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Tithing Your Taxes

By Jeremy Myers
15 Comments

Tithing Your Taxes

Tithing dollars

Moses is the only biblical author to write any commands about the tithe. Yes, that is right. There are no commands written by any other author in all of Scripture about giving a tenth of your income. However, some pastors argue that although Moses is the only biblical author to write commands about tithing, his instructions were not for a mere 10%, but were closer to 30% of a personโ€™s annual income.

The 30% Tithe?

The argument for this 30% tithe is based on several passages from the Books of Moses. The argument is that there was a tithe to support the Levites (Lev 27:30-33), a tithe to fund an annual festival (Deut 14:22-29), several smaller tithes to help the poor (Lev 19:9-10) and give rest to the land (Exod 23:10-11), and on top of all of this, there were numerous annual sacrifices of bulls and goats, which also cost money (Lev 1โ€“7). None of this counted the freewill offerings a person might make, but even without these offerings, it is estimated that a personโ€™s annual required โ€œdonationโ€ to the temple was around 30% of their annual income.

People who argue this, however, fail to recognize that when Moses wrote these laws, they were operating as a Theocracy, and the vast majority of these โ€œtithesโ€ were the modern equivalent of taxes. When the people brought in the required tithes of their crops and produce, it was so the rulers of the country could perform their God-given functions. And who were the rulers of the country in the Israelite theocracy? The Levitical priests!

Paying Tithes and Paying Taxes

So while it is true that the Israelites gave somewhere in the vicinity of 30% of their crops and herds to support the work of the Levites, this is not at all equivalent to tithing to support the church today. Instead, since their โ€œtitheโ€ was supporting their theocratic government, the modern equivalent is how we pay taxes to support the functions of our own government.

Tithing Tax Return

And when we realize that the average person today is paying the federal government around 25% of their income, and then paying another 10% (or more) for state, county, and city taxes, we are paying a little more in taxes today than what was prescribed by the Mosaic Law for the people of Israel to pay their government. To ask people to โ€œtitheโ€ and additional 10% to the church because โ€œthis is what the Law saysโ€ reveals a misunderstanding of the Mosaic Law, how this tithe was collected, and what this income was used for.

We will look in greater detail tomorrow at the instructions from Moses about the tithe. Be prepared to be surprised!

God is z Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Abraham Tithed. Should We?

By Jeremy Myers
57 Comments

Abraham Tithed. Should We?

One of the most famous passages in Scripture about tithing is Genesis 14:18-20.

Genesis 14:18-20

In this passage, Abrahamโ€™s nephew Lot has been taken captive by an invading army. Abraham gathers his trained men and pursues this army to rescue Lot. Abraham is successful, and returns from the battle with Lot, Lotโ€™s family, all the people who had also been taken captive, and all the goods and possessions which had been carried away. On their return trip, Melchizedek, the King of Salem, comes out to meet them and he blesses Abraham and blesses God. In response, Abraham gave to Melchizedek a tenth (or a tithe) of everything. And that is everything that this text says about tithing. One little line.

Abraham tithed to Melchizedek

Hebrews 7:1-10

This passage would probably not be so prominent in the tithing debate if it were not for the comments on this passage by the author of the book of Hebrews. In Hebrews 7, the author of Hebrews makes the claim that Jesus is superior to the Levitical Priesthood. He begins this argument in 7:1-10 with a rather complex discussion about who has the right to receive tithes, and that Melchizedek is superior to the Levitical priests because through โ€œthe loinsโ€ of Abraham, the Levites paid a tithe to Melchizedek. Frankly, the whole argument sounds somewhat silly to modern ears, but was quite consistent with Hebraic ways of thinking about their ancestors and helps solve the dilemma about how Jesus could be our High Priest even though He was not of the Tribe of Levi.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Hope for Hypocrites

By Jeremy Myers
21 Comments

Hope for Hypocrites

Hypocrite

I sure hope hypocrites can change.

Everyone knows what a hypocrite is. They are two-faced. They say one thing in public, but do the opposite in private. Or they say one thing to one group of people, and the opposite to others, just so they can be accepted by both. Jesus had numerous encounters with religious hypocrites in His day, and there is no shortage of hypocrites today either.

