Tithing is Not a Christian Doctrine
An Essay by Russell Earl Kelly, PH.
D., March 05, 2006
www.shouldthechurchteachtithing.com
Introduction:
The
following essay is a summary of my book, Should
the Church Teach Tithing? A Theologian’s Conclusions about a Taboo Doctrine.
The book itself is a greatly expanded version of my PH. D. thesis. I challenge
Bible educators to be bold, to open up their seminary level research and to
promote studies on this subject in the Masters, Doctorate and PH. D. levels.
This doctrine is simply too important to ignore.
In many
churches today the doctrine of tithing has reached the level of a modern
scandal. While on the one hand, most seminary-level textbooks on hermeneutics
and church theologians omit tithing, on the other hand, the practice is quickly
becoming a requirement for church
Modern
Tithing is Based on Many False Assumptions
One
denomination’s statement on stewardship is typical of what many others teach
about tithing. It says that "tithing is the minimum biblical standard
and the beginning point which God has established that must not be replaced
or compromised by any other standard." It adds that the tithe is from
gross income which is due to the church before taxes. The following points of
this essay contrast the false teachings used to support tithing with what God’s
Word actually says.
Point
#1 N. T. Giving Principles in Second Corinthians 8 and 9 Are
The false
teaching is that tithing is an assumed mandatory expectation which always
preceded free-will giving.
Free-will
giving preceded tithing. The following New Covenant free-will principles are
found in Second Corinthians, chapters 8 and 9: (1) Giving is a "grace.”
Second Corinthians, chapters 8, uses the word, "grace," eight times
in reference to helping poor saints. (2) Give yourself to God first (8:5). (3) Give yourself to knowing God’s will (8:5). (4) Give in
response to Christ’s gift (8:9; 9:15). (5) Give out of a sincere desire (8:8, 10,
12; 9:7). (6) Do not give because of any commandment to give (8:8, 10; 9:7).
(7) Give even beyond your ability (8:3, 11, 12). (8) Give to produce equality.
This means that those who have more should give more in order to make up for
the inability of those who cannot afford to give as much (8:12-14). (9) Give
joyfully (8:2). (10) Give because you are growing spiritually (8:3, 4, 7). (11) Give because you want to continue growing
spiritually (9:8, 10, 11). (12) Give because you are
hearing the gospel preached (9:13).
Point #2 In
God’s Word, the Tithe is Always Only Food!
The false
teaching is that biblical tithes include ALL sources of income.
Do not use Webster’s Dictionary! Use God’s Word to
define “tithe.” Open a complete Bible concordance. You will discover that
the definition used by tithe-advocates is wrong. In God’s Word “tithe”
does not stand alone. Although money existed, the substance of God's
"tithe" was never money. It was the “tithe of food.” This is very
important. **True biblical tithes were always only food from the farms
and herds of only Israelites who only lived inside God’s Holy
Land, the national boundary of Israel.** The increase was from God's hand
and not man's craft or ability. There
are 15 verses from 11 chapters and 8 books from Leviticus 27 to Luke 11 which
describe the contents of the tithe. And the contents never (I repeat), never included
money, silver, gold or anything other than food! Yet the incorrect definition
of "tithe" is the greatest lie being preached about tithing today!
(See Lev. 27:30, 32; Numb. 18:27, 28; Deut. 12:17; 14:22, 23; 26 12; 2 Chron. 31:5, 6; Neh. 10:37; 13:5;
Mal. 3:10; Matt. 23:23; Luke 11: 42).
Point #3
Abraham’s Tithe to Melchizedek Reflected Pagan Tradition.
The false
teaching is that Abraham freely gave tithes because it was God’s will.
However, for
the following reasons, Genesis 14:20 cannot be used as an example for
Christians to tithe. (1) The Bible does not say that Abraham "freely"
gave this tithe. (2) Abraham’s tithe was NOT a holy tithe from God’s holy land
produced by God’s holy people. (3) Abraham’s tithe was only from spoils of war
common to many nations. (4) In Numbers 31, God only required 1% of spoils of
war. (5) Abraham’s tithe to Melchizedek was a one-time recorded event and Abraham
moved often. (6) Abraham’s tithe was not from his own personal property. (7)
Abraham kept nothing for himself; he gave everything back. (8) Abraham’s tithe
is not quoted anywhere in the Bible to endorse tithing. (9) Genesis 14, verse
21, is the key text. Since most commentaries explain verse 21 as an example of
pagan Arab tradition, it is contradictory to explain the 90% of verse 21 as
pagan, while insisting that the 10% of verse 20 was God’s will. (10) If Abraham
is an example for Christians to give 10% to God, then he should also be an
example for Christians to give the other 90% to Satan, or to the king of
Point #4
First-Tithes Were Received by Servants to the Priests.
