Wednesday 18 June 2014

TITHING 107: GIVING


GIVING

A discuss on tithing will be lopsided if we do not explain the vital place of giving in our Christian discipleship. When most people understand that they are not under any obligation to tithe, their first reaction is stop giving entirely. This is understandable having been under the weight of the somewhat oppressive regime called tithing for some times. However, such individuals need to be shown that it is our duty to give to support Christians works and to give to the weak. Giving is very pleasing to God (Hebrew 13:16) and it is in His very nature to give Himself, having given us His Son Jesus Christ to redeem us from our sins. Anyone, truly converted by the Spirit of God, must of a necessity be a giver. In fact, I believe that it is that natural tendency for Christians to give that those who encourage tithing take advantage of and abuse. Though we are not under any obligation to tithe to churches, Christians should give and give without any inhibition.

The Grace of God
The scriptures show us that the grace of God is his free unmerited favor given to sinners (Ephesian2:8). When a sinner becomes a believer in Jesus Christ, the grace of God is made manifest to him first by his sins being forgiven. Then he is given a new nature – he becomes a new creation. At the same time, he is given the blessing of the Spirit of God that indwells him and helps him with life issues. The believer’s walk through life is a manifest panorama of God’s grace, as God is seen to give him everything that pertains to life and godliness (2Peter 1:3). Only Christians, of all religions in the world today, are called children of God. They are not simply creations, servants, or workers of God; rather the bible calls us God’s children. This comes about as we identify with the first begotten from the dead – Jesus Christ. So if Christ is a Son, we are then sons of God through Him. This is the manifest grace of God and indeed it is awesome. This grace is not just an intangible thing in the form of being saved through faith and enjoying peace, love and joy alone; rather this grace extends to other issues of life. Tangible things like food, clothing and shelter are things God provides for His children. When trouble comes, God is a shelter for His own from the storm. One of the greatest blessings we receive from God is the blessing of family – spouses and children. God is a giver and He has given us so much.

It is an understanding of God’s grace that should propel Christians to give. When we realize how much God has sacrificed for us and given to us because of our identification with him, it should not be difficult to give to His courses in return. The greatest motivation to give is a clear sense of how much God has given to us. This is another reason why tithing is incongruent with true gospel living. Tithing commands a giving of ten percent of one’s earning regardless of whether the individual is saved or not, or whether or not he understands the grace of God extended to him. At the end we have folks tithing with completely wrong motives and cannot enjoy the blessing of giving. However, when giving comes from an understanding of how much we have received from God through His grace, such giving will be totally unreserved and a mere ten percent may be too little to give.

Giving to the Poor
Most of the giving recorded in the New Testament church the apostles led was made to support the poor, the weak and the needy in the church. With the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the church of God was born on the surface of the earth. In Acts of the Apostles we see the Spirit of God coming to indwell the disciples with power to witness to the resurrection of Christ. The result was a large in flow of people into the church. In the church of that time there were the rich and the poor, but one could imagine that there would have been a great deal of poor folks among them as many people would have begun to suffer deprivation from family and society because of their profession of the Christian faith. It is safe to say that the very first thing the church did after it was birth was to ensure that the poor was catered for in its midst.

32 And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul:  neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things common.   33 And with great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus:  and great grace was upon them all.   34 Neither was there any among them that lacked:  for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold, 35 And laid them down at the apostles' feet:  and distribution was made unto every man according as he had need.   36 And Joses, who by the apostles was surnamed Barnabas, (which is, being interpreted, The son of consolation,) a Levite, and of the country of Cyprus, 37 Having land, sold it, and brought the money, and laid it at the apostles' feet – Acts 4

We see a communal system birth with the aim of ministering to the poor and needy. While such a communal lifestyle is impracticable in churches today, we catch a glimpse into the heart of God which is for the rich to supply the needs of the poor, such that a semblance of equality can be seen among the people of God.

