Many years ago I was a member of a small
congregation in which a few other members decided that they were no longer
happy with the preacher. Rather than handle the situation biblically,
professionally, or lovingly, these disgruntled “Christians” just stopped giving
financially to the church. Soon there was not enough money to pay the poor
preacher.
This may not be new or unusual behavior among God’s people. While the physical survival of the Old Testament's “fulltime ministers” depended on how faithful the other Israelites were,* there were many periods in Israel’s history when the Levites (the priestly tribe) lived in a state of poverty.* And in Malachi, chapter three, the prophet had to remind the people to “bring the whole tithe into the storehouse.” He actually accuses them of robbing God!
We are not under any “legal” obligation to tithe today but there are scriptural principles that point to our duty as church members to provide financially for someone who can be available to “meet the pressing needs of the congregation.”* As ministry professionals, of course our ministers trust God to provide for their needs but as pew-level Christians, we are missing out on God’s blessings if we aren’t giving at least 10% of our income to the Lord’s work. - Blessing 1: Being obedient is its own reward.
- Blessing 2: Blessing others blesses you.
- Blessing 3: Living on the remaining 90% strengthens your faith in God’s provision.
Aaron
and his tribe of priests were assured that God would be their share and their
inheritance. As a priesthood of believers, Christians have double the
opportunities to benefit from the same promise God made to the Levites: the
blessing of his provision and the blessing of being the instrument of his provision.
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