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Today's sermon text will be found
in the book of 2nd Chronicles, chapter 31, beginning at verse
1. Please stand for the reading
of God's word. 2nd Chronicles 31, beginning at verse 1. Now, when
all this was finished, all Israel who were present went out to
the cities of Judah and broke the sacred pillars in pieces,
cut down the wooden images and threw down the high places and
the altars from all Judah, Benjamin, Ephraim, and Manasseh, until
they had utterly destroyed them all. Then all the children of
Israel returned to their own cities, every man to his possession. And Hezekiah appointed the divisions
of the priests and the Levites according to their divisions.
Each man according to his service, the priests and Levites for burnt
offerings and peace offerings to serve, to give thanks and
to praise in the gates of the camp of the Lord. The king also
appointed a portion of his possessions for the burnt offerings for the
morning and evening burnt offerings, the burnt offerings for the Sabbath
and the new moon and the set fees as it is written in the
law of the Lord. Moreover, he commanded the people
who dwelt in Jerusalem to contribute support for the priests and the
Levites that they might devote themselves to the law of the
Lord. As soon as the commandment was circulated, the children
of Israel brought in abundance the first fruits of grain and
wine, oil and honey, and of all the produce of the field. And
they brought in abundantly the tithe of everything. And the
children of Israel and Judah, who dwelt in the cities of Judah,
brought the tithe of oxen and sheep, also the tithe of the
holy things, which were consecrated to the Lord their God. They laid
in heaps. Let us pray. Lord God, we thank
you for this historical record of reformation and transformation
in the time of Hezekiah. Father, we thank you for bringing
us to a consideration again today of our relationship to the created
order by means of the tithe. We do pray, Lord God, for reformation,
revival, and renewal, transformation, reconstruction in our day. We
know, Lord God, that we are in a position in this country of
judgment. And we pray, Father, that you
would shine forth from your holy hill, from your holy mountain,
that we might be saved, Lord God, from our sins and the sins
of our culture. Help us, Father, this morning
by your spirit to understand the texts and scriptures we'll
be turning to, that we may understand how to apply ourselves to reconstruction
and transformation in the context of our day as well. In Christ's
name we ask and for the sake of the manifestation of his kingdom.
Amen. Please be seated. Theocracy. The early 80s when we started
Reformation Covenant Church, that was a scary term. Didn't
want to use theocracy. Oh, if they heard you were theocrats,
that'd be a bad deal. Well, last Lord's Day, I watched
Meet the Press in the evening, which was a discussion with various
clergy, Catholic, Evangelical or Baptist, Jewish, and Muslims
about the religious state of America. One of the men there
was a man named Newhouse, who was the editor of First Things.
He converted to Roman Catholicism from Lutheranism I think 20 years
ago, around the same time our church was getting started, Newhouse
was defending what he referred to as the Theocons. You've heard
of the conservatives, there's the old paleocons, the old-fashioned
conservatives, the neocons are the new conservatives, and there
are a lot of the ex-Reagan Democrats, actually, is who they are, with
different ideas about things. So now the term is bending about
theocons, those that call for theocracy, is what Newhouse was
talking about. This is now an accepted part
of the political dialogue in the context of America, and we
can thank God for that. Now, no doubt it still gives
the majority of the people in the country the willies to think
that we want a culture run by God, and that's what a theocracy
is, of course. It's not an ecclesiocracy. It's
not run by the church. It's an acknowledgment of the
rule of God, which is there whether we like it or not. Theocracy. Theocons. There is this movement
in the public sphere now to talk about the implications of Christ
and the resurrection that we spoke of and proclaimed and rejoiced
in last Sunday for all of culture. We are part of that movement
in this church. I guess you can look at it that
way. We do believe that as these young boys sang so beautifully
earlier that the Lord Jesus Christ is Lord of all. There's not one
square inch of this earth that the Lord Jesus Christ doesn't
claim for his own. We are in a series of sermons
going through the book of Hebrews, and to remind us of the structure
of that book, it begins with the bright shining forth of Jesus
in the first of seven sections and concludes with the tremendous
benediction that we'd be empowered for every good work to do the
will of God through Christ. The second section describes
who this Jesus is. He's the son of God and the son
of man. He is the mediator between heaven and earth. And the sixth
section matching that is a description of how we live out of heavenly
community here in the context of earth. And so as the epistle
moves to its end, it shows us what it means to live a heavenly
life in the context of our lives here on earth. Jesus, the mediator
of heaven and earth, who is the son of God and the son of man
has come that he might indeed make manifest his theocracy,
his reign in the context of our lives and every aspect of those
lives. And so in Hebrews 13, we've had
a lot of stomping on toes. We've had the word of God tell
us that it's not up to us how we use our houses. They're his
houses. And he encourages us, he commands us to use them in
hospitable ways, to show grace and mercy to others, recognizing
the grace and mercy he's shown to us. He tells us not to draw
back from members of the Christian church who are involved in being
persecuted by the state, but rather to suffer with them. And
the early church took this quite literally and would go to the
jail or to the imprisoned place where the Christians were being
martyred or imprisoned, and they would be right with them. He
tells us that when we get to that moment in our homes where
men and wife, man and wife, husband and wife come together at the
end of the evening and rejoice in the wedded bliss that they
have in Christ, that this too is not an unmediated relationship. This is a relationship and activity
that he claims priority over. And so the Lordship of Jesus
Christ extends from what we do in our homes in terms of hospitality.