The theme of giving to the poor runs through out the bible. When God instituted the tithes under the mosaic law, he instructed that those who shall be given tithe along with the priest and Levites must include the orphans, widows, and strangers (Deuteronomy 14:39) – these people would generally be regarded as the poor in their communities. The psalms speak about the blessedness of giving to the poor (Psalm 41:1; Proverbs 19:17). From the statement of Judas complaining about the expensive perfume poured on Jesus, it is clear that one of the things Christ did along with ministering to people was to give to the poor (John 12:5). Paul and Peter may have been called to minister to disparate groups of people but ministering to the poor was a common ministry they shared (Galatians 2:9-10). In fact the collections made and recorded in the epistles were mainly to minister to the poor (Acts 4:34; 1Corinthians 16:1; 2Corinthians 9:1).

These are the reasons why catering for the weak and the poor should be a leading ministry among Christians and churches. The priority of all churches that truly name the name of the Lord should be to first minister to the needs of the poor and needy in their midst. There is something essentially lopsided about having people who are in felt needs in a church that is considered wealthy. God ensures that there will be the rich and the poor in His church, in order for the rich to meet the needs of the poor so that the spirit of equality is maintained.

13 For I mean not that other men be eased, and ye burdened:  14 But by an equality, that now at this time your abundance may be a supply for their want, that their abundance also may be a supply for your want:  that there may be equality:  15 As it is written, He that had gathered much had nothing over;  and he that had gathered little had no lack. – 2 Corinthians 8

It is indeed a very sorry sight to see churches spending millions in raising buildings, meeting the needs of the pastor, organizing year long meetings, booking adverts in the media and so on, while there are people in their midst whose needs can be met by very little. After evangelism, the church should have no other pressing duty than to ensure the poor and needy in their midst are adequately catered for. This spirit is very likely to then pass on to each member of the assembly as they make it their priority to give to those who are in need around them. The idea of socialism, community, charity and welfare which the world practices was certainly taken from the bible. Giving to the poor and needy by Christians and churches is the greatest witness to the person of Jesus Christ because then the world can see the love of God in our midst and will consider the gospel message.

The Weak

34 Yea, ye yourselves know, that these hands have ministered unto my necessities, and to them that were with me.   35 I have showed you all things, how that so labouring ye ought to support the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, It is more blessed to give than to receive – Acts 20

The western world has a concept of social welfare where people who are considered “weak” are provided for. The weak in this sense would include the elderly, children, the sick, invalid, mentally challenged, the blind, deaf, those incapacitated in one or the other, the deformed, crippled and so on. The truth of the matter is that by no fault of one, sometimes things happen to people that suddenly renders them incapable of providing for themselves. In these countries there is a strong social programme that ensures that such people are catered for. Government does this by instituting taxes on the salaries of those who are strong enough to work. Thus in addition to other things government uses money for, there is a portion set aside for the “weak”.

These are things churches should be known to be doing also. The scripture above actually showed us that this was the culture that was predominant in the first century church. Ministers and members of each church worked a secular job. There was no such thing as a full time minister who collected salary from the church. Paul said in that scripture that his own hands ministered to his necessities and those around him. Paul was never a full-time minister, as he had a job as a tent-maker. The strong were the ones that worked and these people then gave to the weak – those who could not provide for themselves. This is a culture that must be restored to the Christian church if we truly want our witness in today’s world to be heard. It is even more needed in third world countries where we reside, since the system of welfarism from government is non-existent. The church should teach the nations how the weak ought to be provided for. Therefore, there is a pressing demand for the needs of the weak to be provided for in our churches, if we do not want to end up a society where we devour each other. No one knows tomorrow. The man that is strong today can suddenly become invalid tomorrow. When a culture of welfare has been put in place either in society or the church, we all stand to benefit from it somehow.

