These past few months have been a test and trial as to my understanding and faith in tithing. Yes, tithing is a difficult subject, but I think it's because we are all so unique in our walk with God that not one of us is having to face the same exact trial. Some may be similar, but never exact. We each have our own reactions, beliefs, and circumstances to affect the issue.
So with that said, here is my experience with learning to tithe.
A couple years ago I made a promise to God. A promise that I was going to start tithing. At the time tithing scared me, I had no understanding of it, and God knows my heart enough to know when I don't understand something that can be understood well then it's lesson time! I love a good lesson! Ya know? I love learning too.. most of the time. For me this was one of the hard ones. Mostly because it involves a very sensitive subject.. money. (Yuck) I can take you back a couple years to my promise to God that I would atleast tithe $20 a week. I know that doesn't sound like much from a full-time worker who makes a decent amount, but keep in mind I'm also a single mother living off only 1 income. It's not an easy thing to do. One can get very caught up in the debts and financial responsibilities. In fact, I was so mentally strangled by my finances I would freak out and fall into a depression over bills. No I wasn't responsible for a house. I only had a few bills.. I called it "drowning in a puddle". Meaning I'm face down, held under by the finances that surrounded me, but they didn't really add up to much compared to some others I knew of. So why was I drowning??
Perspective. That's why. What do I mean? Well I'll get to that, but let's go a bit deeper. So I made a promise to tithe $20. This was a big step for me, because before that point tithing was the last thing on my mind. I was worried about bills, and food, and clothing for a boy who was growing VERY fast. I had to make sure there was gas in my car, and that my son had lunch money.. how the heck was I supposed to tithe when I could barely afford those things?? I bet you're on my side at this point. Probably thinking to yourself this girl is being realistic. These are real issues, and I can see from her perspective why she felt tithing shouldn't really be a priority. If you aren't on my side, well good for you! But this is for those who really want to see, like I did, why tithing was so important.
Fast forward over weeks of tithing $20, and no further in my understanding, yet I started feeling that tug that I should be giving more. And after I started feeling that other things were starting to be laid on my heart. For those who do tithe we know that God absolutely provides when we do. Needs are met, suddenly that car we've been needing shows up, or the clothes we can't afford are provided, or the bill we can't pay is anonymously paid off. It happens. Checks we aren't expecting come in the mail, people show up on our doorstep with meals fully cooked on a night when we just can't pull it together. Don't tell me that doesn't happen, because I've got a church full of "yes it does" people, just waiting to testify to that very fact. For me, when I was tithing the $20 my needs were being met, barely. I never needed food, clothing, or gas. My car never broke, I never got sick and neither did Ethan. Work was going great, nothing was breaking, and I was maintained. Then enter that feeling and suddenly things started changing. God was saying to me, "Jocelynn, you still don't do what I ask fully." I never felt pressure from Him, but I felt this knot in my heart, like I was wrong to not try. I'm not blaming outside influences, but it didn't help that I had people who "understood" that I couldn't afford it telling me that I shouldn't tithe, it's crazy when I'm this strapped for cash. I still didn't understand tithing, or the lesson God was trying to teach me through it. Even though my tithe had increased, I was giving more, my desire to do so decreased. I found that every once in a while I'd skip a week. Who cares, ya know? They always say God "owns the cattle of a thousand hills" and "if I didn't give it's not like God would worry".. God was the owner of everything, so why did it matter if I didn't give my portion? It's not like He'd have to skip a car payment because of me. And with this attitude I slowly started to stop tithing again. Every week became a battle. Me against tithing. Every time I'd see the ushers come to the front with those baskets I wanted to find any excuse I could.. I need money for food, I have to buy Ethan new shoes, I didn't pay the electric bill yet.. seriously, I found a lot of excuses to not tithe.
Sometimes I'd convince myself it was the right thing. I'd listen to the speaker explain how tithing is good, and helps us grow in faith and depend on God. I WANTED to be that person. I wanted to be faithful to God. I wanted to give and do my part. But I was finding more and more that because I couldn't understand WHY I was supposed to tithe I didn't want to do it. Just like I had to understand why I should wait for my future husband, it was hard to wait without understanding, just as it was hard tithing without understanding.
Sometimes without knowledge I literally get stuck in my faith. And I found in other aspects I was growing spiritually, but not in this one. My faith in God's ability to comfort me in my emotional struggles was there. I knew He could, because He was constantly doing so. I was understanding the love stuff more, and the fruits of the spirit, and why we forgive. Everything was really starting to make sense. It was awesome. But at the bottom of my barrel of lessons remained tithing. And it became a weight that kept me from growing completely. I was finding because I couldn't understand this, I was slowly starting to grow bitter about it. I hated that I had to deal with this problem.