The false
teaching is that Old Testament priests received all of the
first tithe.
The truth is
that the "whole" tithe, the first tithe, did not go to the priests at
all. Instead, according to Numbers 18:21-24 and Nehemiah 10:37, it went to the servants
of the priests, the Levites. Next, according to Numbers 18:25-28 and Nehemiah
10:38, the Levites gave the best “tenth of this tithe” (1%) which they received
to the priests who ministered the sin sacrifices and served inside the holy
places. Priests personally did not tithe at all.
It is also
important to know that, in exchange for receiving these tithes, both Levites
and priests forfeited all rights to permanent land inheritance inside Israel
(Numb. 18:20-26; Deut. 12:12; 14:27, 29; 18:1, 2; Josh. 13:14, 33; 14:3; 18:7;
Ezek. 44:28). The Levites, who received the first tithe, were prohibited from
ministering blood sacrifices under penalty of death (Numb. 18:3). There is no
continuation in the New Covenant of this ordinance.
Point #5 The
Phrase, "It is Holy to the LORD," Does Not Make Tithing an Eternal
Moral Principle.
The false
teaching is that Leviticus 27:30-32 proves that the tithe is an "eternal
moral principle" because "it is holy to the LORD."
However,
tithe-teachers must ignore the stronger phrase, "it is MOST holy to the
LORD," in the immediate preceding verses 28 and 29. This is because verses
28 and 29 are definitely not eternal moral principles in the church. In its
context, the phrases "it is holy to the LORD" and "it is MOST
holy to the LORD" cannot possibly be interpreted as "eternal moral
principles." Why? Almost every other use of these phrases in Leviticus has
long ago been discarded by Christians. Similar phrases are also used to
describe all of the festivals, the sacrificial offerings, the clean/unclean
food distinctions, the old covenant priests and the old covenant sanctuary.
Point #6
There are Four Different Tithes Found in the Bible.
The false
teaching ignores all other tithes and focuses on part of the first religious
tithe.
In reality,
the first religious tithe, called the "Levitical
tithe," had two parts. Again, the whole first tithe was given to the
Levites who were only servants to the priests (Numb. 18:21-24; Neh. 10:37). The Levites, in turn, gave one tenth of the
whole tithe to the priests (Numb. 18:25-28; Neh.
10:38). According to Deuteronomy 12 and 14, the second religious tithe, called
the "feast tithe," was eaten by worshipers in the streets of
Another
common error is to equate the tithe with the “first-fruit” or even the “best.”
While the “tithe of the tithe” (1%) which was given to the priests was the
“best” of what the Levites received, the tithe which the Levites received was
only “one tenth” not necessarily the “best” (Lev. 27:32, 33). Also, while the
first-fruit and firstborn of every clean animal was brought directly to the
temple, the tithe was brought directly to the Levitical
cities (Neh. 10:35-38). According to some historians,
the first-fruit was an extremely small offering. Often an entire village’s
first-fruit could be carried by one animal.
Point #7
Jesus, Peter, Paul and the Poor Did Not Tithe!
The false
teaching is that everybody in the Old Testament was required to begin their
giving to God at the ten per cent level.
In reality,
the poor were not required to tithe at all! Neither did the tithe come from the
results of man’s craft, hands and skill. Only farmers and herdsmen possessed
what was defined as tithe increase. Jesus was a carpenter; Paul was a tentmaker
and Peter was a fisherman. None of these occupations qualified as tithe-payers
because they did not farm or herd animals for a living. It is, therefore,
incorrect to teach that everybody paid a required minimum of a tithe
and, therefore, that New Covenant Christians should be required to at least
begin at the same minimum as Old Covenant Israelites. This common false
assumption is very often repeated and completely ignores the very plain
definition of tithe as food from farm increase or herd increase.
It is also
wrong to teach that the poor in
Point #8
Tithes Were Often Used as Political Taxes.
The false
teaching is that tithes are never comparable to taxes or taxation.
However, in
the Hebrew economy, the tithe was used in a totally different manner than it is
preached today. Once again, those Levites who received the whole tithe were not
even ministers or priests -- they were only servants to the priests. Numbers
chapter 3 describes the Levites as carpenters, metal workers, leather-craftsmen
and artists who maintained the small sanctuary. And, according to First
Chronicles, chapters 23-27, during the time of King David and King Solomon the
Levites were still skilled craftsmen who inspected and approved all work in the
It is
important to know that Old Covenant tithes were never used for evangelism of
non-Israelites. Tithing failed! See Hebrews 7:12-19. Tithes never stimulated
Old Covenant Levites or priests to establish a single mission outreach or
encourage a single Gentile to become an Israelite (Ex. 23:32; 34:12, 15; Deut.
