This
morning, we're going to look at God's plan for giving. We're going to
be dealing with the subject of money. And money is a good barometer on
spirituality, because the way you handle your money is an indication of
your Christian stewardship of life. More than any other single
commodity, money is your hands. You're constantly dealing with money.
Some
of you are now feeling your pocket to make sure you're still dealing
with money and that you didn't lose it on the way in, and you pay bills
constantly. You write checks. You receive paychecks. You go to the
savings. You go to the bank. You take your wallet out. You put change
in this and that. Money is a constant thing.
And the
stewardship of money is a critical area of life. And the Bible has very
much to say about. In fact, we're going to look at God's plan for
giving in the Old Testament this morning. And the next Lord's day,
God's plan for giving in the New Testament. And we're going to find out
that they're no different, that they're the same. But the definition
is...it really in the New Testament so much more vast in the
particulars, that I'm sure the two part study in itself will give us
once and for all. I trust the real understanding of this area.
Now
the Christian is faced with many decisions regarding money. I ought to
say this too, that for you that are visiting, this is something that we
do not normally do. We usually continue with a book study, but as I
said, we're making a break for this particular reason. And I trust that
you'll understand that.
But the Christian is faced with many
decisions regarding money. Basically, they fall into four categories.
Number one, how we feel about money. Number two, how we earn money.
Number three, how we spend money. And number four, how we give money.
The total stewardship of money can fall into those categories. How feel
about it. How we earn it. How we spend it. And how we give it away.
Now,
first of all, what about the area of how we feel about money. Does the
Bible say anything about that? Well, you know it does. And I'm just
going to briefly introduce the subject, because we want to dwell on the
fourth one. But the Bible says a lot about how we feel about money.
First of all, it says we are not to love it.
In 1 Timothy 6 in
verse 10 it says, "The love of money is the root of all kinds of evil."
We are not to love money. Now that is not an easy thing since it's
around us all the time. Another thing the Bible says in regard to how
feel about money is that we are not to trust money. That is we are not
to put our confidence in our money.
In 1 Timothy 6:17
it says, "Charge those that are rich not to trust in their money." So
trust in money is idolatry. Even when you derive your sense of security
from the money that you say God provides for you, that's still
idolatry.
In Matthew 6:24
it says, "You cannot serve two gods. You can't serve the true God and
money." That kind of divided allegiance doesn't make it. That's why
when the Bible lays down the qualifications for an elder, it says, "You
cannot be a man who is greedy of money." Because you cannot serve God
and money.
Not only that, the Bible tells us that we are not to
seek to be rich. We are to seek to honor God. If He desires to make us
rich, that's His business. We're to seek to work as hard as we can, do
the very best we can for His glory. If He desires to make rich in
response to that, that's His business.
1 Timothy 6:9
says, "Those who would be rich fall into many hurtful lusts and their
souls ultimately are drowned in destruction and loss." Also in
regarding money, we are not to regard money as our own. It is God's. We
are stewards of it. There are other things in that area.
Let me
go to the second one. What does the Bible say about how we earn money
or how we get money? It says a lot. First of all, we're not to steal
it. That's a no-no. We cannot steal money. You say, "I...I would never
do that." Listen to Psalm 37:21. "The wicked borrows and pays not back." There are lots of ways to steal.
In fact, in Amos 8:5 and Hosea 12:7
the prophets talk about falsifying the balance owed and then deceiving
somebody out of money. No, you're not to steal money. Secondly, we are
not to exploit others by usury. In other words, we are not to
overcharge desperate people. If your brother has a need, you give him
to meet his need. You don't loan him what he has to have and then
charge him exhorbant and high rates of interest, that's usury.
Also, we are not to defraud people by not paying them what we owe them. You know what James 5:4
says? It says, "The money that you should have paid to your laborers is
crying out against you." You've defrauded them, because you didn't pay
them what they deserved for their work.
In terms of how we get
money, the Bible also says that we're not to gamble for it. And this,
of course, I think, is an inference in the Scripture from the
standpoint that if you trust the sovernty of God and the providence of
God, chance has no part in it. The word for dice-play is used in
connection with the ministry of Satan in Ephesians 4:14. Now, those are negative things as to how we're not to get money. How are we to get it?
Well,
we are to get it by receiving gifts. And this is a wonderful way. You
don't have to do anything. You just have to be nice. Or know somebody
who is nice. And Paul received money a lot. They gave him gifts
constantly. And...and I supposed that I've been the beneficiary of such
things. Sometimes people send a love offering, you know, in response to
a ministry that you've had. And this is expressing love. And this is a
legitimate way.
In the Old Testament, they received money
without working and the basis of inheritance didn't they? The first
born received the inheritance of all that his father possessed in
general. So we can receive gifts in terms of inheritance as well as
gifts of love. Another way that we can get money is by making wise
investments. And I don't believe that God wants to run the risk of
wildcat investments and high risk gambling speculations with this His
funds, but I think that God desires that we make wise investments.
In
Matthew 25, verse 27, you know, the owner said to the servant, "If you
had been smart, you would have put this money out and so that when I
came back, I would have received mine own with interest." So we can
earn money by making wise investments. Interest can be made.
But
the primary way and the last one I'll mention is we earn money by work.
