“3 Nephi 24: The Lord’s Law of Tithing,” Book of Mormon Teacher Manual (2024)
“3 Nephi 24,” Book of Mormon Teacher Manual
3 Nephi 24
The Lord’s Law of Tithing
What has the Lord promised us if we pay tithing? The Savior used Malachi’s words to teach the Nephites about the law of tithing and the blessings of living this commandment. This lesson is intended to help you feel a desire to pay tithing.
Possible Learning Activities
Your experiences
Read the following scenarios, looking for those that feel most relevant to you or the youth in your area:
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Carlos is saving money for a phone. It doesn’t occur to him to pay tithing.
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Sita always paid tithing when she was young, but now that she has a job and is earning more money, it has become harder to do.
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Oneka gives all the money she earns to help her family. She wonders if she needs to pay tithing when her family needs the money.
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Anjum doesn’t earn any money, so he wonders how or if the law of tithing applies to him.
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Which situations do you feel are most relevant? Why?
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What questions or concerns might youth have about tithing?
Think about your own experiences and understanding of tithing. Do you pay tithing, or are you willing to pay tithing? Why or why not? What have you learned from your experiences with tithing? As you study this lesson, seek the guidance of the Holy Ghost to help you obey this law.
The Lord’s law of tithing
While teaching the Nephites, Jesus commanded them to write the words that Malachi had recorded about 400 years earlier. Malachi prophesied of the Second Coming of Jesus Christ and the Savior’s role in judging the wicked (see 3 Nephi 24:1–6).
Read 3 Nephi 24:7, looking for the problem the people faced in Malachi’s day.
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How might the Nephites have been like the people in Malachi’s day?
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What did the Lord promise the people if they returned to Him?
To encourage the people to return to the Lord and prepare for His coming, the Lord, through Malachi, taught about tithing.
Read 3 Nephi 24:8–12 and consider marking what the Lord taught about the law of tithing. Note that “the devourer” (verse 11) may refer both to pests, droughts or flooding, and even Satan.
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What stands out to you from these verses?
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How might refusing to pay tithing be like robbing God?
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How might you finish the following sentence: “If we obey the Lord’s law of tithing …”?
Here is one way you may have finished the sentence: If we obey the Lord’s law of tithing, He will pour out blessings upon us.
In Malachi’s day and in the Nephites’ day, Saints likely paid tithing by giving a tenth of their food or goods. Today “Church members give one-tenth of their income to the Lord through His Church. These funds are used to build up the Church and further the work of the Lord throughout the world” (Gospel Topics, “Tithing,” topics.ChurchofJesusChrist.org). If someone does not have an income, they are not required to pay tithing, though they should be willing to in the future.
The Lord used powerful and vivid phrases when talking about tithing: “Prove [or test] me … if I will not open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing that there shall not be room enough to receive it” (3 Nephi 24:10).
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What do you think the Lord was emphasizing by using the words and phrases He did? What do you learn about Him?
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Read the paragraphs under the heading “Lesson Number 1—Significant but Subtle Blessings” in Elder David A. Bednar’s talk “The Windows of Heaven” (Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2013, 17–20).
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Think of your own experiences paying tithing and those of people you know.
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Text a parent or Church leader asking what blessings they have experienced from paying their tithing.
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How do these blessings affect your desire to pay tithing?
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Why do you think the Lord commands His people to pay tithing?
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How does obeying the law of tithing help us “return unto” (3 Nephi 24:7) or become closer to the Lord?
Personal application
Think about what you have learned and felt today as you read the following statement by Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles:
The honest payment of tithing is much more than a duty; it is an important step in the process of personal sanctification. To those of you who pay your tithing, I commend you.
To those of you who presently are not obeying the law of tithing, I invite you to consider your ways and repent. I testify that by your obedience to this law of the Lord, the windows of heaven will be opened to you. (David A. Bednar, “The Windows of Heaven,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2013, 20)