7:2). Old Covenant tithing was motivated and mandated by Law, not love. In
fact, during most of
Point #9 Levitical Tithes Were Normally Taken to the Levitical Cities.
False
teachers want us to think that all tithes were formerly taken to the
The “whole”
tithe NEVER went to the
Point #10
Malachi 3 is the Most Abused Tithing Text in the Bible.
The false
teaching about tithes from Malachi 3 ignores five important Bible facts.
(1) Malachi
is Old Covenant context and is never quoted in the New Covenant for the church
(Lev. 27:34; Neh. 10:28, 29; Mal. 3:7; 4:4).
(2) In 1:6;
2:1 and 3:1-5, Malachi is very clearly addressed to dishonest priests who are
cursed because they have stolen the best offerings from God.
(3) The Levitical cities must be considered and
(4) In
Malachi 3:10-11 tithes are still only food (Lev. 27:30-33).
(5) The 24
courses of Levites and priests must also be considered. Beginning with King
David and King Solomon, they were divided into 24 families. These divisions
were also put into place in Malachi’s time by Ezra and Nehemiah. Since normally
only one family served in the Temple for only one week at a time, there was
absolutely no reason to send ALL of the tithe to the Temple when 98% of those
it was designed to feed were still in the Levitical
cities (1 Chron. 24-26; 28:13, 21; 2 Chron. 8:14; 23:8; 31:2, 15-19; 35:4, 5, 10; Ezra
6:18; Neh. 11:19, 30; 12:24; 13:9, 10; Luke 1:5).
Therefore,
when the context of the Levitical cities, the 24
families of priests, under-age children, wives, Numbers 18:20-28, Second
Chronicles 31:15-19, Nehemiah 10-13, and all of Malachi are all evaluated, only
about 2% of the total first tithe was normally required at the Temple in
Jerusalem.
Both the
blessing and the curse of Malachi 3:9-11 only lasted until the Old Covenant
ended at
Today the
very lowest income class pays the largest percentage to charity. Yet most
remain in poverty. Neither the lottery, nor the tithe is a magic get-rich-quick
answer to replace education, determination and hard work. If Malachi 3:10
really worked for New Covenant Christians, then millions of poor tithing
Christians would have escaped poverty and would have become the wealthiest
group of people in the world instead of remaining the poorest group. Therefore
there is no evidence that the vast majority of poor “tithe-payers” are ever
blessed financially merely because they tithe. The Old Covenant blessings are
no longer in effect (Heb. 7:18, 19; 8:6-8, 13).
Point #11
Tithing is not Taught in the New Testament.
The false
teaching is that Jesus taught tithing in Matthew 23:23 which, they say, is
clearly in the New Testament.
The New
Covenant did not begin at the birth of Jesus, but at his death (Gal. 3:19, 24,
25; 4:4). Tithing is not taught to the church after
There is not
a single New Testament Bible text which teaches tithing after
Point #12
Old Covenant Priests Were Replaced by Believer-Priests.
The false
teaching is that New Covenant elders and pastors are simply continuing where
the Old Covenant priests left off and are due the tithe.
Compare
Exodus 19:5, 6 with First Peter 2: 9, 10. Before the incident of the golden
calves, God had intended for every Israelite to become a priest and tithing
would have never been enacted. Priests did not tithe but received one tenth of
the first tithe (Numb. 18:26-28; Neh. 10:37, 38).
The function
and purpose of Old Covenant priests were replaced, not by elders and pastors,
but by the priesthood of every believer. Like other ordinances of the Law,
tithing was only a temporary shadow until Christ (Eph. 2:14-16; Col. 2:13-17;
Heb. 10:1). In the New Covenant every believer is a priest to God (1 Pet. 2:9,
10; Rev. 1:6; 5:10). And, as a priest, every believer offers sacrifices to God
(Heb. 4:16; 10:19-22; 13:15, 16). Therefore, every ordinance which had
previously applied to the old priesthood was blotted out at
Point #13
The
The false
teaching is that Christian buildings called "churches,"
"tabernacles" or "temples" replaced the OT
God’s Word
never describes New Covenant churches as
"tabernacles," "temples" or "buildings"
in which God dwells! God’s church, God’s dwelling place, is within the
believers. Believers do not "go to church" -- believers “assemble to
worship.” Also, since OT priests did not pay tithes, then tithing cannot
logically continue. Therefore it is wrong to call a building "God’s
storehouse" for tithes. (1 Cor. 3:16, 17; 6:19,
20; Eph. 1:22, 23; 2:21; 4:12-16; Rev. 3:12). For "storehouse"
compare First Corinthians 16:2 with Second Corinthians 12:14 and Acts 20:17,
32-35. For several centuries after
Point #14 The Church Grows By Using Better New Covenant Principles.