It extends to what we do in the most intimate part of our home,
our bedrooms. And in that text, it goes on
to talk about that the Lordship of Jesus Christ extends over
our pocketbooks what we do with our money. We're to beware of
the sin of covetousness. We're to be content with such
things as God has provided us. Things are not bad. Things are
good. The material order has been created
good. Money is not filthy. It can be
used for improper purposes and frequently is in our day and
age, but it is a created thing by God and to be used in proper
stewardship. That's the intent of the verse. And the beginning
of that, the beginning of the proper use of our time, the proper
use of our tongues, the proper use of our relationships and
community, and the beginning of the proper use of our money
happens right now, happens today, happens in this two-hour slot
that is the beginning of the rest of your life and forms the
pattern for the rest of your life. The proper giving to God
of tithes and offerings is an indication of our commitment
to the Lordship of Jesus Christ, not over the ten percent, that's
what tithe means, ten, but rather over every nickel and dime we
have. properly understood when you
walk forward and give your tithes and offerings to God today or
regularly do, then what it does is it sets up an understanding
on your part that when you give your $5 bill to the grocer or
to the mechanic or to the video rental store, whatever you use
your financial transactions and money for, it's to be consecrated
for the purposes of Jesus Christ. There is no unmediated financial
relationship you have and the tithe is the part for the whole.
It represents all of the claims of Jesus Christ over every bit
of your money. And he says that you might understand
that. You give him the 10th. Not that
you can use the 90% in your own, but just the reverse. It's a
reminder of his ownership over it. We need it again. In a theocracy, the tax is about
10%. God's tithe. That's what a theocracy
does. Now, there may be some support for other civil magistrates
or whatever, some small part of that. But in essence, the
tithe goes to fund social reconstruction and the transformation of a culture
through ministers, Levites, and deacons, as we'll speak about
in a couple of minutes. And when the church fails to
tithe, then somebody else does those jobs. And in our day and
age, the great idolatry is not Islam yet. It's not New Age spirituality. You know, the shaggy dog, the
old version had magic. The new version has genetic manipulation. We're into that kind of stuff.
Our idolatry today is secularism, and specifically statism. The
king provides, the state provides health, education, and welfare.
And the state, of course, as God wants them to be, a bad taskmaster
to remind us that we need to cry out to God for salvation.
10% tithe, and if you elect a king like the nations round about
you, which we have done, he's going to take at least equal
to that. And in our case, we just passed tax day. And I didn't
read the figures this year, but it's always between 45 and 50%
and rising, the total amount of take from the production of
the people of the United States given to various civil entities. 40 to 45%. We don't want theocracy,
we want democracy. And as a result, we don't pay
10% plus a little, we pay 45%. And the product we get for that
45% is not so good either, is it? We've seen social welfare programs
destroy the family in minority communities. We know that prior
to the onset of the modern welfare system, even in poor communities,
you could sleep outside in the hot summertime, and there's no
problem. Now you wouldn't dare do that. So high taxation levels,
lousy product at the end. This is the judgment of God.
It's the judgment on a church that refuses to give the tithe
to him, refuses to look for him, for health, education, and welfare,
and instead turns to a secular state. And that's what we have
today, is that kind of radical judgment upon us. We are sometimes
gnostic when we come to this topic. I know it's the big word
that's used a lot these days in our denomination, but I was
amazed at a couple of situations I've been directly involved with
over the last few weeks and months. And in one of them, the elders
of the church have been engaged in things that, honestly, I think
that if it happened in the context of a private business, it would
be long out of business long ago. And the men may indeed be,
like Ken Lay is, up on charges for improper stewardship responsibilities
over money. Incredible laxity since at least
of omission, if not commission. It's a serious thing, because
in the context of the church, people are urged to have great
reverence and submission to their leaders. And so it makes leadership
even more responsible for a proper use of the tithes of the people
to be transparent to them so that they don't misuse that trust
and then misuse the funds that God has given to them. But another
situation, I know of a situation where a man has not seen the necessity of looking
at financial arrangements in terms of major decisions in his
life. Pastor. You know, there's a tradition
in the church coming from Europe, you know, where in, for instance,
the Dutch Reformed Church, the pastor was the domine, he was
a lord, and he would never have hands that indicated work, nor
would his wife, they would have servants. They wouldn't gauge
themselves. You know, I've talked to Pastor
Van Dyken and some of the old Dutch people, they watch him
fixing his car in his driveway. Oh, you cannot be pastor guy
because Domine doesn't do that. He's removed from those kind
of things. And unfortunately, You know,
this is infiltrated into the church. And so we don't do economics
well in the context of the local church. And people don't trust
the local church. And a lot of times, that trust has not really
been earned. Years ago, we went and spent
a week with R.G. Rajduni at his home. And we were
talking then about elder training. How do we train up elders in
the context of the church? And he said something that was
a little surprising to us at the time. He said that, The first
thing we ought to do in training elders is to teach them economics. R.J. Rushton, he was probably
the original non-Gnostic, knew the application of the faith
to the supposed secular matters of economics were absolutely
critical. Economics comes from two Greek words, the law of the
home, oikos and nome, law, oikos, household, the law of the household,
and if a man can't understand the financial arrangements of
the church, the economics of the money of the church, how
is he going to appropriately use the tithe of the people entrusting
him, and how will that church then perform its obligations
according to God's truth. We need to effect reformation
and transformation. We need the shining forth of
God upon us that will be saved. And part of that salvific work
of God is bringing us to an understanding of the crown rights of Jesus
Christ over our finances. And we are to see those finances
in direct relationship to the purposes of God. You know, if
there's any part of the book of Hebrews that should have immediate
and obvious application Monday through Saturday, it is this
13th chapter. whether it's sexuality, community relationships, homes,
or in the case of the topic we've been dealing with for the last
couple of months, the use of our money, you will immediately
tomorrow, well not all of you, but most of you, many of you
will tomorrow, engage in some sort of financial transaction.
