Monday, 29 June 2026

FCRA

FCRA

 The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026

Hi Bill ditnaw leiin National Council of Churches in India (NCCI) le The Catholic Bishops' Conference of India (CBCI) bâka Evangelical Fellowship of India (EFI)chun June 28 (Pathienni) hi Day of Prayer a hmang dingin thu anlo suksuok tah. 


Chuleiin, theitâwpa ṭawngṭainaa hin ei ṭhang a pawimaw in, Pathien ei buon nasa hlê a ṭul a nih. 

FCRA chu iem a na?

Ramdanga inthawk sum hung lût khuokhirna le enkawlna dân a nih. 

FCRA chanchin timeline 

1. 1976 Emergency huna Indira Gandhi PM a ni laia dân siem ṭana um a nih. 

2. 1984 in 1st Amendment 

3. 2010 in New FCRA tiin a hlui thlâk a nih.

4. 2020 in Amendment tenau iemani zât nei nâwk a nih. 

March 25, 2026 khan Ministry of Home Affairs in Lok Sabha-a FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 phar a nih. 

June 23, 2026 khan FCRA Amendment Rules 2026 ti suksuok nghâl a nih. 

Rajya Sabha-a phar a la ni hman nawh. 

FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 hin iem a amendment ding

Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 siemṭhat le sukdanglam a tum tak a nih. 

FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 hin Kristienhai iengtin am a mi nghawng ding

1. Kohran rawngbâwlna- Inchûkna, Hospital le Ramthim (Missions) hai suktâwp theina bâka hienghai po po sawrkar-a thuneina le enkawlna sawn theina- Permanent Vesting and Disposal.

2. Kohran ram le building hai lâkpêk theina-Designated Authority.

3. FCRA fe thlenga sum lût po po - pasietna dawmkângna ding dâm, Hospital dâm, ram sukhmasâwnna dâm chân theina - Freeze Assets. 

4. Hnam hnuoihnung Dalit le Tribal ta dinga hnengdena le sirdena hmangruo a ni ding.

5. Tlâwm lemhai Minorities abîkin Kristienhai sirbetna, hnawchepna hmangruo nîng a ta. An chanvo le indikna palzûtna ni bawk a tih.

6. India rama FCRA fe thlenga ṭhangpuina sumhai hrim hrim sakhuo inletna (conversion) a hmang theilo/thienglo ding an tina ang tluk a nih. 

7. Rawngbâwlna abîkin Ramthim/Ramthar ah harsatna lientak ei tuokna Bill a ni ding.

8. Kohran hmasâwnna dinga hmalâkna hrim hrim Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) nasatakin nghawng a nei ding. 

9. Christian NGO-Hospital, Charity, School, Humanitarian Activities a nghawng na hlê ding a nih. 

Hi Bill FCRA Amendment Bill 2026 hi sawrkar laipui cheltu Lotus pâr hai hin India ram hi Hindutva-ah a siemna dinga sirbi pakhata hmang chu a keivirtu tak a nih. Sakhuo danga inlet (conversion) suktâwp a ni theina dingin, hi durbin hmang hin dân an duong pei ding a nih. 

Lotus Pâr hai thiltum chu ieng dang a ni nawh; Mother India-Bharat Mata- mother goddess-a annei - feminine goddess (Shakti) a ram leilung hi Bharat Mata ta ding vawng a ni ti hi an ngirna a nih.

Bharat Mata dinga development po po an thawhai hi an pathien shakti (Devi,Durga, Saraswati, Lakhsmi) ta dinga thaw anni leiin an thaw nasa hrim a nih. 

India ram pumpui a tlâng le muol, vadung le ngawpui-hai hi a thienghlim a ni tiin Kshetra an tih. 

Chu ram ta ding chun Desh Bhakti anti a, ram hmangaia ram ta dinga sinthaw chu an thiltum(goal) lientak a nih.

2/3 Majority NDA in a nei ṭep tah. AAP party a inthawk MP 7 in BJP anlo zawm taa. TMC an awi mêk bawk, MP 20 ruol inkau zinga um an nih.

PARTNER WHO REFUSES TO DISCUSS PROBLEMS OR WORK IN RELATIONSHIP

PARTNER WHO REFUSES TO DISCUSS PROBLEMS OR WORK IN RELATIONSHIP

WHAT DO YOU DO WITH A PARTNER WHO REFUSES TO DISCUSS PROBLEMS OR WORK IN RELATIONSHIP?

Storyline

Trying to get through to my husband is like banging my head against a steel wall. He refuses to discuss our problems, tells me they are my issues, and says if I want to read books or go to therapy, I should go ahead, but to leave him out of it. This has been going on for years. Our marriage is in major trouble, but he doesn’t want to see it, and I feel like saving it is up to me. Is this something that I can do alone? Is there something that I can do to wake him up?

This is one of the saddest questions. A husband or wife shares this kind of story tearfully and tears apart their marriage in severe trouble, and a partner who absolutely refuses to discuss any problems is a big problem. You may not like my answer, but here goes: You are not presently in a marriage. What do I mean by that? I mean that marriage is not a living arrangement, or how many years you have been together, or a piece of paper that says you are husband and wife. Marriage is ultimately the commitment to loving your partner and doing everything you can to make the relationship work.

Since your husband refuses to face or discuss your problems, and will not agree to any outside help in solving your conflicts, he has broken his commitment to your relationship as much as if he had an affair. He may be scared; he may have had an abusive childhood; he may have a wonderful, loving heart somewhere inside of him. The fact remains that, unless he is willing to be an active participant in your partnership, there is no partnership. And you can’t make a marriage work alone

There are five commitments every marriage needs to survive and grow. These are commitments both partners should make:

1. I am committed to learning everything I can about being a better person and a better mate, and I will do whatever it takes to make the relationship work.

2. I am committed to being emotionally open to and with my partner by sharing my feelings.

3. I am committed to being emotionally generous with my partner, not emotionally stingy, and will express my love and affection.

4. I am committed to being honest with my partner and myself.

5. I am committed to learning how to love my partner as much as he or she truly deserves to be loved.

Any relationship cannot be truly healthy without these commitments. Take Commitment #1, for instance, the one you and your husband are struggling with right now. If a partner isn’t committed to doing whatever it takes to make the relationship work, what’s the point of being in a relationship at all?

Being committed to merely living in the same house with you and calling you a wife does not qualify as being a good husband. A good husband, or wife, fights for the marriage, and will try everything, until it’s obvious that nothing is going to work.

Apparently, you’ve tried to get through to your husband countless times. Try once more, and use this analogy. Ask him to imagine that one of your children, or a beloved pet, had been hit by a car and was lying, bleeding, in the street. Would your husband say “I don’t believe in hospitals,” and leave your loved one there to die? Would he stubbornly refuse to get help? I don’t think so. He’d rush the person he loved to the hospital and beg for all the help he could get.