There is one hypocrite in particular who annoys me more than all others. I first encountered him on my blog about five years ago, and every so often, more recently of late, he comes back and spouts off some sort of pious nonsense, which sounds good on the electronic page, but which I know for a fact is nothing but pure hypocrisy.

So I sure hope hypocrites like this can change.

I want him to keep interacting on my blog, but if he keeps it up, I might have to ban him.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Blogging

The Tithing Tax

By Jeremy Myers
24 Comments

The Tithing Tax

Tithing a Tenth

Under the Client-Patron system of church finances, the church buildings and most of the clergy were funded by the national and local governments. For the most part, this was the only way that churches and clergy receivedย fundingย for the first 800 years of the church.

The Tithing Tax

But in the ninth century, as the expense of financing all these churches and clergy became enormous, some local governments began to excise additional taxes on the people, which went to help cover the costs of maintaining the church buildings and clergy.

The Mosaic Law about the tithe was used to justify this additional tax. The explanation given to the people by the church and government authorities was that God instituted a ten percent tax on the people of Israel to support the Levitical Priesthood and the construction of the tabernacle and temple. This is not exactly true (as we will see below), but it is the explanation that was given when the government added a 10% tax on people to cover the costs of local church buildings and clergy.

The Parish System

However, this practice was not widespread until the late eighth century AD, when Emperor Charlemagne developed the parish system for the church. He wanted to control what the churches were teaching, and who the bishops and priests were in a particular church. So with the help of various church leaders, he developed the parish system, and exponentially increased the number of archbishops to oversee these various parishes. They were given the task, in coordination with the local political rulers, of hiring and paying clergy to oversee all the people in a particular parish.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Client-Patron Churches and Clergy

By Jeremy Myers
9 Comments

Client-Patron Churches and Clergy

Tithing

As we saw yesterday, in the era of the New Testament, there were two main ways of gaining financial support for the work of the ministry. You either worked a job to pay your own expenses, or you found a rich Patron who would you on as a client and pay for your expenses.

The Early Church Fathers

Outside of the New Testament, we see these two methods referenced over and over in the writings of the early church fathers. Some worked with their hands and supported themselves. Others sought out a Patron to provide for their needs and give them the food and clothes they needed so they could teach, travel, study, and write. Typically, the first few lines of a book indicate whether an early church father was a client or not, as those who have Patrons usually always dedicate their book or pamphlet to their Patron. For example, the patron of St. Jerome was Pope Damasus, and Jerome makes frequent references to works that had been commissioned to him by Damasus, and that once written, they would be dedicated to Damasus.

The Client-Patron Pope

The fact that the Pope was a Patron raises an interesting point. At this point in church history, the spiritual leader in the church of Rome was also a Client. He was a Client of the Roman Empire. When Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and made it the official religion of the Roman Empire, the church was unified with the Roman Empire, and was viewed as a Client to the Empire. The Empire turned over all the pagan temples and most of the pagan priests to the Church, and paid for them all out of the Empires vast tax and war revenue.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Money for Ministry

By Jeremy Myers
20 Comments

Money for Ministry

Tithing

Did you know that practice of tithing, as it is taught today in many churches, is only about 300 years old? It did not exist in the days of Jesus. It was not taught or practiced in the churches planted by Paul. Even where we do read in Scripture about tithing (a few places in the Old Testament, and fewer still in the New), the practice then was not at all what we are encouraged to practice today: giving 10% of your income to the church.

Later this week we will look at some of the Scripture passages used to defend the practice of tithing, but first I want to discuss the history of tithing.

We begin with looking at how things worked for most of the first millennium.

Two Ways of Getting Money

Roughly the first 1000 years of the church operated under the Client-Patron system. Under this system, wealthy patrons would offer to protect, sponsor, and provide for the needs of scholars, philosophers, doctors, in exchange for their full-time service. Patrons also would provide for peasants and farmers in similar ways, but with different sets of requirements.

So if one wanted to be a philosopher, doctor, or religious teacher, you had two choices. You either had to pay your own way by having a job, or you had to find a Patron who would take you on as a client, and pay your way for you.