Tithing was the one lesson I couldn't figure out. Then about a year ago I made a choice to start praying for God to seriously teach me about tithing this time. I was willing to do whatever if He could just help me understand what it was that was keeping me so constricted and blinded. And honestly, I didn't see anything change in my life at first. I was tithing off and on, so I decided to force myself to tithe weekly, this time giving on my net pay instead of just the $20, because I felt like I needed to show God I was willing to do something to show Him I did want to atleast be faithful in what He asked of me financially.. even if I didn't understand. So every paycheck I'd tithe. Still none the wiser about what the point of it was. Slowly I started feeling like maybe God didn't care. Maybe I was at the point where God saw how crappy my effort was throughout all this lesson, and was sick of it and was done with me. This was a losing battle. I got discouraged, but I forced myself to be faithful still. I couldn't bear the thought of what God would think or do if I didn't tithe.. Now you should know that if you don't tithe your heart isn't right with God's desires for your life. But if you tithe just because you're afraid of what will happen if you don't that's bad too. God is not a dictator, or debt collector. He's not up there on His throne eating tables of food, shouting at His angels to come down here and take all your money. I always picture the scene from The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King when the Stewerd of Gondor, Denethor, was at the table eating the meat.. food dripping from his mouth.. He only cared about himself. I think in some strange way I assumed this was God. He doesn't care about me, He only wants my submission and money. He's a dictator, barking orders and demanding respect.
Now don't get this wrong. In NO WAY is God a meek mouse in the corner. He's not a wimpy bully ready to pounce, but afraid of what would happen if you fight back. No. God is God. He is Omnipresent, Omnipotent, and Omniscient... meaning He has all power in all places at all times, yet He is a respecter of persons. He demands our love, our worship, our faithfulness.. but in no way does He force it. We will probably never fully understand all there is to understand about God here on this earth. Our image of Him will always be limited to our earthly minds, so to think you understand God would be a big fat IGNORANT thought. And I'd say you should think again. Anyways...
So how did I learn to understand the tithing thing? It wasn't easy. In fact, literally only recently have I really started to grasp what it is God is trying to teach me. I shut out those thoughts of a gross king up in heaven as God, and I started to trust that God isn't like that. I remembered how He helped me through those hard times when I felt like my world was crushed, and how never once did I feel Him pressure me to do anything I wasn't ready to do. God loved me, and still loves me. He has always been patient with me in my learning, has always waited until He knew I was ready for more, so slowly over the last year I became more determined to tithe even if I didn't understand. I told God I was willing to be faithful even if I never understood, even though I really wanted to, I had to just be faithful and wait. Over time I did see a change. I found myself seeing a trend in my finances that needed to change, I became more strict with my spending habits, I set limits for myself financially, I set up budgets and spending plans. Every month I would work on a spending plan for where my money would go to. I have a green notebook that I've been using. At the top I'd put the month, then I'd list in order of date what needed to be paid. A couple months back God called me to do something that was hard for me to swallow.. He wanted me to tithe on my Gross Income, not my Net Pay. Most of us taxpaying Americans know that's like a big difference. And it was hard. And to add to that He also starting to show me that I needed to change how I pay my bills. I thought He was crazy. I paid them as they were due, then I'd buy groceries, put gas in my car, and tithe. I had my priorities, ya know?? I had to make sure the bills were paid! Yet I'd go weeks without filling my fridge or cabinets, and I'd never drive anywhere to conserve gas.
Still, I'd tithe. It was about June when I started a new diet that forced me to change my eating habits. Along with a gluten-free life God gave me a lovely ironic scripture to chew on that I think gave that final push I needed to truly understand...
Deuteronomy 8:3(NLT)
3 Yes, he humbled you by letting you go hungry and then feeding you with manna, a food previously unknown to you and your ancestors. He did it to teach you that people do not live by bread alone; rather, we live by every word that comes from the mouth of the Lord.
If you didn't already know, I come from a family that practically survives off of glutenous foods. My mom is Sicilian and Armenian, so when we eat a snack it's packed with gluten. There was always a loaf of Italian bread on my Nana's table growing up, and any gathering always included multiple pasta dishes.. lasagna, stuffed shells, Italian fried chicken, meatballs with breadcrumbs, ravioli... and that's just the main dishes.. can we talk about desserts? Baklava, Che reg, Cookies, Cakes, Pies.. so much good food. And to my horror those were the reason I have been so sick all my life. In June I went to a doctor appointment in my most desperate state.. I had turned into a basket case. My hormones were out of control, I was constantly itchy, feeling like my skin was crawling, my hair was falling out in clumps, my weight had ballooned up to place where I've never been, and my body felt like I was bursting at the seams. I knew there was something wrong, but it wasn't a simple fix. I sat in the doctor's office feeling so stupid, thinking maybe there was something wrong mentally.. hey it made sense to me.. only last time I thought that and got medication to fix it all it did was make me numb, and fixed nothing. We discussed my issues, and I had looked up my symptoms online and discovered I may have a problem with Gluten. With me being dangerously low in Vitamin D, Iron and Calcium I was supposed to be taking vitamins, but I couldn't because I could never keep them down.. so with the things I told her, plus my past medical issues we decided to take gluten out of my diet. And what a horrible ordeal that was. Within the first two weeks I lost 15 lbs because I had no idea what I could eat. But it changed not only eating habits, or my health, it also changed my financial habits. I could no longer eat fast food. Whether at a McDonald's or in a grocery store, all things that are preserved or pre-frozen are more often than not chock full of glutenous ingredients.. because that's used as a preservative. I had to stop buying quick and easy, and start buying fresh and make everything from scratch. Junk food was no longer on the menu, so I went through a horrible withdrawal period. Luckily the worst of it was in the hot months so I got by with salads and fruit and light meats and fish. And before the cold months hit I was pretty much a pro at it, and I think I handled Thanksgiving very well... there was very little crying.