Well, guess what? Your relationship is lying, bleeding, in the street. If it doesn’t get help, it’s going to die. Ask him one more time. If he truly refuses to participate in an effort to save it, if he stubbornly holds his ground, know that it is time for you to leave before you, too, bleed to death emotionally.

PARTNER TO EXPRESS FEELINGS

PARTNER TO EXPRESS FEELINGS

HOW CAN I GET MY PARTNER TO EXPRESS FEELINGS TO ME?

Stortyline

I know my husband loves me, but he never expresses it verbally. He comes from a family that isn’t very communicative, and claims “words don’t mean much to him.” How can I get him to express his feelings to me? I’m starving for some attention.

You’re what it call “word-hungry,” starving to hear verbal expressions of your husband’s love that will fill up your heart. Like all of us, your husband formed his love habits at an early age, and obviously didn’t experience being loved with words, nor see examples of his parents using words to express feelings. Remember—he’s not withholding verbal affection on purpose; he simply doesn’t understand why it is so important to you, or how to fulfill your needs. So let’s talk about how you can explain this to him so he gets it!!

One of the best ways to create intimate connections between you and your beloved is with words. Words are bridges that allow you to travel from your private world into your partner’s. They link your silences together, so you can know the person you love from the inside out, and he can know you. They give your mind evidence to trust what your heart already knows. Deep inside, you feel he loves you but when you hear him say those words, the experience becomes that much more real.

Some people argue that words, by definition, cannot possibly contain the fullness of emotion, and therefore limit your experience of intimacy.“ Talking about it trivializes the love,” they insist. I strongly disagree—without words to make the feelings tangible and transferable, the feelings will not be as real to you or to your partner. Words stir up the love energy between you. They are like the wind, making waves upon the ocean of feeling you share.

The water is always there in the sea, but it is the wind that moves it, teasing it from stillness until it rises into sparkling swells. Your feelings are always there in your heart, but it is the words that give them movement from silence into expression.

Many lovers are stingy with their words. They hoard them as if there are a limited number of “I love you’s,” “I need you’s,” and “You make me so happy’s” available, and they don’t want to use them up. So they conserve the amount of verbal love they share, saving it for special occasions such as birthdays or anniversaries, and leave their partner feeling hungry for words the majority of the time. Whenever I’ve confronted verbally stingy men in my life, they always responded with this defensive reasoning for why they weren’t loving me more with words:

“If I say it all the time, it won’t mean anything anymore…” This thinking is as absurd as believing that if you wear a beautiful dress often, it won’t be as beautiful as if you only wear it once in a while, or that if you kiss your little girl or boy good night every night and tell them you love them, it won’t mean as much as if you only do it once every four months!

The result of this kind of emotional stinginess will be that the mate who isn’t hearing love words feels controlled and resentful, and that’s what you’re feeling now. Your partner has been putting you on a “verbal love diet” without realizing it. You need more words of love from your husband—they will feed your heart and nourish your spirit.

Translating feelings into words isn’t always easy. Some of us, like your husband, aren’t very familiar with the language of love, because no one ever used it with us. “I don’t like talking about feelings —that’s just the way I am,” we claim. Some of us feel uncomfortable using words, either because we fear we aren’t very good with them, or because expressing our emotions in words leaves us feeling vulnerable and unprotected. “I’m not sure what to say. I just can’t describe it,” or “I don’t want to talk about it,” we protest. But I believe that our fear or lack of ability is no excuse for not learning how to use words to be a better lover.

Share my thoughts with your husband. (And for all you other women out there, place this book open to this page in front of your lover when needed!) Perhaps when he understands that you’re not asking him to put feelings into words to get him to do things “your way,” but want to appreciate his love for you even more than you already do, he’ll be willing to try using more words. And don’t forget to remind him that women get turned on in our heads first, and that, for most of us, loving words are a powerful aphrodisiac!!

FALLING IN LOVE TOO QUICKLY

FALLING IN LOVE TOO QUICKLY

IS THERE SUCH A THING AS FALLING IN LOVE TOO QUICKLY? WHAT DOES IT MEAN IF A PERSON EXPERIENCES THIS OFTEN?

Storyline

I’m madly in love with my boyfriend, and we’re talking about getting married. My friends think I’m crazy, since we’ve only known each other for about six weeks, but our relationship is perfect! The only thing that makes me a little nervous is that in the past, I have been IN A RELATION with two other men, both within the first three months of meeting them. Am I falling in love too fast? How do I slow down?

You are a bona fide “Love-at-first-sight junkie”!! You are addicted to falling in love, and the instant high it gives you, especially in the beginning of the relationship. Love-at-first-sight junkies are in love with love, and it doesn’t usually take much for you to feel it. Once you get hooked on a new partner, your mental faculties seem to all but disappear, and you say things like “our relationship is perfect” when the truth is, you hardly know the person. And that’s the point. You don’t really want to know him, because if you did, you’d have to take him off of his pedestal and see him as a flawed human being, and that would ruin your fantasy.

I wouldn’t even call what you’re doing “falling in love.” It may be more like “falling in lust,” or an infatuation with who you think the other person is. You are so commitment hungry that you are looking for a commitment rather than looking for a good relationship. True, some people do know the moment they meet their partner that it is right, but in your case, you’ve made a profession of instant love affairs, so I am pretty sure this isn’t the real thing. And the problem is that once the relationship does become more real, and you are forced to deal with all of the challenges every couple faces, you become disenchanted, feel like you’ve “fallen out of love,” and break it off, right?

There are two issues you need to deal with. First, why you keep doing this, and second, what to do about your present situation.

Let’s talk about the why. Love-at-first-sight junkies are usually people with very wounded hearts. When you were small, you probably did not have the loving family you wanted, and in some way felt rejected, abandoned, or not good enough. You grow up with this huge, unfulfilled desire to belong, to have someone, anyone, there for you, to fill the emptiness you’ve carried inside you for as long as you can remember. And it doesn’t take much to fill this order.

A person comes along, usually someone who is also desperate to feel wanted, and you latch onto each other like two drowning sailors who just discovered a plank of wood floating in the ocean.

If you ever want to have a truly healthy and lasting relationship, and I know you do, you are going to have to face the demon you’ve run from your whole life: your pain. You’re in need of intense emotional healing work. Stop hiding behind your infatuations, and find the courage to look within. There you will find the answers to all your questions and, ultimately the love you’ve been seeking.

Now, about your boyfriend. You don’t necessarily have to break up with him. Hopefully, you can both do this emotional work together, and actually begin to create a real relationship. But whatever you do, do not live together and do not get married.

Don’t even talk about it. Slow down. Date each other, and get to know yourself, as well as the other person. Day by day, week by

week, your relationship will grow, slowly, like a tree sprouting from a seed, planting its roots firmly in the soil.