You will give somebody money for something or you will receive
money from them. Properly understood, the tithe
is a declaration by Jesus Christ of his ownership of that relationship
and a call to you to exercise Christian stewardship with those
transactions. So, if you don't get anything
else out of today's sermon, those of you who are already tithed,
I think, but don't let it stop there. See your responsibilities
then, based upon that tithe, to oversee all of your commercial
transactions, to think about them self-consciously. This week,
in the providence of God, we've been brought to this topic today.
And that means that this week we ought to be thinking about
our money. We ought to be trying to get out of debt. We ought
to be trying to get stewardship. We ought to try to evaluate our
transactions. And so this week, may the Lord
God grant us grace that we evaluate these transactions carefully. And what I want to talk about
primarily today, and the last time we talked about Tide, we
saw some things, we did a little review. The outline I've given
you today has the stuff we talked about several weeks ago at the
top in smaller type, and then the few texts we haven't gotten
to yet down below that in larger type of spaces for notes. So
we've looked a little bit at what the Tide was. We've kind
of gone through about half of the scriptural references to
the Tide. We've seen that the tithe means literally ten, ten
percent, one dollar out of every ten dollars. The tithe did not
originate with the Mosaic Covenant. The tithe originated before Moses. That's important. It shows us
that it's not restricted to Mosaic Covenant times. It's applicable
to the Church. We can begin to make that assumption
based on that. So the tithe started before Moses. The first record of a person
tithing is Abram. Abram, whose name gets changed
to Abraham. Abram means father, and Abraham
means big father or big daddy. Father of many nations, royalty.
But before his name is changed, it's Abram who tithes to Melchizedek.
So it begins with Abram, and if we're of the faith of our
father Abraham, if we see the direct, rather direct relationship
of the Abrahamic covenant, to us, then the tide becomes immediately
immediately applicable to us. I, on the children's outline,
I have for number four who tithed at Bethel. I should have said
who promised to tithe at Bethel, the house of God. Jacob is the
answer to that, of course. Jacob promised to give God a
tithe since God is going to provide for all of his needs. And so
Jacob is the one who follows up the faith of Abraham in tithing. And then during the Mosaic administration,
tithes change, worship changes from fathers to Levites. And
in the Mosaic covenant directly, we saw many case law references
and other historic references that the tithe was given to Levites,
the Levites. What were the Levites to do?
Well, in Deuteronomy 33, listen to what Deuteronomy 33 says about
Levi. Deuteronomy 33 is a series of
blessings on the tribes of Israel, and each one of them has a particular
kind of blessing attached to it. There's a connection, we
could say, between this and the blessing of Joseph on the tribes
at the end of Genesis. Very marked difference between
the statement to Levi, which was a negative one at the end
of Genesis because of her sin, and then here in this context,
We have a very positive blessing given to Levi. We read in verse
8 of Deuteronomy 33 this, And of Levi he said, Let your thumb
and your ear be with your holy one, whom you tested at Massa,
and whom you contended with at the waters of Meribah, who says
of his father and mother, I have not seen them, nor did he acknowledge
his brothers, or know his own children. So he's saying that
here's going to come the blessing to Levi. This is what you're
going to do. And this is why it's coming to you. Because Levi
didn't place familial relationships above the glory of God. Remember
the story of Phineas spear through the fornicating couple, even
though the man was part of his tribe. The test for Levi, who
had sinned, right? In the matter of Dinah and the
Shechemites, who had sinned. Looking at his family interests,
his sister interests, as more important than the glory of God,
and so misused the sign of the covenant circumcision in a way
that was very displeasing to God. He was judged for that. He got no inheritance in the
land. But now that judgment has turned, and it's turned specifically
because Levi did not ultimatize his family. He saw his most ultimate,
the glory and honor of God. He does not know his family.
It's important to us. We know that the family has fallen
apart in our times. We know we need to strengthen
the family, but we must never get to the place of ultimatizing
our children or family. My young men have been told by
me, my daughters didn't need it as much, I don't know why,
but my boys, you know, they will tell you, I've told them many
a time, would you like to talk to some of the other elders at
our church to straighten this matter out? This house has rules. The rules are based on the law
of God. If I'm in error, the elders will help me think it
through. We should not draw back from doing that. We should be
like Levites, those committed to the glory of God above our
families and our children. And the end result of that kind
of thinking and that kind of action toward family members
is their well-being, is their own well-being as well. Levi
put his family second to the glory of God, and then verse
10, Verse 9 rather, they have observed
your word and kept your covenant, Levi. They, the Levi, shall teach
Jacob your judgments and Israel your law. They shall put incense
before you and a whole burnt sacrifice on your altar. Now
we know burnt sacrifice is an ascension offering. That's what
it is. And then the blessing, bless
his substance, Lord, accept the work of his hands. And then the
curse to those who would oppose the work of the Levites strike
the loins of those who rise against him and of those who hate him
that they rise not again. There's a movement in the Mosaic
Covenant from patriarchal worship to worship now led by someone
outside of the family, although still a tribal group. There was
a further development of the Old Testament where specialized
functions became started to work into the mix. And by the time
it comes to the New Testament, we have Levites in the sense
of this particular function, not hereditary, but rather called
gifted and enabled by God for the particular calling in the
church. The tithe supported the Levites. The tithe supports ministers
in the local church today. And their particular function
is very well summarized in the function given to Levi. They
shall teach Jacob your judgments and Israel your law. They shall
put incense before you and a whole and an ascension offering on
your altar. Two tasks for the Levites. They were to lead in worship.
and they were to instruct the people of God in the law of God.
