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09-23-2014, 09:44 AM
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Yeshua is God
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 4,158
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Timmy
Another question for tithe teachers:
Why didn't the Holy Ghost include tithing in the list of requirements of Gentile believers?
Acts15:28-29 For it seemed good to the Holy Ghost, and to us, to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary things; That ye abstain from meats offered to idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication: from which if ye keep yourselves, ye shall do well. Fare ye well.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jason Badejo
Or ANY Apostle or NT writer for that matter.
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Because tithing was not a part of the law, it existed before the Law, it was just simply added to the Law, where it was expanded.
There was not need to remind the believers of what was common knowledge and was commonly practiced by them.
Actually the teaching was endorsed in the Book of Hebrews, of course those who like to twist the scriptures twist it to mean that Paul was preaching against tithing, when in reality in Hebrews he was reaffirming the tithe.
Those twisters of the Scriptures twist the scriptures to their own destruction.
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09-23-2014, 10:01 AM
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Saved by Grace
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Decatur, TX
Posts: 5,247
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FlamingZword
Because tithing was not a part of the law, it existed before the Law, it was just simply added to the Law, where it was expanded.
There was not need to remind the believers of what was common knowledge and was commonly practiced by them.
Actually the teaching was endorsed in the Book of Hebrews, of course those who like to twist the scriptures twist it to mean that Paul was preaching against tithing, when in reality in Hebrews he was reaffirming the tithe.
Those twisters of the Scriptures twist the scriptures to their own destruction.
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Oh ok. NOW I'm convinced.
Actually the only tithing before the Law was Abraham to Melchizedek and a cross reference of Gen 14 w/ Hebrews 7 shoe it was not even of Abraham's personal possessions and wealth but of the spoils of war.
I'm interested to know how YOU sir twist the scriptures to tell people under your care that that means they have to tithe money under the covenant of grace or be cursed for robbing God.
__________________
"Resolved: That all men should live to the glory of God. Resolved, secondly: That whether or not anyone else does, I will." ~Jonathan Edwards
"The only man who has the right to say he is justified by grace alone is the man who has left all to follow Christ." ~Dietrich Bonheoffer, The Cost of Discipleship
"Preachers who should be fishing for men are now too often fishing for compliments from men." ~Leonard Ravenhill
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09-23-2014, 11:31 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Most Christians in the first century were among the servant class. Jewish Christians no doubt continued to tithe to the priesthood in the Temple until the division between Judaism and Christianity became firmly established. However, Gentile Christian communities spread throughout the entire Middle East. Remember, for nearly 300 years Christians didn't meet in large buildings or have a large "organizations". Instead, history shows us that they met in houses, civil squares, barns, cemeteries, caverns and caves. With so many Christians coming into the faith... where did Christians store all the money, produce, livestock, etc. that would have been tithed to them??? It would have taken a massive storehouse like that found in Jerusalem. But we don't find it in archeology or history. We don't see it in Scripture either. We read how tithing WASN'T practiced within the church up until the time of Cyprian. Cyprian wanted to institute an Old Testament style tithe to support a professional priesthood to combat heresies. In fact, Cyprian tried to impose tithing on Carthage, and it was vehemently REJECTED. The Council of Macon tried to force tithing on Christians again, and it was REJECTED. The history on this is CLEAR. The Roman Catholic church eventually instituted tithing THROUGH the royalty ruling various governments. It was a "church and state" institution, a religious "tax" that became enforceable under law in the Middle Ages. It went to support the priesthood and to build massive cathedrals... and to pay off state officials who allowed the church to enforce the tithe... with fines and sometimes brute force if necessary. Even the Catholic Encyclopedias explain this...
The Catholic Encyclopedia (1912 edition only) says, “In the beginning .. [provision] was supplied by the spontaneous support of the faithful. In the course of time, however, as the Church expanded and various institutions arose, it became necessary to make laws which would insure the proper and permanent support of the clergy. The payment of tithes was adopted from the Old Law, and early writers speak of it as a divine ordinance and an obligation of the conscience. The earliest positive legislation on the subject seems to be contained in the letter of the bishops assembled at Tours in 567 and the Canons of the Council of Macon in 585.” In the NT we see Christians giving cheerfully of what they had to give as they purposed in their own hearts. We also see them sharing their entire lives and property. Essentially, early Christians gave 100%. If there was any need among them, they sought to meet it as a congregation. They didn't pay their 10% and go home leaving a brother or sister to catch the bus. They'd have raised funds to buy them a car... or someone with two cars would have given one car.
The Christian life actually requires MORE than tithing.
