Ideas from the Edge – Six
Most Quoted lies About Tithing? by Russell Kelly
Greetings
If you still think tithing is relevant for us today (or expected,
or a minimum, or a starting point, or something like this), here is something to
consider. It is from the
website of Russell Kelly, who did a PhD on the subject of tithing.
There are other great resources about tithing (critiquing the modern teaching of it) on his website, including his analysis of talks given by Paul de Jong (CLC Auckland), Brian Houston (Hillsong Sydney) & Geoff Woodward (Perth) - he has invited these preachers to respond to his analysis of their tithe-talks, but apparently none have responded.
If you already believe that tithing isn't relevant for us today, & shouldn't influence the way we give (& hopefully you are a generous & prayerful giver), then you can just press the delete button & have a cup of coffee & pray about who you can give to .... J
Happy reading
Blessings
David Allis
(1) TITHING WAS BEFORE THE LAW AND IS THEREFORE AN ETERNAL MORAL PRINCIPLE
A tradition is not automatically an eternal moral principle merely because it is
very old, very common and very widespread. The fact that tithing was common in
much pagan worship before the Bible was written does not make it a moral
principle. Idolatry, worship of astrological bodies, child sacrifice, temple
prostitution, witchcraft and necromancy are equally very old, very common and
very widespread in pagan cultures. The practice of giving is found in natural
law, but an exact percentage is not.
Abraham tithed before the Law. But that does not prove that tithing is an
eternal moral principle. If we followed Abraham's example (as we are told), (1)
we would only tithe spoils gathered from our enemies; (2) we would only tithe
once; (3) we would not tithe any of our own property and (4) we would give the
90% to the equivalent of the king of Sodom. See my book, chapter two and
my essay, Tithing is Not a Christian Doctrine, point four.
(2) TITHING IS THE BIBLICAL STANDARD, THE MINIMUM STARTING POINT AND/OR "IT'S
This lie is built on two false assumptions: (1) that everybody in the OT was
required to begin their level of giving at 10% and (2) that everybody in the OT
gave 10% of all increase as a tithe. First, only those Israelites who earned a
livelihood from farming and herding clean animals inside
(3) TITHES ARE THE SAME AS FIRSTFRUITS
The first-fruit was a very small amount of the first crop harvest and the
first-born was the first offspring of animals. The first-fruit was small enough
to fit into a hand-held basket (Deut. 26:1-4, 10; Lev. 23:17; Num. 18:13-17; 2
Chron 31:5a).
First-fruit and first-born offerings went directly to the
Teaching that the first tenth of ones increase must go to the church
organization is wrong. It is not taught to the Christian or the Church .
It violates the instruction found in 1st Timothy 5:8 that one acts like an
infidel if one does not care for family essentials first. And it robs the
poorest in society of food, medicine and necessary care.
(4) TITHES INCLUDE MONEY
One argument to support non-food tithing is that money was not universally
available and barter from food must have been used for most transactions.
This argument is not biblical. Genesis alone contains “money” in 32 texts
and the word occurs 44 times before the tithe is first mentioned in Leviticus
27. The word shekel also appears often from Genesis to Deuteronomy.
In fact many centuries before
According to Genesis 47:15-17 food was only used for barter after money had been
spent. Banking and usury laws exist in God’s Word in Leviticus even before
tithing. Therefore the argument that money was not prevalent enough for everyday
use is false. Yet the tithe contents never include money from non-food products
and trades.
(5) THE CHURCH IS THE STOREHOUSE AND THE TITHE MUST BE TAKEN THERE
This lie can be easily refuted from both the Bible and from early church
history. First, the OT
(6) THE FULL TITHE MUST GO TO THE PREACHER
This lie is a gross distortion of the OT doctrine of tithing under the Law.
First, the OT tithe went to the Levites who were both servants to the priests
and who also served as government employees. Second, the Levites only gave a
tenth of their tenth to the priests. Third, as tithe-recipients neither Levites
nor priests were allowed to own or inherit land inside
All of these points are discussed in detail both in my book, Should the
ChurchTeach Tithing, and in my essay, Tithing is Not a Christian
Doctrine.
Russell Earl Kelly, Ph. D.
......................................................................
Reply to Letter, March 4, 2008
The “10% is a good place to start” is the clarion call of my own Southern
Baptist background. They give that reply automatically without any thought
whatsoever.
It sounds good --- but it is not biblical.
It is based on the false assumption that every OT Hebrew was required to
BEGIN his giving at 10% of income ---which is not biblical.
The truth is that 16 of 16 verses which DESCRIBE the CONTENTS of the tithe
always only include food from the herds and farms from INSIDE
Is 10% a good starting place, a minimum starting place, training wheels for
giving (Randy Alcorn) or a minimum expectation (Southern Baptists)?
It sounds good --- but it is not from God’s Word. Why? The Mosaic Law
required a double portion to the firstborn male. That would make the land
portions too small and force most out of land ownership within 4-5 generations.
The displaced persons would work as day-laborers for their richer relatives (the
first-born lineage) or move into the cities and take up trades for a livelihood.
The day-laborers would not be required to tithe if the tithe had already been
paid by the landowner. And the craftsmen would not be required to tithe because
the increase came from their own hand rather from a miracle from God.
Use 10% as a guideline if you wish. It is better than nothing. But do not say
that it is taught in God’s Word. That is what I am saying.
In his book on Malachi the esteemed J.
My complaint it that many poor are giving sacrificially when they give less than
10% and they should not be made to feel like cursed and second-class church
members. Paul tells us in 1st
Timothy 5:8 that we are worse than the infidels if we do not take care of our
family’s essentials needs FIRST. And the poor who cannot give 10% do not hold
church offices even though they may have great spiritual gifts. That is contrary
to James, chapter two and 1 Corinthians 12.
Calling the tithe FIRSTFRUIT is also very wrong.
The tithe was the TENTH. The biblical “firstfruits” were extremely small
token offerings which must be eaten inside the
“Corban” was a method of taking that which rightfully belonged to the invalid
elderly parents and promising it to God. The same kind of “corban” is attached
to tithing when it is called “firstfruits.” In the CBS video my own wife was
told she would be cursed if she stopped tithing in order to buy medicine for her
sick husband. Howard Dayton basically said the same thing to a mother who was
drowning in debt; she must continue tithing.
I do not think that God gets the glory from that kind of false theology. Read
the blogs on the CBS site and see how many are out of the church because of that
kind of garbage doctrine.
In Christ’s love, Russ Kelly