Faith & Finance with Rob West
The holidays naturally inspire generosity. As Christians, we feel a heightened awareness of need—empty tables, struggling families, and financial hardship made more visible by the contrast of celebration all around us. And that impulse to give is good. But God calls us to something deeper. True, Christ-centered generosity goes beyond a one-time act of charity. It invites us to walk alongside people in ways that restore dignity, build hope, and reflect God’s heart for renewal—not just during Christmas, but throughout the year. To explore what that kind of generosity looks like in practice, we sat down with Lisa Sheltra, Director of Community Engagement at Salt & Light, a ministry committed to helping without hurting by empowering individuals rather than creating dependency.

The holidays naturally inspire generosity. As Christians, we feel a heightened awareness of need—empty tables, struggling families, and financial hardship made more visible by the contrast of celebration all around us. And that impulse to give is good.
But God calls us to something deeper.
True, Christ-centered generosity goes beyond a one-time act of charity. It invites us to walk alongside people in ways that restore dignity, build hope, and reflect God’s heart for renewal—not just during Christmas, but throughout the year.
To explore what that kind of generosity looks like in practice, we sat down with Lisa Sheltra, Director of Community Engagement at Salt & Light, a ministry committed to helping without hurting by empowering individuals rather than creating dependency.Lisa explained that while giving material help is often necessary, biblical generosity must flow from our relationship with Christ. God’s model for giving isn’t transactional. It’s restorative.
She pointed to John 3:16 as the ultimate framework for generosity. When God gave, He didn’t offer something temporary or superficial—He gave His Son to address our deepest brokenness and bring true flourishing. If our generosity reflects God’s heart, it should aim not only to relieve immediate pain but to support long-term restoration, reconciliation, and community.
Many churches and families feel pressure in December to focus heavily on relief efforts—food drives, toy collections, clothing donations. These are good and often necessary responses, especially in moments of crisis.

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But Lisa cautioned that relief, by its nature, creates a giver-receiver imbalance. When relief becomes the default instead of the exception, it can unintentionally harm both sides of the relationship. It can reduce people to passive recipients and rob them of agency, dignity, and participation.
During the holidays, what looks like an emergency is often a symptom of a deeper, ongoing struggle. Repeated relief may feel satisfying to the giver, but it rarely moves families toward lasting stability or community.
Development, on the other hand, invites people to use their own gifts, make their own choices, and participate fully in solutions. It treats individuals not as problems to fix, but as image-bearers with capacity and value.
That shift—from receiving charity to exercising choice—restores dignity in powerful ways.
For churches wanting to steward holiday generosity wisely, Lisa offered several practical insights:
The goal isn’t to do more—it’s to do good in ways that last.
Many believers want to help but fear causing harm. The answer isn’t to stop giving—it’s to give differently.
Lisa encouraged individuals to approach generosity with humility and a willingness to learn. We don’t need perfect solutions. We need presence, patience, listening ears, and respect for dignity.
She reminded us that kingdom impact isn’t measured by numbers alone. While it may feel impressive to count meals served or gifts distributed, God’s metrics are relational. Sometimes faithfulness looks like doing for one what we wish we could do for everyone.
When asked to leave listeners with one guiding principle beyond the Christmas season, Lisa said it simply and beautifully:
When we give in ways that honor dignity and foster genuine connection, we don’t just meet needs—we participate in God’s redemptive work.
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