Good old work. And really frank...and frankly folks, the Bible says,
"six days shalt thou," what? "Labor and do all thy work. The seventh
shall you rest." In other words, crowd your labor into six days.
Really, you have enough for seven if you're working hard.
Now,
that's a crusher, because most people in financial need haven't learned
how to work yet. You know, when you get down to the place of people who
are chronically out of money, chronically don't have enough, they're
chronically indolent. To some degree or another. Now, there are
extenuating circumstances in personal individual cases, but basically
the real problem with people who don't have anything is they don't work
for anything. Work is a wonderful divine principal.
And a lot of us like a lot of divine principals, but we're not real excited about that one. But that is one. Proverbs 28:19,
"He that tills his land shall have plenty of bread, but he that follows
after vain persons shall have poverty enough." He just floats with the
crowd. He's not going to make it, but the guy who stays home and works,
he's going to do all right.
I'll give you another interesting one. I like this Proverbs 14:23.
This is really practical. Listen to this. "In all labor there is
profit, but the talk of the lips tends to poverty." You work you make
money. You talk, you don't. Now you see the Bible then has a lot to say
about how we get money. About how we feel about money.
Thirdly,
it has a lot to say about how we spend money. First of all, we are to
provide for the needs of our family and the needs of those around us. 1 Timothy 5:8 says, "That if a man doesn't provide for his household, he's worse than infidel." That's pretty serious talk.
And
John said in 1 John 3, "That if you see your brother have a need, you
don't meet his need you're not even a Christian." "How dwelleth the
love of God in you?" So you are to spend your money for your needs and
the needs of your household and the needs of those around you who have
needs.
Secondly, you're to spend your money to pay your debts
immediately. Did you get that? Immediately. Say where'd you get that?
Out of the Bible. Romans 13, "Owe no man anything but love." But I'll
give you a verse that really is interesting. II Kings 4:7, are you ready for this? "Go sell the oil and pay thy debt and live thou and thy children on the rest." II Kings 4:7 says liquidate what you have to pay your debts and live on what's left. Pay your debts.
A
third thing you're to do in spending your money is to save your money.
Do you know that there are four wise, wise creatures in the world that
God just really exalts? Ants, badgers, locusts, and spiders. You say,
you're kidding. No, Proverbs 30. "There are four things," verse 24
says, "which are little on the earth, but are exceedingly wise."
The
ants, the first one. The ants don't make a great contribution, they
mostly just get in the way, but here we find that they are extol for a
very, very interesting virtue. "The ants are people not strong, yet
they prepare their food in the summer." You know, they're not too
strong, but they're smart enough to know that you'd better get your
food in the summer, because you're not going to be able to find it in
the winter. Good for the ants. That's saving. That's stashing it for
the time you're going to need it.
21:20 of Proverbs, "There is
treasure to be desired and oil in the dwelling of the wise." In other
words, whatever you need, you're going to find in a wise man's
treasury. That's right. But a foolish man spends it up. No preparation
for the future. I believe that future planning is very reasonable. It
is not only reasonable, it is biblical. It is wise. Maybe you're future
planning is in long-term solid investments. Maybe it's in life
insurance, where you are setting aside a certain amount of money to
secure a certain amount in the future, which can take care of the needs
of your family in a day when they may not have the money to supply the
need. This is wise.
All right, so there we have some...some of
the indication what the Bible says about how we're to spend it, how we
are to earn it, and how we are to feel about it. All of this, people,
becomes a barometer on your Christian life. How you handle money just
like everything else. How you handle your wife, how you handle your
husband, how you handle your kids, how you handle the stewardship of
every dimension of your life. How you work at your job. How you handle
the relationship with other believers. Everything you do, how you
handle your prayer life, how you handle your Bible time, all of this is
a monitor or a barometer on your spiritual life isn't it?
Money
is no different. The credibility of your Christianity is manifest and
the handling of your funds. And this is a difficult area, because it's
so constantly a problem that we're being bombarded with by the world to
spend our money stupidly. And not only that, to add to it, we're being
bombarded by Christians to spend it just as stupidly. Let's face it,
we're victimized by an awful lot of slick campaigning on the part of
Christian organizations, aren't we? Trying to loosen up our Christian
bucks.
But your money is qualifier of your Christianity in a
sense. You know, that's what John meant when he said in 1 John 3, "When
you see your brother have a need and you don't extend to him what he
needs, how dwells the love of God in you?" In other words, your
Christianity becomes manifest on the very level of whether you give the
money to the guy who needs it.
Now, you know, you have to think
of the money that you have as a stewardship. You know, if your employer
came to you and said hey, "here's a hundred bucks of my money, I want
you to spend it carefully and wisely, purchasing some things we need.
Come back and give the account." Boy I'm telling you take care of that
hundred bucks. You'd come back and you'd say, "well, I got this, and I
got this for the office and I got this and I got this, all these things
we needed and here's the accounting. I got the best prices."
You
have a hundred dollars in your pocket that's your own and you don't
feel because it's your own that you have any obligation to anybody. But
whose really is it? It's God and if you should give an account to your
employer, how much of account should you give to God for how you spend
a hundred dollars? You must answer to God.