That's it. That's all they were supposed
to do. And we can see this in the immediate context of the
Mosaic Covenant, the centralized sanctuary, first at the tabernacle,
but then later in the land we have a centralized temple. Worship
goes on there. And in the context of the synagogue
that is primarily a place of instruction in the word, we see
the two functions of the Levites geographically, no, structurally
presented, architecturally presented to us as a synagogue meeting
place in the villages and as the temple in Jerusalem. That's what the Levites did,
a specialized group. perform those sacrifices and
worship and then the rest of them talk the law. Well, this
is what the New Testament minister does. The elders of the church,
the Levites of the church, lead in the worship of God and they
teach Israel. They teach God's people who are
ruled by him and who rule for him. That's what Israel means.
They teach them how that works. How to be ruled by his law and
how you rule according to that law. The Levitical tithe was
given for the purposes of teaching God's people how to live their
lives. How do I figure out how these 66 books of the Bible apply
to the situation I've got with a friendship with, you know,
a person who may be in sin? I've got a homosexual friend
at the community college. How do I talk to him? I've got
a job opportunity here. I have a girl I'm interested
in here. I've got a situation that's come up with the extended
family here. I'm having trouble with my vocation
here, you see. What does the Word of God have
to say to these things? That's what ministers are all
about. Monday through Saturday don't have the rest of the week
off after leading worship and preaching the Word of God. No,
they continue the instruction of the word as it relates to
particular situations in the life of the congregation. They
lead in worship and they move people throughout the rest of
the week in the context of applying the law of God, the Levites.
They lead in worship. They taught the people the Bible. The Bible, children, number six.
They lead in worship. They teach the people the Bible.
God said that the tithe goes for them. Now, we saw last time
we talked about this topic that the Lord God doesn't want us
to get the wrong idea about this tithe or the Sabbath. The Sabbath
is, you know, is an old story of a Puritan preacher or somebody
in colonial America. He couldn't get to church. all
this snow on the ground and stuff so his horse couldn't make it
through the snow and he had to ski to the church and then the elders
had to figure out, well, is it okay to ski on the Sabbath, Christian
Sabbath, the Lord's Day? And they said, well, as long
as he didn't enjoy the skiing, okay. Well, let's not argue the
Christian Sabbath. The Sabbath is a day of rejoicing.
In fact, the Lord God instructed his people that the tithe was
not some horrible, terrible obligation to give 10% to his Levites, but
actually a portion of that 10%, some of it, was to go to fund
rejoicing. They were commanded to rejoice.
And they were commanded to use a certain part of their money
that was very explicitly now dedicated, consecrated, holy,
we could say, to God. They were commanded to use that
to eat good things, to drink wonderful food, or drink rather,
to eat great food. And every Lord's Day, a portion
of people's tithe here at this church finances the agape. to remind us that the Lord's
Day is a day of feasting, it's a day of celebration. Yeah, we've
got a lot of work to do. We've got to come down off that
mountain, because there's demon-possessed kids, you know, people that we're
going to meet in the rest of the week. We've got ministry
to the world, but this one day we come together and we rejoice
in the context of God's truth and his people. And that joy
of the Lord is our strength as we go about the task Monday through
Saturday. And that joy is financed by a
portion of the tithe, the agape. Family camp is coming up, and
as I said a couple of weeks ago, it is perfectly proper, very
great application of Deuteronomy 14 to use a portion of your tithe
to fund family camp, to go off once a year with God's people,
not by yourself, on your own someplace, but to convocate with
God's people in a different sort of a setting than what we have
here, like the Feast of Booze, living in tents or sheds or whatever
it is. Hearing the Word of God preached
and rejoicing together, family camp, joy together. And we saw
that the implications of Melchizedek and Abram is that there's this
relationship, this transaction that goes on in worship between
tithing and reception of bread and wine. And so the clear implication
of that is that if you don't tithe, if you're not going to
give God lordship over that money, now if you're studying it out,
that's different. But if you know this is what
you ought to be doing and you don't do it, you shouldn't get this.
That was the relationship between Abram and Melchizedek. If we
don't tithe, then we shouldn't eat the Lord's supper. Today,
most of our tithes go to the local church. This local church, we finance
ministers of the word who lead us in worship and then teach
us the scriptures as well. Now, as we move ahead, remember,
we talked about this last time, but Deuteronomy 26 says that
fulfilling the three-year cycle of Mosaic tithing, so let me
just, there was a change in administration of that 10% during the Mosaic
period specifically. Now we have centralized sanctuary
and there were elements of the tithe that were used for joy,
there were elements of the tithe that were used in the third year
to help, not poor people, not poor white men, but the widow,
the fatherless, and the stranger. People that were here and didn't
know the culture and were able to be oppressed by others. children
whose parents were no longer there to take care of them, and
widows whose husbands weren't taking care of them. There's
a grace aspect of the tithe. And there was a three-year cycle
of how this worked. And in the third year, a major
portion of the tithe went to show grace. And at the end of
those three years, Deuteronomy 26 says that the faithful member
of God's community It's supposed to say, I've been faithful to
your covenant. I've kept the covenant, Lord
God, I've kept my part of this by your grace. I've walked in
covenant obedience. And very specifically, the covenant
was identified one for one with whether or not he kept the laws
of tithing, whether it's the third year he had refrained from
eating a part of that tithe before it had been distributed to the
poor or to the widow, father and strangeless in the third
year. So the Bible makes a very close connection. between covenant
obedience and the tithe. It's an important thing. It's
not one of those various things that we do that somehow, you
know, all the implications of the scriptures are there, but
it's somehow a secondary matter. The tithe is a primary matter
to God, so much so that if we don't tithe, then we haven't
really been covenant keepers. We've been covenant breakers.