One of the most pitiable occurrences in our world today is how young people treat the elderly. Old people spend their days serving community and the young, but they then grow old and no one is there to care for them. When they are sick, some people are looking forward to their deaths so they can feast. If society cannot take care of the elderly, the church should not be seen to abandon them too. Another terrible thing that is happening in our world is the number of people who are rendered invalids as a result of being involved in motor accidents on our terrible roads. The church should be near enough to care for these people. Then we have children becoming orphans almost overnight as we continue to loose large number of young men and women, people in their productive years, to the scourge of HIV/AIDS. These and many more are the reason why the culture of giving to the weak is so very important. The church cannot afford to continue this attitude of feasting and celebrating the rich and the strong, while we neglect weak folks in our midst – we do not know who would be the next tomorrow.
  
Giving
As we give to the poor and the weak, we should also remember to give to ministers of the gospel. There are men and women who are missionaries to far flung communities. These people are to be supported by Christian folks.

It is at this junction I need to sound a note of warning about a pervasive kind of giving that has taken hold in the church and is bringing reproach to the name of the Lord. When scriptures speak about giving to ministers in passages like Matthew 10:41-42; 1 Corinthians 9: 13-14; Philippians 4:15-19; 1 Timothy 5:17, the bible was not talking about a means of money doubling. There is a gospel that is running around these days telling people to give to a particular class of clergy called “men of God” as a means of entering into great wealth. The result is that these men, who already have established themselves as chairmen of their church finances, are further enriching themselves by making gullible worshippers give to them in a said bid to enter great riches. This is not the picture that the New Testament gave of giving to ministers. Jesus Christ was the first to speak about minister’s remuneration when he sent out his disciples in Matthew 10 and Luke 10. In Luke 10, our Lord said

Go your ways:  behold, I send you forth as lambs among wolves.   Carry neither purse, nor scrip, nor shoes:  and salute no man by the way.   And into whatsoever house ye enter, first say, Peace be to this house.   And if the son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon it:  if not, it shall turn to you again.   And in the same house remain, eating and drinking such things as they give:  for the labourer is worthy of his hire.   Go not from house to house.   And into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, eat such things as are set before you:  And heal the sick that are therein, and say unto them, The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you

The impression we get from this passage and many other passages that speaks about giving to ministers is that the preachers of Jesus and the apostles’ times did not live on salaries. They had no financial security anywhere – this is what Christ meant by carrying no purse in verse 4. It was as they ministered to people, whatever those people were pleased to give them were they to receive. Verses 7 and 8 uses the phrases: “eating and drinking such things as they give…” and “eat such things as are set before you…” in the same context of the “laborers is worthy of his hire…” Jesus was saying whatever the people give you when you minister to them is your wage! Therefore these ministers were totally at the mercy of God who alone could move the people to give to them in response to their ministry. The concept of a minister receiving tithes, offerings and first fruits was totally alien to the New Testament.

I stated this to show a clear distinction in the kind of ministers Christians should support today. If a minister pastors a church and enjoys the financial security of a salary and his members’ occasional well wishes through gifts, that minister is not what the New Testament commands us to give anything to. He has his rewards already. The minister that needs our support are people laboring for the Lord, many of them missionaries, even social workers that take care of orphanages, etc, and do not have any source of income; these are the people we are supposed to help with our finances because many of them are pursuing laudable ministries for the Lord and do not have any financial backing from anyone. The attitude of “sowing” into the “life” of a rich “man of God” to obtain his kind of prosperity is totally unscriptural and it is the workings of Satan that he continues to use to deceive many people in organized church systems. It should be discouraged. This is the reason why giving to the poor, weak and needy is emphasized the more in this essay. It is to remind us that the New Testament placed greater emphasis on this type of charity than any other type.


In conclusion, God is very pleased with giving. God blesses every kind of giving that comes from a proper motivation in the heart. It is this writer’s desire that Christians be more selfless and give more to Christian works anywhere they find them. Many of us can reduce our expenses and consumption, so as to give more to the things of God. If we make such commitment, we can be sure that heaven will be pleased and God’s name and purposes further magnified on the face of the earth.