All right, let's go to
the fourth area. We don't want to talk too much about that. It gets
kind of painful. The major of issue of Scripture...I mean, I'm even
squirming. The major issue of Scripture is concerned with how you give
your money. Now this dominates Scripture. It's too important a subject
for us to bypass. How we give our money is extremely important. And it
isn't easy to keep a clear perspective because we really are being
bombarded.
Now, there are constant appeal. If you've been a
Christian length of time and have gotten on any of the Christian
"mailing lists," you know what comes wanting your Christian money.
Well, if that's way at your house, you can imagine what it's like at
mine. There is no end to the proliferation of people who want money and
the organizations.
And you turn on your radio, you know, and they
have these half hour religious broadcasts, 25 minutes of asking for
money and five minutes of telling you the reasons they're asking for
money and that's about it. And you wonder when they're going to get to
doing something that's worth your money. We're bombarded by these
techniques giving gimmicks, church stewardship drives, budget drives,
all kinds of things.
And we've all come from organizations in
the past where we were victimized by this. Voltaire was no Christian by
any stretch of the imagination, an atheist, once remarked, "That
Protestantism is merely a less expensive substitute for Catholicism."
And Lucas Visherin his book wrote this, "The French philosopher
Voltaire was highly critical of the Roman church for what he felt were
its excesses and its aberitiousdemands. But he was even more
critical of the Protestant churches for allowing themselves to be used
as havens for those whose religious convictions were determined
primarily by the desire to keep more of their money for themselves."
And
I guess Christian giving in the eyes of some people seems to be
exploitation. In the eyes of other people, it seems to be totally
neglected. There's a stream literature telling you how. You can take
courses in certain schools on how to raise your church budget. I can go
take a course in that. I have a book that I read this week on How To
Develop a Tithing Church. How to get slick things going like loyalty
week and knock on every door week.
And everything in the book on
how to have a pledge system. How to have a canvas, how to have this,
how to have that. How to do this, how to stimulate people. How to
motivate people. How to make them feel guilty because they don't do
what they ought to do and then trade on the guilt that they feel. And
then if you really get desperate, you can hire out-of-town experts who
will come in and raise the money for you, for a piece of the action.
I
mean, it's not totally a ministry. But there's one organization that
exists in America just to publish materials that you can post around
your church to stimulate people to give money. I'm not against
stimulating people to give me. I'm just against doing in unbiblical
ways.
That's like I was telling somebody yesterday, you know, the
evangelism campaign in one church was stimulated by the fact that they
were going to hide a football in the homes of several unsaved families,
and you were to go to door to door and if you happened to hit the
unsaved family that had the football, you won a jacket. So evangelism
was stimulated by hiding a football and trying to win a jacket.
Well,
I'm not against evangelism, but I'm sure against that. How in the world
would an unregenerate family ever understand what's going on when they
got a football in their house and people are coming there to witness to
them on the pretense really of evangelism, when all they want's the
jacket.
Well, I get a little irritated about this kind of
stuff. There are so many slick ad men putting together these things,
there are so many hucksters on TV and radio hounding the Christians for
money that you really kind of find yourself trapped and you don't know
what to do with it. Then you feel the press of the economic situation
and everybody keeps telling you that if you don't sock it away...if I
hear that guy one more time from Glendale Federal telling me that I've
got to have so much of my income in savings I'm going to write them a
letter. What's his name? Elliot Janeway?
But, you know, let's
face it, it comes from so many directions. We are being absolutely
bombarded by the fact that if we don't sock it away, if we don't have
this whole huge six months worth of income stashed somewhere, we'll
never make it. Well, what happened to God? I mean, I believe in saving,
but you know, you can become paranoid about this. And you know, here we
are trapped between the balance of trusting God and investing with God
and keeping what we need to supply our family for the present and the
future.
It all boils down friends to the responsiveness that we
have of the ministry of the Holy Spirit in our lives as He leads and
guides.
Now
many people come along and they say that the solution to everything is
to just accept the biblical pattern, which is 10%. That the biblical
standard of giving is the tithe or 10%. And they justify the 10% by
saying if the law required 10% certainly grace would require at least
10% since incidentally the tithe is never mentioned in the New
Testament in reference to the churches giving, never.
In all the
passages where the church gives, there is no mention at all any place
of tithing. But in order to get tithing in, they say if law required a
tenth, certainly grace does. And I'm not against the principal. But
what they're really saying is, we know tithing is not New Testament
giving, but if we don't push the tithe, we're afraid we won't get
enough money to operate. It really boils down to that kind of
motivation. The 10% sort of keeps the money flowing.
You know
what's wrong with the 10%? Number one, it isn't biblical and it's
giving for the wrong reason. It's giving to fulfill and obligation
rather than a response to a loving, willing heart, right?
Second
thing that's wrong with it is, it hinders what you could do by making
you think you're done. Giving is never to be by coercion. It is never
to be by fundraising. It is never to be by compulsion. It is any
gimmick is offensive to God.
Now,
having said that, let me just say this and then we'll get into it.
God's pattern for giving is not tithing in the New Testament. It isn't
even tithing in the Old Testament. It never has been tithing, it never
will be tithing. And I'll try to explain why I can say that this
morning and next time.
