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What if the church didn’t need your money to survive?
In this episode of More to Church, we take an unflinching look at one of the most sensitive—and least examined—assumptions in modern Christianity: that church requires compulsory giving to function faithfully.
From a North American context, this conversation traces the staggering financial realities of the modern church, unpacking what Scripture actually says (and doesn’t say) about tithing, budgets, buildings, and pastoral pay. Drawing from biblical texts, historical developments, and contemporary financial data, this episode challenges the idea that money is the engine of God’s kingdom—and asks whether we’ve quietly replaced generosity with obligation.
You’ll hear:
This isn’t an attack on church buildings, paid pastors, or organized ministry. It’s a call to honesty. A call to rethink stewardship. A call to ask whether our structures are serving the kingdom—or quietly competing with it.
Because if church is reduced to budgets, benefits, and buildings, it stops being the church.
There has to be more to church than money.
Support the show
By brandtWhat if the church didn’t need your money to survive?
In this episode of More to Church, we take an unflinching look at one of the most sensitive—and least examined—assumptions in modern Christianity: that church requires compulsory giving to function faithfully.
From a North American context, this conversation traces the staggering financial realities of the modern church, unpacking what Scripture actually says (and doesn’t say) about tithing, budgets, buildings, and pastoral pay. Drawing from biblical texts, historical developments, and contemporary financial data, this episode challenges the idea that money is the engine of God’s kingdom—and asks whether we’ve quietly replaced generosity with obligation.
You’ll hear:
This isn’t an attack on church buildings, paid pastors, or organized ministry. It’s a call to honesty. A call to rethink stewardship. A call to ask whether our structures are serving the kingdom—or quietly competing with it.
Because if church is reduced to budgets, benefits, and buildings, it stops being the church.
There has to be more to church than money.
Support the show