A GREATER LIFE

A GREATER LIFE

A GREATER LIFE

Going after a greater life is far from easy, and that’s why most people settle for less. But if you take the time to absorb what you’ve learned in your life and in this Insta Vibes, start acting with determination, positivity and tenacity, you won’t be one of those people. One small step at a time, you’ll build unstoppable momentum and move ever closer to the life you’ve dreamed of living.

Remember that there’s a lesson in every challenge, a lesson in every failure, which means your failures don’t have to be failures at all; they’re just twists in your path to greatness. If you commit your whole heart to achieving something and it doesn’t work out, you can take that as a promise from the Universe that it wasn’t the right thing for you. Something better is coming.

Keep Going.

Remember, too, to trust your instincts. Listen to that feeling in your belly that warns you about a toxic relationship. Listen to that voice in your head that lets you know when you’re wasting your time. Respect your personal boundaries, and ask others to respect them, too. If something doesn’t feel right, it very well might not be. And if something feels wonderfully, deeply, powerfully right, it probably is. Go with that. Let it flow.

Have faith. Let go of fear and your life will shift from ordinary to extraordinary. You’ll connect with your higher purpose – because it’s impossible not to when you’re striving with every cell of your being to travel through life with a commitment to your personal growth.

You have everything you need to create an exciting and beautiful life, and it all begins with loving yourself. By building and maintaining a high vibration, you’ll achieve your dreams. And even if it takes a long time, your high vibration will make you feel good along the way. That’s all we really want, isn’t it? To live a life that feels good.

ACHIEVING TRUE HAPPINESS

ACHIEVING TRUE HAPPINESS

ACHIEVING TRUE HAPPINESS

Happiness doesn’t come from

other people, from places or

things. It comes from within.

I’ve deliberately minimized the use of the word ‘happiness’ throughout the book so that I could leave it right until the end. I hope you can see that by raising your vibration and having feelings of joy, you’re actually experiencing happiness.


We’re led to believe that happiness is based on external influences: people, places or things. We have all these goals and desires in life, believing that once we achieve them, we’ll be happy forever: when we find someone to love, we’ll be happy; when we get our own house, we’ll be happy; when we lose 20 pounds, we’ll be happy. These may give you temporary happiness but this is fleeting – it doesn’t stay with you. So once you acquire these things, you carry on pursuing lasting happiness from other external things.

Money, for example, is frequently linked to happiness and even success. But you’ll learn from the richest people in the world that even with lots of money you can still experience sadness. If money was used to measure happiness and success, at what point would the scale begin and end? After all, numbers never end. You can easily want more and more, even once you identify your target. So you can’t use it as a tool for measurement.

I explained at the beginning of this book that we pursue things because we believe they’ll make us happy when we get them. The same applies to the money we want: we don’t want the money itself, but we do want the security and freedom it will give us, because we believe that this will make us happy.

But if you were the only person on the planet and you had unlimited access to money, how useful would this be? How about being able to afford any holiday or crazy adventure you wanted, but having extremely poor health?

What about being able to buy all that you ever wanted, but being neglected by the entire world? Or even being given an unlimited supply of money while working in the worst job ever, 20 hours a day?

Even your ideal partner has no control over your lasting happiness. They can only affect your relative happiness, which can vanish in seconds if external conditions change – if your partner acts in a way that you perceive as hurtful, for example.

The advertising industry is skilled at toying with your happiness because it preys on the knowledge that all of us want to be happy. ‘Buy this and you’ll be happy,’ it says. You buy it, and then six months down the line they release a new version. You then realize that the previous product failed to give you long-lasting happiness, so you buy the new one in the hope that it will instead. The cycle repeats.

What if you could feel happy all the time? Isn’t this the ultimate goal? It would mean that you’re happy with what you’ve got at any moment – for the rest of your life. We could then say that lasting happiness is what true success looks like.

This is what true happiness is. It’s lasting and it occurs when you remain at the highest frequency, despite everything that’s happening at the surface level of your life. I believe that this is the place we all want to be at; where people and events are unable to change our emotional state from our natural state of love and joy.

To sustain happiness, you must work towards self-mastery. It’s an inward journey that requires substantial spiritual growth. Choosing empowering thoughts over limiting ones should become your natural way of thinking.

You must make it a habit to look on the bright side of things and let go of the past; to stop living in the future and appreciate where you are and what you have right now; to withdraw from comparisons, and love everything in this world without condition.

Embrace what is.

Be happy.

MONEY AND GREED

MONEY AND GREED

MONEY AND GREED

Money is merely energy – neither good

nor bad, and unlimited in our infinitely

abundant Universe. Make money to

assist you, not to complete you.

Sometimes, people feel that it’s wrong to make money by living their  purpose, so let’s take a moment to define what money really is. Before you say it’s a token used to complete a transaction for goods or services, or anything along those lines, let me stop you. Money is simply energy!

Therefore, money is neither good nor bad. The label you give it is up to you, and the way we interpret money depends on how we attract positive situations or negative situations regarding money.

There are people who do great things with their money, while the way others use it can reflect the misery inside their minds. Money is simply an amplifier. If you’re not trying to create value by spreading kindness and love when you have very little money, what makes you think you’re going to do that when you have more of it?

Money flows to those who believe they deserve it and can attain it. Let me ask you right now, what are your views on money? Do you believe you deserve to have more money? Your subconscious thoughts and feelings on money will reveal a lot about your current reality and the one you’ll experience if these perceptions stay the same.

Some say that money is the root of all evil, yet they still pray for it. That’s like going to a Burger King, making an order then walking out before you’ve even been handed your meal. How can the Universe deliver a request you’ve already cancelled?

Some of us feel bad for wanting more money; we’re told we’re being greedy. Truthfully, most of us want money so that we can experience financial freedom and live our most desired lifestyles without restriction.

This might include wanting to go on holiday with your loved ones whenever you want, and not having to worry about how much you spend while you’re away. If you perceive this as greed because others will never get to live that lifestyle, you’re assuming that a) the supply of money is limited and b) others will never break away from their current lifestyles to experience the same level of freedom.

Greed works on the basis that there’s a limited supply of a particular thing and that you want the majority, which will consequently be at the expense of another person’s wellbeing.

We are led to believe that there is only

ever a limited supply of what we want, yet

the truth is that abundance is infinitely

available and provided by the Universe.

Limitation, then, is only a product of your mind. When your mentality is focused on what you lack, you project a fear-based vibration out into the Universe, which brings you more things to be scared about. You become scared to lose money, so you guard it closely. You become afraid to spend it, because you don’t know if you’ll have that much money again. As a result, even though you’re trying your best to hold on to your money, your vibration may create an avenue to financial difficulties.

