QUESTIONS/ANSWERS ON TITHES
QUESTION #291 -- How does our
church get the authority for
teaching tithing for present-day
Christians?
ANSWER #291 -- There is a common
error to the effect that tithing
was a matter of the Jewish
economy and that it belongs
"under the law." But you will
find in the Old Testament that
Abraham and Jacob paid tithes,
and their casual manner suggests
that the practice was common
among their contemporaries, a
long time before the law was
given to Moses. And in the New
Testament there is no set and
regular plan for the support of
the church apart from what was
already known and practiced, and
there is abundant evidence that
the tithing plan which came long
before the law was given
continued to live after the
ceremonial part of the law had
become obsolete. The tithing
plan is scriptural and
practical, and it works. I
suggest that you try it
* * *
QUESTION #292 -- Should
Christian people pay tithes?
ANSWER #292 -- Since you have
stated the question this way, I
am tempted just to answer with
an emphatic yes, and let it go
at that. Even those who still
contend that the tithing system
belongs to the Old Testament age
and is not obligatory now could
not reasonably object to such an
answer. For leaving the legal
phases of the question out,
there are three benefits that
come from systematic tithing
that cannot be denied: (1)
Paying tithe gives one basis for
a good conscience in good times
and in ill. (2) Paying tithes of
necessity injects order into
one's business (for if one knows
what one tenth of his income is,
he must also know what ten
tenths are) and this within
itself is worth all it costs to
the average person. (3) If all
God's people should tithe
scripturally and systematically
the program of the gospel would
be adequately supported. For
even when the tithe is not
sufficient for such support,
tithers will be liberal also
with their freewill offerings.
And there is really no
possibility for anyone, poor or
rich, to complain against the
justice of the tithing plan. For
when one has little income, his
tithe will be small, and when he
has a large income, he will have
plenty left after he pays his
tithe.
* * *
QUESTION #293 -- We hear from
the. pulpit quite often, "Now if
you do not give God your tithes
and offerings, He will get them
anyhow, even if He has to take a
cow, horse, car, barn, or your
health, or something else of
money value." Please tell us how
God gets the tithe in this way,
and also tell us whether people
who tithe and make offerings
ever suffer financial loss.
ANSWER #293 -- There is evidence
of carelessness in the
statements which you quote. God
sends His rain on the just and
on the unjust, and affliction
also is the common lot of
humanity. Some saints are poor
and sick and even die at an
early age, and some sinners have
good health, long life, and
temporal prosperity. If it were
like as is intimated in the
quotation you make it would
secularize the kingdom of God in
spite of all. It is much better
as it is. But there are many
advantages in paying the tithe
and in making offerings for the
promotion of His kingdom, even
as there are advantages in
keeping all His commandments and
doing the things which are
pleasing in His sight There is a
business advantage in systematic
tithing, for if one knows what
one-tenth of his income is, he
must also know what his whole
income it, and this bookkeeping
element is worth more than the
tithe involves to the average
person. So that it often happens
that the tither has the
advantage in this one particular
enough so to mark him as more
prosperous than his non-tithing
neighbor. Then the tither
literally takes God into
partnership in his business, and
this makes for honesty and
carefulness and industry-great
factors in prosperity. But most
of all, the tither has a good
conscience, and when adversity
and afflictions come, he bears
up better than his careless
neighbor and comes back to
health and prosperity much
sooner and much oftener. I sat
at the table with a man who has
been almost a life long tither.
He said, "Afflictions and
reverses have come to me, but I
have found sweet refuge in the
knowledge that I have never
wasted anything God ever gave me
and have never failed to tithe
whatever came into my hand. So I
know my adversities are not
judgments." The tither has the
advantage in times both of
prosperity and adversity-there
is no doubt about that
* * *
QUESTION #294 -- I am a local
church treasurer and have to see
some things that cause me to
wonder. Some people, I find,
refuse. to pay their tithes if
they do not like the preacher.
Some others use the tithe in
their own business and just pay
up once or twice a year when
they can afford to do it. Do you
think these practices are
justified?