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Now
let's divide the history of giving into three sections before Moses,
between Moses and Jesus, and from Jesus to the present. These are three
periods of history. Three dispensations if you will with which we'll
deal. And the first and the second and the third...notice this friends,
all teach the same pattern of giving. There is no difference.
Let's
look first of all at giving before Moses, because this important. The
people who teach that we should tithe, teach on this basis. Since the
tithe was before Moses, since Abraham tithe and Jacob tithed before the
mosaic law, tithing was before Moses, it was before the law, it is
therefore to be after the law. It is a universal principal, therefore,
since the tithe was first, the law came in the middle, the universal
continues afterwards. So the tithing is continuous.
The problem
with that is if you're going to accept anything before the law as norm
for after the law, the Sabbath was also before the law, right? So we've
got quit meeting on Sundays. Secondly, the sacrificial system was...was
initiated with the garden and we're going to have to go back to killing
animals. And I'm not real sure that's the idea.
So if we're going
to say that whatever is before is after the law, we run into an awful
lot of problems. Let's not say, we're a lot safer. Now before Moses,
giving before Moses, you can write some notes on your little outline
there, giving before Moses falls into two categories as does all giving
in all these periods.
Two categories, freewill giving and
required giving. Freewill giving and required giving. The Bible does
require that you give your money. You're not buying, you're just giving
it away. And the Bible does require that. It also...the Bible also
speaks of a free gift, free gifts.
Now let's look at the book of
Genesis, and let's find out from the very start about first of all
freewill giving. Now, this is going to be an Old Testament lesson this
morning and I think we're going to see some interesting things. The
term tithe does appear in the Old Testament in the book of Genesis, it
does.
Now some have thought that because it appears in Genesis it
becomes the standard from the start. God's universal plan is to tithe.
Incidentally, the Hebrew word ma'aser which is translated tithe means a
tenth part. It's the same as dekatoo in the Greek the tenth. That's all
it means. It simply means a tenth. It isn't a religious word, it's a
mathematical word. It has only to do with a percentage, it means a
tenth.
Historically even outside the Bible from ancient sources
that we have, we know that man has always used ten as the basic number
for counting systems. And that is obviously, because he starts out by
going (counting). So he's got ten fingers and ten toes. So ten becomes
the symbol of the counting system. This is universal.
The
symbol of measurement is ten. Now notice ten then kind of becomes the
number of completion. We see this sometimes even in Scripture. Ten
becomes the number of completion. There is evidence that many pagan
deities were honored by the giving of a tenth. And the reason is this,
since the ten represented totality or completeness, the giving of a
tenth was a symbol of the giving of the whole. Do you know what I mean?
The
giving of a tenth of something, the totality was represented in that
tenth. By giving what was a total number, ten, you are simply sort of
symbolizing the fact that you were giving your all. Since ten was the
symbol of totality. So the total number, ten, became then a common
number in terms of offerings to deities among the pagans.
Now,
the Bible does not institute tithing in Genesis. There is no statement
from God ever regarding tithing at this point. No one told Abraham to
give a tenth. No one told Jacob to give a tenth, certainly not God.
There is no universal law as such stated in Scripture.
Now let
me show you what I mean. In Genesis Chapter 4, for example, and you can
kind of float through Genesis with me if you want. We're just going to
elude to it, but in Genesis Chapter 4, you have the first offering. Now
the first offering given to God was from Cain and Abel.
And the
interesting thing about this is that it was a voluntary offering. It
simply says in verse 3, "In the process of time it came to pass that
Cain brought the fruit of the ground and Abel brought the firstlings of
the flock.
Now there is no command that they were to do this. God
did not tell them specifically to do this, at least it is not so
recording in the Scripture. It seems to mean the test and process of
time it came to pass that they did it. It was then voluntary, right? It
was a free choice on their part. They gave fruit of the ground, which,
of course, as we know was not the thing that had been asked of God. We
know that there was no universal law about how much, but there was
apparently the revelation of a law about what? There was to be animal
sacrifice.
But we don't know what percentage at all. There is no
indication of it. They were prompted by their own initiative. There was
no requirement. There was no amount. There was no stipulation and there
was no frequency enjoined upon them. It was completely at their own
will.
Now later on you have in Chapter 8 Noah. The flood
subsides, Chapter 8 and Noah immediately goes out to make a sacrifice
or to make an offering to God. Verse 20 says, he built an altar and
took of every clean beast and every clean fowl and offered burnt
offerings on the altar.
Now here is an offering to God. Again,
it is completely voluntary. There is no command. There is no stipulated
amount. There is no percentage given. Noah determined that in his own
heart. It was spontaneous. You go further in that and you go to Abraham
and you find that Abraham in Chapter 12 is given the wonderful call of
God to be the leader of a nation.
In response to that in verse
7, he builds and altar to the Lord. And in offering to the Lord, there
again is no command. There is no stipulation. There is no requirement.
Only the free spirit of Abraham in response to the wonderful promise of
God as he says thanks to God by way of an offering.
In verse 18
of 13, he did it again. He built another altar to the Lord in Hebron.
And so always a volunteer thing, never in response to the command of
God. Here we have people freewill giving. These people gave to God of
their own possessions out of love and thankfulness and it was totally
spontaneous. This is the pattern of freewill giving.
