[Opening Video Clip: The Skit Guys – “The
Skinny on Tithing”]
I didn’t know there were so many
perspectives on tithing and giving to the church! We’re going to focus on this very important
topic and how it relates to living transformed lives.
In
keeping with our water image, the title of the message today is “Pennies in the
Fountain.” When you throw pennies into a
fountain, you release them and give them away. And that’s really what we are doing when we
offer our gifts to God and the church.
We release them and give them away.
Think about how God is a generous
giver. Listen to Psalm 103:
Praise the Lord,
I tell myself,
and never forget the good things he does
for me.
He forgives all my sins
and heals all my diseases.
He ransoms me from death
and surrounds me with love and tender
mercies.
He fills my life with good things. (vv.2–5)
Our whole
concept of giving corresponds to how God has given to us. Paul wrote to the
church at Corinth, “Thank God for his Son—a gift too wonderful for words!” (2
Cor. 9:15).
Giving
is an integral part of the Christian faith because God is so very generous to
us. But it also carries with it an implication
that we are to share these blessings with others. God doesn’t give to us so that we can keep
these gifts to ourselves. God gives to
us so that we can experience the joy of giving.
Jesus
commanded: “Give as freely as you have received!” (Matt. 10:8). In Paul’s
second letter to the church at Corinth, we read: “God will generously provide
all you need. Then you will always have everything you need and plenty left
over to share with others.” (2 Cor. 9:8).
Part
of the essential nature of our growth in the Christian faith — and part of
receiving all that God wants to give us as we move on toward perfection — is
understanding that giving in freedom is a crucial aspect of our Christian
life. God is very generous to us, and
God expects us to pass it on.
Since
giving can be a very touchy and personal issue for many of us, let’s focus on
the question: why should we give? For
today, I’d like to offer three reasons from an exhaustive list of reasons
provided in the Bible on why giving is one of the essential ways that we
experience transformation in our lives.
Number
one, giving reminds us that God has given us everything we have. The idea of stewardship is that we don’t own
or earn anything. Instead, God gives to
us and we are called to be good stewards of what we have received. Deuteronomy, chapter 6, contains this warning:
“When you have eaten your fill in this
land, be careful not to forget the Lord”
(vv. 11–12). Then in Deuteronomy,
chapter 8: “You may say to yourself, ‘My
power and the strength of my hands have produced this wealth for me.’ But
remember the Lord your God, for it
is he who gives you the ability to produce wealth . . . ” (v. 17). May we
never begin to think, “Look what I have
accomplished,” but rather remember it is God who has given us all food,
land, property, wealth, prosperity, and more.
1 Chronicles 29:1 says,
“But who am
I, and who are my people, that we could give anything to you? Everything that
we have has come from you, and we give you only what you have given us!”
The key
understanding of stewardship is that we give because God has given us
everything.
A
second reason for giving is that it reveals where our priorities lie. The Bible
says we are to seek God’s kingdom first. How do we know that God is first in
our lives? By giving. This shows that God has first place in our priorities.
Deuteronomy 14:23
spells it out for us: “The purpose of
tithing is to teach you always to fear the Lord
your God.” Jesus also made it clear when he explained one of the bedrock
principles of life found in Matthew 6:21 “Wherever
your treasure is, there your heart and your thoughts will also be.”
A
great way to see who or what is first in your life, is to review your check
book from last month. Where we spend our money, time, and energy indicates what
is really first in our lives, what we really worship. “Wherever your treasure is, there your heart and thoughts will also
be.” My desire for all of us as people of God is that we demonstrate how
God is our top priority by tithing and giving. That’s what really demonstrates
that we put God first.
There’s
a powerful third reason for giving: It allows God an opportunity to show that
God is real. Malachi 3:10 offers these words:
“Bring all the tithes into the storehouse so
that there will be enough food in my Temple. If you do,” says the Lord Almighty, “I will open the windows of heaven for you. I will pour out a blessing
so great you won’t have enough room to take it in! Try it! Let me prove it to
you!”
As
we give generously, we are able to see just how real God is. Positive things happen in our lives and in
our church when we offer to God our very best.
Let’s look at
another question: How much should I give? This is a question that every person
has to answer individually, and it’s the church’s responsibility to help people
find the answer through a biblical point of view.
With
that said, the biblical standard for giving is the tithe, which is 10
percent. A tithe literally means 10 percent. Leviticus 27:30 states: “A tenth of the produce of the land, whether grain or fruit, belongs to
the Lord and must be set apart for
him as holy.” Multiple passages throughout the Old Testament are
confirmed by Jesus in the New Testament, as seen in Luke 11, which states that
we should tithe. The first 10 percent is to be returned to God. Remember it’s
about stewardship. I’m not giving what I have, because it’s all God’s anyway.
