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Monday, February 28, 2011

GIVE YOURSELF FIRST TO THE LORD

GIVE YOURSELVES FIRST TO THE LORD

INTRODUCTION:

  1. Today we want to have somewhat of an in-depth study on the subject of giving financially to God's work.

  2. Our Special Missions Contribution opportunity is coming up soon, and this seems a very good time to study a very important subject.

  3. Frankly, the subject may be a sensitive one for a number of us.

  1. Our sensitivity may be due to what we have observed on TV about money raisers (televangelists); it may be due to a lack of biblical understanding of the subject; or it may be due to something amiss in our heart that needs changing. (As is often stated, our heart strings and purse strings seem very connected!)

  1. While giving may be a sensitive subject to some of us, when we see what God's Word has to say about it, we can rest assured that it is not a sensitive subject to God!

  2. More is said about giving than about a whole host of other important topics, and while this lesson cannot be an exhaustive study, we will attempt to cover some of the key concepts in the Bible about giving financially to God and his Cause.

BODY:

1. Tithing in the Old Testament

A. Tithing (giving a tenth of one's income) was a very important part of the Mosiac system in the OT -- dating from about 1500 BC.

  1. Leviticus 27:30-32.

  2. Note the reason for the tithe in Numbers 18:20-21 — to support the priesthood (and we have a similar need to support ministry staff today).

  3. A careful study of tithing under the Law of Moses will show that the basic tithe was the base amount of their giving, but that additional specified offerings raised their giving level beyond that figure.

B. The practice of tithing was much older than Moses Law, being apparently a part of God's plan from the beginning.

  1. In Genesis 14:17-20, we see that the father of the faithful, Abraham, paid tithes from the spoils of battle.

  2. In Genesis 28:20-22, we find the Jacob, the father of the twelve tribes, vowing to pay tithes of everything that he received from the hand of God.

C. Therefore, although we are not under the Mosaic system, we can see that tithing has long been a part of God's plan.

  1. It was a subject that God took very seriously — read Malachi 3:8-12 carefully.

  2. One way to look at how the concept could have application even in our day is to reason that since the New Covenant under which we live is a far superior covenant (as the whole book of Hebrews argues), then we certainly would not want to give less than any good Jew in the OT.

  3. However, while giving one-tenth of our income might be a good starting place, it may not be the right ending place, for the Bible has much more to say about the subject.

II. Giving To Meet Needs In the Book of Acts

A. Look at Acts 2:44-47 and Acts 4:32-35.

1. Note the context of these two passages: thousands of disciples were baptized from every nation on earth, and needed to stay in Jerusalem in order to be grounded in their new faith before returning to their own lands to spread the good news.

  1. Our needs today are similar in this respect: supporting ministry staff to take care of present needs in our congregation, and in the future, spreading out to plant churches in other parts of Texas and surrounding states.

  2. The support and training of ministry staff is always going to be a very important reason for our giving (though certainly not the only one).

B. However, meeting needs must go far beyond the training of staff.

  1. It is focused on meeting evangelistic needs is a number of ways.

  2. Our giving to an annual Special Missions Contribution allows us to meet similar needs in parts of the world where disciples simply do not have the financial abilities to meet their own needs of church building and church planting.

  3. It is also aimed at meeting the physical and emotional needs of those of our own number, and additionally at meeting these same needs of the poor and less fortunate than ourselves outside the church.

  4. I am very thankful for HOPE Worldwide and local HOPE projects — to which I personally give significant amounts yearly.

C. Giving to meet various sorts of needs is common in the New Testament, and therefore is a very valid consideration — but the NT has yet more to say about our giving — and what we consider next is probably the most important part to God.

III. Giving As a Demonstration of Spirituality

  1. 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 provide some of the best in-depth teaching about the connection between giving and spirituality to be found in the whole Bible.

  2. Giving money is an extension of first giving ourselves to God (2 Corinthians 8:1-5).

  1. Note also that the people gave themselves to the leaders (verse 5) — this requires both an appreciation for, and trust of, our leaders.

  2. Biblically, leaders of the church determined the exact distribution of the contributions.

  1. Read Acts 4:34-37: "All the believers were one in heart and mind. No one claimed that any of his possessions was his own, but they shared everything they had. 33 With great power the apostles continued to testify to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and much grace was upon them all. 34 There were no needy persons among them. For from time to time those who owned lands or houses sold them, brought the money from the sales 35 and put it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to anyone as he had need. 36 Joseph, a Levite from Cyprus, whom the apostles called Bamabas (which means Son of Encouragement), 37 sold a field he owned and brought the money and put it at the apostles' feet."

