Bring All The Tithes Into The Storehouse

The Tonawanda Indian Reservation is in upstate New York. It is about 45 minutes from Niagara Falls. I lived there for a year on the reservation working with Seneca Indian children. It really was an amazing experience! Our reservation was unique in that it had a long house where Medicine men still practiced their magic and healing. The little Baptist church I worked at was older than our country. Originally, it met in a log cabin during the days of George Washington. We had a bi-vocational pastor and me. I was paid $75.00 a month by an old farmer.

The reason the church has been able to remain viable in a pagan environment is because the people tithed. I think they had 69 people in church this past Sunday.

We are blessed in our church with kids who have been called to the ministry. It is exciting! I wonder what church ministry will look like in 10 to 20 years. We are encouraging our young men and women to get trained in a career so they can support themselves. If the current trend of giving continues in our churches, it will be sad to think that our future ministers will have the challenge of ministering full time with only minimal income.

Eastern Hills is still healthy but we are feeling the pressure to cut back. Our senior adults have always sacrificially given. Their parents were also sacrificial givers. It is why the churches in America were able to survive during the Great Depression.

Malachi 3:10 is the only place in the Bible where God says, “I dare you” or “Try it, you’ll like it” He says, “Bring the tithe into the storehouse, so there may be meat 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 to store it.”

Our generation is going to have to step up. We are going to have to take the baton and sacrificially give if the future of the CHURCH is to carry on.

I had a pastor whose daughter once asked, “Daddy, how come we don’t get a new car like all of my friends?” His response was, “Because we do not drive our tithe around town.”  That’s kind of harsh, but it is a reality in churches across this country. We are willing to sacrifice for our wants but we are not willing to sacrifice for the kingdom of God.

We need to teach this younger generation the importance of giving and that we cannot out give God. He promises that He will bless our giving.

My question to all of us is, “Are we giving to the kingdom of God as if our gift was what it will take to keep an active church for our kids and future generations?”

“Try it, you’ll like it.” – God-

Greg

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FOCUSED

One of the casualties of aging to which I find myself a victim is the dimming of the eyes.  Ecclesiastes 12 counsels the young person to remember God, their Creator, in their youth before the aging process takes over and various faculties, as listed in verses 1-7, are diminished.

Clear eyesight when we are young may be something we take for granted. However, as we age the realization that our vision is not as sharp as it once was takes hold. “Readers” become standard fare for all intricate tasks. Our once keen laser sharp focus is now blurry and in need of help to restore its youthfulness. That restoration is found through glasses or some sort of rejuvenating surgery. Especially in the early stages of this degenerative eye problem we may be able to fake it and get by, but eventually we must relent and do something to correct the problem.

There is a parallel between physical and spiritual vision. “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus” was written in the early 20th century. The hymn writer, Helen Lemmel, was strongly influenced by the artist and later little-known missionary, Lilias Trotter. Miss Trotter started off as an aspiring artist but early on felt a call from God to reach the lost. She began her ministry by rescuing prostitutes from the streets of London. Later she went to Africa, without missionary funding, and served for over forty years. While there she penned a poem that would greatly influence the writing of the hymn “Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus.”  The poem was entitled “Focused: A Story and Song.” 

The poem centers around focusing one’s attentions fully and completely upon God. She writes that Satan knows that if a person uses all their powers of concentration on being led by God’s Spirit, they will have a great intensity and impact upon those to whom they are called to minister. Lilias Trotter, writing in a more formal use of the English language than we are accustomed, shares some timeless insights which could very easily have been written today but with a different accent. She writes: “Never has it been so easy to live in half a dozen good harmless worlds at once—art, music, social science, games, motoring, the following of some profession, and so on. And between them we run the risk of drifting about, the ‘good’ hiding the ‘best’ even more effectually than it could be hidden downright frivolity with its smothered heartache at its own emptiness.”

The “good” hiding the “best” leads us to emptiness.  Could this be true of us today especially as American Christians? Have we sought the “good” while missing the “best”? The chorus of the hymn, which we will be singing in worship this Sunday, says it best.

                Turn your eyes upon Jesus, Look full in His wonderful face,                                                                                                                                        And the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace.

Keith Pate

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