Gospel Generosity

September 14 | Rick Thiemke

Stream from your smart TV by going to our Youtube channel: youtube.com/@ViaChurch

 
 

Philippians 4:14-20

14 Yet it was kind of you to share my trouble. 15 And you Philippians yourselves know that in the beginning of the gospel, when I left Macedonia, no church entered into partnership with me in giving and receiving, except you only. 16 Even in Thessalonica you sent me help for my needs once and again. 17 Not that I seek the gift, but I seek the fruit that increases to your credit. 18 I have received full payment, and more. I am well supplied, having received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent, a fragrant offering, a sacrifice acceptable and pleasing to God. 19 And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus. 20 To our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen.

 

Generosity is a sensitive subject. Most Christians would agree that giving is important, but the statistics are sobering - nearly 80% of professing believers give little to nothing of their income toward gospel mission. And yet, in Philippians 4, Paul describes generosity in ways that lift it above guilt, duty or religious box-checking. For Paul, generosity is about participation in God’s mission, fruitfulness that lasts into eternity, worship that pleases God and trust in His ongoing provision. 

Generosity Is Partnership In The Gospel 

Paul thanks the Philippians for sharing in his trouble (verse 14). Notice his language: he doesn’t frame their giving as a mere transaction, but as partnership (verses 15-16). They weren’t simply writing checks to a missionary; they were entering into his hardships, joining him in the work of making Jesus known.

The Philippians’ support tied their lives to Paul’s ministry. They became co-laborers in every sermon preached, every soul converted, every church planted.

This is what our giving does today. When you give to the mission of the church, you’re not just “covering expenses.” You’re partnering in gospel advance - joining in baptisms, discipleship, next generation ministry, community impact and global mission. It’s one of the ways ordinary believers live “on mission” together.

Generosity Leads to Fruitfulness, Worship and Trust

Paul quickly shifts the focus (verse 17). That’s remarkable. Paul is less concerned about his own needs and more concerned about the Philippians’ spiritual growth. Their generosity was producing fruit in them - a deepening love for Christ, a loosening of money’s grip, a growing joy in sacrifice.

Generosity isn’t about what God needs from us - it’s about what God wants for us (verse 18). When we give, God is shaping us into people who treasure Christ above all. That’s temple language. Giving is worship. It rises before God as a declaration that He is worth more than our possessions, more than our security, more than our comfort.

And then Paul anchors it all with a promise (verse 19). This is not prosperity teaching - Paul is in prison, after all. Instead, this is a call to trust. God’s provision may not always match our wish list, but it always meets our true needs. His riches in glory in Christ are inexhaustible.

For a generation marked by financial pressure - student loans, rising costs, economic uncertainty - this promise is vital. We don’t give because we’ve figured out how to afford it; we give because we trust the God who promises to meet our needs. Generosity is a test of where our security really lies.

So here’s the invitation: step into gospel generosity. Not out of guilt, but out of joy. Not as spectators, but as partners. Not fearing lack, but trusting God’s abundant provision.

When you give, you are joining God’s mission in a way that outlasts your life. You are bearing fruit that will echo into eternity. You are offering worship that delights the heart of God. And you are declaring your trust in the One who has promised to supply all your needs in Christ Jesus.

Let’s live as people on mission, unified in generosity, reflecting the generosity of Jesus Himself - for God’s glory (verse 20).


Discussion Questions

Paul says the Philippians’ generosity was sharing in his trouble (v.14). How does viewing giving as partnership in mission, rather than just paying bills, reshape your perspective?

Their gift was “a fragrant offering, pleasing to God” (v.18). How might seeing your giving as worship deepen your joy in it?

Paul assures them that God will supply every need (v.19). In what areas of life is it hardest for you to trust God’s provision, and how can generosity help grow that trust?

 

Worship PlayList