Christians often ask if they should give all of their tithe to the local church, or if they can give a portion of it to a ministry. To help find the answer, a Christian minister quotes preacher John Piper on his blog.
Chris Willard, director of generosity development at Leadership Network, takes up the issue of tithing on his personal blog, providing the transcript of a message by Piper, who served as pastor at Bethlehem Baptist Church in Minneapolis, Minn., for over three decades.
āThereās no clear biblical mandate that your generosity has to be in a certain proportion to your church and to other ministries,ā Willard, who served with Campus Crusade for Christ for more than 25 years, quoted Piper as saying in a message on April 14, 2008.
āAs a pastor, if somebody came to me and said, āIād like to tithe. Where should I give it?ā I would say, āWell, I think itās a helpful rule of thumb to say that, considering that this is your family of believers with its own set of needs and that you benefit from the church and give your life to it, starting with a tithe here is a good idea. And from there you can give more here and more elsewhere,āā Piper said.
“But I would never say, āYou must give your tithe to this church.ā I just donāt find it in the Bible. I canāt put biblical texts behind it,ā Piper added.
Many evangelical leaders believe tithing is not a biblical mandate, but generosity is, which often involves giving more than 10 percent of their income.
In a survey by the National Association of Evangelicals in April 2011, 58 percent of respondents, all members of the NAE board of directors, said they do not think giving 10 percent of oneās income to the church is mandated by the Bible, while 42 percent do.
Many of the NAE leaders noted in their response that although tithing is an Old Testament legal model, New Testament Christians should give out of generosity. The overwhelming majority, 95 percent, of respondents said they give at least 10 percent.