Now Genesis 14:20
is the first mention of the tithe. And of course, you know the story,
Abraham, Abram at this time, had just returned from fighting of these
kings, the slaughter of Kedorloaomer and the kings in verse 17 in the
Valley of Shaveh. And he had been victorious and he had taken a
tremendous amount of spoil, treasure from these kings that he had
conquered. On his way back, he runs into the king of Salem. Salem is
the ancient name of Yerushalayim, Jerusalem.
Now, the king of
Salem was a man named Melchizedek who was not only a king, but
according to the book of Hebrews was also a priest. And it says it as
well in verse 18 that he was a king and a priest of the most high God.
So when Abram sees this man who represents God, he wants to express
thanks to God for the victory. So what does he do? Verse 20 at the end
of the verse, "he gave him a tenth of all."
Now it doesn't say
God told him to do this. Again, it's not commanded that he give a
tenth. And I think it's most interesting to know that it doesn't
necessarily mean that he gave a tenth of everything that he owned. He
gave a tenth of something that he took in this battle. Another thought,
Abraham lived 160 years. At no time in Scripture is it ever recorded
before or after this incident that he ever gave a tenth. This is the
only time that he ever gave a tenth that we know of in the record of
160 years on earth. Now that indicates something to us. And it wasn't a
tenth of his income and it wasn't an annual tenth. It was simply that
he chose to do it.
Now another thought, in Hebrews 7:2 it says, "He gave him a tenth of the spoils," it's translated. But the Greek word is akronthinian.
Now the word akron is in there which means the pinnacle or the top, the
top. Akronthinian means the top of the heap. It says he gave him a
tithe of the top of the heap. It could mean that he gave him a tenth of
the top of the heap. So it wasn't a tenth of the total pile. It was a
tenth of the top of the pile.
You say, what are you trying to
say? I'm trying to say that maybe all he gave him was a tenth of the
best that he had, not a tenth of everything. If he took spoils of all
five kings and their kingdoms, a tenth of all of that would have been
awful lot for one priest to handle.
Maybe he only gave him a
tenth of the top of the heap. But the point is, it was a one time
thing. There's no record that he ever did it this way again. All right,
free voluntary, motivated only by gratitude in his heart. Not required.
Go
to Genesis 28 and let's fine the use of the word tithe in the book of
Genesis and that has to do with Jacob. 22, verse 22 of Chapter 28. And
Jacob just says at the end of verse 22, "I will surely give the tenth
unto thee." Now at this point, Jacob is making a vow. Verse 20 vow to
vow, "If God will be with me and keep me in this way that I go and give
me bread to eat and raiment to put on so that I come again to my
father's house in peace then shall the Lord be my God."
In other
words, God if you do this I will, you know, bow down to you. That's
really bad. Jacob was at a low spiritually. He was so shallow, it was
really sad. What he was doing was buying off God. All right, God, if
you'll give me safe journey and bread and clothes then I will let you
be my God. Isn't that real nice?
In fact, God, I'm just going to
build you a nice pillar right here and I'll just give you a tenth of
everything I have. Now when you get to the place where you're buying
God, you're at a low spiritually, right?
Don't take this as a
norm of spirituality. This guy gave a tenth. He was trying to buy God.
There's no command that he give it. It was completely arbitrary,
completely voluntary with no obligation at all to tithe. Now notice I
followed from Cain and Abel right through to the gift of Jacob and in
all cases they were free voluntary gifts.
The idea that it was
a tenth was arbitrary. Out of all of the offerings throughout the book
of Genesis, twice it happened to be that they gave a tenth. Which in
their eyes and in the eyes of ancient people simply represented the
total and the sense that it was a symbol of giving all, nothing more.
All
right, now let me take you a step further. What about required giving.
You said that before the mosaic law there was required giving. You're
right, there was. And I did say that and I want to show you where the
required giving came and if you'll turn to Genesis 41, I'll show it to
you.
There was required giving of money or of possessions. In
fact, most of the time in Genesis, they don't give money at all,
because their exchange was not money, but it was animals or seed or
land. But in Genesis 41 you remember that Joseph was sold into slavery
in Egypt by his brothers and he got there and he was in jail because of
what he had been accused of in Potiphar's house. And when the Pharaoh
had a dream that he couldn't handle, they got a hold of Joseph and he
came and told the dream. Remember and he said there would be seven
years of fruitful crops and seven years of what? Of famine. So Joseph
said you better get ready for the famine. And here's how Joseph
suggested they get ready and this was God's plan, verse 34.
"Let
Pharaoh do this and let him appoint officers over the land and take up
the fifth part of the land of Egypt in the seventh plenteous years."
For seven years tax the people at what rate? What's a fifth? 20%. Here
is the introduction of taxation in the economy of Egypt. This is
introduced by God.
This is the first time you find the taxation
of a national entity expressed this way. And you'll noticed that we
haven't progressed much farther from that. That the norm that they
asked for then is still the basic norm of taxation in America, 20%,
except for some of you unfortunates who may be other brackets.