Tithing is a
means of recognizing that God has given me everything and is the top priority
in my life, and that I’m going to follow this biblical principle of giving.
For
some of us, it might be difficult to imagine tithing or even getting close to
tithing. Well, a pastor shares the story
of a single mom who was in that situation. She hadn’t grown up with tithing or
even with giving sacrificially. Her parents had given a token offering to the
church each week, and that was it. Well, she heard a sermon on tithing. She
felt God was telling her to tithe. So even though she had very little left over
after paying her expenses each month, she began to tithe. Regardless of what
other bills she had or other things she might want to do with her money, she
wrote that check each week.
After a few
months, however, she noticed something strange. Even though her income hadn’t
increased and she hadn’t reduced any of her expenses, she always had money in
her checking account. Whereas before, sometimes things were so close that she’d
bounce checks, now there was always enough. She said she didn’t know if God had
supernaturally changed her spending habits so she wasn’t spending as much as
before or if God was supernaturally depositing money into her checking account,
but things had changed for her.
I can tell
you that one of the most freeing and liberating things that’s happened in the
lives of so many people is when they came to the point that they said “God, I want you to be first place in
everything that I do.” A good place to start is with finances. Now
don’t just take my word for it, or even do it just because the Bible says so. I
suggest you find people who tithe and ask them about God’s faithfulness. I
guarantee that they will enthusiastically tell you about the freedom and the joys
they’ve personally experienced because they tithe.
One of the
keys in experiencing a transformed life is through our giving. And it’s through
tithing, that we are reminded that God has given us everything that we have, it
shows that God has first place in our lives, and God becomes more real in our
lives.
As
a pastor, I think one of the things that shuts most people down from experiencing
true transformation is that we want to do a lot of things, but we’re not
willing to let go of our money. Where we put our money indicates where our
values and our priorities really are.
Tithing to
God and the church leads to transformation. This is just a short story, but it’s a typical
one. A teenager felt led to make a $110 gift to one of the church’s ministries.
He had saved that same amount for an MP3 player. But instead he wrote a check
for $110 to the ministry, and thought he’d go without the MP3 player.
Well, at the end
of the month, he took the time to balance his checkbook and he discovered that
he had made a mistake. Somewhere along the line, he’d subtracted wrong, and
there was exactly $110 more in his checking account than he’d thought. Now, I
don’t know how to explain that exactly but I do know that it just goes to show
how God is faithful.
Now,
the last question: how should we give? We talked about why we should give and
how much we should give. But let’s think
about how we should give. The Bible
speaks very clearly about the connection between our attitudes and our giving.
Here are three things about how our attitude is connected with our giving.
First
thing is…we should give willingly. We’re not to do it because the church is
going to make us feel guilty. We’re not to do it because we want to impress
somebody. We’re to do it willingly. Joyfully. The Bible says, “You must each make up your own mind as to
how much you should give. Don’t give reluctantly or in response to pressure.
For God loves the person who gives cheerfully” (2 Cor. 9:7).
Secondly,
we should give sacrificially. It’s not just enough that I want to do it
willingly, but I do it sacrificially. I’m reminded of a C. S. Lewis quote. He was quoted as saying “The only safe rule is to give more than we can spare.” Consider
the beautiful story in Luke about sacrificial giving:
Jesus went
over to the collection box in the Temple and sat and watched as the crowds
dropped in their money. Many rich people put in large amounts. Then a poor
widow came and dropped in two pennies. He called his disciples to him and said,
“I assure you, this poor widow has given
more than all the others have given. For all of them have contributed out of
their abundance, but she out of her poverty has put in all she had to live on.”
Now I expect
the disciples looked at him in amazement. They probably said something like, “You don’t really understand much about
economics, do you? She didn’t give the most; she gave the least.” Then
Jesus would’ve explained, “You might
understand economics, but you don’t understand people. This woman gave all that
she had. Others just gave a token out of their surplus.”
Second
Corinthians 8:3 says, “For I can testify
that they gave not only what they could afford but far more. And they did it of
their own free will.” When we give more than we think we can afford, and we
do it of our own free will, we open ourselves to all that God wants to do in
and through us, blessing us both as individuals and as a church.
So,
in what spirit should we give? We should give willingly and sacrificially. We
should also give expectantly.
In Luke
chapter 6 we are told, that if you give, you will receive. Your gift will
return to you in full measure, pressed down, shaken together to make room for
more, and running over. Whatever measure you use in giving—large or small—it
will be used to measure what is given back to you.
Now that’s a
powerful concept.
Like prayer and worship, giving is how
God waters and refreshes our souls.
It’s how we
experience transformed living.
*This sermon
is based on the resource, Treasures of the Transformed Life, Abingdon Press, 2006.
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