who can hold to such a gift and
not share it with a hurting and troubled world?
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