After all that I realized I had changed in lot of ways, but financially I was spending differently too. I no longer bought because I wanted something, I bought according to needs. In the course of all that I also had this nagging feeling I wasn't doing my spending plan right. It was in order of most important bills.. you know.. Rent, Electric, car payment, Credit Cards... guess what was at the bottom of that list? Tithing, food, and gas. Yep. I put God and myself LAST. Those other things were not as important.. I can deal with what was in my cabinets.. but with my gluten issue resolved, me only feeling better WITHOUT eating gluten that really left me with nothing in my cabinets to eat. I had no choice but to buy food.
I remember the night God hit me with a thought that really rocked my way of thinking up to this point. I was sitting at the computer like many other nights and staring at the green spending sheet wishing it would burst into flames. I didn't like the numbers it was showing me. And I was doing this new thing where I would tithe my gross income, and that's when God was stirring my spirit about my priorities.. why am I paying Credit cards and bills and not buying food first? Now that I was putting God first financially I thought it was enough. But I still put the bills before myself. Why? Because I thought that's way it had to be. And I could hear God.. "No, no, no, you've got it BACKWARDS. YOUR needs before you pay the bills."
Huh??? What God?? You've got to be kidding me, right? Those bills have to get paid. They'll take my car, and my apartment, and hunt me down! They'll call me and hound me, and OH MY GOSH. I'm not gonna lie.. I cried. Actually I sobbed. How could God ask this of me?? I HAVE TO PAY BILLS. Yeah. God was turning the world I had known UPSIDE DOWN.
And that's when it hit me.. He was turning my face out of the puddle I was drowning in to face Him. He was teaching me that I had my priorities all wrong. This whole time I was putting money, and bills, and debt, and the government before Him, and before my own needs. All those other things are a huge load. Everything I owe doesn't add up to much, but to me it was a lot to handle. God was showing me that I was an upside down iceberg.. putting everything else that was holding me under water first. It was only when I started to tithe the Gross Pay, and buy groceries and put gas in my car first that I started feeling this release. I could almost feel the iceberg pushing out of the water, and the tip was where I stood, and the rest was under water.. the 90%..
God asks us to give 10%. He asks us to be faithful and trust that He has the means and desire to keep us afloat in an ocean that threatens to consume us.. maybe my issues looked like a puddle.. but to me they felt like an ocean. And suddenly as I look over things I don't feel like I'm looking from the bottom anymore. I feel like I'm at the top looking down, and I can breathe, because I'm not under the water, drowning. God asks for us to tithe, I believe because He wants us to see from another perspective, and He wants you to get your priorities straight. He should be Lord over everything, even money. And considering money is really nothing to Him, I know He's not asking me to give Him a tithe of my income because of the money. It's a metaphor.. it's to show Him where our loyalty and faith lie. Do we believe Him when He says He is "Jehovah Jirah"? Meaning God our provider?
That scripture I put out earlier was set in a time when the Israelite's had really lost their perspective. Their world was just flipped upside down... or maybe they were actually flipped right-side up, and so was I. All this time I was upside down, face down in a puddle.. struggling to breathe.. struggling to break free from chains that just wouldn't let me go. But once God gave me this understanding I realize I wasn't chained at all. I was wrapped up in my problems, just like we can get wrapped up in our sheets when we sleep. God unwound me, flipped me right-side up, and pulled me out of my puddle I was drowning on. I almost feel like I know what walking on water would be like.. I bet this is pretty close...
And I doubt I'm close to being done with this lesson. As most children of God know, these lessons are lifelong. We never stop learning. Things I understand now will grow with me, I'll understand more and heck... I might even figure out I'm wrong about something. But it's ok. Today I feel triumphant. Money still makes me crazy, bills will always be there to pay, but my hope is that I will never let bills get in the way of putting God first, or putting myself second.