Sacrificial Giving
Deut
26:1-11
As we read to this passage we are reminded, as
indeed the Jewish people were reminded each time these words
were read out, of just how much of a debt they owed to their
heavenly Father. How they were rescued from a life of slavery
in Egypt and guided through those difficult wilderness years
into the promised land. If we read the whole story of those
hard times, then we find that the people of God werent
always as faithful to their God as He was to them, and there
were many times when they were tempted to follow other gods,
as man today is also tempted when times are hard, or when spiritual
help is not visibly available from the Christian church in their
neighborhood, to follow after false doctrines or prophets.
But however often the people of God rejected Him,
God never took his eyes off them, and eventually they turned
back to Him and crossed the Red Sea into the promised land.
Now, in order that they might never forget that
moment, a law is delivered to them. They are to take some of
the first fruits of the harvest and offer it as a thank offering
in the temple. This offering became the festival of Tabernacles
or Booths, a celebration which included camping out in gardens
and on roof-tops in tents or huts made out of branches. These
tents (or tabernacles) were a reminder of those days spent living
in tents in the desert.
The festival included a ceremony in which water
was poured out and prayers made for good rains for the coming
season. It was at this festival that Jesus stood up and declared
Whoever is thirsty should come to me and drink. As the
scripture says Whoever believes in me, streams of living
water will pour out from his heart. Jesus knew how to
drive a message home by making it relevant to the moment.
After the instructions regarding the giving which
are spelt out in Deuteronomy, there follows almost a hymn of thanksgiving,
confession and dedication, spelling out a summary of all that
the people of Israel had been through - followed by words of assurance
Lets look at this passage then in the light of
our own worship, the reasons why we are here in this place today,
singing hymns, saying prayers. Is it not an absolute truth that
if we forget just how much we owe to our heavenly Father, how
thankful we are that he has placed us in this wonderful country.
How thankful we are that he loved the world so much that he
gave his one and only Son, so that whoever believes in Him shall
not perish but have everlasting life. How thankful we are that
we can know his peace and his love in our lives, then if we
lose any sense of why we are doing what were doing here,
then our worship loses its life and vitality.
We need constantly to remind ourselves of all
that God has done for us in our lives, both individually and
as a congregation. And yes, we need to give as a token of our
gratitude. The passage makes no mention of tithing or giving
a tenth, but simply infers that the giving should be in proportion
to that which has been given by God. And we are given the reassurance
that a grateful giver will be blessed in the giving.