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LynneClomina said:um, i thought it was whatever % off our taxable income? ie. say i tithe $100, so i can claim 40% of that on my income tax - that only comes off the amount that the gov't taxes me. so i can take $40 off my taxes... it is not a return of any of the money that i've tithed, it's a deduction of my regular tax amount for being a charitable citizen....but then what do i know, taxes confuse me. i leave that up to my accountant.
oh, and i've never had enough income to even get taxed. so i really dont have a clue what i'm talking about.
andry said:Hypothetically, if you and the government don't owe each other for any benefit or deduction (so that you're tax return is $0.00), but you did have a $100 donation to church that year, you would put on your tax return a $100 donation to a non-profit organization. What would you get back from the government? That's right, $40.
Now who's $40 is that?
LynneClomina said:huh. i dont get none of that back from the govt. my accountant says to hold on to the reciept so that i can claim it in the future, becuase it would do nothing for me, becuase my tax return was $0, and the deduction only applies if i have a positive amount - they dont "pay out", so to speak, if i dont have any taxable income - my income is too low.
If you are tithing off your gross, you are already tithing off everything the government takes since they are getting a % of your gross. Unless of course you are getting back more than you paid in (earned income credit, etc.) That's not to say you shouldn't give out of your tax return, just that the tithe is already paid.andry said:Well ok, if you don't have taxable income, I believe you can 'carry' that donation for 5 years until your income is taxable. But check with your accountant!!
Abraham gave the spoils (10%) he gave the 90% back where it came from. He didn't give his own belongings or income.TheScottsMen said:Letting my mine go round and round today at work. In Genesis 14:16 it says that Abe brought back everything he won after defeating his enemy, he gave Melchizedek a 1/10 of that, his winnings (Genesis 14:20), his abudance? Not his normal day to day living expenses? btw: I'm for tithingjust wondering what everyones view is on that.
Mercy Me said:I am always surprised when people say the New Testament does not command us to tithe:
Matthew 23:23 (Jesus speaking)
Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice and mercy and faith. These you ought to have done, without leaving the others undone.
Don't know how to get around that, no matter how many things I read that say we are not under the law to tithe.
Deb4given said:Jesus did teach about tithing, this does not mean that he taught tithing as a New Covenant doctrine. In fact, his teaching of tithing in Matthew 23 and Luke 11 only prove that Jesus approved of tithing while the law system was in place and had jurisdiction over those under its tutorship (Gal. 4:4). Jesus could not declare the tithe invalid before Calvary because, in doing so, he would have been declaring the entire Old Covenant Law invalid before Calvary.
In this verse,(matthew 23:23) justice, mercy and faithfulness are heavier and weightier than the rules for tithing spices, evidently because the former reflects the nature and character of God
I must have missed it? What is the scripture verse?andry said:Ahem, Abraham tithed before the law. As far as 'giving what God lays on your heart', tell me, is that 'usually' more than you're tithes and offerings would have been, or less?
TheScottsMen said:I must have missed it? What is the scripture verse?
EDIT:
I read that wrong. I agree, he tithed before the law. But couldn't someone easily say that the sabbath observance was before the law (i know many of my jewish friends state that), and that sabbath and other feast are talked about in the book of Revelation (Feast of Tabernacle, etc..)
TheScottsMen said:Why is the Feast of Tabernacles celebrated after Christ returns? If (and im not disagreeing with you) it was done away with, why celebrate something that the Lord nailed to the cross, get rid of something just to bring it back?
I was only refering to the scripture that was indicated.andry said:Ahem, Abraham tithed before the law. As far as 'giving what God lays on your heart', tell me, is that 'usually' more than you're tithes and offerings would have been, or less?
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