When we commit our energy to poverty, we manifest poverty. I’m not saying you shouldn’t save your money, or that you should just throw it away. However, you should focus your mind on prosperity – there’s power in believing and allowing wealth to flow to you.

Too often we’re sold ideas around lack and limitation, when the truth is that we have creative power and control over our circumstances. When individuals can inject fear into the masses, the overall vibration of the collective consciousness projects yet more fear, poverty and destruction. It’s an effective way to control humankind.

Money is readily available to everyone, and the distance between you and money is determined only by your attitude towards it. Remember, though, that money will only assist you, not complete you. It’s not what gives you your life purpose. You can’t add value to the world and serve others by accumulating lots of money. You must also have the desire to make a difference.

YOUR HIGHER PURPOSE

YOUR HIGHER PURPOSE

YOUR HIGHER PURPOSE

You came here loaded with potential, ability,

gifts, wisdom, love and intelligence to share

with the world. You are here to make the world

a better place. You have a purpose, and until

you start living it you will have a void inside

of you; a feeling you can’t quite explain, but

that knows that you are meant for more.

I believe that everyone has a purpose in life: a purpose to be of service to the world. This purpose, along with the experience of unconditional love and joy, is the reason for our existence. Purpose provides us with meaning.

Most of us find it difficult to identify what our true purpose is. Others have a feeling that they know what it is, but are often forced to conform to society’s norms and reject their real purpose in the name of practicality.

Think of a Football. The purpose of this ball is to be kicked. If the ball just sits there doing nothing in the corner of a room, its purpose is being ignored – however, it doesn’t care, because it has no soul. Imagine now that the ball has a soul, giving the ball self-awareness. If the ball stayed sitting in the corner of the room, it would have a strange feeling inside of it, like something was missing. The ball may never find fulfilment because it would probably feel as if it hasn’t shown the world its true worth.

Now imagine someone finally picks up the ball and decides to throw it around. As the ball glides through the air, it feels ecstatic. But moments later, the ball feels a void inside itself again, because although it had fun, it wasn’t enough.

The ball might then be used in a variety of ways, seeing plenty of action but still feel unfulfilled. The ball assumes that the more events that occur in its life, the closer it’ll come to fulfilment. But the more events it experiences, the more this idea is disproved.

Until one day, when the ball is kicked. In this moment, everything makes sense to the ball. It understands what it was designed for: it was supposed to be kicked. It looks back at the events that have already taken place and starts connecting the dots. When it was being moved through the air, and when it felt someone applying pressure to it, it experienced feelings of excitement that related to its purpose. The ball now knows what it’s been searching for all along.

We gain a modicum of satisfaction from applying ourselves to roles that aren’t our own profound purpose, but rarely do we have lasting satisfaction.

That’s not to say that you can’t experience joy – after all, we can always raise our vibration. But we can only feel ultimate fulfilment if we meet the purpose we were made for.

You may find the idea of having a higher purpose to be far-fetched, but if you found a smartphone in the middle of a field, you’d assume that someone had dropped it there. You wouldn’t think that something so complex was formed naturally by events in nature, over millions of years, without having a designer. Yet we believe the whole human race, which is far more complex than a smartphone, was produced by a series of mutations and survival of the fittest.

Many of us seem to accept that we have no purpose in life, and that we’re each just another human being in this Universe of billions upon billions of galaxies. However, just like a smartphone, there must surely be a purpose in your existence.

When people go through their lives without really believing in a higher purpose, they’re not making the most of their existence.

These individuals could go through their whole life just trying to make ends meet. Their purpose in life will always be driven by daily survival, the need to pay the next bill. Of course, bills do matter. We need to pay for food, water, shelter, clothing and utilities. But do you honestly believe you were put on this planet just to exist in such a manner and then die? Do you truly believe that life is simply about making money?

Life is greater if you live with purpose.

When you find a meaningful reason for

doing what you do, you will feel complete.

Just like I used to, many people spend their days working at a job that means nothing to them and living for their two days of freedom each week.

During those two days, they’ll either do very little or go on a spending spree to make the most of that freedom – as I did by going to a club every weekend. Every week they’ll look forward to those two days, wishing their precious time away because they want their time away from work – their ‘free time’ – to come quicker. The result is that a whole life can go by in a flash.

Life is often difficult and money does give us much more freedom. Nevertheless, have faith that you can serve a purpose for humankind and also meet your financial needs. This purpose doesn’t have to be something huge – you don’t have to be the next Dalai Lama or even the next Mark Zuckerberg. However, you must seek to add value, and the only way to do this is by doing something you enjoy with all of your heart. This is why passion plays such a big part in living a great life.

Not everyone knows what they’re passionate about. Spiritual medium Darryl Anka claims to channel a being known as Bashar, who advises that following your ‘excitement’ is the shortest path to realizing what you want; your next step should always be the one you find most exciting. You don’t need to justify it, says Bashar, you just need to do it. So take action on whatever it is that truly excites you. Make sure you don’t choose something that you label as exciting because you can’t think of anything else, or because you think other people will see it as exciting.

The things that you’re naturally drawn

towards aren’t random; they’re picking you

out in the same way that you’re pursuing

them. It really is as simple as this.

So don’t overcomplicate it by thinking that you need to have it all figured out. And don’t be dishonest with yourself and force action on something you feel is unfeasible. For example, if you really like drawing, you could start by creating a website or social media account and sharing some of your work with the world. Don’t try to sell your drawings for thousands of pounds right away, particularly if this seems like a long shot to you at this stage. It should be something you’re willing to do for free, without any expectation, because it’s something you’re truly passionate about. If it doesn’t excite you, it’s not right for you.

You don’t immediately need to quit your current commitments and put your financial obligations at risk. What this does mean, though, is that you need to stay curious, stay hungry for positive change, and keep taking steps towards the things that stimulate your mind, body and soul.

Don’t worry about which step to take next, or how things will unfold for you. Remember, if you show your excitement to the Universe, it will give you more things to feel excited about. Wondrous opportunities will follow and help you to discover your path in life, as long as you act on the signs.

Small steps are fine, because they’ll lead to bigger things. Eventually you’ll work out a way to make your passion your paycheque. This could be an extension of what you’re already doing or, if you’re in a profession you dislike, it means you’ll eventually be able to give it up and commit to your purpose full-time.

You were created with intention. You are here to help, love, assist, save and entertain. You are here to inspire and put a smile on someone’s face. You are here to make a difference. You wouldn’t be on this planet, at this time, if you didn’t have something to offer.

There is a purpose behind your existence, and

when you discover what it is, you will not only

change the dynamics of the world, but also

experience abundance in all areas of your life.

Thursday, 25 June 2026

Is Tithing a Biblical mandate today? Is Tithing a Sin?

Is Tithing a Biblical mandate today? Is Tithing a Sin?