It's that important to us. And the text today from Hezekiah
tells us one reason why that is. The outline point now three,
Roman numeral three, the tithe and two periods of covenant reconstruction. When God's people had come upon
difficult times, when statism or some other form of idolatry
had overtaken them and they needed to work through that and needed
to reconstruct the culture they were in, or we might say transform
it into something more beautiful and obedient to God. They would,
we see in the accounts of both Hezekiah that we read from earlier,
as well as Nehemiah that we'll turn to in a minute, that those
times of transformation and reconstruction were times when the tie was reinstituted
and made important. We read from 2 Chronicles 31,
Hezekiah establishes, what does he do in terms of trying to transform
the culture back to a theocratic republic? He tears down false
worship, he attacks the idolatry of the culture, and he empowers
the true worship of God by restoring priests and Levites in verse
2 that we read. He appointed the divisions of
the priests and Levites according to their divisions. He institutes
the true worship of God, tearing apart the false worship of God.
It all begins with worship. Remember when we spoke from Samuel's
Defeat of the Philistines, that God begins the defeat of the
Philistines in that account from 2 Samuel. He begins the defeat
of the Philistines, 1 Samuel rather. He begins the defeat
of the Philistines while the people are worshipping, while
the sacrifices are being made, while the offerings are happening,
while people are praising God. God then discomforts, He attacks
the Philistines. begins the battle that way. Now,
the battle's got to be continued throughout the week. But Hezekiah
starts, just where we would think he would start, tearing down
false idolatrous worship and restoring the true worship of
God. And as part of doing that, he says in verse 4 that he commanded
the people who dwelt in Jerusalem to contribute support for the
priests and the Levites to what end? That they might devote themselves. That they might devote themselves
to the law of the Lord. We read in the text at the beginning
of the sermon, we read that then he says that bring in the tithes
of all the things. This is how he's going to support
these men that they can be devoted to the law of the Lord. And then
we read the account that this is what they did. They obeyed.
How's reformation and transformation going to happen? It's going to
happen by the people of God seeing the crown rights of Yahweh over
them in terms of their financial transactions. And they're going
to do that by restoring the tithe and the support of the Levites
and the priests to the end that those men, those specialized
functioning men, might devote themselves to the law of the
Lord. There's so much stuff comes in
that Hezekiah has to prepare new rooms in the context of the
temple to hold all the substance that's brought in. Now, I want
to make a connection here, a little change the outline just a tad.
But this verse is a good verse to think about in terms, first
of all, of course, that the time of transformation is a time of
the restoration of the tithe, but secondly, This verse we just
read, that they might devote themselves to the law of the
Lord, should, I think, trigger a little bit of connection to
Acts 6. Acts 6 in the New Testament times,
we have the apostles governing the church, and we read in verse
3, wherefore brethren, and there was a problem with distribution
of food and the keeping of the financial tables, Wherefore,
brethren, look ye out among you seven men of honest report, full
of the Holy Ghost and wisdom, whom we may appoint over this
business. But we will give ourselves continually to prayer and to
the ministry of the word. So what is the role of the apostles
who would be followed by the pastors, the elders in the church?
that they might commit themselves to prayer. Now in the New Testament,
I've said this over and over again, prayer as you know is
a summary statement of what the worship of God is. The worship
service of the church is a prayer service. The culmination of what
we do in the service is that great pastoral prayer to God
and then he feeds us to supper. So all of worship is referred
to over and over again in the New Testament as prayer. So we
devote ourselves to prayer worshiping on the Lord's Day and leading
that worship and to the ministry of the word are not distinct
the Lord's Day they would preach the word but the ministry of
the word just like Levi would do you offer the sacrifices of
any would instruct the people in the application of the law
of God in the context of the week so we see a connection between
the elders of the church the apostles and the Levitical ministry
of the old Mosaic leaders in worship and instruction. But
we also see a connection to this text from Hezekiah. There are
things that would prevent the elders from devoting themselves
to the ministry of the Word. And there are things that go
on in the ministry of Hezekiah's time that would prevent them
from devoting themselves to the ministry of the Word. They want
to devote themselves to the law of the Lord. The elders want
to devote themselves in Acts 6 to the ministry of the Word.
Now in Acts 6, the specific reference is the provision of men that
can handle the financial administration of the church under their oversight.
But in Hezekiah's time, it's very specifically aimed at restoring
the tithe. And when men don't receive, when
God's officers don't receive the tithe, They cannot make the
kind of commitment to God's word to lead in worship and the application
of the word. And the whole of the theocracy
then begins to unravel. There's a portion on your outline
where I make the case that the New Testament elders, the pastors
of the church, are those who receive the tithes of the church,
and the Acts 6 connection is one of those. Another one would
be 1 Corinthians 16, verse 2, where Paul said that on the first
day of the week, let each of you lay something aside, storing
up, as he has prospered, that there be no collection when I
come. That would indicate some kind of percentage, a tithe-like
percentage, gathered on the first day of the week for Paul to receive. So we seem to have these connections.
Additionally, in 1 Corinthians 9, we won't go through the text
now, but Paul, you know the text probably pretty well. Paul says
that we as apostles, we as those who bring the word of God to
you, have a right to eat and drink based upon that labor of
the word. Verse 26, it says, is it only
Barnabas and I who have no right to refrain from working? Whoever
goes to war at his own expense. Who plants a vineyard and does
not eat of its fruit? Or who tends a flock and does
not drink of the milk of the flock? So, Paul then quotes an
Old Testament case law, don't muzzle the ox when he's tramping
out the grain. And he says, who is this written for? Was it written
for ox? He says, God doesn't care about oxen. Now, it's a
relative statement. I mean, God cares about everything.
