Faith & Finance with Rob West
Have you ever felt like giving to your church is more of a burden than a joy? You're not alone. For many believers, the offering moment stirs up anxiety instead of worship. 2 Corinthians 9:7 says, “Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.” Those words—not reluctantly and not under compulsion—are key. God doesn't want us giving out of guilt. He invites us to give freely, joyfully, and with a heart aligned to His mission. But guilt is a powerful motivator. Perhaps you've felt it—when the plate passes or a giving campaign is launched. Thoughts flood in: “I haven’t given enough... I’m letting God down.” That’s not generosity born of grace. That’s fear. And it contradicts the gospel.

Have you ever felt like giving to your church is more of a burden than a joy?
You're not alone. For many believers, the offering moment stirs up anxiety instead of worship. 2 Corinthians 9:7 says, “Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”Those words—not reluctantly and not under compulsion—are key. God doesn't want us giving out of guilt. He invites us to give freely, joyfully, and with a heart aligned to His mission.But guilt is a powerful motivator. Perhaps you've felt it—when the plate passes or a giving campaign is launched. Thoughts flood in: “I haven’t given enough... I’m letting God down.”That’s not generosity born of grace. That’s fear. And it contradicts the gospel.
That includes condemnation over money. Christ’s death covers all guilt—financial or otherwise. If we’re giving to appease guilt, we’re not walking in the freedom Jesus secured.
And let’s be clear: there’s a big difference between guilt and conviction.

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John 16:8 reminds us that conviction is the Spirit’s loving invitation into deeper trust, not shame.
Here’s a test:
When we live under grace, our giving becomes service, not penance. We give because we’re loved, not to earn love.
Ironically, guilt-fueled giving short-circuits the very transformation generosity is meant to bring. When we give cheerfully, we remember that all we have belongs to God. That reframes us as stewards, not owners—a truth that reshapes us from the inside out.
When we give from grace:
Because here’s the truth: God isn’t after your money. He’s after your heart. And when He has your heart, generosity will follow—not from guilt, but from grace.
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