Tuesday, 08 September 2009
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Sacrifice Your Money To God and He Will Provide
It's like this. Kylee and I raise support in order to do what we do, much like an out-of-country missionary does. Sometimes I see ourselves as missionaries. Sometimes Anderson, IN is as foreign as it gets. For two years now, we've set our goal to raise a certain amount and have met it. We started out the first month of raising support mainly focusing on phone calls and whatever money came in, we bit the bullet and built up a little cushion in our support raising account. As money comes in from our supporters, it gets deposited into that account. From that account, we get paid. No money in the account = no paycheck. This has never happened. As the account begins to dwindle, God moves in the heart of someone and the account gains a little health...but not until we get a little wake up call first... You see, the only time in the Bible where God actually challenges us to test him is in the area of tithing:
"...Return to me, and I will return to you," says the LORD Almighty. "But you ask, 'How are we to return?' Will a man rob God? Yet you rob me. But you ask, 'How do we rob you?' In tithes and offerings. You are under a curse—the whole nation of you—because you are robbing me. Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in my house. Test me in this," says the LORD Almighty, "and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it." Malachi 3:7-10During the first year, we were struggling to get enough pledges to meet our goal. We were challenged on the tithing end. We decided to tithe at whatever 10% of our goal was. Within the next month, we met our goal. And that has never stopped. There are plenty of similar stories where God has "thrown open the floodgates" and has blessed us beyond belief...and it keeps us humble; it keeps us in our place. This summer has been insane as we bought a house and moved on top of our normal responsibilities. Obviously this house thing has been a test on the financial end...and our account, it's dwindling.
I was reading in Genesis (I'm no saint, I don't remember the last time I purposefully sat down to read my Bible) and read through the story of Abraham's obedience being tested when God asked him to sacrifice Isaac...his only true son...the one through whom God promised would give birth to a great nation. Yet, Abraham agrees. As they are reaching the place on the mountain where they were going to sacrifice, Isaac is wondering where this lamb is that they were going to sacrifice. Abraham replies beautifully: "God will provide the lamb." It comes the time when Abraham had tied down his son and raised his knife when an angel stops him saying that the LORD has noticed his obedience and does not want Isaac to be hurt. God said that because of his obedience, he will make his descedants outnumber the stars in the sky and the grains of sand on the seashore. Then God provided a ram that was caught in a nearby bush for Abraham to catch and use as a sacrifice. This gave birth to a saying of that day, "On the mountain of the LORD it will be provided."
It clicked for me and a desire to test God was renewed. Abraham knew that though his own reasoning made sense to him, God must understand the bigger picture and, though he would much rather do what made sense to him, he had to obey God. "God will provide the lamb." God will provide a way...or a way out. In the end, God is still God and things will work out as He plans, and that's okay. And God did, but not until Abraham was willing to sacrifice. You see, God needs a willing soul, someone with the desire to give up something for the sake of gaining God's way.
In order for God to provide where I need Him to provide, I must be willing to sacrifice. And sometimes sacrificing your money in today's economy can feel like giving up your firstborn. I caught up on tithing today and am another step closer to fulfilling our pledge to our church building campaign and I've already seen God give a blessing. We got a utilities bill from our last apartment and one for our new house for this last month, both of which I wondered were off. I went in and found out that both had errors and were going to end up being significantly less. Sometimes the blessings come quickly. Other times they don't, as when Abraham had to wait for the birth of Isaac that God had promised years ealier. And sometimes it does feel like we are stuck on the top of a mountain with no where else to go but down. In fact, it would maybe just seem easier to jump... but who's mountain is it? Let us not forget: On the mountain of the LORD it will be provided. So hang in there.
What do you think? Do you have any experiences in which your obedience to God has lead to provision?
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Comments (8)
I tried that. It worked.
We gave sacrificially and "somehow" wound up with more than we'd started with.
Then one month we accidentally let our giving slide.
And we still wound up with extra in our resources.
That's when we realized that God's blessings are based not on our giving, but on His grace.
As I've blogged in the past, G-D's economics are based on sharing and trust (faith). We only have money so we can use it to glorify G-D and we do so but pairing our finances up with our faith and giving sacrificially to G-D and the needy. our Father is not concerned with percentage tithes as much as he is with our practical love for others. As we provide for creation G-D provides for us just as we forgive others he forgives us and as he shows us mercy we show mercy to others.
When we obey G-D in as much as we know how to, he blesses us. Even when we are disobedient there are default blessings bestowed upon us because we are his loved creation.
Matthew 6:33 "But seek first the kingdom of G-D and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you." These issues always come back to this teaching in my mind.
Good post.
sorry to introduce a disturbing thought: why would God need money? isn't the time spent thinking of Him valuable enough? is there an hourly rate? money smells of Mammon...
I'd rather do community service, than give money to God. I understand where you're coming from.
Look back at God's previous conversations w/ Abram. God's covenant is a unilateral covenant, based on God's grace, not Abraham's (or our) works. God had already made HIs sure promise to Abram before the events in Genesis 22.
Genesis 12:1: And I will make of you a great nation, and I will bless you and make your name great, so that you will be a blessing.
Genesis 15:5: And he brought him outside and said, Look toward heaven, and number the stars, if you are able to number them. Then he said to him, So shall your offspring be. 6 And he believed the LORD, and he counted it to him as righteousness.
I agree w/ @Pass_the_Aura@xanga who said, God's blessings are based not on our giving, but on His grace.
We get into a dangerous situation if we say, "If I do thus and so, God will bless me." Job was righteous and look what happened to Him. Faithful saints end up being plundered (Heb. 10:34) or martyred (end of Heb. 11).
God's provision of the lamb in Genesis 22 foreshadowed God the Father sending His Son to be the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. To imply Abram "earned" the lamb by his obedience is anathema to the free gift of salvation through Jesus Christ.
For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. Romans 6:23.
I'm not saying we aren't to sacrifice, for we are, all we have and all we are is to be given to God – but as we do so, we can never presume to say things such as, "When I sacrifice, it's a sure thing that God will bless me in such and such a way."
@TheGreatBout@xanga - Nice explanation.
@Pass_the_Aura@xanga - Right on. Giving is great, but we certainly shouldn't cultivate an attitude of giving just so that God will give us stuff. The fact that we have anything is evidence of God's grace.
As Job can attest to, sometimes obedience to God will leave us with nothing but our sore infested bodies.
I think you should put God first. I don't think you should do so to your own detriment. You shouldn't give because you are expecting something from God. A tithe should mean 10 percent. If your offerings on top of tithes are causing financial hardship--time to re-budget.