IS TITHING A BIBLICAL MANDATE TODAY? IS TITHING A SIN?



Johny Laldinthar F. Tusing, 25 June, 2026.

Prolegomenon

The tithe in Scripture means 10 percent, literally "the tenth part," from the Hebrew word maaser.

Tithes need to be explored more in detail in the light of biblical ethos. I’ve already written an article on Tithes which was published by ICI Central Kristien halai Pawl (Central Youth) for Youth Common Subject 2021; Lesson 11- halaihai leh Sâwma Pakhat (Youth and the Tithes)’.

I'll be honest — I write this article again out of frustration. Every day on social media many of us encounter various videos and wide spectrum of  AI generated deepfake videos. One disturbing videos circulated on Social Media is "TITHING IS A SIN" | Billy Graham Best Powerful Speech” ( link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dvRiP66VxCw) also posted on Dailymotion website (link https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9lp3iw). The videos on YouTube surfaced 1 year ago, have 224k viewers as of now, and have become drastically viral recently. Ironically, the content is supposed (I assumed) to be deepfakes.

           1.     What is Deepfake?

Deepfakes are images, videos, or audio that have been edited or generated using artificial intelligence, AI-based tools or audio-video editing software. The process of producing complex deepfakes involves two algorithms. One algorithm is trained to produce the best fake replicas possible of real images. The other model is trained to detect when an image is fake and when it's not. The two models iterate back and forth, each getting better at their respective task.[1]

1.1.         Uses of Deepfakes

The main purpose of a deepfake is to influence people into believing something happened that didn’t. Anyone with the capability to create deepfakes can release misinformation and influence us to behave in a way that will advance their agenda in some way. Deepfake-based misinformation could wreak havoc on both a small and large scale. [2]

        2.    Did Billy Graham say Tithing is a sin?

No, Billy Graham did not say tithing is a sin. In fact, he was a strong advocate for tithing and believed it was a Christian duty and a privilege. Graham consistently taught that giving a tenth of your income to God's work is a biblical principle that brings God's blessing. Key points of his teachings on this topic from billygraham.org (Billy Graham Evangelistic Association):

Tithing is a commendable goal and is a worthy standard for our giving–and no, it isn’t just for rich people. On one occasion, Jesus commended a poor widow because “she, out of her poverty, put in everything–all she had to live on” (Mark 12:44). She did it out of her love for God.

In the Old Testament, tithing was an important part of the worship of God’s people, and God promised to bless them if they obeyed His command to tithe. The Bible says, “Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse … and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much blessing that you will not have room enough for it” (Malachi 3:10). Think how much greater our impact on the world would be if every Christian followed this injunction.

Someone has said that our giving is the true measure of our commitment to Christ—and it’s true. Which should be more important: your wallet, or God’s work? But which actually is more important to you and your husband? Put Christ first in your life, and then ask Him to help you use the resources He has given you for His service.

The Bible says, “Each man should give what he has decided in his heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver” (2 Corinthians 9:7). The more we love Christ, the more we will want to advance His work by our giving.[3]

Nowhere in this writing, Billy Graham is against tithing nor he never affirmed that Tithing is a Sin.

            3.    The Place of the Issue of Tithing in Theology

The debate over tithing properly lies (at least in part) under the issue of the relationship between the Mosaic law and Christians. [See W. G. Strickland, ed., Five Views on Law and Gospel (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1996); and T. R. Schreiner, 40 Questions about Christians and Biblical Law (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2010].

Which Mosaic laws apply directly to Christians? This is one of the most difficult problem we Christian faced today. We need to delve deeper and break it down into smaller pieces.

3.1.        The Mosaic Law and Christians

Some laws cited by New Testament authors apply to Christians. For example, “Love your neighbor as yourself” (Lev 19:18) is quoted in the New Testament in several texts (Mt 19:19; Mk 12:31; Lk 10:27; Gal 5:14; Jam 2:8). But the New Testament has no comments on verses like, “You must not boil a young goat in its mother’s milk” (Deut 14:21). Nor do we see an explicit teaching in the New Testament on whether Christians are allowed to wear clothes with two different types of material (Lev 19:19), in a verse that comes right on the heels of the command to love your neighbor. The New Testament uses of Old Testament text cannot be ignored. [See Kenneth Berding, Jonathan Lunde, eds. Three Views on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2008); G.K. Beale, D.A. Carson, Benjamin L. Gladd and Andrew David Naselli, eds. Dictionary of the New Testament Use of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 2023); G.K. Beale and D.A. Carson, eds. Commentary on the New Testament Use of the Old Testament (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Publishing Group, 2007)]

We believes that the Bible was inspired by God and is authoritative for every believer. Paul said, “All Scripture is inspired by God and is profitable for teaching, for rebuking, for correcting, for training in righteousness” (2 Tim 3:16). Therefore, we all hold to a conservative and orthodox view of Scripture, though we interpret and apply many texts differently. For those of us who hold to the authority of the Bible, Scripture itself needs to be the final arbiter. Many of us have an irritating question always. Will your church go bankrupt if the members are not told to tithe? This is a good question to ponder. But the fact of the matter is, it's not about bankruptcy; it's about putting God first (our priority from our earnings).

3.2.       Different Views on Tithing

The complexities over the continuity or discontinuity of tithing are numerous. Some say that the tithe was only for Israel (Old Covenant View) and has no application on Christians (New Covenant). Others say that Christians must pay God His tithe. However, there are several mediating views and other aspects that need to be addressed.

Some from a Reformed perspective, who typically divide the Mosaic law into three parts (civil, moral, and ceremonial/sacrificial), consider tithing as part of the moral law; thus, they might begin their discussion on the amount of giving by stating that Christians should begin with the tithe.

Many from the Dispensational perspective view the Mosaic law as a unity and therefore consider all of it as having been fulfilled and none of it directly applying today. They typically don’t include the tithe when considering how much a Christian should give. Not all Dispensationalist hold on this view.

Those who consider themselves Theonomists (dominion theology) view the civil and moral laws as binding and thus the tithe is binding as well. However, they are sharply divided over the issue of where the tithe must be given—to the church only or to Christian organizations? Many others do not approach tithing through theological systems, but they try to allow Scripture to lead them to their conclusions regardless of their theological systems.

Here is the concise different view on Tithes, excerpt from the book, ‘David A. Croteau, ed. Perspectives on Tithing: 4 Views (Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, 2011).

The first strong view is, Tithe is the Foundation of Giving. A believer under grace would never do less than those who had lived under the Mosaic law. Tithing: A Good Starting Point to begin the teaching of stewardship. Let's embrace the idea that the tithe is a good biblical place for beginning the journey of joyous giving, but that under grace and empowered by the Spirit, we can move beyond the tithe.

