What are the benefits of giving tithes and offering?
(1) It enables you prove your faith in God as your SOURCE. (2) It enables you prove God in your finances. (3) God promises to open the windows of heaven upon you. (4) God will pour out blessings upon you.
Giving has been proven to decrease blood pressure and reduce stress. This reduction promotes longer life and better health. Giving promotes social connection. Studies show that when you give to others, your generosity is often continued down the line to someone else, or returned to you.
You will be enriched in every way so that you can be generous on every occasion, and through us your generosity will result in thanksgiving to God. This service that you perform is not only supplying the needs of the Lord's people but is also overflowing in many expressions of thanks to God.
- Giving Is Evidence of Our Obedience to God. Slide 1 of 6. ...
- Giving Sets Our Priorities Straight. Slide 2 of 6. ...
- Giving Increases Our Faith. Slide 3 of 6. ...
- Giving Acknowledges That God Owns it All. Slide 4 of 6. ...
- Giving Leads to Joy. ...
- Giving Makes Us More Compassionate and Involved in God's Work.
Tithing is about gratitude. Firstly, we pay our tithes because we believe God owns everything in all creation (Psalm 24:1; Acts 17:24-25). Second, we pay our tithes because we want to show gratitude and love (Mosiah 2:20). Lastly, we pay our tithes because it shows faith in God (Malachi 3:10).
God's hand is always moved to bless His people through giving. Givers are always commensurately rewarded according to their giving, hence givers never lack. People who do not know this will continue to suffer in poverty, while those who understand the principles of giving enjoy God's blessings.
It has been said that there are three kinds of givers: grudge givers, duty givers, and thanks givers. Grudge givers say, “I hate to give;” duty givers say, “I am forced to give;” thanks givers say, “I want to give.”
The power of giving comes out of giving from your heart—not because you have a lot of money or time to give but because the cause is simply important to you.
2 Corinthians 9:10-11
It's a basic biblical principle of stewardship—when we are faithful with a little bit, God will trust us with more. Generosity causes God to invest more in us because he knows we will continue to be generous. It's a cycle of God blessing us so we can give that goes on and on and on and on…
Deuteronomy 14:23 says, “The purpose of tithing is to teach you always to put God first in your lives.” God doesn't need your money, but he wants what it represents — your heart. He wants you to trust him. Where should you tithe?
Why is tithing so powerful?
Tithing is one way to worship God—to honor Him as your provider and remind yourself that all of your resources belong to Him and are provided through His grace. As you give away that first 10% of your income, you set your course to honor God in the way you handle the rest of your finances.
The money (or its equivalent in crops, farm stock, etc.) was used to support the clergy, maintain churches, and assist the poor. Tithing was also a prime source of subsidy for the construction of many magnificent cathedrals in Europe.
Jesus says, “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You give a tenth of your spices–mint, dill and cumin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law-justice, mercy and faithfulness.
Three Types of Tithes
The Old Testament, which is the first half of the Bible written before the birth of Jesus Christ that focuses on the Jewish myth, describes three different types of tithes that the Jewish people were expected to pay: Levitical or sacred tithe. Feast tithe. Poor tithe.
Origin. In the Bible, the offering is an act of gratitude to God. At the time of Moses, God gave certain prescriptions to the people of Israel. In particular, he was to bring him some of his wealth by way of gratitude for the land that God gave him for inheritance.
Practicing the Law of Giving and Receiving is simple: if you want joy, give joy to others; if you want love, learn to give love; if you want attention and appreciation, learn to give attention and appreciation; if you want wealth, help others prosper.
Confession: “Lord we come before you today to present our tithe and offering to you in faith. We believe your word, and we honor it by putting our faith in action through giving. We thank you for your blessing, and we believe we will have what you promised.”
Giving and other forms of compassion do more than release brain chemicals. They stimulate areas of the brain that are involved in prayer. The anterior cingulate is involved in a lot of our thinking — our memory, attention, and motivation — but it's also active in prayer, empathy, and compassion.
The original Hebrews indicates that the benefits come on a day by day basis. The benefits include His kindness, His goodness and His provision. The benefits, besides being our practical daily needs, is ultimately God Himself. His benefits know no limits.
Paying tithing brings great blessings, especially in helping us better recognize the hand of the Lord in our lives. The Lord has commanded us to pay tithing. In return, He promises to “open … the windows of heaven, and pour … out a blessing, that there shall not be room enough to receive it” (Malachi 3:10).
What does tithing pay for?
Tithing funds are always used for the Lord's purposes—to build and maintain temples and meetinghouses, to sustain missionary work, to educate Church members, and to carry on the work of the Lord throughout the world.
The Bible is very clear in Leviticus 27:30 where it says “A tenth of the produce of the land, whether grain or fruit, is the Lord's, and is holy.” And Proverbs 3:9 (NIV) says, “Honor the Lord with your wealth, with the first fruits of all your crops.” It's critical to recognize that tithing was central to God's law.
A feeling of peace is one of the great blessings of paying a full tithe. Those who have kept the commandment of tithing can testify that the blessing of peace is real and precious. Third, those who pay tithing feel an increase in their love of God and of all God's children.
And it doesn't offer another option when it comes to giving 10% of your resources back to God. But the Bible does promote giving both your money and your time—especially if you don't have the ability to give above your tithe.
Half of Protestant churchgoers say their tithes can go to a Christian ministry rather than a church. A third say tithes can go to help an individual in need. And more than a few (18 percent) say tithes can even go a secular charity, according to a new study by Nashville-based Lifeway Research.