But
basically the 20% taxation was the basic taxation rate in Egypt. This
was God's plan as it was expressed through Joseph. And when they
collected the 20% through the fat years that would supply them the
needed foods for the lean years. So a taxation was instituted at that
point and 20% was the figure.
In Genesis 47, let me show you
something else in verse 24. "It shall come to pass in the harvest you
shall give the fifth part to Pharaoh, four parts shall be your own for
seed for the field, for your food, for them of your households and for
food for your little ones."
Now, I'm going to leave you four
parts. Some to sow back in the field, some to eat, some to take care of
your household needs and some for your kids. The fifth part goes back
to the government. Folks, required giving in the Old Testament was 20%.
Was instituted in Egypt and it was the funding of the national
government.
Now notice freewill giving is directed toward the
Lord personally in a response of love and sacrifice, required giving is
given to the national entity for the supply of the needs of the people.
All right, now, that's what you find from the time of creation to the
time of giving the law.
Now let's look at the time from the law
to Jesus. Point two, from Moses to Jesus. What do we find here? During
this time, the tithe obviously becomes a familiar term and those who
teach tithing as God's universal principal lean heavily on this period
for their definition, obviously.
Let's look first of all at
required giving. Required giving from Moses on. This is very, very
interesting. Now, generally I was taught, I supposed by many people
that tithing was giving a tenth and this is what Israel gave.
Let
me show you something. Turn to Leviticus 27. Leviticus 27 is just the
very end right before Leviticus runs out. Verse 30, "Now here was the
tithe called the Lord's tithe or the Levites tithe." And the reason it
was called the Levites tithes is very simple. It tells us in Numbers 18
that this tithe was collected to be given to the Levites. Who were the
Levites? They were the priests. The entire tribe of the Levites, the
taxation of all the rest of the tribe went to supply the needs of the
Levites or one of the 12 tribes, the priests of tribes. So this is the
Levites tithe.
Verse 30, "All the tithes of the land, whether of
the seed of the land or the fruit of the tree is the Lords. It is holy
unto the Lord." It isn't even yours. Ten percent of all of your land
and seeds and fruit is the Lords. Now, maybe you want to keep you
fruit.
All right, verse 31, "If a man will at all redeem any of
his tithes he shall add thereto to the fifth part thereof." All right,
if you want to keep your fruit, you can pay and just add 20%. And you
give money instead. Now concerning the tithe of the herd of the flock,
this meant a tenth of every calf, and a tenth of every lamb,
"whatsoever passes under the rod, the tenth shall be holy unto the
Lord, he shall not search whether it be good or bad, neither shall he
change it."
In other words, you could give money in exchange
for the land and the seed and the fruit, but you could not redeem the
animals. Those you had to give. The end of verse 33, "it shall not be
redeemed." These are the commandments which the Lord commanded Moses
for the children of Israel on Mount Sinai.
All right, the
Levites tithe was 10% of everything that they had in terms of produce
from the land animals. Now, the emphasis here is on quantity. Now this
teaches that this belonged to God. This is not a freewill offering to
God, is it? This is His already. You are robbing Him if you don't give
it. Isn't that what Malachi said? You are robbing me in the tithes. It
is mine.
So the 10% of the animals given to the tribe of the
Levites to support them, because you see they were the priests and they
didn't earn a living other than just carrying on priestly functions.
And so the things that were given went to support them. And frankly,
they ran the government. They ran the nation.
All right, let me
take you to something else. You say well, there it is, there's the 10%.
All right, let me show you. Go to Deuteronomy 12. In Deuteronomy 12,
you find there was a second tithe. And from verses 6 to 17 we find
again about what it requires is another tithe, another 10%. And this
10% was to be taken to Jerusalem and it was to be eaten.
It was
eaten by the family, the friends, the servants, and the priests in the
sanctuary. And it was very purposeful incidentally. The idea of it was
to stimulate devotion to the Lord. The idea of it also was to promote
unity in the family and the servants and they would all go to Jerusalem
and they would consume this particular tithe.
It was kind of like national potluck. It made everybody share. And so this was a purposeful tithe recorded there in the 12thChapter. I'm not going to take time to read it all, because our time is going.
Let
me give you a third thing. And this I think is very interesting. So
already we're up to close to 20%. You've got 10% of the first...the
first amount and you've got 10 more percent of the remaining 90% that
you had to give to...to the government or to supply for the food of
others.
But in Deuteronomy 14, just a little ways further, we
find a third one. Verse 28, "At the end of three years, you shall bring
forth all the tithes of your increase the same year and lay it up
within the gates and this was for the sojourner, the fatherless, and
the widow." Now this was what was called the poor tithe.
The
first one was called the Levites tithe, the second one was called the
festival tithe, and it was at the festival and the central sanctuary in
Jerusalem it was consumed. The third one was called the poor tithe. So
you've got 10%, 10%, 3 1/3% every year if you've got 10% every third
year. Okay? You're up to 23% right now.
That was Old Testament
tithe. So when somebody comes along and said that a Jew gave 10%, that
isn't true. The Jew gave 23% to begin with. Coincidentally, this was
the welfare program, the third one, for the poor people, the widows,
and the people who didn't have anything to eat, this was welfare.
