|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
8 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
29 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Proof-text tithe advocate.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
Giving and Tithing, Larry Burkett, 1991, 1998, 62 pages.If you are a lay person with little depth of contextual Bible study, this book will be very appealing and a delight to read. Larry is a financial planner, not a theologian, and is more skillful in getting people to agree with him than instead of correctly teaching God's Word. PLUS: (1) When New Covenant principles such as those in 2 Corinthians 8 and 9 are discussed, the book has a lot of worthwhile comments, although they are still in proof-text style. (2) On pages 32-33 he correctly points out that the real biblical "tithe" was actually 23 per cent, although he does not go into embarrassing detail. (3) He correctly concludes that a great deal of the Old Covenant tithe went to the poor and needy in the community and even states the churches should give a portion of their "tithe" income to individuals or para-church organizations that are filling in the gap (page 35). NEGATIVE: (1) Pages 14-15: While claiming to spend many hours studying the Bible in its context, Mr. Burkett does not show any knowledge about the correct definition, contents, covenant, limited purpose, or failure of tithing. (2) Page 29: In reality the tithe was always only food from landowners and herdsmen inside Israel and never applied to craftsmen or the poor. His definition of tithing ignores the food only contents of every legitimate tithing text after Moses. Although Abraham was before the Mosaic Law, he was obeying the Arab law which is clear by Genesis 14:21 in most commentaries. (3) Page 29: Burkett says "no punishment was indicated for not tithing." King Saul (1 Sam 8:14-17), David (1 Chron 23-27), Hezekiah (2 Chron 31), and Nehemiah (Neh 10-13) sent soldiers to collect tithe-taxes to support their Levitical government workers. (4) Page 30: Since tithes were collected and stored in the king's storehouses, it was not voluntary, as Burkett, and thus is disqualified under free-will principles of the newer and better covenant of grace. (5) Page 31: Burkett also missed the "purpose" of the tithe by ignoring its key chapter, Numbers 18. The tithe was a temporary replacement for the "priesthood of believers" and only its supported priests could draw near to God. When tithing ended at Calvary, Exodus 19:5-6 was fulfilled in 1 Peter 2:9-10. (6) Page 31: The wicked "they" were most likely the disobedient cursed priests from Malachi 1-3. (7) Page 32: Says that the tithe was considered a minimum without giving any supporting texts. This is not true. The poor gave what they could and were not covered by the definition of the tithe. (8) Page 34: "The priests and the tribe of Levi would be the equivalent of the pastors, church staff, missionaries, and evangelists today." This is also not true, because the believer-priest replaced the old priesthood and the pastor-teacher is a new entity comparable to the rabbi, who was usually self-supporting. (9) Page 34: Says that the system of tithing was "kept nearly intact by the early church." Actually, while the earliest church was very strong on helping the needy, tithing was not reintroduced until Cyprian's time in the 3rd century. Tertullian, his teacher, taught otherwise. (10) Pages 16-17: Claims that Paul's "material suffering" following his great sacrifice was "unique" and, therefore, not the norm, which contradict his own survey found on page 16. (11) Page 17: The statement that "Paul amplifies" the statement that "those who give less than a tenth of their income limit what God can do for them" is absurd when compared to New Covenant principles found in 1 Tim. 5:8 and 2 Cor. 8:13-14. (12) Page 17+: While quoting Mal. 3:10-12 numerous times and 3:8 once, he does not quote the curse of 3:9 because it contradicts his statements about no "fear" of being "punished" on pages 22-23. The old covenant curse context of 3:5-7 from Neh. 10:29 and Deut. 27-28 is totally ignored. Actually, the priests in Malachi were cursed for keeping the best of the tithe for themselves and not giving it to the poor in verse 5. The curse of the law for not tithing does not apply to Christians, per Galatians 3:13. (13) Page 17: "A lack of giving is an external material indicator that spiritual changes need to be made" is an insult to the devout Christians in Judea who were being helped by the early church; and also to those today who are suffering under tremendous medical bills. Burkett sacrifices the love Jesus shows to the poor for his viewpoint of "weak and unprofitable" "abolished" principles of tithing (Heb 7:18). Burkett might succeed as a family financial counselor, but he fails miserably as a theologian and church historian. When asked to speak for the church in such matters, he should defer the biblical application to those persons. Burkett is not inclined to dialogue with those who disagree with him. Since the book contains so many biblical errors, I do not recommend it at all.