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09-23-2014, 11:35 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Also consider that the following conditions applied under the Law:
(1) non-food items could not be tithed;
(2) clean wild game animals and fish could not be tithed;
(3) non-Israelites could not tithe;
(4) food from outside God’s holy land of Israel could not be tithed; (5) legitimate tithing did not occur as a regular practice when there was no Levitical priesthood;
(6) tithes did not come from what man’s hands created, produced or caught by hunting and fishing.
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09-23-2014, 11:40 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Really, all one has to do is do some historical research on the history of tithing through the ages to see how tithing was rejected time and time again until the institutional church partnered with the staste to force this religious tax on the people. After the Protestant Reformation, some churches continued to partner with government to receive tithes. As the separation of church and state took hold, churches took the practice as a private religious practice and so we have tithing as it is understood today.
Think about it... imagine living as a poor land owner struggling to make it by and hearing how the local land baron was partnering with the diocese in order to require a "tithe" of all your land, income, crops, and livestock. The tithe wasn't seen as a blessing down through history... unless you were a Catholic Bishop or some class of royalty that the church paid in order to have a right to enforce the tithe with brute force if necessary.
Last edited by Aquila; 09-23-2014 at 11:42 AM.
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09-23-2014, 11:57 AM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Some interesting, more detailed, history on tithing...
Historians usually agree that, not until A.D. 567, five hundred and thirty seven (537) years after Calvary, did the Church’s first substantial attempt to enforce tithing under its own authority appear in history! The Council of Tours in 567 and the Council of Macon in 585 enacted regional church decrees for tithing and excommunication of non-tithers, but did not receive authority from the king to enforce collection through civil decrees. It is significant that tithing did not emerge historically until the church became powerful in the secular realm. Even at this late date tithes were still only food. Eventually the Roman Church even refused to administer last rites if it was not given wealth or land in wills.
Between 774 to 777 the Frankish king, Charlemagne, destroyed the Arian Lombard kingdom which separated his empire from northern Italy. After his defeat of the Lombards, Charlemagne’s unopposed rule included northern Italy and Rome. By quoting the Mosaic Law as its authority at a Church synod, the pope finally convinced Charlemagne to allow enforced agricultural tithing in support of the fast-growing parish system of churches. In 785 Pope Hadrian attempted to impose tithing on the Anglo-Saxons. In appreciation of his church support, on Christmas Day, A.D. 800, the pope crowned Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, thus making official the renewed “Holy” Roman Empire.
In 906 King Edgar legally enforced food tithing in England. In 1067 and 1078, at the Church Councils of Gerona, and in 1215 at the Fourth Lateran Council, tithing was increasingly applied to all lands under Christian rule. All citizens, including Jews, were required to tithe to the Roman Catholic Church. A typical peasant was giving the first tithe of his land to his secular ruler or landlord (which was often the church) and a second tenth to the church outright. In 1179 the Third Lateran Council decreed that only the pope could release persons from the obligation to tithe, and he exempted the Crusaders.
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09-23-2014, 12:00 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
The point is that all these modern day "tithe advocates" have romanticized the doctrine of the tithe and divorced it from it's history... because there isn't any history of a tithe being required of a believer for nearly the first 400 to 500 years of Christianity. In fact, history shows that until the church gained political points with local governments, every effort of councils to institute a tithe were vehemently rejected.
And where there is history of a required tithe (beginning in the Middle Ages) we see the church using political savvy to make it happen and then using excommunication and brute force to enforce it. In fact, the overthrow of the tithe features prominently throughout the Revolutionary period. I praise God that my people of beloved Ireland abolished the tithe in 1871.
Historically speaking, the tithe doctrine was often a brutal and oppressive doctrine.
Last edited by Aquila; 09-23-2014 at 12:06 PM.
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09-23-2014, 12:07 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Two of the larger false doctrines with us today that originated in the Roman Catholic Church are the doctrines of the Trinity and that of the Tithe.
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09-23-2014, 02:23 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Posts: 23,543
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Okay you tithe teachers....I know you are ticked off at me, but forget about me right now and PLEEEASE read what AQUILA recently posted.
He is posting the facts that you guys must act upon. Just back up and read his last several posts and LEARN!
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09-23-2014, 03:20 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 31,124
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Re: Deep Apostolic Teachers?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sean
Okay you tithe teachers....I know you are ticked off at me, but forget about me right now and PLEEEASE read what AQUILA recently posted.
He is posting the facts that you guys must act upon. Just back up and read his last several posts and LEARN!
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Notice how even you admonish that they read a more sensible position backed with facts. This was my point to you originally. When people start throwing condemnation everything gets emotional and logic goes out the window.
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