  1. Also in Acts 11:29-30 we read: "The disciples, each according to his ability, decided to provide help for the brothers living in Judea. [30] This they did, sending their gift to the elders by Barnabas and Saul."

  1. Paul's reassurance about how the funds would be administered is the same assurance that we offer you as leaders: "We want to avoid any criticism of the way we administer this liberal gift. [21] For we are taking pains to do what is right, not only in the eyes of the Lord but also in the eyes of men" (2 Corinthians 8:20-21).

  1. In addition to our Leadership Core Group, the Board of Directors is charged with helping us stay financially solvent and legally righteous.

  1. Giving is an act of grace on our part, and therefore giving is called a grace (2 . Corinthians 8:6-7). Giving and spirituality are inseparably linked.

  2. Our giving tests the sincerity of our love and shows our imitation of Christ (2 Corinthians 8:8-9).

  3. Our willingness and desire to give is more important than the amount we actually give (2 Corinthians 8:10-12), although both are important as the next point shows.

  1. Equality in giving means that as a family, we each do our part to the best of our ability (2 Corinthians 8:13-15). In a physical family, if grown children do not each do their part in caring for aged parents, the other members of the family will know instinctively that the situation is not fair and not family.

  1. Our giving determines the amount and types of blessings that God is able to give us (2 Corinthians 9:6-15).

  1. Giving sparingly limits God's blessings in your life, and giving generously increases his blessings in your life (verse 6). (Recall the Malachi 3:8-12 passage that we looked at earlier on this point.)

  2. Giving is a spiritual decision, and giving must be done cheerfully (verse 7).

  3. Giving generously enables God to bless us both financially and spiritually (verses 8-11). Therefore, failing to give righteously carries risks for us and our families spiritually, which is a sobering thought that should get our attention!

  4. Our giving results in more and more people, inside and outside the church, giving overflowing praise to God (verses 9-15).

IV. The Ultimate Goal of Giving Is Stewardship and Sacrifice

A. Stewardship is our safeguard again materialism and greed (Luke 14:25-33).

1. In verse 33, the NASV translates it "all of your possessions."

2. It shows us the concept of everything belonging to God, with us being only managers of what God has given us.

3. The "sharecropper" concept is exactly what the NT teaches us about the way that we view and use money.

  1. The sharecropper lives on another's land and farms it, taking for himself only what is required to live and sustain his life.

  2. Obviously, such an arrangement would never allow for materialism and possessiveness.

  3. It is vital to understand that our view of use and money is not just a nice ideal to shoot for — the text does say "cannot be my disciple."

4. This approach makes some important lessons very obvious:

a. Giving a tenth may or may not approach what a disciple ought to be doing. (1) Giving $20 of a weekly income of $200 would likely be quite a sacrifice and might well represent the concept of stewardship.

(2) Giving $200 of a weekly income of $2,000 would not necessarily constitute a sacrifice or even good stewardship, and could indicate that we have already fallen prey to a materialistic lifestyle.

b. Our lifestyles should be legitimate and reasonable, rather than giving out of our abundance and then spending the rest on our luxuries.

  1. Many of us have some soul-searching to do, and some radical changing in both our attitudes and our lifestyles may be God's call to us right now.

  2. One word of warning at this point: deal with yourself, and fight the temptation to be the judge of everyone else — envy and jealousy can strike quickly and seriously in this area if we become judges of one another!

B. Just how do we determine what sacrificial giving really is? Jesus gave us some very

special accounts to help us with this definition.

1. Mark 12:41-44 — the poor little widow — this one is full of lessons for us.

  1. One such lesson is that Jesus took the time to watch what people were giving — and rest assured that he still does that — in your case and mine

  2. Another lesson is that the widow gave her money to God and was commended for doing so, yet from a human perspective, the money was going into a corrupt Jewish system. Giving is always to God — in our minds and His.

  3. In defining sacrificial giving, it is obvious that Jesus looks more at what we have left after we give (thus the sacrifice) than at the amount we actually give.