Another view is The Post-Tithing View: Giving In The New Covenant. This view opines that tithe is not directly applicable to Christians because the tithe has been fulfilled in the new covenant. The Post-Tithing view propose that believers are commanded to give generously, willingly and cheerfully. This must be embrace as the model endorsed in the New Testament.

The third view is almost congruent to the first view, it is Tithing in the New Covenant. It opines that, Is Tithing in the New covenant? Yes, It's about "Not Neglecting the Others." The tithing principle carrying over into the new covenant era as well. This view negates anti-tithing, "post-tithe giving," and , "grace giving." The Worship Dimension is bringing offering. So, the Old Testament tithe functions in the New Covenant as a foundational principle for giving, rather than a binding legal rule.

The last view is The Covenantal Tithe.  A binding legal relationship between a self-asserted sovereign and his subordinates. This view asserts that Tithe is a foundational financial and theological framework within Christian Reconstructionism. It argued that tithing 10% of net income is a perpetual, binding moral obligation that signifies a believer’s submission to the sovereignty of God. It advocate that, The new law of the tithe is that Christians must pay their tithes to the local church, as the ecclesiastical representative (point two) of the high priest (based on Heb.7). The biblical tithe is based on the biblical covenant model.

Hence, accessing all the view, except post-tithing view, all asserts that tithes is a biblical mandate even in the new covenant.

        4.   Tithing in the Bible

For a complete understanding of the Tithing in the Bible, read the book ‘Perspectives on Tithing: 4 Views’ edited by David A. Croteau (Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, 2011).

What is the biblical definition of a “tithe”? The Hebrew word for “tithe” is maaser , which means “a tenth part.” Many Christians claim that the tithe always refers to giving back to the Lord 10 percent of all income (or increase). Tithe point to Abram as a pre-Mosaic law when Abraham gave Melchizedek, king of Salem a tenth of everything” (Gen 14:18–20).

Another passage in Genesis appears to define the tithe as 10 percent prior to the Mosaic law. Jacob was on his way to Haran when he stopped to rest (Gen 28:12–22).

4.1.        Tithing in the Mosaic Law

The first reference to tithing in the Mosaic law is Lev 27:30–33. In Numbers 18:20–24, it describes the Levitical tithe, and provides more clarity on the subject. Also, the priestly tithe, is described in Num 18:25–29. Further, we have a Festival tithe in Deut 14:22–27. The Charity tithe is found in Deut 14:28–29; 26:10–16.

4.2.       Tithing in the Rest of the Old Testament

Several passages outside the Pentateuch also mentioned the tithe. The first is 2 Chron 31:5–6. The next passage that mentions the tithe is Neh 10:37–38. Nehemiah explained that the Israelites were giving 10 percent of the produce of the land to the Levites. Nehemiah said that the tithes are to be placed in the storerooms of the treasury.”

Probably the most famous passage on tithing is Mal 3:8–12. The prophet Malachi received an oracle (1:1) from God. God told the Israelites that they were robbing Him by not paying their tithes:

“Will a man rob God? Yet you are robbing Me!”

You ask: “How do we rob You?”

God told the Israelites that by not giving their tithes and offerings they were robbing Him. Then God commanded them to bring the full tithe into the storehouse. This is the main text that supports the doctrine of “storehouse tithing.” This doctrine teaches that Christians must give at least 10 percent of their income to the local church. If they decide to give it anywhere else, they are robbing God of His tithes, according to Malachi 3.

What was the storehouse? Some scholars believe that the storehouse was the temple. The sentence says to bring the tithe into the storehouse “so that there may be food in My house” (v. 10). The reference to the Lord’s “house” would be the temple. So by bringing the tithe to the storehouse, the temple is provided with food. The local church today would be the equivalent of the temple.

A final passage makes a curious reference to tithes. Amos 4:4 says, “Come to Bethel and rebel; rebel even more at Gilgal! Bring your sacrifices every morning, your tenths every three days.”

These are all the Old Testament passages that directly discuss the tithe. Before the Mosaic law, Abram gave 10 percent of the spoils of war to Melchizedek, and Jacob promised to give 10 percent of his increase if he was safely returned to the land of his father Isaac. Several tithes occur in the Mosaic law: the cattle tithe, the Levitical tithe, the priestly tithe, the festival tithe, and the charity tithe. In 2 Chron 31:5–11 the Israelites are told to bring tithes to the temple and the chambers that were prepared in the temple treasury (storehouse) to hold the leftovers. Nehemiah 10:35–39; 13:9–13 detail Nehemiah’s reinstitution of the tithe. Malachi 3 contains an oracle against the Israelites for robbing God of His tithes.

4.3.       Tithing in the New Testament

The Greek word for “tithe” is ( δεκάτη) and means “to pay a tenth.” Four passages in the New Testament directly mention tithing.

The first is Matt 23:23: “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! You pay a tenth of mint, dill, and cumin, yet you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy, and faith. These things should have been done without neglecting the others.” The parallel is in Luke 11:42.

The third passage that directly mentions tithing occurs in one of Jesus’ parables: “I fast twice a week; I give a tenth of everything I get” (Luke 18:12). The statement is made by a Pharisee as he contrasted himself with a tax collector. There is nothing in this text that would argue for the cessation of tithing, but there also is not much to argue that it should continue.

The final passage that directly mentions tithing is Heb 7:1–10. For many scholar, this is the ultimate New Testament passage for the proof that Christians are required to tithe since it connects a pre-Mosaic law event, Abram’s tithing to Melchizedek, with Christians in the new covenant.

For this Melchizedek— King of Salem, priest of the Most High God, who met Abraham and blessed him as he returned from defeating the kings, and Abraham gave him a tenth of everything; first, his name means ‘king of righteousness,’ then also, king of Salem, meaning ‘king of peace;’ without father, mother, or genealogy, having neither beginning of days nor end of life, but resembling the Son of God— remains a priest forever.

Every text that explicitly mentions tithing has now been examined. Texts that may allude to tithing, without directly referencing it, could also be important in this debate. For example, 1 Cor. 9 or Chap. 16 could be discussing the concept of tithing, even though Paul did not mention the word directly. Regardless, this debate needs to center on Scripture; the Word of God is our center, our standard, and the final arbiter of all truth.

Therefore, we should all allow the text of Scripture to determine our conclusion on tithing, not history, not tradition, and not pragmatics.

