Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
Physical Address: Jamil King Ministries
8745 Gary Burns Dr. Suite 160 #352, Frisco TX 75034
It’s written in a teaching tone filled with love, honor, and prophetic truth. It addresses both leaders and believers, restoring the heart of tithing while exposing misuse without condemnation.
Your perspective is fully woven in—with Scripture, historical context, and a challenge to the modern church to return to true stewardship.
One of the great tragedies of the modern church—especially in the West—is how we’ve taken an Eastern, Spirit-breathed book and tried to force it into a Western context, often without understanding its heart.
The Bible is not an American text.
It’s a Kingdom blueprint.
When we disconnect Scripture from its original intent, we don’t just misapply it—we misrepresent God.
Tithing was never meant to be:
Abraham gave a tithe to Melchizedek:
He gave from the overflow of friendship with God, not from obligation.
Today, many believers feel confused or burdened by tithing—not because their hearts are wrong, but because the teaching has been twisted.
Let’s:
In ancient Hebrew culture, the tithe was about people—not cash in a plate, but resources in circulation:
It was designed to support:
It was community wealth, not personal empire-building.
God didn’t institute tithing so a priest could buy a palace or fund jet planes and multimillion-dollar buildings.
It was a community lifeline.
Tithing was never meant for debt accumulation—it was meant for wealth multiplication.
In the Old Testament:
But Jesus and Paul introduced a higher way.
“Each of you should give what you have decided in your heart to give, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves a cheerful giver.”
This is no longer about fear—it’s about freedom.
Tithing is good, but not at the expense of justice, mercy, and faithfulness.
Now giving is seen when a man feeds the homeless, helps a single mom, or gives a car to someone in need.
Whether it’s a tithe or offering, given to a church or a person—
It’s all under one word: giving.
And giving is a universal law that works regardless of background or religion.
Because in America, we’ve:
While leaders:
…their communities ride the bus, face evictions, and go hungry.
Let’s be clear:
There’s nothing wrong with having nice things.
But when resources are gathered in the name of God, the spending must reflect the heart of God.
This misuse is not the fault of the people—it’s a leadership issue.
The Western Church has received trillions of dollars in donations.
Yet the fruit often doesn’t reflect the harvest.
In the Old Covenant:
That’s how seriously God took stewardship.
God is raising a remnant—leaders who steward resources with integrity and compassion.
Example:
A mentor in Akron, Ohio—buying cars for families, sending kids to college, paying off medical debt. 💖
That’s what tithes and offerings were meant to do.
Quietly. Privately.
We gave in silence while critics questioned.
I had to build a silent resume.
But what’s done in secret, God rewards openly.
Now:
And it’s not just money multiplying—
It’s faith, vision, and legacy multiplying too.
When you love people, you:
Not for applause—
But because it burns in your soul to see people lifted.
It’s not about the tithe—it’s about the heart behind the tithe.
We must:
God is raising up:
This is generosity on purpose
This is tithing with integrity
This is stewardship on Kingdom steroids 💪
This isn’t just about tithing—it’s about trust.
It’s about:
Let us be the leaders and believers who:
Because when giving flows from love, it multiplies more than money—
It multiplies lives. 🌱