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In today’s video, we’re breaking down a moment that should make every Christian stop and think: William Murphy telling people in church to sell things they own so they can catch up on their tithes — and grounding that push in Mark’s account of the rich young ruler. Original video: • EVERYTHING fOrward…[Financially] | 10AM | ... And I’m going to be honest: this is one of those moments where people confuse a real biblical warning about idolatry with a very modern church habit of turning the Bible into a fundraising tool. What happened (and why it matters) The rich young ruler story (Mark 10) is not Jesus saying, “Sell your stuff so you can pay back-tithes to the temple.” Jesus confronts the man’s heart because his wealth owned him. The issue is lordship — not a “tithing deficit.” But in this clip, the application becomes: “Sell what you have… so you can catch up on your tithes.” That’s not a small shift. That’s a major theological jump. Because when you take a passage aimed at exposing idolatry and self-righteousness and make it about paying the church, you’re not preaching the text — you’re using the text. The key problems with this teaching In this reaction, we’re going to walk through the biggest concerns: 1) It turns discipleship into debt collection Tithing becomes treated like arrears owed to an institution, and people are pressured to liquidate possessions to “get right.” That’s closer to spiritual billing than shepherding. 2) It weaponizes Scripture against struggling people If someone is behind financially, the answer isn’t always “sell your things.” Sometimes it’s budgeting help, wisdom, accountability, generosity in proportion, and rebuilding stability — without shame. 3) It misuses the rich young ruler story Jesus isn’t offering a tithing plan. He’s revealing a heart problem and calling the man to follow Him — and the man walks away sorrowful. The passage is about repentance, surrender, and true treasure — not a command for the congregation to fund a budget gap. 4) It blurs the line between generosity and coercion There’s a massive difference between: -a believer freely choosing sacrifice for the kingdom, and -a leader telling the room to sell things to catch up on tithes, especially when emotion, guilt, or public pressure is involved. -What biblical giving actually looks like The New Testament pattern emphasizes: cheerful giving, voluntary generosity, proportionate giving, care for the poor, and giving without manipulation. And yes, we can talk about stewardship and faithfulness — but we can’t turn the pulpit into a pressure campaign that confuses conviction with coercion. What we’ll cover in this video ✅ The actual point of Mark 10 (rich young ruler) in context ✅ Why “sell your stuff to catch up on tithes” is a dangerous application ✅ How this kind of teaching burdens the vulnerable and protects the system ✅ A healthier, biblical approach to giving and discipleship ✅ How to spot when a sermon is being used to extract money Join the conversation Drop your thoughts in the comments: Have you ever been told to sell possessions to give to a church? How should churches handle giving teaching without shaming people? What’s the difference between conviction and manipulation? If you appreciate content like this, like, subscribe, and share for more sermon breakdowns and discernment videos. Software I use (Ecamm) Sign up with this link: https://www.ecamm.com/mac/ecammlive/?... AFFILIATES Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/allthings... Covenant Eyes: https://covenanteyes.sjv.io/zNYmqG Join this channel to get access to perks: / @kdubtru Website: kdubtru.com Music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1TohV... Subscribe & click 🛎 for notifications of premieres and live streams! Follow me on social media: Twitter.com/kdubtru Facebook.com/allthingstheology instagram.com/kdub.tru/ SUPPORT: Patreon.com/kdubtru Listen on podcast: https://anchor.fm/allthingstheology Email for interviews or booking: allthingstheology@gmail.com