So
you can see what they were doing. They were funding the people who ran
the government, the Levites, they were supplying for national feasts
and so forth and so on in the festival tithe. And the third one was the
welfare program in the poor tithe. This is all folks funding for the
national entity.
All three of those are taxation, not freewill
giving to God. Tithing was always taxation. So that the programs of the
government could run. The priestly program, the national religious
program and the welfare program.
I'll add to that. If you were a
Jew, you still weren't done yet. Leviticus 19, this is interesting.
This is the profit sharing plan in Israel. "And when you reap the
harvest of your land, you shall not wholly reap the corners of your
field, neither shall you gather the gleanings of your harvests." Leave
the corners alone and don't pick up what you drop.
Why? Leave it
for the poor. And then he says, "I am the Lord your God." Which is like
saying and I'm not kidding. So here was profit sharing. You didn't pick
up what you dropped and you just left the corners of the field
unharvested so that the poor people could share in that. So boy now
you're moving up further.
They had a third shekel temple tax they
had to pay to buy show bread and grain and sacrifices for the temple.
And if you want more in Exodus 23, they had to Sabbath rest for the
land every seven years which meant they forfeited an entire years
earnings off the land to let the land rest. And another thing on the
same Sabbath year, they had to set all debts aside did they not?
Listen
folks, 10% is a long way from what it cost them to exist within the
theocracy of Israel. They were easily well over 25% of their income
given to the funding of that government and to the caring of the lands.
This was required giving.
Now notice in addition to that there is
freewill giving. Now watch this. This includes first fruit giving and
freewill offerings. Now the emphasis here is not on the quantity or the
percentage, but it's on the attitude of the giver and the quality of
his gift. First fruits, first of all, we talked about this recently.
How that they would plant and then they would go and they would take
the first part that came in, the best part.
In Numbers 18:12,
it says, "All the best of the oil and the wine and the wheat, these
have I given thee." That's first fruits. He would collect off the top
the very best that was in the field and go and give it at the temple.
Give it to God. And the beauty of this thing was he hadn't yet
harvested the crop so he didn't really know how much was there.
So
he was believing God and God was saying, "if you will give me the first
fruits right off the top before you even know how much you're going to
have, if you'll give me the first fruits right off the top and trust
me, I'll bring in your full harvest."
That's actually kind of a nice promise. Yeah, it's right there in Proverbs. Let me show it to you. Proverbs 3:9,
listen. "Honor the Lord with your substance." Boy that's a great
principal. That's with all that you've got. Honor God with every penny
you have. Now watch. "And with the first fruits of all your increase,"
within the first fruits, watch, "so shall your barns be filled with
plenty and your presses will burst out with new wine." Two things, you
Honor God with every penny that you have. Number two, you give him
right off the top sacrificially the first fruits and believe me He'll
fill your barns and your presses will burst out with new wine. That's
God's promise to Israel.
Now please, God's promises to Israel
were fulfilled temporally. We cannot make the same statement for the
New Testament promises which are fulfilled spiritually. And you say, I
knew it. I knew it. I'll give it all and all I'll get is spiritual
blessing.
Well, we'll get into that next week. We'll get into
that next week. If you think about long enough, which is better?
Spiritual blessing, but there's both. God will make the needs met.
All
right, so here was the plan for freewill giving. First fruits, whatever
you've got give the best. Remember the difference in Malachi? God says,
"I'm not happy with you. I'm going to destroy you. I'm going to judge
you because you have brought to me the blind and the lame, remember?
The worst animals you've got. You're keeping the best for yourself and
forfeiting my blessing.
Freewill giving was independent of
taxation. Always, always, always giving to the Lord, giving to the Lord
was a matter of freely giving Him the best and that's what God's after,
the choicest thing. You know, it isn't when you spend on all your money
on yourself and you've socked all your money away in some kind of great
fund to take care of you that you trickle a little bit to God. That
isn't the first fruits. It's when you give him the cream of what you
have and keep a little bit for yourself that He'll fill your barns
spiritually as well as He'll meet your needs physically.
Get the perspective. Freewill offerings, first fruits. The principal is in Proverbs 11:24 and 25.
"There is that scatterth and yet increases." In other words, there's
the guy who gives liberally and he increases. "And there is that
withholdeth more than is fitting and it tends to poverty." You keep it
back and you're going to be poor. "The liberal's soul will be made rich
and he that waters shall be watered also himself." Boy I like that. I
like it.
Let me show you how this works. You know people say oh
we'll never raise the budget. If...MacArthur, you'll mess our church up
if they start listening to that tape. I've had that said to me. I hope
our people never hear what you say about that, because it'll ruin our
church, because they won't tithe.
Well, listen folks, this tape
is a disturbing thing, then your problem isn't with MacArthur, your
problem is with the Scripture. Exodus 25, let me show you how it works
though. I mean, we're results oriented unfortunately, we are. Listen to
this. Exodus 25:1,
"The Lord spoke to Moses saying, speak unto the children of Israel that
they bring me an offering." Now here is God's chance. God, all you got
to say is I demand a tenth and that seals it, right? The tenth becomes
universal law because you said.
