Everyone has something to offer

Every parish has people who quietly wonder, “Do I really have anything to offer?” Stewardship answers that question with a resounding yes. In the life of the Church, every person possesses important gifts: gifts that can strengthen the parish family, lift the vulnerable, and build up the Body of Christ. When we understand that truth, we begin to see that no one stands alone, and no gift, however small, goes unnoticed by God.

The lived outcome of stewardship is this: no one stands alone, and every contribution of time, talent, or treasure counts. This same truth extends into the daily rhythm of parish life. Each person carries a gift, for everyone is “rich” in some way. Some are spiritually rich and can pray and intercede. Others are relationally rich and can welcome new families, building bonds of friendship. Others are professionally rich, lending expertise to strengthen programs, mentor youth, and support parish ministries. Still others are monetarily rich and can give generously of that wealth.

The Fathers of the Church understood this well. In Sermon 95 on the Beatitudes, St. Leo the Great once preached, “No matter what their class or condition, because all can be equal in their willingness to give, however unequal they may be in earthly fortune . . . provided they are found equal in spiritual possessions.” The real measure of generosity is not wealth but willingness. Every gift offered in love, no matter its size, carries equal spiritual worth in God’s sight.

Yet stewardship does not mean that a Christian’s wealth in one area excuses that person from living it in other respects. To be a disciple is to bring time, talent, and treasure together, each in right proportion and each given from our substance, not merely from our surplus. This is what it means to live sacrificially, generously, and proportionally. All three legs of the stool matter, and the bar that connects them is trust.

True wealth is not measured by bank accounts but by the willingness to make a gift of self. Even when our resources seem small, we are still called to give, not merely from surplus but from our very substance. As Msgr. Thomas McGread often said, “We give from our substance, not from our surplus.” Although we may feel our poverty more acutely than our abundance, stewardship invites us to serve from both. As Jesus said in the Gospel of Mark about the widow who gave her last mite, “Others gave from their surplus, but she, from her poverty, gave all she had.” It is in the spirit of the widow’s mite that we come to understand not only true generosity, but also radical trust in God’s providence.

Some say, “I don’t have enough time,” yet each of us has the same 24 hours. Others say, “I don’t have enough money,” and yet even a gift from our need can be a “drop of water” that makes a difference. Still others think, “I am not very talented,” but the simple presence we bring, the conversations we share, and the ways we participate all contribute to the larger gift of the Stewardship Way of Life.

Every dollar is made of 100 pennies. But $0.99 is not a dollar. And yet, $0.01 is literally the difference between a dollar and, well, “not-a-dollar.” Every penny matters. Every act of stewardship, no matter how small it may seem, matters. Whatever you can share with your parish community increases its strength, reach, and faithfulness.

You matter. What you have to offer matters. When everyone offers a little, we form a great river of faith that offers hope for the future.

This is the fruit of stewardship. It is not a theory; it is the gospel lived. Through small, faithful offerings – time, talent, and treasure – the Church proclaims to every generation: You belong. You matter. You are loved.