Reflections on 70+ Years of Tithing

Kathleen and I were 21 years old, newly wed and snugly settled into a one-room apartment above a two-car garage. It was winter and I was attending classes nearby. This was 73 years ago and our hearts were set upon serving the Lord.
Financial support, we knew, would come in pieces from part-time work. World War II had recently ended and money was still scarce and our income marginal.
Little more than a month into our marriage we had a serious talk about money. We agreed to the principle of tithing — the first ten percent of income was for the Lord and his church — but should we wait until income was more plentiful?
Our extremely small earnings appeared to be a good reason to delay, or to reduce the amount to two percent, or even to give only what was left after paying each month’s expenses.
We also knew that until summer our income would especially be scant. Our one hope was that I would continue to sing or speak in churches nearby, in return for an offering.
All of this was set alongside our Christian awareness of God’s great generosity: “He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all — how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32)
We knew that the tithe belongs to the Lord, as stated in our Christian scriptures (Malachi 3:8-10). The f irst ten percent should be given to the Lord for Christian ministries. Christian mothers had taught us this in childhood.
We had seen early that tithing enriches the deep partnership of marriage. How could we be “together” in the fullest sense if we did not act on common convictions about the management of resources entrusted to us?
Looking back now, at ages 94 and 95, we recall three periods of seriously limited resources during our first ten years of marriage. But we persevered in tithing and recall now how God’s faithfulness was there for us in such times.
Here’s what we’ve learned in our 73 years together: the practice of tithing begins as a discipline but quickly becomes a joy. We both agree that this joy has only grown across the years as we’ve increased our giving to the Lord’s work.
We also discovered that after giving away the first ten percent, as a tithe, the remaining ninety percent seems to provide as much support as the original hundred percent did.
We think this is because tithing made us more careful with the remainder. And God has blessed us even with modest resources.
As well, tithing tended to deepen our sense of financial responsibility to the Lord for his many gifts. I recall the story of a Christian railroad engineer, back in the days of steam locomotives, who left the pay car each month and took a tithe of his earnings directly to his church.
Asked why he was so urgent, he responded, “My job has its dangers; I don’t want to die with the Lord’s money in my pocket.” That is scrupulous faith!
In a sense, the commitment to tithe is like the ratchet on a hoist. The ratchet doesn’t determine any upper limit, but it keeps what is being lifted from dropping back to earth.
During my late teens I often used hitchhiking as a means of inexpensive long distance travel. Drivers who gave me a lift provided the vehicle, paid for the insurance, filled the fuel tank, and underwrote repairs. I rode for free. Today, Kathleen and I would feel like hitchhikers to have accepted the blessings of the church and its ministries while leaving others to provide the funds needed.
Looking back across 73 years we know that we are the richer for having started the practice of tithing together at the outset of a married life launched on meager resources.
We agree with the Apostle Paul, who wrote, “You will always be rich enough to be generous” (2 Corinthians 9:11a NEB).
* Our guest blogger this month is Bishop Emeritus Donald N. Bastian, former pastor and Bishop with the Free Methodist Church.









