Scripture References
- Malachi 3
- Leviticus 27
- Deuteronomy 27
- Deuteronomy 28
- Isaiah 45
Introduction
- The group explored Malachi 3, where God accuses His people of “robbing” Him by withholding the tithe.
- Through lively stories about grandparents who lived through the Great Depression and modern habits of excess, the conversation pressed one core issue: our willingness to trust God with the first tenth of everything reveals whether we actually believe He is our Provider.
- Malachi promises either a curse or an overflow of blessing, and the men wrestled honestly with whether such consequences still apply under Christ.
- The study opened with light banter about volunteering at the church’s upcoming “At the Movies” outreach, then shifted to a question: “If your grandparents walked into your house today, what would they say you waste the most?” Answers–time on phones, eating out, bottled water, oversized houses–set the stage for a deeper look at stewardship.
Key Points / Exposition
1. We Waste What Earlier Generations Guarded
- Grandparents who survived the Depression reused bacon grease, canned vegetables, washed foil, and ate every bite; few owned large homes or dined out.
- Illustration: one member listed 27 Apple devices he owns–laptops, tablets, watches–contrasting that excess with older relatives who hoarded scrap fabric and garden produce.
- The exercise highlighted how casually we now spend time, money, and resources.
2. “Will a Mere Mortal Rob God?” – Malachi 3:8
- God’s charge is not merely “disobedience” but “robbery” because everything already belongs to Him.
- Withholding tithes signals a deeper issue: a lack of trust in God’s provision.
- Question posed: When finances feel tight, is my instinct to trust God more or to grip my money tighter?
3. The Curse of Withholding
- Malachi 3:9 ties national hardship to collective robbery: “You are under a curse–your whole nation–because you are robbing Me.”
- Leviticus 27 outlines the tithe requirement; Deuteronomy 28 lists graphic blessings for obedience and curses for rebellion (failed crops, debt, even family calamity).
- Discussion: Have we ever felt seasons where everything went wrong? Could some hardship be self-inflicted by ignoring God’s covenant principles?
4. Test God With the Tithe
- “Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse… Test Me in this… and see if I will not throw open the floodgates of heaven.”
- God invites Israel to the only sanctioned “test” of Him–returning the full tenth.
- Promised results: abundant harvests, protected vines, and provision “more than you can store.”
- Purpose of blessing (v. 12): so “all nations will call you blessed” and recognize God’s goodness.
5. Do These Curses and Blessings Still Operate Today?
- Lively debate:
- Some argued Christ’s atonement removes direct curses, but God still disciplines to draw believers back.
- Others noted Isaiah 45 where God claims authorship of both prosperity and calamity–His character has not changed.
- Distinction suggested: vertical sins against God (e.g., robbing Him) may invite heavier consequences than horizontal sins against people.
- Consensus: Whatever form discipline takes, God’s goal is always reconciliation and His own glory, not spite.
Major Lessons & Revelations
- Everything we possess is on loan from God; keeping the tithe is stealing, not savvy budgeting.
- Our first reaction when security is threatened reveals whether we trust God or wealth.
- God’s blessings are meant to showcase His goodness to outsiders, not just improve our lifestyle.
- Under the New Covenant, God still uses circumstances–even painful ones–to bring His people back to faithful dependence.
- What we protect most fiercely shows what we trust most deeply.
Practical Application
- Examine this week where you are gripping resources instead of trusting God–time, money, possessions–and open your hand.
- Set aside the first ten percent of every paycheck and bring it to God before any other expense.
- Track one area of habitual waste (eating out, streaming, delivery apps) and redirect that amount to generosity.
- Share with a brother where you sense God’s discipline and pray together for renewed obedience.
Conclusion & Call to Response
- The study ended with a sober reminder: God is not after our cash; He is after our confidence. When we hold everything loosely and return the tithe, we invite His protection and provision–not just for ourselves but as a witness to everyone watching.
- The challenge lingers: “What you protect most fiercely reveals what you trust most deeply.”
Insights
- Grandpa survived the Great Depression; we can survive scrolling–trade screen time for kingdom time.
- Your wallet tells louder testimonies than your lips; generosity proves where your security truly sleeps.
- When money feels tight, open your grip; God can’t fill clenched fists.
- Comfort warns, ‘hold back’; faith whispers, ’test Me’–obedience unlocks floodgate blessings.
- What you defend at all costs is already your master; choose love over luxury.
- Stop treating tips like tithes; God’s invitation is total trust, not spare change.
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