Read 2 Samuel 24.
We are not told
why the LORD was angry with
David's desire to publicly repent, stay the plague, and worship God led him to Araunah's threshing floor. Here he wanted to build an altar and make a sacrifice to the LORD. The humility and generosity of Araunah is worthy of meditation in and of itself. He offered the king his property, his livelihood for the burnt offering, and even the wood for the fire.
David was not a perfect man. He made some moral and leadership decisions that displeased the LORD. Yet, the scriptures refer to him as "a man after God's own heart" (Acts 13:22). What made him such a godly man and leader was when he knew he had done wrong he knew how to repent and did so. It was never a cheap grace that he sought. Each recorded time the cost was high and painful.
The king refused Araunah's offer with this famous statement in verse 24: "I will not offer burnt offerings to the LORD my God that cost me nothing." The result was peace with God and the people.
This was not
his systematic worship of giving to the LORD of his tithe. This was sacrificial giving out of generosity. Sacrificial giving may be characterized as-
1.
"Freewill" offering, as in Exodus 35:5, 22, and 29 when building the
Tabernacle.
2. "Over
and above", as David stated it in 1 Chronicles 29:3 when building the
3. "Cheerful", as Paul described such a giver in 2 Corinthians 9:7 when meeting the needs of the poor.
The tithe belongs to the LORD. Those monies support the on-going ministry. However, giving generously beyond the ten percent requires one to rethink personal plans. It means that repurposing money for what God wants instead.
Generous giving
is a discipline of one who is learning spiritual maturity.
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