ANSWER #294 -- If one is to get
the full blessing that God
promises, he must pay his tithes
to the Lord, not to the
preacher, and he must pay
regularly. The work of God must
go on as well as a man's private
business, and no one can tell
when the opportunities of the
year may be the best. Pay your
tithe fully and cheerfully and
regularly and God will bless you
with spiritual and temporal
blessings. If you do not like
the preacher, here is the chance
for you to be true to God under
a handicap, and if you are full
and cheerful and regular under
these circumstances, you will
gain an extra blessing. I
believe all this with all my
heart. You try it for a couple
of years and then if it does not
work, drop me a card.
* * *
QUESTION #295 -- What is the
income of a farmer who owns his
own farm? What is the income of
a tenant farmer who has to
borrow money to meet his part of
the expenses? What is the income
of a factory man or wage earner
who has to pay transportation to
hold his job? How would the
tithe be computed in each case?
ANSWER #295 -- Income has two
forms, viz., gross and net. As
to the gross, there is usually
no question, for it is all the
income one has from all sources
whatever. But the tithe is due
on the net income and here one
has to face the question of what
is the expense of production.
Sometimes people say they are
not making anything at all. But
when you inquire you find they
mean they are unable to make any
permanent saving above their
living, and they are inclined to
count their living costs in with
the production costs. But this
is not correct. The great
majority of people are unable to
make any permanent saving in the
whole of their lives above the
family and personal cost of
living. In the examples given
above, the wage earner is
certainly entitled to deduct the
cost of transportation to and
from his work, the tenant farmer
is entitled to deduct the
interest on his borrowed
capital, and the farm owner is
entitled to deduct the taxes on
his farm. All this is apparent
right on the face. But there are
instances in which questions
arise as to whether certain
items are production costs or
living costs. In such cases, it
is best to "give God the benefit
of the doubt" and reject the
deduction. Genuinely Christian
people get so much joy out of
paying their tithes that they
get to where they seek rather to
make the tithe as large as they
can, rather than as small as
they dare. Tithing is both a
duty and a grace: both a
requirement and a privilege.
* * *
QUESTION #296 -- A, who has been
a tither for years while in
business, bought a farm in
March, 1930, expecting payments
on a property he had previously
sold to meet the considerable
balance on the purchase price of
the farm, and to buy stock and
equipment. But the expected
payments have not been made and
may never be made, so A is left
with a heavy debt and without
the equipment to make his
farming operations profitable.
He cannot meet outside
obligations, let alone support
himself and wife. Under these
circumstances what would you
consider his duty regarding
tithes?
ANSWER #296 -- The tithe is
based upon the "increase" --
this is fundamental. The case
you present is just a matter of
one's absorbing his increase in
the endeavor to recoup a loss in
his capital, and that is a
delicate matter indeed. A number
of rich American bankers tried
to do this regarding their
income tax accounts, and they
got by on the legal
technicalities, but the country
in general did not approve, and
the reputation of bankers as men
of honor suffered. I believe
that in the case you present
this farmer should figure out
the income just as he did when
he was in business, and that
just as he did then, he should
count the value of whatever he
and his family consume as income
and should pay tithe on this.
The only case in which a man who
continues to exist has no income
at all is the case where he is
drawing directly from his
accumulated capital which has
already been tithed at the time
when it was produced. And such a
man will have means for
"freewill offerings," or else
his day of complete penury must
be right now at hand. The
tithing method of supporting
God's work is such a blessing to
those who follow it sincerely
that they usually strive to find
a way to have tithes, and do not
seek to avoid them.
* * *
QUESTION #297 -- I am a
Christian and believe in
tithing. My husband is unsaved
and objects to my paying or
giving anything to the church. I
do what I can, but feel
uncomfortable when he asks me
about what I do with money, 'Low
much I give to the church, etc.
I am not clear just what to do.
Should I go on as I do now, make
bold to have an understanding
with my husband on the matter or
give over to him as regarding
this question?
ANSWER #297 -- I would not
advise you to jeopardize your
home and family peace in this
regard. God understands and will
not demand anything unjust of
you. I believe you should keep
it always clear to your husband
that you would rather give your
money to God than to spend it
for any other purpose and never
quit praying that God may touch
his heart. And while waiting for
the answer to this prayer, I
think you should not do anything
that makes you ashamed before
your husband. In the end I
believe you will win and that
the church will be better off
than it will be for you to take
chances on this secrecy which,
after all, is probably no great
secret to your husband.
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