TITHING 106: GUILE


GUILE

The Christian man will always find himself having to ensure that his practice of faith has not degenerated to mere form and ritual, which many rightly define as religion. What makes what we do as Christians different from what other religious people do in their faith is that our actions are birth from truth – such truth that is founded in the word of God, the bible, and that is etched in our hearts. In other words the Christian man must be a sincere person – he may not be perfect but he must be true to his God and to his neighbor. This is what the Psalmist meant when he wrote these eternal words in Psalm 32: 1-2,

Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin is covered.   Blessed is the man unto whom the LORD imputeth not iniquity, and in whose spirit there is no guile.

There are four characteristics of the Christian man enumerated in the above scripture: 1. His transgression (sin) is forgiven; 2. His sin is covered; 3. Iniquity is not imputed on him; 4. There is no guile in his spirit. Note that the first three items are what God gives to the Christian man when he comes to faith in Christ Jesus. It is what follows his justification before a holy God. This was the scripture Paul quoted when he was speaking of the faith of Abraham that justified him in Romans 4:1-4. This is the same faith we possess when we come to Christ as believers and the blessings in it all are the three items listed above. The last item, the issue of no guile in the justified man, is shown to us as an inherent characteristic of a true Christian. The Christian man has no guile: he is not deceptive, dishonest, fraudulent, duplicitous, cunning or artful deceptive (these are some dictionary synonyms to the word “guile”). The Christian man is true because the grace of God given to him through Christ came with truth (John 1:17), so there is no reason to be deceptive. Also, the worship of God that his faith consist of demands that he be true always (John 4:23-24) – and if he is faithful in the practice of his faith he would have learnt the art of truth and not to be “artfully deceptive”.

Truth is what religion is devoid of. The forms, rituals, ceremonies and procedures that religious practices consist of do not require truth in the inward part; anyone can practice any religious observance as long as he get the procedures right. This were the issues God had with the nation of Israel in the Old Testament when he gave them the many rituals in the Mosaic Laws (Isaiah 1:11-18). That is why the Law was never intended to last forever. The purpose of the Law was to point men to the sinfulness of sin, man’s inability to keep it and the coming of Christ who would fulfill the Law for all who will believe in Him. Therefore when the Law was given through Moses, the guile in man was meant to be revealed. However, grace and truth came with Jesus Christ to cleanse man from sin and guile. Today, one aspect of the Law remains with us in a perverted form and that is the ritual of tithing, and understandably guile cannot be separated from the practice of tithing. Tithing, like many other aspects of the Law, is a purely religious activity and it does not require truth in the inward man to practice it. What it requires is to faithfully carry out a religious activity every week or every month as the case maybe. Anyone can give a tenth of their income to a religious house; they do not need to be Christians to do this. They only need to believe the lie that says that by tithing we merit God’s blessings.

The first aspect of guile or dishonesty about the practice of tithing comes from its definition. What does the true biblical tithe consist of? The word tithe means tenth. However, it is a religious term used to denote the levy or tax God imposed on the nation of Israel in the Mosaic Law. This tax was meant to be given to the civil and religious leaders of the nation of Israel to ensure the proper running of the religious and civil life of the nation. The tithe from scriptures consisted only of agricultural products (Leviticus 27:30-33) and was never money. Thus when anyone teaches a concept of a monetary tithe today, he or she is teaching a deceptive gospel because the tithe of the bible was not money. With time, the practice of tithing became unnecessary in Israel for two reasons. One of them was the coming of a new dispensation in which Christ’s death and resurrection had rendered the Mosaic Law obsolete and unnecessary (Romans 10:4; Hebrew 8:13). The second reason was that the providential dealings of God with the nation of Israel makes tithing totally unnecessary today because there is no more temple in Jerusalem for the Israelites to take a tithe to; and the civil life of the nation of Israel is totally changed now. Instead of tithes, people pay their government a tax and civil life is sustained this way. When we realize that those who the original concept of tithing started with have ceased to practice it, we understand why what Christians tithe today is not the true biblical tithe and why modern day tithing is a deceptive practice borne from a heart of guile.