15 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A grand disappointment in light of Scripture!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
Though Larry is often heralded as one of the most popular Christian authors on financial matters (which I would have to agree that financial advice is his strong suit and I know people who have benefitted from his books), this book is a grand disappointment, to say the least. This book proves that Larry is typically influenced with the traditional mindset on tithing but is less than able to present any valid biblical reason for his direction to tithe. As Russell Kelly, PhD. put it, "Larry is a financial planner, not a theologian..."Larry builds his entire foundation on the modern traditional teaching of tithing rather than building it on the Word of God. While Scripture is referenced, it is most often far removed from its proper context and Larry relies on his personal opinion often to enforce points. Larry seems to be ignorant of the mountain of evidence included in early Church history that reveals the Church was big on giving out of love, but was not impressed with those who imposed Old Covenant mandates on the Church. In fact, several of the Church Fathers from the second century specifically spoke out against tithing (to be used as an example, guideline or motivation for Christian giving). And despite the fact that there is not one New Testament passage that teaches the Church to use the Old Covenant tithe of food as an example to motivate giving money for the purpose of maintaining building programs and staffed ministers, still Larry insists that tithing is very much a New Covenant principle! Amazing! Another problem is that Larry only seems to quote certain passages of Scripture where it supports the point he is making. That wouldn't be a problem if it weren't that he continually misapplies passages by removing them from their proper context and then only quoting the part of the passage that suits his view. Other passages that should also be included to bring clarity to the complete biblical picture are left out entirely, and understandably so as they would cause his misuse of other passages (whether deliberate or from ignorance) to be more evident. His puzzle wouldn't fit together if Scripture was visited in its proper context. This is sad and unfortunate. Even more unfortunate is the reality that there will be some Christians who just bite and swallow these teachings without examining the Word fully for themselves. I am not suggesting that Larry is deliberately trying to deceive people. I'm sure he is probably thoroughly convinced of his view as are so many believers today who follow the modern concept of tithing money to churches. I know that Larry is a skilled teacher in the area of financial management and I thank God for the help he has provided to people needing assistance in this area of their lives. There is much good to be said about brother Larry's work in this field. I cannot, however, speak so positively about his handling of this subject of tithing because, quite honestly, this book is a miserable examination of the topic and it is misleading to the body of Christ when it encourages Christians to just accept that tithing money to a church is a biblical mandate. It is not. Not even close. This is also not to say that Christians should not support those programs that they receive benefit from, but all I am suggesting is that to call something biblical and present it as a mandate of Scripture when it is not Scriptural at all is just not biblically honest and I don't see how the Holy Spirit can ever bless such teaching. I hope by sharing these comments that, if someone does happen to purchase Larry's booklet on tithing, they will be wise to thoroughly examine the Word on their own and not just take this brother's word for it. Anyone can build a doctrine by piecing verses together here and there. It is another thing to honestly examine Scripture in its full and complete context. While there is much encouragement in the New Testament towards giving from love and obedience to the internal leading of God's Spirit, and that giving is to be actuated from free will WITHOUT COMPULSION or because of NECESSITY (2 Corinthians 9:7), any mandate to tithe money to a local church ...is just absolutely absent from Scripture! After studying the topic myself for more than 4 years now, I am thoroughly convinced it is a doctrine of man and not at all of Scripture. For a real study on tithing, that goes far far far beyond just one guy's opinion, prooftexted with a small handful of verses, I strongly encourage you to get your hands on a copy of Russell Earl Kelly's book on tithing. It's called, "Should The Church Teach Tithing: A Theologian's Conclusions About A Taboo Doctrine." This book is remarkable! Every passage on tithing in the entire Bible is dealt with thoroughly, in context. There is no proof texting in this study... it's just strait up, honest Bible! Where opinion is offered, Russell states such and does not ever expect the reader to just take his word of opinion for something. In other words, Russell does not teach his opinions as being the Bible. He teaches the Bible. And his book includes all the source references used in his study so the reader can check him out completely if they choose to. That's why I loved his book and so highly recommend it - it nails it on the head when it comes to "getting biblical" about this topic. No stone is left unturned! Just about every other pro-tithe book I've read lacks substance and usually these books are very thin, scantly clad with Scripture. Russell's book is crammed thick with the Word of God and loaded with resource study material, including an examination of early Church history - post Calvary! Good stuff! Excellent!... If you want to get honest about what biblical tithing is, I strongly recommend Russ' book!...
