TITHING REBUTTAL (PART 2)
From Doctor Russell Earl Kelly Rebutted, Parts 1 and 2,
By Anonymous on You Tube; By: Russell Earl Kelly, PHD
Anonymous has placed over 2 hours of video on You Tube
rebutting my book on tithing. As always I encourage open public dialog with
anybody concerning God's Word. I think this kind of personal attack is cowardly
and wrong since it does not allow a proper discussion. Nevertheless I will hit
the high points of his disagreement with me. Part 1 has been previously
rebutted.
Chapter 29: He begins stating that chapters 28-31 are
irrelevant. However chapter 29 is the Secular History of Tithing which
demonstrates that the early church did not teach tithing as a church law until
AD 777. Also, he uses chapter 28 later without reference.
Chapter 15 i. e. Luke 18:12; Anon criticizes by
implying that I should cast out fasting along with tithing. First fasting is
taught in the Post-Calvary church while tithing is not. Second, the Pharisee
was going beyond the law which did not command fasting twice a week or tithing
of everything.
Chapter 16; Acts 15: He admits that the Church is
currently under "none" of the Law. This forces him to invent a
post-Law biblical definition of the tithe (which he never does). He says James'
list was only of things "we should not do" I say "Read Acts
15:19-20." It is a list of only those things that Gentile converts should
do. Common sense must prevail. James was not entangling Gentile Christians in
hundreds of laws which pertained only to Hebrews such as food tithing from
inside Israel.
Chapter 17, New Covenant: Anon ignores the many top
theologians I quoted who agree with me, including Martin Luther. One of his two worst errors is failure to
have a working hermeneutic (principle of interpretation) when transferring
material from the Old to the New Covenant other than his own opinion. Only that
which has been repeated from the OT after Calvary in terms of the New Covenant
applies.
Chapter 18, the Law of Christ: Again Anon ignores the
many top theologians who agree with me and attacks as if I stand alone. I would
support a Christian who gives any percentage as a sacrificial faith response.
Anon is the one who expects the poorest in the land to tithe a full ten percent
and go without necessities. He uses "minimum sacrificial" giving as if
the two words make sense being used together; "sacrificial" for one
person is not necessarily "sacrificial" for another. Did Joseph and
Jesus give 100% of their carpentry income before caring for their own household
contrary to First Timothy 5:8?
Chapter 20; Law Ended: Yes, some things in the Law have
been "carried over" --- BUT they have really been REPEATED after
Calvary in terms of the New Covenant under grace. That is a consistent
principle of interpretation. Anon has no consistent hermeneutic other than his own opinion.
Chapter 21: Priesthood of Believers: After saying
"I believe that the NT is clear that tithing is a means of support for
gospel workers," Anon gives no detailed textual explanation. That is
merely his opinion.
Chapter 24; 1 Tim 5; Double Honor: I urge readers to
read the entire chapter very slowly.(1) Since "discipline" means
"training people to obey rules" or "a code of behavior," I
used the correct word for 5:1-20. (2) Anon completely ignores 5:19-20 in his
rebuttal. (3) "Timee" is never translated "salary" in any
un-paraphrased Bible. (4) While initially stating that my chapter 28 on Acts 20
is unimportant, he twists it here without encouraging its reading. (5) Paul would
not follow his boasting about being self-supported with a command that gospel
workers be paid double salary. (6) Anon's conclusion that Paul's full time
support of his co-workers is a "deeply doctrinal policy" which proves
that gospel workers should all be full time is ridiculous.
Chapter 25, Miscellaneous: Anon incorrectly connects
Romans 12:1 to tithing. With the possible exception of Hebrews 7, Paul's
writings do not contain the word "tithe."
Chapter 23, 1 Cor 16: Since this contains no reference
to tithing, Anon defeats his own argument by saying that the principles here
for helping the poor should be the same principles used for the support of
gospel workers. I agree.
Chapter 26: Anon does not point out that this is a verbatim
chapter written by L. S. Chafer and John Walvoord of Dallas Theological Seminary.
Chapter 27: Although Anon quite often refers to Matthew
22:19-22 as his strongest argument for the tithe, he never explains what Jesus
meant by "the things that are God's." Never does Anon define the word
"tithe" using the 16 biblical verses of the HOLY tithe as always only
food from inside HOLY Israel. Yet Jesus specifically said that money with the
"image and superscription" of secular authority does not qualify as
holy to God. Anon does not explain what is left.
Chapter 14, Matt 23:23: After admitting that the church
was under "none" of the Law (his comments on chapter 16, Acts 15),
Anon's primary argument for New Covenant tithing is because JESUS TAUGHT IT!. My
reply is that, Jesus taught total obedience to the Law before Calvary---
otherwise He would have sinned. Yet He never taught that tithes should be given
to Himself or to His discip0les. Mt 23:23 is about tithing under the Law.
Chapter 22, 1 Cor 9: Anon says that I seem to
discourage full time ministry. I say, "Read the chapter." I attend a
church with a full-time minister and support it. I merely point out that the
Bible neither teaches such nor confirms such. Perhaps in our modern age, it is
the best way to avoid uneducated neophytes.
I am angered by Anon twisting my words and repeating his
false conclusion three times: Read the book; it is free online! On page 186 of
chapter 9 about First Corinthians 9:13-14 I state in BOLD print what the
MINORITY POSITION is. Anon's "Dr. Kelly meet Dr. Kelly" is a joke
which proves he only skimmed my book. Anon's 2nd argument for tithing is
"The Lord has ordained it." This is his own personal interpretation
of 1st Corinthians 9:14-15 which really says "Even so hath the Lord
ordained that they which preach the gospel should live of the gospel. But I
have used none of these things." The gospel principles of grace and faith
do not include Law principles of stewardship.
Chapter 19 & 2, Hebrews 7 and Genesis 14: Anon
misses the point that it was Melchizedek's "order" and not his
"person" which set the foundation of Christ's high-priestly order.
Anon does not even have the courtesy to learn how to
pronounce"Mel-chi-se-dec" from either the Old or New Testament. While
admitting that 7:18 ended Levitical tithing, he never explains how the Scripture
teaches a completely different kind of tithing. He erroneously states that there
were no king-priests in the Old Testament. He says that my description of
Melchizedek as a pagan Canaanite king priests is "total nonsense" --
yet I got the idea from the Baptist Wycliffe Bible Commentary. He says that there
is no basis for the pagan tithe from spoils of war yet the five commentaries I
quote on pages 24-25 disagree. Also Hebrews 7:4 must not be in his Bible.
Finally, Heb 7:8 is used by many to justify post-Calvary tithing. Yet 7:8 was
written while the Temple still stood and while the Levites and priests were
still receiving tithe; it must mean they did so as Jesus' representatives. Nevertheless
7:8 does not annul the close connection between 7:5, 12 and 18..
If "anonymous" wants to come out of his dark
closet and enter public open dialog with me, I await him in the name of Jesus
Christ.
Russell Earl Kelly, PHD
2 comments:
CORRECTION: A similar rebuttal to part 2 was posted at russkellyphd.blogspot.com on August 4, 2016.
"Never does Anon define the word "tithe" " At 1:41- 1:44 I do give the definition of the tithe.
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