         5.    What Bible Scholars Say About Tithe

5.1.        Iain Duguid

Old Testament scholar argues that Christians should tithe as an expression of their covenant relationship with God. In his booklet ‘Should Christians Tithe?,’ he notes that the biblical tithe was designed for three distinct purposes: supporting full-time ministry, providing for the poor, and funding communal celebrations. The New Testament teaches us that Christian giving should be proportional, as indeed Tithe was (1 Cor.16:2) but also willing and generous (2 Cor.9:7). Even hyper-generous (2 Cor.8:2). So there is no reason for us to stop giving tithe, if we grasp the beauty and power of the Gospel. Because financial resources generously spread glad tidings everywhere.[4]

5.2.       John Piper

American Reformed theologian and retired pastor. Specializing in New Testament studies, who is the chancellor of Bethlehem College and Seminary in Minneapolis, Minnesota argues that “But the other thing to notice is that tithing is not unimportant; it is to be done: "These [i.e., justice and love of God] you ought to have done, without neglecting the others." In other words don't neglect tithing all your income, even the spices and herbs. But let it all be in the context of justice for people and love for God. Let your concern for people and your passion for the glory of God set the tone of your whole life. Then in that tone of life, your tithing will bring blessing and not a condemnation” [5]

5.3.       Randy Alcorn

Evangelical bestselling Christian author, pastor, and the founder of Eternal Perspective Ministries, says, ‘I detest legalism and I don’t want to try to pour new wine into old wineskins, imposing superseded First Covenant restrictions on Christian. Every New Testament example of giving goes far beyond Tithes. Jesus raised the spiritual bar, He never lowered it (Mt. 5:27-28). Jesus validated the mandatory tithe, even on small things (Mt.23:23)[6]. The tithe is God’s historical method to get us on the path of giving. In that sense, it can serve as a gateway to the joy of grace giving. It’s unhealthy to view tithing as a place to stop (Old Covenant fulfilled view), but it can still be a good place to start. Tithing isn’t the ceiling of giving; it’s the floor. It’s not the finish line of giving; it’s just the starting block. Tithes can be the training wheels to launch into the mind-set, skills, and habits of grace giving. To give less than He expects of us is to rob him. God doesn’t expect us all to give the same amount. . We’re to give in proportion to how He’s blessed us (Deut.16:16;16-17)[7]

5.4.       Gary North

Gary North an American writer, Austrian School economic historian, and leading figure in the Christian reconstructionist movement and Reformed Protestant theology states that, ‘It is common to hear Christians dismiss as “Mosaic” the requirement that they tithe a tenth of their income to God.’ They claim that as Christians, they are not under the Mosaic law, and so they are not under the Mosaic obligation to pay tithes. But the New Testament does not ground the tithe on the Mosaic law. On the contrary, Hebrews 7 establishes the authority of Jesus Christ’s high priestly office in terms of Melchizedek’s collection of the tithe horn Abraham. The superiority of the New Covenant to the Old Covenant is seen in Abraham’s payment of his tithe to Melchizedek - a representative judicial act of submission in the name of Israel and his son Levi. Any attempt to escape the obligation of the tithe is an assault on the New Covenant’s High Priest, Jesus Christ.[8]

Gary further articulated, ‘Tithing is unbreakable connected to the institutional church because the sacraments are unbreakable connected to the institutional church. Any attack on the God-delegated authority of the institutional church to collect the tithe is an attack on the God-delegated monopoly source of the sacraments in history. Taking the sacraments in a local church without paying a tithe to that church is a form of theft.’

5.5.       George A.E. Salstrand

American theologian, author, and professor of New Testament Interpretation and Evangelism argues in his classic book The Tithe The Minimum Standard for Christian Giving,’  that ‘tithing is a timeless, pre-Mosaic principle that serves as the baseline for financial stewardship. He presents a detailed biblical defense, asserting that giving one-tenth of one's income is the baseline for honoring God. [9]

5.6.       A. T. Robertson

Archibald Thomas (A.T.) Robertson (1863–1934) an evangelical and a devout Southern Baptist preacher, a prominent conservative theologian, and one of the most celebrated New Testament Greek scholars in Christian history, argues that, ‘Jesus does not condemn tithing. What he does condemn is doing it to the neglect of the weightier matters (τα βαρυτερα). The Pharisees were externalists. We should tithed and should not neglect other things like externalists (hypocrites).’[10]

5.7.       Craig L. Bloomberg

Dr. Craig L. Blomberg a prominent evangelical New Testament scholar and author says, ‘I am not opposed to anyone who voluntarily chooses to tithe, including those who give it all to their local church. Because the overall levels of Christian giving are so low, a tithe well surpasses the percentage of giving of most of the church finance resources. Jesus laments the practice of tithing by proclaiming ‘You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former’ (Mt.23:23; Lk.11:42).[11]

5.8.       David Jeremiah

American evangelical Christian author, founder of Turning Point, also a prolific, award-winning Christian author who has received multiple honors from Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA), says, ‘What we do with our money indicates whether we honor God above all else in life. The tithe was established as a way to keep God first in the hearts and minds of His people. [12] To Tithe is to Trust God.’ [13]

5.9.       Elmer Towns

A Christian academic, pastor and writer who co-founded Liberty University in his book ‘Tithing is Christian’ says, ‘The early church gave more than the tithe. When Christians no longer gave to the temple, they brought their money to the church. Twice the Scripture records they gave all their possessions (Acts 2:44, 4:34), this included more than the obligation of the tithes (10%) in the Old Testament. Most who argue against tithing want to do less, whereas the early church did more.’[14]

5.10.   Ken Hemphill, Bobby L. Eklund and Reggie Kidd

Ken Hemphill is Professor at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and North Greenville University. He has doctoral degrees from Cambridge University and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Bobby L. Eklund earned his doctoral degree from Luther Rice Seminary and the founding partner of the Eklund Chair of Stewardship at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary. Reggie Kidd is the Professor of New Testament at Reformed Theological Seminary (Orlando, Florida) and earned his doctoral degree from from Duke University in Christian Origins.

As already mentioned in different views of Tithes; Ken Hemphill and Bobby Eklund opines that, Tithe is the foundation of giving. Reggie Kidd asserts that, Tithing in the New Covenant. (ref. Different views on Tithe or read the book as given above) [15]

          6.    Today’s Attitude on Tithe

Because most of all the Charismatic or Prosperity Gospel (health-prosperity-wealth movement) Preacher, are advocating Tithing. Many argues that Tithes and Prosperity Gospel are in same tune. In the prosperity gospel, tithing is often reframed as a "seed of faith" or ‘an investment’. Proponents teach that paying the first 10% of your income obligates God to financially and physically bless the giver, functioning as a spiritual cause-and-effect mechanism for wealth and health. This is one of the main reason for many scholar and theologian sharply counter them back with biblical teaching of giving. They (Prosperity Preacher) distorted the gospel and claimed a "shameless fraud."

But, it is significant, to keep aside the prosperity gospel and all the health-wealth strategy. Putting God first with our income or earning is what Worshipping God "in spirit and truth" is all about.

In Today’s context, many believers often says

‘Mosaic Law’ has been fulfilled by Jesus Christ.

Tithe is under the Old Covenant, in the New Covenant we must give freely, generously and willingly.

We are not obligated to the Old Covenant Law.