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Short and powerful,
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
Burkett, the sage of Christian finances, writes a short book addressing the two very sensitive topics of giving and tithing. Burkett, as well as Alcorn and Ramsey, all argue that the Bible's mandate to tithe at least 10% is still in full effect.
If you can't live off of 90% of your salary, you've got bigger problems than worrying about the other 10%, they say. The truth is we can never out give God. But refusing what is rightfully "his" will result in poverty (certainly spiritual and probably material). Burkett goes on to say that helping the poor is an important part of any church's ministry, especially towards the unsaved. He spends time explaining how a church should set-up a committee to review requests. He shows why all potential recipients must participate in a financial counseling session before a church gives any assistance. Burkett reminds us that the principle of "from each according to his means, to each according to his needs" is a principle, though disastrous if implemented by the unsaved, appropriate for application by today's church.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Spiritual & Insightful,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
Very insightful and informative. Let's the readers know why we as Christians should tithe and give and the benefits for tithing. Tithing is a way of trust between you and GOD. God doesn't need your money, but your faithfulness in Him. Mr. Larry Burkett uses the Bible to teach its readers plus good old common sense to make it easy to understand for those that read and don't read the Bible.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good Book,
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
The book gives very compelling "whys" for tithing. Another good book on this subject is "Robbing God? Tough Questions for Non- Tithers". by Dr. McNeese. He uses tough questions in a Socratic counseling format to show that we should not only give a tithe, but according to the New Testament, giving the 10% alone could still be short-changing God. [...].
12 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Larry's Right On Track Again !,
By Colleen J. Sweeney (North Carolina, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
This is another wonderful book from Christian finanical expert Larry Burkett. It's short and to the point. It lets its readers go through the biblical truths of giving and tithing in easy to understand language. With topics like: Bad and Good reasons for giving, Does God need your money? What is a tithe? Should you tithe from your net or your gross ? How can you know which organization to support? Setting up a benevolence ministry in your church. Larry also covers how to improve giving and the history of welfare. This book is a must for any believer's library.
3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Giving NOT Tithing,
By Searcher (California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
Larry was a blessing to so many but he really swallowed the error of tithing. There is not a single verse telling Christians or churches to tithe, Paul never asked for tithes or salary, none of the apostles taught tithing. In Galatians Paul taught keeping an OT law (like tithing) brings the believer under the curse of the law. Bro. Burkett died from the effects of cancer, which is of the curse in Dt. 28. The NT teaches over and over "giving" (not tithing). Most giving went directly to needy Christians not a building or personal kingdom called a ministry. Read "The Tithe That Binds" free at [...]
2 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
God does ask us to tithe and give offerings,
By Natasha "book lover" (San Bernardino California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) (Paperback)
The Bible does teach us to tithe and give offerings. In Malachi 3:10, it says "Bring the full amount of tithe to my Temple so that there will be plenty of food in my house. Try me, and see if I will not open the gates of heaven and pour out so many blessings on you, spiritual as well as material, that you will not be able to number them all." I have paid tithe and offerings my whole life and God has always taken care of my needs, plus given me many extra surprises. Ideally, our motive for giving should be out of love, however, it's natural to worry about not having enough money left over to pay our bills. That is why God says, "Try me". He invites us to test Him and find out for ourselves that He will take care of us. Some people only want to quote the New Testament and not the Old Testament, but God gave us the whole Bible and both parts apply to our life. Another great book to read about paying Tithes and Offerings is "Fields of Gold" written by Andy Stanley. You might enjoy also be inspired by reading "God Owns my Business" by Stanley Tam, and "Mover of Men and Mountains" by R.G. LeTourneau. Both of these men gave 90% of their income to tithes and offerings and became multi-millionaires. I admire these men who said, "How much can I give to help others", rather than asking, "How little can I give".
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Giving and Tithing (Resourceful Living) by Larry Burkett (Paperback - August 1, 1998)
$6.99
In Stock | ||