In terms of what Paul is saying, that was not a case law written
primarily for agricultural purposes. It was a case law, he says, written
all together for our sake, the ministers of the gospel, that
we might receive those tithes and offerings of the people,
to the end that we might devote ourselves to the service, the
worship service of the Lord, the prayers of God, and to the
ministry of the Word. teaching Israel the law of the
Lord. So Paul makes a strong connection
to ministerial support based upon their work. And in verse
13 he actually draws a direct parallel to the Levitical reception
of tithes and offerings. He says that those who minister
the holy things, even the things of the temple in the Old Testament,
those who serve at the altar partake of the offerings of the
altar. Even so, the Lord has commanded
that those who preach the gospel should live from the gospel.
So Paul makes a one-for-one connection. to the Levitical receipt of their
support, which we know comes from tithes and offerings, to
the ministerial support of the pastors and elders of the Church.
To the same end, that there may be times of Reconstruction and
Reformation in our day as well. I have a brief reference as well
to the support of deacons. Without getting into a lot of
detail on this, there were these There were a number of Old Testament
functions or offices in the church, but one was called an officer.
An officer was an administrator, a spirit-filled administrator.
And we know that some of the Levites, in addition to being
priests and instructors in the Word, some of those Levites were
administrators. They were those who would take
care of the administration of the congregation in the particular
city in which they lived. And in our day, in our church
at least, in our particular communion, we see those deacons as administrators
of the church. And I've said this since day
one of this church, that it seems perfectly appropriate if the
church grows to a size, if you've got a church, for instance, up
at Mars Hill where you've got 5,000 people, it seems perfectly
appropriate to use the tithes of the church to support a full-time
deacon whose task would be financial administration. because the Levites
are the ones that received the tithe, and most of them taught
or led worship, but there were some who were administrators.
And so, support of elders and support, I think, of deacons
in the context of the church are indicated with a whole Bible
approach to ministers and what they do. Let's look at Nehemiah
as well for a time of reconstruction, where the tithe is restored as
well. Look at Nehemiah chapter 10 in
your Bibles if you would. Verse 28 talks about the covenant
that these people are ending into. Verse 29, this is Nehemiah
chapter 10. Verse 29, these joined with their
brothers, their nobles, entered into a curse and an oath to walk
in God's law. So this is the covenant retaking
in the time of Nehemiah in chapter 10. And it says in verse 32,
we made ordinances for ourselves to exact, for instance, the yearly
one third of a shekel for the service of the house of the God,
the showbread. So they're very specific details of what it is
that they covenanted to do before God. So this covenant retaking
involves various aspects. Verse 35, we made ordinances
to bring the first fruits of our ground, the first fruits
of all fruit of the trees year by year to the house of the Lord.
So first fruits. And then in verse 37, we made provision to bring into
the priest to the storerooms of the house of our God, and
to bring the tithes of our land to the Levites, for the Levites
should receive the tithes in all of our farming communities.
And so, again, in a time of reconstruction, rebuilding, transformation, the
reestablishment, of the Theocratic Republic under Yahweh is a time
when the tithe is central to the retaking of the covenant.
And that's why in our church covenant we have a reference
to the tithe. Turn to chapter 12 and we see
another reference to this. Chapter 12 of Nehemiah, verse
44. verse 44 at the same time somewhere
appointed over the rooms of the storehouse for the offerings
the first fruits and the tithes to gather into them from the
fields of the cities, the portions specified by the law for the
priests and the Levites for Judah rejoiced over the priests and
Levites who ministered. So again, a reference two chapters
later to them bringing in the tithe to the Levites. But now
continue on to chapter 13 of Nehemiah. Look at verse 10. Nehemiah
13 verse 10. So the covenant to do it. They
started well, but when Nehemiah comes back after a period of
time, verse 10 says, I realized that the portions for the Levites
had not been given them for each of the Levites and the singers
who did the work had gone back to his field. So I contended
with the rulers and said, why is the house of God forsaken?
And I gathered them together and set them in their place.
And then all Judah brought the tithe of the grain and the new
wine and the oil to the storehouses and dropping down a verse or
two. They were considered faithful.
Their task was to distribute to their brethren. Verse 14. Remember me, O God, concerning
this. Do not wipe out my good deeds that I have done for the
house of my God and for his services. So this was such an important
thing. Nehemiah sought to his task to
lead the rebuilding of the Theocratic Republic that he concludes this
little section of the restoration of the tithe was saying, please
remember me, Lord God, for my work. This is something good
I did, of course, by the power of the Spirit and the grace of
God. All that's understood. He's not a prideful man, but
he's a man who understood how important it was in terms of
the restoration of the theocracy to establish the tithe to the
end that These Levites and priests would not have to go to their
own fields. In other words, if you don't
pay Levites and priests to lead in worship, or to take that Bible
and apply it in all of life, then what's going to happen is
they're going to find second jobs, or in some cases, first
jobs. Reconstruction and transformation
will stop or be hindered when the tithe does not support the
men, the incarnational work of men, right? to teach the people
of God the application of God to them and to lead in the context
of worship. The tithe and the restoration
of the tithe is essential to times of reconstruction, transformation,
reestablishment of the theocratic republic. We won't look at it
now, but I would remind you that this is also the specific portion
of the book of Nehemiah, where he also said that the other thing
that had gone south with the tithe was the Sabbath. was the
ceasing from buying and selling on the Lord's Day. And he reinstituted
severe prohibitions to men who would buy or sell on the Lord's
Day. He reinstituted that as well. Now, there are many churches
that want to talk about the tithe and look at Nehemiah for why
we should have that and the importance. But somehow we end up skipping
over the next few paragraphs of Nehemiah 13, where it's essential
for reconstructing a theocratic republic. to take one day of
the week like we take one-tenth of our money and take hands off
of it. Give it to God and rest in Him.
