Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Pilgrims, Property Rights, and the Source of Stewardship
Pilgrims, Property Rights, and the Source of Stewardship
Oct 29, 2025 10:14 PM

Each Thanksgiving brings with it another opportunity to pause, meditate, and express our gratitude for the great blessings in life. As one who recently ed a new baby boy to my family, it seems particularly evident this season that the greatest blessings are not, after all, material.

Yet material need is a persistent obstacle, the dynamics of which wield significant influence over the entirety of our lives, from the formative effects of our daily work to the time, energy, and resources we pour out out in the service of others.Thus, it should be no surprise that Thanksgiving is often panied with reflections on the material: how we’ve been blessed with food in our bellies, shelter from the cold, a means to provide, and so on.

In the spirit of such reflections, Reason.tvreleased a nice, albeit excessively cheeky, video aimed at prodding our gratitude beyond the bread on the table and toward one of the systemic features that helps bring it from the field to the baker to the boca: property rights.

Examining an oft-repeated story about the Pilgrims’ transition from socialistic redistribution to free and diversified exchange, the video emphasizes the role that private property continues to play in turning service into surplus. (warning: moderate language)

The narrator concludes by encouraging us to “give thanks to the true patron of this holiday feast: property rights,” and here, I believe, a quibble and qualification is in order.

Though the role of property rights and free exchange in cultivating prosperity is vastly under-appreciated, in elevating such a feature, we should be careful to orient our thanks first and foremost to the Creator of all good things. Whatever property we manage, maintain, and multiply is his alone, and our activities ought to be oriented as such. Let us not forget; the true power and potential of property rights is in its freeing and empowering individuals to listen, obey, and respond more attentively to the call of Christ and the voice of the Holy Spirit.

As Lester DeKoster and Gerard Berghoef explain in Faithful in All God’s House:

God makes man steward of his world. Who is man, asks the psalmist? He answers: “You made him a little lower than the heavenly beings and crowned him with glory and honor. You made him ruler over the works of your hands; you put everything under his feet” (Ps. 8:5–6).

God makes man the master of his temporal household. Like all stewards, man is not the owner. He is the overseer. For three score years and ten, more or less as the case may be, each of us is steward over those talents and those pounds allotted us by divine providence….As each has managed his stewardship, so will he be judged: “Well done, my good servant!” or, “But those enemies of mine who did not want me to be king over them—bring them here and kill them in front of me” (Luke 19:17, 27). The quality of stewardship depends on obedience to the Master’s will. The steward who does not obey the Master’s law rejects the Master’s authority and serves another. Our stewardship is the test: Do we mean to serve God or mammon, the Lord or the Devil?

Stewardship is, we repeat, key to the Christian life—and death, and judgment.

Property rights may be a patron of plenty of prosperity, but insofar as the Christian receives such blessings, the true patron — a lackluster term for the Supreme Investor — is he who entrusts us with these gifts in the first place.

So while this video helpfully prods us to look beyond the mutton and to the mechanism, allow me to prod us further to praise, thank, and stand in awe of the source of it all. Let us give thanks for economic freedom, certainly, but let us do so because it gives us an increased opportunity to strive and steward in the service of the Holy One.

