Hi, Melody.
This is weird. I posted a reply to your post an hour or so ago and it's gone! I hate having to type in everything all over again, but I guess that's what I'm going to have to do.
Melody said:
No, that is Mosaic Law. Christians are bound by the law of Christ who was the fulfillment of the law. However, that does not mean you can go out and commit adultery, etc. because there are admonitions against these in the NT.
TIthing was a law prior to the time of Moses. Therefore it is not part of the Mosaic Law.
of no verses where Jesus said we are to pay tithes and there is no record in the NT of Jesus or the apostles paying a tithe.
But I already mentioned Matthew 23:23, in which Jesus called the Pharisees "heretics" because they only paid tithes and disregarded the more important aspects of the law. He then said that both were important.
Where else does it occur? Abraham never tithed unless my bible is missing a few pages and he, of all people, should have tithed if this was what God wanted.
Actually, I suspect all of our
Bibles are missing considerably more than just a few pages! I certainly don't think that everything Abraham, Moses, Noah or even Jesus did ended up being recorded and preserved to be in our
Bibles today. I am actually convinced that Abraham, as a prophet of God, did obey all of God's commandments, including the law of tithing.
look at the OT tithing, only Levite priests could collect tithes. I don't know about your pastor, but I'll make a wild guess that he's not a Levite.
That's right, because at that time, only members of the tribe of Levi could hold the Priesthood at all. But that, too, changed when Jesus established His Church. And since my Bishop holds exactly the same Priesthood authority as the Old Testament priests did, I guess that would put him in a position to be able to collect my tithing.
Even when the tithe was paid, it was paid in food from the land....not money.
Of course it was. And tithing can still be paid "in kind." For most people nowadays, though, money is a more convenient means of exchange.
I vaguely remember reading somewhere that tithing in the church didn't happen until the reign of Charlemagne.
That wouldn't surprise me in the slightest. As you may or may not know, I believe that the Church Jesus Christ established fell into apostasy during the first couple of centuries after His death. When this happened, many of the principles of the gospel were lost -- including tithing. At some point (you say at the time of Charlemagne) the Church attempted to reinstitute this law.
Did you know that not everybody was required to tithe? If a man only had only 9 cattle, he was not required to give up one of them.
But I'll bet that if he was an obedient man, he would have given something of equivalent value.
Tithes were given to the temple. The temple was destroyed. Organized religion would have you believe they are the replacement "temple". Not true. We are God's temple.
Tithes were given to the temple? I'm not sure what you mean by this. Yes, the temple was destroyed, but guess what? 120 new ones have since been rebuilt!
Our bodies are the temples in which our spirits reside, but temples built to glorify God are still "the house of the Lord" as they were in ancient times.
God does not need our money. He needs us to give of ourselves.
I believe His Church needs both, which is why I try to give both.
Again, if you want to give to your church to support it, then by all means give, but tithing is just not scriptural for Christians who follow the law of Christ.
Sorry, but I disagree. I believe it is entirely scriptural. I kind of feel as if I've pushed one of your buttons. I didn't want to do that. This is probably an issue we're just never going to see eye to eye on. I'm willing to let it drop, though, since I don't see further dialogue on the subject as being particularly worthwhile.
God bless,
Kathryn