K
I forgot to say that I think one of the things that happens subconsciously is that as you develop as a Christian, you're moulded into the particular beliefs of whatever Church or denomination you happen to attend.
I would suggest that relatively very few people read the Bible in it's entirety and then decide which Church best aligns with their interpretation of the Bible.
Instead, they hear passages for the first time from a preacher. But by the very nature of how modern preaching seems to work, you're not just given what the Bible says but the preacher's individual interpretation or perspective too.
This means that you're not actually hearing God's word, but the word of the preacher.
If he's an honest and good preacher then the two will be the same, but often times this is not the case.
This 'moulding' and force feeding of other's interpretations will make you swear by a particular set of values, even though to other people, they're blatantly incorrect.
Tithing serves as a good example.
Some people will swear that Malachi provides the reason for compulsory giving.
But Malachi isn't even about that, it's about organising resources in times of good/bad.
Furthermore, it is under the old covenant, whereas we are under the new.
My Church drives tithing (compulsory) quite a lot.
I once asked for Biblical references to support this.
I will say that in all honesty I wasn't made to feel awkward for asking, but the explanation I received was detail light and emotion heavy.
The person answering my question went all the way back to Genesis to show me an example of somebody who raided a village and gave 10% of the treasure they had captured to his allies.
He forgot to mention that in the particular story he referenced, the victorious warriors actually did this voluntarily.
I mentioned my objection to Malachi, as above, and he had no answer or rebuttal.
He could not give me a solid verse in the NT where God commanded 10% of anything.
I asked bluntly
"In order to be saved does God ask us to have faith in Jesus...and also to give him money?".
There was a pause, and he looked visibly shocked by the blunt question.
I did not receive an answer.
Then came the emotional stuff.
It was essentially explained to me that the Church uses tithing as a way of 'seeing where your heart is at'.
In other words, to assess the strength of your faith.
I don't know about you, but if somebody wants to know what type of person you are, and it just so happens that you're encouraged to give them money to demonstrate that you're of good character, this screams 'manipulation' to me.
I would suggest that relatively very few people read the Bible in it's entirety and then decide which Church best aligns with their interpretation of the Bible.
Instead, they hear passages for the first time from a preacher. But by the very nature of how modern preaching seems to work, you're not just given what the Bible says but the preacher's individual interpretation or perspective too.
This means that you're not actually hearing God's word, but the word of the preacher.
If he's an honest and good preacher then the two will be the same, but often times this is not the case.
This 'moulding' and force feeding of other's interpretations will make you swear by a particular set of values, even though to other people, they're blatantly incorrect.
Tithing serves as a good example.
Some people will swear that Malachi provides the reason for compulsory giving.
But Malachi isn't even about that, it's about organising resources in times of good/bad.
Furthermore, it is under the old covenant, whereas we are under the new.
My Church drives tithing (compulsory) quite a lot.
I once asked for Biblical references to support this.
I will say that in all honesty I wasn't made to feel awkward for asking, but the explanation I received was detail light and emotion heavy.
The person answering my question went all the way back to Genesis to show me an example of somebody who raided a village and gave 10% of the treasure they had captured to his allies.
He forgot to mention that in the particular story he referenced, the victorious warriors actually did this voluntarily.
I mentioned my objection to Malachi, as above, and he had no answer or rebuttal.
He could not give me a solid verse in the NT where God commanded 10% of anything.
I asked bluntly
"In order to be saved does God ask us to have faith in Jesus...and also to give him money?".
There was a pause, and he looked visibly shocked by the blunt question.
I did not receive an answer.
Then came the emotional stuff.
It was essentially explained to me that the Church uses tithing as a way of 'seeing where your heart is at'.
In other words, to assess the strength of your faith.
I don't know about you, but if somebody wants to know what type of person you are, and it just so happens that you're encouraged to give them money to demonstrate that you're of good character, this screams 'manipulation' to me.