The religious man is full of guile. Religion requires that one puts on a façade of piety, fulfill certain rituals and please those who are observing what is being done. Those that require being pleased many times include religious leaders, family members, friends, religious associates and sometimes oneself. The practice of religion has a way of dousing an inner craving to fulfill religious obligations and many times it gives a false impression that we have given God His requirements, so we can move on to do our own thing while we believe that God will bless our efforts as we have fulfilled our obligations to Him. When God instituted the New Testament, He wanted this sort of thing to stop. He wanted our practice of faith in Him to come from the state of our heart and not in fulfilling obligations. And that is why Paul contented with the religious people of his day who insisted that physical circumcision shall be a sign of conversion. Paul resisted these people because he wanted to show them that the new dispensation does not require an outward observance or ritual to be acceptable with God. Now God wanted people to do things from the sincerity of their hearts. With this standard, every aspect of the Mosaic Law went with the old dispensation (Colossians 2:16) and the practice of tithing went with them.

A man may still give a tenth of his income to support Christian works today; just as he may give any other proportion of his income also. But it would be wrong for anyone giving a tenth of his income to claim that he is tithing because it is abundantly clear from scriptures that the biblical tithe was never money. The litmus test of whether our giving is ritualistic and religious or whether it is borne from a heart of truth is if we obey this command of scripture:

Every man according as he purposeth in his heart, so let him give;  not grudgingly, or of necessity:  for God loveth a cheerful giver – 2 Corinthians 9:7

Again we return to the state of the Christian’s heart but this time when he is giving. Two things must govern what the Christian gives: first, we must give as we purpose in our hearts. The word “purpose” here denotes freedom, free will, making one’s decision without any external interference, etc. This is the only way such giving can be done without grudging – because no one would grudge what he willingly does. Giving as one purpose in one’s heart also is the exact opposite of giving out of necessity. Necessity in this case denotes giving out of force, according to Law, or out of an imposition. Giving out of necessity is what tithing according to the law denotes. When a man is told that to enjoy God’s blessing he must tithe his income, that man is being placed under a burden to give – he is giving out of necessity. The next thing we see about giving according to 2 Corinthians 9:7 is that this giving must be cheerful. No one will give cheerfully as long as he is giving grudgingly or out of necessity, and as long as tithing is taught as a type of giving we are encouraging giving in church that will not be  cheerful.

The biggest tragedy with the practice of tithing is the fact that an un-regenerated individual might consider himself a Christian because he tithes. So because he observes a religious activity he cannot see himself as one in need of salvation. This is the problem with religion. It is obvious from this that anything a non Christian can do is not Christian – and this must include the practice of tithing. A non Christian however cannot have the influence of the Spirit of God on his heart that will lead him to give as only God can lead a Christian. This is why the only kind of giving that should be acceptable in the Christian church is free will giving because this is the only type of giving that the Spirit of Jesus can inspire  a Christian to do.


God has ordained that the Christian faith shall be one borne from a heart condition. This is why for one to be a Christian such a person must be born-again – a state that is best described in the bible as the circumcision of the heart (Philippians 3:3). Then the Christian life is to be lived out by faith (Romans 1:17b) – still a heart condition that indicates implicit trust in God through Christ Jesus. The Christian man worships God in spirit and in truth – again a heart condition of devotion and reverence of a sovereign God for all that He has done for us through Christ. Then the Christian man practices his faith through love (Galatians 5:6b) – still a heart of submission to the singular law Christ left for us to observe: love the Lord your God and love your neighbor as yourself. It is in the process of loving God and men that a Christian man must give but this giving is again a reflection of his heart condition which prompts purposeful giving, not of necessity but cheerfully (2 Corinthians 9:7). This giving is borne from a heart devoid of guile or the hypocrisy that adorns the observance of the law; rather, there is a freedom to give as one wills. This is the reason that a giving of a tithe in the Christian church is not congruent with the spirit of the New Testament church. Tithing is of the law, whose observance too many times follows ritualistic procedures that the man full of guile can observe without qualms. However, purposeful or free will giving retains the freedom that should be present in the New Testament church.