Examples from Scripture

We see examples of both in Scripture. Jesus was trained as a carpenter, but He did not support His ministry through carpentry. Instead, it appears that He had a small network of patrons who supported His work and ministry. Luke 8:3 indicates that Jesus had several followers who provided for Jesus out of their wealth. In others words, Jesus was their client. They believed in what He was doing, and so they supported Him so He could do it full time.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Hope for January

By Jeremy Myers
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Hope for January

It is time for the monthly Synchroblog! For those of you who are new to blogging or are trying to grow your blogging audience, synchroblogging is one of the greatest ways to get your blog going. It introduces your blog to lots of other people, and it gives you backlinks from the blogs of others, which helps your site rank better with Google and Bing. I have been doing Synchroblogs for a year now, and see significant traffic results every month.

You don’t want to miss this month’s synchroblog, as it is being hosted by Provoketive Magazine.

Provoketive Magazine

The topic isย Hope.ย  January is often a space to create new dreams and so weโ€™re leaving the topic open and to your imagination. We believe the power of voice has tremendous capacity to inspire and give hope to people. Provoketive is a space to explore what it means to be human and hope is an integral part of that experience.

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God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Blogging

Help Write a Book about Church

By Jeremy Myers
18 Comments

Help Write a Book about Church

Note: This book has already been published. You can find it here: Finding Church

I am working with a publisher to write a book about people and their experiences with church. If you have a story to tell, and would like to get your story into print, you are invited to participate.

The rest of the post contains more information, but here are the submission guidelines if you just want to start writing:

Finding Church Project Submission Guidelines (MS Word)

Finding Church

The working title of the book is Finding Church.ย 

Finding Church

The project is currently broken up into four categories. These categories may change as the project develops. We encourage you to shape your submission to fit within one of these categories.

Leaving Church
Stories about personal life adjustments, theological changes, or church moral failures which led people to leave church for good.

Returning to Church
Stories about people who used to attend church years ago, but stopped for a while, and have now decided to start attending again. These stories explain why they left, and what caused them to return.

Reforming Church
Though many people are leaving the church and criticizing how church is done, some people want to stay within their church and be part of the solution. These stories relate what problems exist in the church, and how the person is seeking to reform and renew the church from within.

Changing Church
Many people leave one church to attend another. Sometimes they attend a similar church across town; other times the new church is a completely different denomination, or form of church, such as going from a mega-church to a house-church. These stories reveal what moves the person made, and why they changed churches.

[Read more…]

God is Redeeming Books Bible & Theology Topics: Finding Church

An Expensive god

By Jeremy Myers
12 Comments

An Expensive god

Yesterday I wrote about the beautiful church building I discovered in the midst of a slum in Bangalore. The church was doing lots of good in the slum, but I also discovered that many of the poverty stricken people of the slum tithed sacrificially to the church.

I remember wondering if this was what God wanted.

Lavish Buildings in Low Income Areas

In more recent years, I have discovered that having a lavish church building in the midst of poverty is not an isolated incident. It is not uncommon to go into some of the poorest and most destitute communities around the world, where many of the people live in cardboard and tarpaper shacks and have barely enough food to live on, and in the middle of this community, find a large, grandly constructed church building with towering steeples, intricate stained glass, beautiful woodwork, and gorgeous hand-painted murals.

Church in Manila Slum
A slum in Manila. What does this church building tell the people of this slum about God?

In 2001 I went with a missionโ€™s trip to Kino, Mexico, a poor fishing village on the eastern shore of the Gulf of California. Many of the families of this village live in tarpaper shacks and slept on a dirt floor. Yet right in the middle of town was a large, brick church building, complete with stained glass and steeples. I donโ€™t know the story of how it was built, or where the money come from, or who was hired to construct it, or anything about the building, but I still remember thinking that the people of the community might have been better served if that church building never existed.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

Pass on the Offering Plate

By Jeremy Myers
1 Comment

Pass on the Offering Plate

Offering Plate

Chapter 12 in my book,ย Close Your Church for Good, is called โ€œPass on the Offering Plate.โ€

In this chapter, we look at some of the issue of tithes and offerings in the church, and whether the practice is truly biblical or not, and what alternative ways there might be for churches to obtain funding for their various ministries.

Please note that due to some of the feedback I receive on these posts, this chapter might be radically revised for the final edition of the book. These changes will only be available in the print or eBook version when it comes out.

[Read more…]

God is Uncategorized Bible & Theology Topics: Close Your Church for Good, Discipleship

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