2. Luke 18:18-30 — the Rich Young Ruler — also full of lessons for us.

  1. What was this man's problem? As a good Jew, he no doubt gave at least a tithe of his money.

  2. But, he drew a line in his life and said "this much and no more."

  3. Where have you drawn the line in your giving?

  4. What are you not willing to examine about your giving and not willing to do?

  5. Wherever you draw lines in your life, be assured that God will sooner or later come along and demand that you erase them. It really is a matter of His Lordship in our lives.

  6. I expect he is making some of those demands today on this vital subject of financial giving to His work!

CONCLUSION:

  1. Review — giving that pleases God begins with consideration of the tithe principle, progresses to meeting needs of several types, is a demonstration of our spirituality, and finally, must conform to Jesus' teaching about discipleship.

  2. We have the opportunity to grow in the grace of giving, to accomplish more than ever before, and to become increasingly sacrificial and thus more like Jesus.

  3. May God help all of us to be disciples in the fullest sense of the word, especially as it relates to our giving.

  1. Let's give in a way that allows the church to be strengthened, the world to be evangelized, the poor to be helped, us to grow spiritually and our God to be glorified!

2 comments:

  1. NO ONE, absolutely NO ONE pays the Biblical tithe today.

    Leviticus 27:30-33, Numbers 18: The First Tithe - a tenth of crops and animals and commanded to take the tithe to the Levites.

    Deuteronomy 14:22-27: The Second Tithe aka The Festival Tithe - a tenth of crops, plus add to that the firstborn animals, and take for the yearly feast.

    Deuteronomy 14:28-29: The Third Tithe aka The Three-Year Tithe aka The Poor Tithe - a tenth of crops, kept at home, and invite the Levites, widows, orphans, stranger to eat.

    Now, tell me. Which of the above three tithes commanded by God does anyone follow today?

    The ONLY people in the Old Testament that were commanded to tithe were those who INHERITED THE PROMISED LAND WITH EVERYTHING ON IT. They got the land, house, animals, crops, etc. ALL FREE AND CLEAR. No mortgage payment or rent to pay. And THEY were commanded to tithe on the crops and animals and take it to the Levites who INHERITED the tithe INSTEAD OF the promised land with everything on it. No one else tithed. Wage earners did not tithe. Jesus didn’t tithe. Paul didn’t tithe. Peter didn’t tithe.

    HOW CAN YOU COMPARE THAT WITH CHRISTIANS WHO HAVE TO PAY THEIR MORTGAGE PAYMENT OR RENT, INCOME TAXES, PROPERTY TAXES, SALES TAXES, ETC?

    There is no way to justify making some “principle” out of the Biblical facts and then apply it to Christians today. It is just flat out wrong and makes no sense at all.

    Giving did not start at 10%. The tithe was a law, a payment. It was similar to a tax.

    Tithe - paid by those who inherited the promised land.
    Inheritance or Estate tax - paid from the estate or inheritance.

    Tithe - ONLY on property owners.
    Property tax - ONLY on property owners.

    Tithe - used to run the theocracy.
    Income tax - used to run the government.

    Tithe - doesn't apply to the poor.
    Luxury tax - doesn't apply to the poor.

    The New Testament teaches generous, sacrificial giving, from the heart, according to our means. For some, $1 might be a sacrifice, while for others, even giving 50% of their income might not induce a sacrifice. In the Old Testament, ONLY the farmers tithed, and it was equal percentage (a tenth). The New Testament teaches the principle of equal sacrifice instead of equal percentage. Equal sacrifice is much harder to achieve, if not impossible, than giving ten percent.

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  2. By reading the Old Testament we see the heart of God and the example (either good or bad) of God's people.

    What does the levitical tithe mean to us today?

    Correct there is no levitical priesthood any more, or is there?

    With the death of Jesus as you pointed out we are now under the new covenant and as Christians we are greater than the levites or the levitical priest. We do not need a priest. We have a direct relationship with God through the new covenant.

    So what can we learn from the scriptures on tithing in the old testament? We see that their tithing was pleasing to God and a tenth was the number that God chose to use. Why a tenth?

    Does that mean that God commands us to give a tenth today? Not at all. As you pointed out God is more concerned with the heart and the sacrifice than he is in any percentage, however, a tenth can be a starting place for some and maybe not for others.

    It all depends on the individual circumstances and the persons heart who is giving.

    In closing we should not shy away from using the term tenth or tithing when talking about church contribution and giving. For most people giving a tenth is a sacrifice and at worst it gives us a goal or starting point to consider.

    Thanks for your feed back and God bless!

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