The New Testament nowhere designates a percentage of income a person should give.

Christians are not obligated to give a 10-percent tithe.

However, all Christians believes that the entire Bible is God’s inerrant Word and that it is divided into two parts, the Old and New Testaments. The continuity vs discontinuity debate has to do with how the two parts of the Bible relate and the application that has for Christians today. The best answer seems to be that there are some areas of both continuity and discontinuity, and that neither sharp discontinuity nor uniform continuity is warranted. Jesus said He did not come to abolish the Law but to fulfill it (Matthew 5:17). In other words, He was not preaching something brand new (discontinuity) but the culmination of what had been there all along (continuity). But Jesus’ fulfillment of the Law had in it the seeds of discontinuity, because, after the Law had been fulfilled, it was no longer needed (Galatians 3:24–25). God never changes, but the way that He deals with people can change. What about tithe is it still relevant today? The deeper question, is this: What has priority in our lives? Is Christ really first—or do we put ourselves and our own desires first? Make sure Christ is first in your life, and then ask Him to guide you. Tithing is never condemn by Jesus. The foundation of Biblical mandate of Tithing in the Old Testament lies on ‘Putting God First.’

Conclusion

When the church teaches that God has no legal claims on modern man’s institutions – it’s pluralism - it places itself under another god with another law. God is presented as if He had no legal claims on modern man. “God loves you, and has a wonderful plan for your life.” The doctrine of a claims-less God has financial consequences for the churches, just as it does for the people in them who refuse to pay wallets with holes.

Covenant-breaking man affirms his self-professed autonomy by controlling his wallet. His control over the allocation of his money is the number-one manifestation of his faith. Covenant-breaking man’s number-one priority is to affirm his own autonomy without coming under God’s judgment in both history and eternity. He believes that he has the right to decide what to do with his money. God tells him he is wrong about this. God has first claim through His institutional church.

Men in their rebellion do not accept this teaching. They would prefer to keep 100 percent of a shrinking economic base.

Christians are still so impressed with covenant-breaking philosophies of human autonomy that they have not obeyed God in this area. They cling to their wallets as tightly as the Israelites of Haggai’s day clung to theirs.

But they have nevertheless felt guilty about this. They have therefore sought to justify themselves theologically. In doing so, they have abandoned the tool of dominion: God’s law.’

Meredith G. Kline, Old Testament Scholar proposed ‘A Theory of Cause and Effect in the New Covenant Era’. He states that,

And meanwhile it [the common grace order] must run its course within the uncertainties of the mutually conditioning pinnacles of common grace and common curse, prosperity and adversity being experienced in a manner largely unpredictable because of the inscrutable sovereignty of the divine will that dispenses them in mysterious ways.’[16]

He has substituted a theory of God’s common-grace inscrutability (the quality of not showing emotions or thoughts )to mankind in New Covenant history. Social cause and effect become mysterious from the point of view of biblical revelation. Self consciously, they have abandoned the Mosaic Covenant’s doctrine of covenantal.

Another way to deny the moral necessity of tithing is to declare, with fundamentalism, “We’re under grace, not law!” The result of such a universal affirmation is the self-conscious surrender of history to covenant-breakers.

A third way is to affirm that God’s Holy Spirit will inform each Christian how much to give.

But all these pointed to give tenth of our income for God instituted Church.

The leadership of Christians in society depends on their covenantal faithfulness. The leadership of individual Christians within the institutional church also depends on their covenantal faithfulness. If God still brings judgment accordingly then in order for men to prosperous they must obey God’s Bible-revealed laws. As you sow so shall you reap. (this is not in conjunction with the prosperity gospel)

Those who tithed proportionately, saw their hearts move deeper into God’s Kingdom and they are more satisfied than those who never tithed. It was tithing that set the waves to swing  and we must catch the waves with the right attitude. Tithe may not be mandatory in New Covenant as claimed by many, but the Old Covenant continues in our lives for our moral growth towards God. Tithes pave the road for giving more for God’s Kingdom and for the His Glorification.

It is strongly mandated in the Old Covenant and never abolish the mandate even by Jesus and by the Apostles. In God’s instituted Church Tithes should be the baseline for our giving.  Tithe is never a Sin. It becomes a sin if you think your tithe earns you entry into the Kingdom of God. Tithing is not a ticket for Heaven. However, Tithe should be our  foundation of giving. We ought to give God's portion that belongs solely to Him. Tithing is not a doctrine of material prosperity like the Prosperity Gospel. But, tithing can open the floodgates of heaven and fill our lives with spiritual blessings because putting God first is what Tithing stands for.


[1] https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/familyservices/older-adults/golden-gazette/2024-03-artificial-intelligence-and-deepfake-videos-what-you-need-to-know#:~:text=The%20process%20of%20producing%20complex,better%20at%20their%20respective%20task.
[2] https://www.fairfaxcounty.gov/familyservices/older-adults/golden-gazette/2024-03-artificial-intelligence-and-deepfake-videos-what-you-need-to-know#:~:text=The%20process%20of%20producing%20complex,better%20at%20their%20respective%20task.
[3] https://billygraham.org/answers/my-husband-says-that-tithing-i-e-giving-one-tenth-of-their-income-to-the-church-is-just-something-rich-people-do-is-he-right
[4] Iain Duguid, Should Christian Tithe? Excelling in the Grace of Giving (Glenside: St. Colme’s Press, 2018) kindle 215 of 286.
[5] https://www.desiringgod.org/messages/these-you-ought-to-have-done-without-neglecting-the-others
[6] Randy Alcorn, The Treasure Principle (Colorado Springs: Multinomah Books, 2001) kindle 694 of 1407.
[7] Alcorn, The Treasure Principle…740 of 1407.
[8] Gary North, Tithing And The Church, (Texas, Institute for Christian Economics), 1994, 2.
[9] George A.E. Salstrand, The Tithe The Minimum Standard for Christian Giving (Michigan: BAKER BOOK HOUSE, 1954),
[10] A. T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (Grand Rapids, MI: Christian Classics Ethereal Library, 136.
[11] Craig L. Blomberg, Christians in an Age of Wealth: A Biblical Theology of Stewardship (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, , 2013), kindle 3494 of 7910.
[12] David Jeremiah, ‘How does understanding tithing as God's plan change your view of giving?’ Link https://www.davidjeremiah.org/search?q=Tithes
[13] David Jeremiah, ‘The Sermon on the Amount’ https://www.davidjeremiah.org/search?q=Tithes
[14] Elmer Towns, Tithing is Christian (Virginia: Liberty University, 1984), 34.
[15] David A. Croteau, ed. Perspectives on Tithing: 4 Views (Nashville: B&H Publishing Group, 2011).
[16] Meredith G. Kline, “Comments on the Old-New Error,” Westminster Theological Journal, XLI (Fait 1978), p. 184.