- May 5, 2012
- 5,035
- 6,015
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Anglican
- Marital Status
- Married
This question is for information-gathering only, to help me understand our Episcopal congregation better.
I am on the vestry (lay leadership body) of an Episcopal parish. We are considering strongly encouraging the members of our congregation to begin tithing, partly to help fund a new ministry that our congregation is genuinely excited about. I want to get a sense of how new a concept this will be for our members.
I was raised Baptist, and Baptists are taught about tithing from the earliest years. $1 allowance? put 10 cents in the offering plate. It can be a legalistic concept in some very bad ways, and it can rest on bad hermeneutics, but it can also be a good and fair way to fund a church. Episcopal churches don't generally teach children about tithing, so this is not a habit our cradle Episcopalians are used to.
About half of our members were raised Catholic. Does the Catholic Church raise its members to expect to tithe (or to give N% of their income, for some N)? Will this be a new concept for our former-Catholic members, or can we simply say that what the nuns taught you growing up was a good idea all along? In general, what philosophy or set of rules does the Catholic Church give its members to guide them in deciding how much to donate to their parishes each year?
Thanks for your help. Again, I'm just looking for information here. No arguments, please -- especially no arguments from non-Catholics! This is OBOB, the Catholic forum.
I am on the vestry (lay leadership body) of an Episcopal parish. We are considering strongly encouraging the members of our congregation to begin tithing, partly to help fund a new ministry that our congregation is genuinely excited about. I want to get a sense of how new a concept this will be for our members.
I was raised Baptist, and Baptists are taught about tithing from the earliest years. $1 allowance? put 10 cents in the offering plate. It can be a legalistic concept in some very bad ways, and it can rest on bad hermeneutics, but it can also be a good and fair way to fund a church. Episcopal churches don't generally teach children about tithing, so this is not a habit our cradle Episcopalians are used to.
About half of our members were raised Catholic. Does the Catholic Church raise its members to expect to tithe (or to give N% of their income, for some N)? Will this be a new concept for our former-Catholic members, or can we simply say that what the nuns taught you growing up was a good idea all along? In general, what philosophy or set of rules does the Catholic Church give its members to guide them in deciding how much to donate to their parishes each year?
Thanks for your help. Again, I'm just looking for information here. No arguments, please -- especially no arguments from non-Catholics! This is OBOB, the Catholic forum.