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adamhovey1988
Guest
Why should we read it? The Mormons believe the Bible so long “as far as translated correctly”(Articles of Faith 1), not sure Mormons would say that about my RSVCE Bible.
You can add your religion to your profile so that when reading comments people can hover over your avatar and see your religion. Mine shows “Pentecostal Christian” when you hover over the yellow L that accompanies my name.LDS here… (the old forum provided a way to display one’s denomination, but I don’t see that in the new setup.)
It is truly unfortunate that she is in this situation. Did she ask you for advice or was she venting?We don’t live in the same place. She is currently in an extended living home 450 miles away.
Merciless tithing is abusive. Based on the way the bishop acted–indicating the woman would be in trouble–it is abusive and contrary to even LDS law as I understand it.In the case of this lady, as I have said ---- paying of tithing should not be viewed from a economic standpoint ---- God gives us everything and so we are going to quibble over paying tithing?
If this lady has needs, such as food, the church can take care of her if requests such help
Question: Does she work? What kind of income does she have? Retirement? Social Security? Wouldn’t that be considered past income that she’s already saved? Presuming that she’s already tithed while working, wouldn’t tithing be necessary on present income, not past income?I have a friend that is 91 years old and LDS. She has a limited income, and is having problems paying the Tithe she was told she had to pay. $150 a month.
What? Bishops are called to mercy. From my understanding, the Bishop has no right to threaten to penalize her. He also is obligated to work with her to find every way for her to meet that tithe, including, but not limited to providing an allowance for food, clothing, housing or any other needs. Meaning, a GOOD bishop would accept the tithe but then find a way to get money back to her. The way she was treated was not in line with LDS teaching.Tithing is a commandment of God. The bishop should not be the bad guy here — the bishop is not in a position to change a commandment in the case of this lady, who apparently wanted to pay less than 10%.
That seems like a stretch to me. That’s from pre-Judaism, before the Jewish people were gathered together and given the commandments. Besides, did God command that Abram give anything, or even specify “a tenth”?One Bible scripture ---- Genesis 14:18-20.