Evaluation
Overall Score: 8.2/10
A substantial and balanced guide to Scripture's teaching on money, giving pastors strong categories for faithful preaching and discipleship.
Summary
At a Glance
- Length
- 300 pages
- Type
- Theological
- Theo. Perspective
- Broadly Evangelical
- Overall score
- 8.2 / 10
Money and possessions are never merely practical matters, they reveal what we worship and what we fear. This volume offers a wide ranging biblical theology of possessions, tracing how Scripture speaks to poverty, wealth, generosity, contentment, and justice. The argument is substantial, yet it aims to remain usable for church leaders and thoughtful Christians.
The book moves across both Testaments, setting individual texts within the wider storyline of creation, fall, covenant life, wisdom, prophets, and the teaching of Jesus and the apostles. We are helped to see that Scripture neither romanticises poverty nor baptises wealth. Instead it calls the people of God to trust the Lord, use possessions as stewards, and resist the idolatry of security and status.
Strengths
The strength is its breadth joined to clear moral aim. The author gathers the main biblical material without collapsing it into slogans. We valued the balance, especially where modern debates can become shrill. The book encourages generosity and simplicity, yet it also addresses structural issues with care.
There is also a helpful insistence that giving is not an isolated virtue. It is tied to discipleship, contentment, and a kingdom shaped imagination about what is truly valuable.
Limitations
Because it covers so much ground, some sections necessarily summarise rather than linger. Readers will want to pair it with detailed exegesis when preaching specific passages. A few discussions may feel anchored in questions particular to a North American context.
It also requires discernment in application, since economic situations differ widely across congregations.
How We Would Use It
We would use this to shape a teaching series on Christian stewardship, and to steady our instincts when addressing generosity, debt, and the pressures of consumer culture. It also helps when preaching texts that confront greed or commend sacrificial giving.
To test it quickly, read the chapters on Jesus and the early church, then scan the concluding synthesis. You will see whether the tone and conclusions are wise for your people.
Closing Recommendation
We warmly recommend this as a substantial and balanced biblical theology of possessions. It can help a church speak about money with courage and grace.
Classification
- Level: Mid-level
- Best For: Busy pastors, General readers
- Priority: Strong recommendation
Build your shelf from across the library
Top picks from across the library.
Join the conversation.
Have you used this commentary in preaching or study? What did you find especially helpful, or where did you struggle?
Please keep discussion thoughtful, charitable, and focused on helping others serve Christ more faithfully in handling His Word.