[product sku=”1317″]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
NIV Stewardship Study Bible Guided Tour
Discover God’s design for life, the environment, finances, and eternity. This NIV Stewardship Study Bible trailer provides a 30,000 foot view of the rich resources found within this study Bible. Whether you are pastor, deacon, elder, financial planner, development director, ministry leader, fundraising consultant … or simply someone interested in ing a better steward of the resources entrusted to you by God, you might want to check out this video! NIV Stewardship Study Bible Guided Tour from Brett Elder on...
‘Freedom comes before equality’
That’s the refreshing and surprisingly accurate headline attributed by The Guardian to Pope Benedict’s address to the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales in Rome for their ad limina visit, which all bishops are required to make every five years. As my colleague Sam Gregg pointed out several years ago, this is yet another example of Benedict’s affinity with Alexis de Tocqueville. Benedict’s address is such a clear reminder of what Catholic bishops need to do to defend truth and...
Rowan Williams on Wall Street
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, delivered a talk on theology and economics at New York’s Trinity Church last week. The historic Wall Street church was the site of the Building an Ethical Economy: Theology and the Marketplace conference which promised to “bring together leading theologians and economists to talk about the relationship between economics and Christian belief and action.” Williams had this to say: “Inevitably at some point, you have to talk about what level of wealth generation patible...
Will America Help the Persecuted Copts of Egypt?
Protection and justice for the Egyptian munity is an issue that is very close to my heart. That is a major reason that this week’s mentary highlights the grave difficulty of their situation. The inspiring news is that the international munity has united to peacefully magnify their outrage of the violent shooting that took place on January 6; the date Coptic Christians celebrate Christmas Eve. I’d like to point out to our Powerblog readers one especially moving video by John...
Zimbabwe’s Entrepreneurs
Business Weekly, a production of BBC World Service, had an informative feature on Toby Sheta, a Zimbabwean mobile phone trader, who provided insights into the courage and tenacity required of entrepreneurs under Mugabe’s brutal dictatorship (you can download the original Business Daily story in MP3 format here). During the worst times of the Mugabe regime, Sheta would illegally buy and sell fuel coupons, a profitable enterprise because of the chaos of governmental interference in international trade and domestic fuel markets....
Ralph McInerny, Renaissance Man
Ralph McInernyThe Church and the world has lost an immense soul in the passing into eternity yesterday of Dr. Ralph McInerny, long time professor of philosophy at Notre Dame University. He was the modern epitome of the Renaissance Man: a towering intellectual, a Latinist, raconteur sublime, a writer of doggerel, a mystery writer (the Father Dowling series) and the list could go on. Of all this, I suspect the role in which he took most pride was in being a...
Lithuanian Priest and Free Market Advocate to Receive Acton Institute’s 2010 Novak Award
Lithuanian scholar and Roman Catholic priest, Fr. Kęstutis Kevalas, is the winner of the Acton Institute’s 2010 Novak Award. During the past nine years, Fr. Kęstutis Kevalas has initiated a new debate in Lithuania, introducing the topic of free market economics to religious believers, and presenting a new set of hitherto unknown questions to economists. Fr. Kevalas is a respected figure and well known expert on Christian social ethics, the free market, and human dignity to the people of his...
On Life Support
Revive is a monly associated with the efforts that paramedics and other medical personnel make when someone has stopped breathing. Whether that’s due to slipping beneath the pond ice or being pulled under by a nasty California rip tide, the consequences of inaction will be fatal. So it’s an appropriate word for Hillsdale College to use in titling their townhall last Saturday – “Reviving The Constitution” – that was broadcast online from the Michigan college’s Washington D.C. annex, The Kirby...
Review: Thomas Sowell’s Field Guide to Intellectuals
“Intellectuals and Society,” by Thomas Sowell, (2009) Basic Books, New York, 398 pp. Arguments about ideas are the bread and butter of the academic, journalism and think tank worlds. That is as it should be. Honest intellectual debate benefits any society where its practice is allowed. The key element is honesty. Today, someone is always looking to take out the fastest gun, and in the battles over the hearts and minds of the public many weapons are brought to bear....
The Professorial Struggle
Ideas have consequences. Says Paul Tillich in 1967: The anti-religious attitude of almost half of present-day mankind is rooted in this seemingly professiorial struggle between Hegel, Feuerbach, and Marx, with both of the ing from Hegel. Feuerbach turned Hegel upside down, and then Marx introduced the sociological element. The projection of the transcendent world is the projection of the disinherited in this world. This was such a powerful argument that it convinced the masses of people. It took more than...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved