Hebrews Lesson 82 March
22, 2007
NKJ
Acts
Hebrews 7
Before I left on vacation and we had the conference, we were studying in
Hebrews 7 with the episode with Melchizedek.
So let’s turn in our Bibles to Hebrews 7 and sort of anchor where we are
there. Hebrews 7 is beginning a new
section, the fourth section, in the book of Hebrews focusing on the uniqueness
of Christ’s priesthood based on the royal priesthood of Melchizedek in the Old
Testament. Of course there are only
about 2 or 3 verses in Genesis 14 that deal with Melchizedek; yet under the inspiration
of God the Holy Spirit the writer of Hebrews is dealing with the episode in
Genesis 18 connecting that to Psalm 110 and from that developing the
implications and significance of that Melchizedekean priesthood in relationship
to the priesthood of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Now when we come to verse 2 of chapter 7 we read that…
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Hebrews 7:2 to whom also
Abraham gave a tenth part of all, first being translated "king of
righteousness," and then also king of
Then we have in verse 3 an explanation of his background.
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Hebrews 7:3 without
father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor
end of life, but made like the Son of God, remains a priest continually.
As I have stated the last couple of lessons, the phrase “without father,
without mother without genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of
life” is not a reference to the fact that he didn’t have a mama or a daddy,
that he wasn’t born, that he didn’t have any physical lineage or ancestors. It is talking about what is in the text of
Scripture. The text of Scripture doesn’t
tell us about his father and his mother and his lineage because that wasn’t
relevant to this kind of priesthood. The
Melchizedekean priesthood was an appointed priesthood. It was a priesthood based upon the
individual’s relationship to God.
We don’t know much more about that other than it was a royal
priesthood. The emphasis from about 2b
(where we start reading being translated the king of righteousness) down
through the end of 3 is sort of a parenthesis as a reminder of who Melchizedek
is. It seems like the driving point of
this paragraph from verse 1 down to verse 10 centers around the event of the
fact that Abraham paid these tithes to Melchizedek. The point of all this is to show the
superiority of Melchizedek because Abraham paid tithes. Basically he gave a tribute payment to
Melchizedek. That indicates (because
this was the custom in the ancient world that the one to whom you gave a
tribute payment. You paid a tithe and it was usually a 10% figure. That is what tithe means – 10%.) that you were honoring someone who was in
authority over you. The writer of Hebrews
is going to draw some implications from that.
As we got into this whole issue of the paying of tithes, we find in
verse 4 where we read…
NKJ
Hebrews 7:4 Now consider
how great this man was, to whom even the patriarch Abraham gave a tenth
of the spoils.
That is important to understand so we had to stop and talk about this
whole doctrine of tithing. It is very interesting.
There was a young pastor here during the week who comes from up in
I have been in churches and places where in the course of the church
service you might have as many as three different offerings. Now sometimes it can be valid if you are
taking up offerings for different things.
If you are really driving and manipulating and making people feel guilty
about what they are giving, then you are out of line. That creates a false motivation for giving.
So much is what you have in many churches is tithing, tithing, tithing. You hear that phraseology over and over
again.
What I started to show the last time was that the concept of tithing is
an Old Testament concept related to the Mosaic Law primarily. There are two examples prior to the Mosaic
Law - one is the case of Abraham, one in the case of Jacob as he is at
We looked at the Mosaic Law. We
saw that in the Mosaic Law there were actually three tithes. Nobody ever talks about that although I am
aware that there was a pastor with a rather large church here in
There were three tithes as I pointed out. One is in Leviticus 27:30
giving the tithe of the land which was everything. You had the first tithe which dealt with
supporting the bureaucracy, the theocracy of the priesthood in Number 18:20-23.
NKJ
Leviticus 27:30 'And all the
tithe of the land, whether of the seed of the land or of the
fruit of the tree, is the LORD's. It is holy to the LORD.
Then the second tithe provided for a national celebration of the grace
and provision of God. That is explained
in Deuteronomy 14:22-24. Those were
annual tithes.
Then there was a third tithe that was taken up every third year to
support the Levite, the alien, the orphan and the widow. That is explained in Deuteronomy
14:28-29.
The tithes were taken up and in the land that money was kept in the
storehouse (the treasury) of the temple.
These were mandatory gifts. It
was legislation for the support of the theocracy as it were - the priests and
the Levites - and also to take care of the widows and the orphans and those who
for one reason or another had lost what they had and did not have the general
means of daily sustenance.
There were also free will offerings as I pointed out last time in the
Old Testament. These are referenced in
Proverbs 3:9-10, Exodus 25:1-2 where Moses raised money through free will
offerings to build the tabernacle. Then
there are various other passages that were given in the law. Leviticus 2:28-23 and other passages are
related to tithing. It is all related
to paying this tax to support the nation and the bureaucracy which was the
priesthood.
Now I pointed out last time that this is the background for
understanding for what happens in Malachi, one of the favorite passages that
people go to that you will hear. I have
heard them in so many congregations and churches. It is based on Malachi 3:8-10. The principle here is that this passage in
Malachi 3:8-10 recognizes that the storehouse, the national bank for the tithe,
was the temple. In Malachi 3:8 God is challenging them. Remember that this is the generation that has
returned from the captivity and they were back in the land. By this time they have been back in the land
about 100 years - maybe about 90 years.
They rebuilt the temple, but everything was really falling apart. The structures that had been established were
not being taken care of properly. Part
of it was because the entire tax system that God had established had been
broken down. Because the tax system had
broken down, the temple was in disrepair.
This dishonored God so God is confronting and challenging the people for
their disobedience to the law.
Now the law remember is given in Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and is
restated in Deuteronomy. So the law
becomes the basis of prophetic challenges.
The best way to understand the role of a prophet in the Old Testament
isn’t someone who told the future. That
isn’t what a prophet did. That was
secondary. It was ancillary. It was what went along but that wasn’t his
purpose. His purpose wasn’t just to be a
preacher. His purpose was to serve as
sort of a prosecuting attorney for the Supreme Court of Heaven to the nation of
Tommy was saying last night that in
Often the reason you bring in the futuristic element is because as God
was through the prophet itemizing the lawsuit against them, He would say, “As a
result of your failure I am going to judge you.”
Yet these things will happen in the future and all of the future or
predictive elements were designed to encourage the Jews with the fact that God
wasn’t disciplining them or taking them out of the land permanently.
But yet He did have a future for them and would not forsake them on a
permanent basis. So the challenge in
Malachi 3:8-10 coming from God is – “Will a man rob God?” If you don’t give your tithe to the nation
“You have robbed Me.” God says.
But you say, “In what way did we rob You?”
See, they are so innocent. They
can’t understand.
“We haven’t robbed you.”
God says, “In tithes and offerings.”
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Malachi 3:8 "Will a
man rob God? Yet you have robbed Me! But you say, 'In what way have we robbed
You?' In tithes and offerings.
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Malachi 3:9 You are
cursed with a curse, For you have robbed Me, Even this whole nation.
That takes you right back to Deuteronomy. Even the whole nation is going to come under
divine discipline. And then God commands
them in verse 10…
NKJ Malachi
Now that is the phrase that you often hear pastors go to. In other words, give you money to the
church. But that is not what it is
saying. The “bring” is the hiphil imperative
second person plural. It is addressed to
the nation. The hiphil is
causative. It means “cause to bring”. The imperative is a mandate to bring all the
tithes. That means the 10% for the
priests and the Levites, the 10% for the annual celebration and the every third
year tithe to support the widows and orphans.
The word for storehouse is the Hebrew word otzar which is one of
9 different words used for treasure.
This word is used of either the treasury in the king’s house. It is used of the treasure in the temple or
it is also used of the material possessions and treasure that an individual
would bring together. There are 9
references in the Old Testament where this word describes the temple
treasury.
A couple of these are Joshua 6:19 and I Kings 7:51.
NKJ Joshua
That’s otzar.
In I Kings
NKJ
1 Kings
So there was a temple treasury in the house of the Lord.
In I Kings
NKJ 1 Kings
This refers to the plundering of the temple treasury. So this term is a term that refers to the
temple treasury. So Malachi
God says, “Do this so that there will be food in My house. Try Me on this. Go ahead and test Me. If you don’t do it, you are really going to
get disciplined.”
That is what He is saying.
In other words if you do this, “I will bless the nation. I will prosper the nation.”
That is exactly what He had promised back in the Mosaic Law.
“If you obey the law I will pour out blessing upon the nation. If you are disobedient to the Mosaic Law, I
am going to discipline you.”
So we had several summary key principles.
All of a sudden they come up
to a grace oriented church and they say, “Phew! I don’t have to give any
more.”
They may go through a reaction
for awhile. Grace doesn’t mean that you
don’t have responsibilities. Grace
doesn’t mean that there is no giving. Grace means that there is an obligation
to give, but that it is between you and the Lord and it is based on your inner
motivation and your gratitude. There is
no set percentage. It is as God has
prospered you. Trust me. “As God has prospered you” is a lot more
convicting and more challenging than 10%.
We have fabulous things that happened here. As I talked about the conference and the
ministry, there are a number of people who gave generously and sacrificially
and gave in abundance in order to meet the financial needs of that
conference. So many people came and didn’t
have to pay for a room at the hotel. They didn’t have to pay for meals. For them it was free, but somebody was
generous and took care of that. They
were able to be graced out in that situation.
Grace is the principle that continues into the Church Age. You have grace in the Old Testament and grace
in the New Testament. So in the New Testament the word tithing is mentioned in
the gospels only in reference to the legalistic practices of the Pharisees.
Let’s go to Luke 11. Turn in your
Bibles to Luke 11. Let’s look at the
context. Luke 11:42.
The reason I make this point here is a lot of people think that tithing
is legalistic. Tithing isn’t
legalistic. There is no such thing as
legalistic blessing in the Old Testament. When the Jews functioned under the
law, it wasn’t legalism. That was still
grace. Grace doesn’t mean that there is
no responsibility and obligation. Grace
means it is oriented to God’s undeserved, unmerited favor. The point that I am making is what the
Pharisees did was instead of recognizing the tithe in its biblical context;
they start making it the basis for gaining God’s approbation, His
approval. You see that is the
difference. You can do the same thing. This person over here does it over here and
it is legalism. This person over there
does it and it is grace because it is grounded in the motivation and gratitude
that is in the individual soul of that believer. This person over here puts $500 in the
collection plate and they think that this is their tithe, their 10 % contribution. God is going to bless them because (Aren’t
they great?) they are giving their 10%.
They are fulfilling their obligation to tithe. That is legalism. This person over here puts the same 10% in,
the same amount.
They are saying, “What a great thing God has done for me. I want to share what He has given me with
others so that they are able to hear the Word of God and are able to respond to
it.”
The difference is in motivation.
What the Pharisees did was take the law.
Paul said the law was unholy, unrighteous and bad. Right? No, he said the law was holy and righteous and
good. The law included tithing. Therefore tithing cannot be in the Old
Testament - in the right context - cannot be legalistic. It was good.
It was holy and it was righteous.
But it was done consistent with grace orientation. But what the Pharisees did was come in and
make this ritualistic law the basis for gaining God’s approval and God’s
blessing. So we come to Luke 11:42 and
Jesus says to the Pharisees…
NKJ
Luke
They get it down to the most minutia and they pass by justice and the
love of God. You see they are applying
the tithe down to the minutest thing.
They are going to make sure that they are going to cut that 10% down to
every minor possession that they have.
In the process they are ignoring the justice of God which here is the
word krisis which is His judgment,
the operation of His justice. It is not dikaios,
righteousness. It is the operation of it
in terms of justice and the application of God’s character. They ignore that and the love of God. So it is all about just doing the right thing
without having the right relationship to God.
Let’s look at the context. As you
go on to read it, in verse 43 he pronounces another woe on the Pharisees.
NKJ
Luke
They are all about approbation.
They want everyone to recognize them as having arrived spiritually. So they are going to sit up front. They are going to be in the market place
where they are seen and observed. Then in verse 44 Jesus says…
NKJ
Luke
So his emphasis here is on their legalism. It is all about the external and not about
the internal attitude of the soul and its orientation to the grace of God.
Another verse in Luke, the second use of tithing in the gospels is in
Legalism isn’t saying, “Thou shalt not”.
Legalism is saying that observing the “thou shalt not” is what gets you
approval with God. That is how you get
saved. That is how you get blessed by
God. It is a rejection of the whole
doctrine of imputation of Christ’s righteousness as the basis for God’s
blessing. So Jesus tells the parable.
NKJ
Luke
NKJ
Luke
NKJ Luke
Earlier in Matthew, Jesus says that if you give, give in such a way that
the right hand doesn’t know what the left hand is doing. Giving is a matter of privacy. It isn’t done before men. It is to be done in privacy. It is to be unobserved. It is unannounced. It doesn’t matter what other people see. If you think your reward comes from what
other people see because they recognize what a great giver you are and how
generous you are then that is your reward - no reward later on at the Judgment
Seat of Christ because you put your hope in the flesh and in men.