Honor the Sabbath day to keep it holy. Remember it to keep
it holy. Our time is fully consecrated
to God by that cycle of one day of the week ceasing from unnecessary
labor, ceasing from those elements of financial transactions that
are not required, and we enter into paradise on the Lord's Day,
not working, not selling or buying. We have this wonderful day. of
restoration of our spirit before God. And the only transaction
we enter into is we give God our tithes and offerings and
he gives us the wonderful gifts. Summarized, I suppose, that the
Lord's Supper. So, Nehemiah says that it's absolutely
essential for the restoration of a theocratic republic to reinstitute
tithing, you know, and part of that is just because people have
to know they got to walk into Monday through Saturday and say,
does this economic transaction make sense for the purposes of
the kingdom of God? Does it make sense for that for
you to enjoy this pastime? It may well. Does it make sense
to buy this kind of a house or that kind of a house? Do we pray
about this? Do we ask counsel? Do we seek
to glorify God in all the minute financial transactions? And all
that, of course, is set up by the tithe. But beyond that, Nehemiah
understood that the tithe established a group of men to lead in the
worship and instruction of the word that would provide the absolute
foundation for the restoration of a theocratic republic. Now,
it does that three ways. It provides this foundation,
I can think of three ways we can think of. First of all, it
empowers the men to lead in the worship of the church. And now,
worship is great. A people who gather together
in worship, who sing the Psalms, who sing hymns of praise to God,
who subjugate their own fear of their own voice or whatever
it is to the group. and become part of that host of God who
gather together and hear the victory of Jesus Christ trumpeted
forth. This is an army ready to march into the rest of their
lives. This is a theocratic army who will transform whatever part
of the world they go into, right? Now, it doesn't be some great
thing. Jeremiah told the men when they went into captivity,
what are you supposed to do? Plant vineyards, build houses,
get married, give your kids away of marriage, receive children
for marriage, work for the peace of the city where God places
you, Babylon, because in their peace you will find peace. Nebuchadnezzar
thought he had conquered the people of God and God, but in
fact God had conquered Nebuchadnezzar by planting godly people who
would do the simple things of life in a totally consecrated
way, in a deliberate way to honor God, and as a result Babylon
was transformed and Nehemiah was converted. So I'm not talking
about great things as we march in tomorrow, but worship prepares
you as a congregation to do that necessary detail work of life
in a way that is consecrated wholeheartedly to God. But more
than that, the worship of God's people is effective, is effectual,
because God sees our prayers and our worship, loves us, and
before we can go out the door, right, the Samuel text, before
we can go out the door, The Lord God is establishing his theocratic
republic. Before we can go out the door.
The worship of God is a factual liturgical warfare for God striking
at his enemies who are our enemies as well. The tithe enables us
to worship in an increasingly mature way, calling upon God
and believing that he will begin that warfare before we go out
the door. And the tithe establishes the worship of the church that
we can be formed up as the army of God to march into all those
detailed decisions of our simple lives in a way that will transform
the modern Babylon that America has become. does that. But secondly,
the tide equips ministers to that second part of the biblical
task right to lead in worship important, but then to teach
the Bible in the application of life so that what we do throughout
the rest of the week is a continuation of the battle against the enemies
of God. The people went out of worship to discomfort the Philistines
even more to exert the power of the Lord and bringing judgment
to them in the establishment of a theocracy again, a theocratic
manifestation there. So the pastors of the church,
the elders of the church, were able to work with you as you
throughout Monday and Saturday, Monday through Saturday, do things
in an increasingly self-conscious way underpinned by the instruction
of God's word. So the tithe enables us to worship,
start the whole process. And the tithe enables us to have
men committed to understanding the scriptures and their application
to how you engage in friendships at the community college if you
ask them. They'll give you advice and counsel on what the scriptures
have to say about that. So it continues to work. And
then third, at the end of the day on Saturday, we get ready
to come back. And the tithe now represents
the transformative power you have had on the world around
you. Where does the tithe come from? It comes from the labor
you did Monday through Saturday, the work you did, the vocation
you did, whatever it was you put your hand to do. And God
says that what you've done is transform that part of your world.
And I want you to bring it to me in worship, right? The tribute
offering is this. We bring a transformed world,
changed by our labors, done to the service of the God that we
worship, and the God who instructs us in the way we're to do these
things based on the scriptures. We transform the world through
our labors, and we bring that world back to God in the tithe,
at the conclusion of this cycle, and present the world to Him.
We give little parts of the world. We bring a little bit of dust.
We bring a little globe, maybe is another way to think of it.
When we bring our tithes, we're bringing a transformed world
to God in worship. And He then empowers us to go
back out. You've been faithful in small
things. You're going to do more this week for me. And you're
going to transform more and more of the world in which I've given
you to live. You're going to work for the
peace of this city, this state, this nation, and this world.
And I'm going to establish you with strength to accomplish that
and bring that back. That's what the tithe is for.