The false
teaching implies that principles of grace giving are not as good as Old
Covenant principles of giving.
Under the New Covenant: (1)
According to Galatians 5:16-23, there is no physical law which controls the
fruits of the Holy Spirit. (2) Second Corinthians 3:10 says that the Old
Covenant has "no glory" when compared to the "surpassing"
glory and liberty of the Holy Spirit. (3) Hebrews 7 is the only post-Calvary
mention of tithing and it is an explanation of why the Levitical
priesthood must be replaced by Christ’s priesthood because it was weak and
unprofitable. Study Hebrews 7 and follow the progression from verse 5 to verse
12 to verse 19. (4) The manner in which tithing is taught today reflects a
failure of the church to believe and act on the far better principles of love,
grace and faith. Mandatory giving principles cannot, has not and will not
prosper the church more than principles guided by love for Christ and lost
souls (2 Cor. 8:7, 8).
Point #15
The Apostle Paul Preferred That Church Leaders Be Self-Supporting.
The false
teaching is that Paul taught and practiced tithing.
Yet, nothing
could be farther from the truth. As a Jewish rabbi, Paul was among those who
insisted on working to support himself (Acts 18:3; 1 Thess.
2:9, 10; 2 Thess. 3:8-14). While Paul does not
condemn those who are able to receive full-time support, neither does he teach
that full-time support is the mandatory will of God for advancing the
gospel (1 Cor. 9:12). In fact, twice, in Acts 20:29-35
and also in Second Corinthians 12:14, Paul actually encouraged church elders to
work to support needy believers inside the church.
For Paul,
"living of the gospel" meant "living by gospel principles of
faith, love and grace" (1 Cor. 9:14). While Paul
realized that he had a "right" to some support, he concluded that his
"liberty," or freedom to preach unhindered was more important in
order to fulfill his calling from God (1 Cor. 9:15;
11:7-13; 12:13, 14;1 Thess. 2:5, 6). While working as
a tent-maker, Paul accepted limited support but boasted that his pay, or
salary, was that he could preach the gospel for free, without being a burden to
others (1 Cor. 9:16-19).
Point #16
Tithing Did Not Become a Law in the Church Until A. D. 777.
The false
teaching is that the historical church has always taught tithing.
Even in Acts
21:20-26, decades after Calvary, the early Jewish-Christians in
While
disagreeing with their own theologians, most church historians write that
tithing did not become an accepted doctrine in the church for over 700 years
after
In fact, the
early church leaders practiced asceticism. This meant that being poor was the
best way to serve God. They patterned their worship after that of the Jewish
synagogues which had rabbis who were self-supporting and usually refused to
receive money for teaching God’s Word. See Schaff, History of the Christian Church, Vol.
II, 63, 128, 198-200; 428-434.
According to
the very best historians and encyclopedias, it took over 500 years before the
local church Council of Macon, in the year 585, tried unsuccessfully to enforce
tithing on its
Conclusion:
In God’s Word, “tithe” does not stand alone. It is the “tithe of
FOOD.” The biblical tithe was very narrowly defined and limited by God Himself.
True biblical tithes were always: (1) only food, (2)
only from the farms and herds, (3) of only Israelites, (4) who only lived
inside God’s Holy Land, the national boundary of
Therefore, (1) non-food items could not
be tithed; (2) clean wild game animals and fish could not be tithed; (3)
non-Israelites could not tithe; (4) food from outside God’s holy land of Israel
did not enter the Temple; (5) legitimate tithing did not occur when there was
no Levitical priesthood; and (5) tithes did not come
from what man’s hands created, produced or caught by hunting and fishing.
I invite
church leaders into an open discussion of this subject. The careful and
prayerful study of God’s Word are essential for church
growth. May God bless you.
(This article may be duplicated without permission.)
Free
Good News web site; BERNIE DEHLER http://freegoodnews.com/
No More Tithing book web site by
George W. Greene http://www.nomoretithing.org/
Subtle
Deception, book web site; LARRY VANYI http://gospelmythbuster.com/
Tithe-Debate.info
(UK, ENGLAND)
http://tithe-debate.info/
Tithing-Study Yahoo Groups; I AM IN THIS DISCUSSION GROUP, http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Tithing-Study/
Truth
for Free.com web site; DAVID YEUBANKS http://prayershack.freeservers.com/