NKJ Jeremiah
17:5 Thus says the LORD: "Cursed is the man who
trusts in man And makes flesh his strength, Whose heart departs from the LORD.
So that is the Pharisee. That is
what makes it legalistic. He is putting
the emphasis on what he does.
The tax collector in contrast…
NKJ
Luke 18:13 "And
the tax collector, standing afar off, would not so much as raise his eyes
to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, 'God, be merciful to me a sinner!'
He is so aware that he had no business being in the presence of
God. He has true genuine humility. He is recognizing that as a sinner we don’t
bring anything at all to the table. God
does everything. The tax collector
standing afar off would not so much as raise his eyes to heaven.
NKJ
Luke 18:14 "I
tell you, this man went down to his house justified rather than the other;
for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself
will be exalted."
The path to preeminence is humility and recognizing that authority
orientation.
2. The Lord also taught as our
second point that giving was to be a private matter between the believer and
God – nobody else’s business.
NKJ
Matthew 6:2
"Therefore, when you do a charitable deed, do not sound a trumpet before
you as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may
have glory from men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward.
NKJ
Matthew 6:3 "But
when you do a charitable deed, do not let your left hand know what your right
hand is doing,
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Matthew 6:4 "that
your charitable deed may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will
Himself reward you openly.
Giving should be done in such a way that people can preserve their
privacy.
Sometimes people say, “Well, sometimes I can’t preserve my privacy when
we pass the plate in church.”
I have been in churches that take up a collection by passing the plate
and others that put a box in the back.
Sometimes we all forget. I think
that passing a plate is a good reminder.
We all forget. A lot of times
people put something out in the hallway and people do forget so I don’t have a
problem in passing a plate. Some people
are concerned about privacy.
I have heard people say this.
“Somebody down the row might see my check pop open and see what I gave.”
Great! Put it in the mail. Don’t
get wrapped around the axle. Everybody
wants to over think stuff. The issue is
that it is between you and the Lord, not letting it be known to other
people.
3. The New Testament clearly
recognizes free will giving that is based on gratitude and soul and not on the
basis of a prescribed percentage. In
Luke 21:2-4 we have the story of the widow who puts the two mites into the
collection.
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Luke 21:2 and He saw
also a certain poor widow putting in two mites.
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Luke 21:3 So He said,
"Truly I say to you that this poor widow has put in more than all;
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Luke 21:4 "for
all these out of their abundance have put in offerings for God, but she out of
her poverty put in all the livelihood that she had."
That is they looked at how much is left at the end of the month in their
checkbook and then they decide how much they are going to give based on what is
left over. Kind of like Dr. Cate said
the other night that happens in Islam.
They are supposed to give 3.2% or 3.5% or something like that. They wait until the end of the year. It is not based on how much they made. It is not based on their gross.
I hear Christians say, “Should I give 10%? Is that 10% of net or 10% of gross?”
It is 10% of grace. Okay? Don’t worry about the numbers. Worry about the grace and that’s it. What the Moslems will do is give 3.5% of what
is left in the checkbook at the end of the year when everything is paid for. That is pretty negligible. So here what Jesus is saying is that it is a
decision that is made up front in the budgeting process. You are going to decide that you are going to
give this amount of money for the local church and missions and you know that
God is going to bless and honor whatever I am going to give and Him to take of
me and I am going to trust Him to take care of me. It is not done irrationally or irresponsibly,
but it is done in light of a thought out procedure according to I Corinthians
based on how God has prospered you.
Later on we are going to see how the Macedonians were praised by Paul
because they gave out of their poverty to help support the Jewish believers in
They didn’t look around and say, “The Lord really hasn’t really given us
that much.”
They said, “The Lord hasn’t given us that much, but I still have a
responsibility to help others.”
The Macedonians demonstrate the same principle of giving out of their
lack, not out of their abundance.
Next time we will come back and go to point 4 dealing with what is going
on with Abraham’s tithe. Then we will
wrap up with the other principles and two other key passages in the New
Testament for giving - I Corinthians 16 and II Corinthians 9.
We need to ask the question, “Is there a reason and is there legitimacy
for churches, for pastors, for seminaries to let people know what their needs
are?”
There are some ministries that say, “If you let people know what your
needs are, you are just asking for money.”
Is there a basis for that biblically?
We will look at that when we come back next Thursday night.
Let’s bow our heads.