It begins maintains and culminates the cycle of our labors and what
we do being effectual for the establishment of the theocratic
republic. Now that's why when we come to
text such as Malachi and Haggai about the blessings and cursings
of God, we have to think of them broader than in just economic
terms, right? Malachi 3 says, in the days of
your fathers you've gone away from my ordinances, you haven't
kept them. Return to me and I'll return to you. Will a man rob
God? You say, how have you robbed
me? Well, God says, I'll tell you how you've robbed me, in
tithes and offerings. You're cursed with the curse for you
have robbed me even this whole nation. Bring the tides into
the storehouse that there may be food in my house and try me
now and this is the Lord of hosts if I will not open for you the
windows of heaven and pour out for you such blessing that there
will not be room enough to receive it. And I'll rebuke the devourer
for your sake, so that he will not destroy the fruit of your
ground, nor shall the vine fail to bear fruit for you in the
field." Okay, this text is preached all the time. If you tithe, you'll
be financially prosperous. Well, maybe yes, maybe no. I don't know about that. Generally
speaking, it's true. We can't ignore the first obvious
application of the text, that God will generally prosper a
people financially, if they honor him with their tithes. Same thing
in Proverbs, honor me with the firstfruits. Well, but see, if
that's all we do is think about it that way, we're thinking far
too small about the tithe. Way too small. The kind of blessing
that God promises to pour out upon these people, He doesn't
restrict it to the financial blessings, right? We're not Marxists.
We don't think of ourselves solely in economic terms. We don't think
of the tithe or the blessings for tithing in solely economic
terms. God says he's going to pour out such a blessing, you
won't believe it if you attended this. Why? Because God knows
that he has established the tithe to move the culture into increasing
manifestations of a theocratic republic. Is that what you want?
You want Oregon City more and more self-consciously serving
God and the Lord Jesus Christ? Tithe, God says, and believe
me, I will pour out a great rich blessing upon you. Don't tithe,
and there'll be curses upon you because you're robbing from me.
Do tithe. The truth is repeated in Haggai.
It's repeated in Proverbs 3. Honor the Lord with your possessions,
with the firstfruits of all your increase, so your barns will
be filled with plenty. and your vats will overflow with
new wine. That doesn't happen today because
we have the tax man who's going to take 40% of the barns and
he's going to take 40% of your grapes. In other words, it's
not just God is going to prosper you financially with the tithe.
He will provide the underpinnings for a theocratic republic that
will get the state eventually off your back as you honor God
with your first fruits instead of the state. And as a result
of that, he'll rebuke the devourer. What's the devourer in our day
and age? It's that false god that we put
up there. And God has that false god attack
us. And God will rebuke the idols
that we have turned to and constructed. He'll help us to tear those things
down. And as a result, the blessing won't just be full barns and
full vats. the blessing will be the Shire.
It'll be comprehensive. It'll be community, richness,
and blessing, like we have on the Lord's Day. So God says that
the tithe is absolutely essential for the purposes of reconstruction
and transformation. The blessings that are attached
to the giving of the tithe are comprehensive blessings. And
the curses that are attached to the failure to tithe are comprehensive
curses as well. You can try a little exercise,
read the last four or five chapters of Judges. The appendices to
the book of Judges shows what happens when Levites no longer
attend to their duties. Judges 17 to 21, all the disorders
in society are a result of the curse of God when men have not
tithed and have not supported local Levites. The Levites were
not doing their jobs In Judges 17 to 21, why did every man do
what was right in his own eyes? There was no king in Israel.
Well, there was. But the king wasn't acknowledged with the
tribute. The king wasn't acknowledged with the time. The Levites didn't
acknowledge the king. They went away and started serving
private households and doing various jobs. And all the problems
that then we see, all the social difficulties of Judges 17 to
21, are tied back in a literary way to this message. that both
covenant blessings and covenant cursings accrue to a people on
the basis of whether they honor God with their first fruits and
provide the necessary underpinnings in terms of worship and instruction
in the word to bring about the sort of manifestations of the
theocratic republic that God promises to us. We're going to
sing a very familiar psalm for the operatory, but listen to
the words of it. Listen to what God calls us to
do. Open, saith the Lord, wide thy
mouth, believing. This is my covenant word. I will,
if thou plead, fill thine every need, all thy wants, relieving. He doesn't promise just financial
prosperity. And in fact, in Haggai, he says,
you eat, but you're not satisfied. What God promises is satisfaction
to his people when they use the tithe for his purposes and see
the blessings that he pours upon it. Oh, that to my voice Israel
would hearken, then they would rejoice, walking in my ways,
bright and joyous days, ne'er a foe would darken. That's the
covenantal, comprehensive blessings that God speaks of in Malachi.
Most abundant good, if thou wouldst but prove me. Even the choicest
food, honey from the comb, wheat the finest known, I would pour
upon thee. That's what we want, right? We
want those wonderful, magnificent blessings of God. And he says,
they're coming. He said last Sunday through You
know, man on TV, it's coming. The theocons are out there. The
blessings of God are coming. God's people are renewing themselves
to the tide. They're renewing themselves to
liturgical warfare. They're renewing themselves to
have men teach them the application of the word. And they're rising
up and they're sitting down in their vocation, their recreations,
their commerce, and in their communities. And God says that
because of that, look forward expectantly to the truth of what
we'll sing now, that it is on its way. from God, because he
has raised up a spirited people today who are restored back once
more to honoring him and looking for his blessings upon them.
Let's pray. Lord God, we pray that as we come forward with
our tithes and offerings, we would do so happily, joyfully,
knowing, Father, that as we've attended to these things, you
have brought increased blessings to us. Help us to believe what
we sing. Help us to look expectantly to
the comprehensive blessings that attend to those people who trust
your word and trust you to make provision, not just of our finances,
but of all of our needs. In Christ's name we ask it. Amen.
Tithing and Transformation
| Sermon ID | 5206122232 |
| Duration | 1:00:01 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | 2 Chronicles 31:1-18 |
| Language | English |
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