Watch what he said. "I demand
an offering." Here listen to this. "Of every man that giveth it willing
with his heart." Don't you like that. Just tell them to give whatever
they want. I want an offering. Whatever's in his heart to give. Well,
Moses is there saying "we're going to build a temple and God says just
give whatever you want." There's no big posters. Have you given your
tenth? Nothing. There's...just do whatever your heart says to do.
We'll
never get the budget. It'll never happen. Listen this is really
terrific. I like this. You have to go all the way to Exodus 35. It took
that long to collect the offering. Exodus 35 verse 4, "And Moses spoke
to the congregation and the children of Israel and said this is the
thing which the Lord commands." Here's what the Lord wants. "Take from
among you an offering." How much? "Whosoever is of a willing heart."
Just bring it. "An offering of gold or silver or bronze or purple or
blue or scarlet or linen or goats hair or rams skins died red or badger
skin or case of wood or oil for the light, spices and sweet incense and
onyx stones and stones on the ephod and the breastplate." That's for
the priest. "And everyone of you has a smart heart." I like that
wise-hearted. "So come and make all of the Lord's commanded."
In
other words, you just bring whatever is on your heart or whatever
you've got. I like that. You say oh very dangerous. Look at verse 21.
"And they came, everyone whose heart stirred him up and everyone whom
his spirit made willing and they brought the Lord's offering to the
work of the tabernacle of the congregation for all it's services and
for all it's holy garments." Did you know they came?
And it says
in 22, "And they came, both men and women as many as were willing
hearted." Hey friends do you get the idea, what is God really after in
giving? A willing heart. It is not a legal law. It is a willing heart
that He's after.
Now, I take you to 36:5 to 7. Exodus 36:5,
"And they spoke unto Moses saying the people bring much more than
enough." Is that terrific? Too much Lord. "And Moses gave a commandment
and caused it to be proclaimed throughout the camp saying let neither
man nor woman make any more work for the offering of the sanctuary so
the people will restrain from bringing." I mean, when is it going to
happen that you arrive at church and they say listen folks, please do
not give any more money?
For the stuff they had was sufficient
for all the work to make it and too much. That's right in the
vernacular too. Too much. Listen when people...I've said this all my
life, when people believe in the ministry and when they believe what
you're doing exalts God, they will give too much, too much.
A
clear illustration people that the giving that is done with true
motivation goes beyond the need. Goes beyond the need. Listen
Deuteronomy 16 says, "Every man shall give as he is able, according to
the blessing of the of Lord which God has given Him." That's all it's a
free thing.
Now you see what I'm saying required giving was
always taxation. Freewill giving was always whatever came out of the
willing heart. But I'm telling you, boy, when people live in what
you're doing that willing heart opens up. Those people believe God
ought to have a tabernacle. They did. They believed that...that it
would honor God to have a tabernacle. So you know what they did, boy
they poured that money out of there. They gave everything they had. And
they saw that completed.
Just to show you that it wasn't an
isolated incident. 1 Chronicles 29, David wanted to build a temple. And
I mean this...talk about the tabernacle was kind of a crummy place, it
wasn't much. It was some nice decoration, but it was still skins and it
was a tent. But in Chronicles, David, you know, is thinking about
getting everything together for the building of this glorious temple
that Solomon's going to erect. In verse 9 of 1 Chronicles 29, "The
people rejoiced, for the offered willingly because with perfect heart
they offered willingly to the Lord." See there it is. There's the same
principal. And David the King rejoiced with great joy. And he blessed
the congregation.
They had a praise session there getting ready
to collect the offering. And verse 16 says, "Oh Lord our God, all this
abundance that we have prepared to build an house for thine holy name
cometh of thine hand and is all thine." He says, "Lord we have so much.
All this abundance has come in to build Your house." You know what kind
of house that was? Absolutely unbelievable. Everything overlayed in
gold. It was astounding what those people provided for the building of
that house.
People said to me oh do you think, you know, do you
think you're going to get the money to build a new building? I said one
of two reasons, if God's in it and if the people who love the Lord know
about it they'll give and probably will have too much. If they respond
as they ought in their hearts.
Love of tithing was taxation for
the theocracy. We don't live a theocracy, but government is still
ordained of God, is not? And our taxation today isn't far from what
they paid in those days. They were up around 25% and we're somewhere
from 20% up when you add all the sales taxes and all the other kind of
taxes that we pay. We're really not too far off what God originally
instituted as the basics of taxation.
That isn't giving. Don't
get stuck at the tenth. Don't limit yourself to legalistic giving. Be
free in the spirit of God to give super abundantly and sows bountifully
that you may what? Reap bountifully.
Well, next week, the New
Testament, let's pray. Father, thank you for giving us the freedom and
liberty to give as we are moved in our hearts to give. Help us to be
wise-hearted and willing hearted. Wise to invest with Thee with the
greatest investment there is. Willing to give all as the Macedonians
and then of our substance. May we see what they saw in the building of
the tabernacle. May we have to say that's too much, stop giving for a
while. Because it is more than we need. Father, we know this would give
You such glory. Thank you for the sweet fellowship we've shared this
morning hour. Thank you for the practical principles the Word of God
applies to our lives. We glorify our Lord Jesus Christ who makes our
fellowship possible and because of whose sacrifice for us we see the
quality of Your gift to us and give in response to that. We pray in His
blessed name. Amen.