Today's Scripture Reading (January 7, 2025): Leviticus 24
Sometimes, it is easier to pull at the heartstrings of the giver in order to get a donation. We have all seen the advertisements from compassionate organizations asking you to sponsor a child. It is difficult to get people to give to the general problem of world hunger, knowing that money also has to be directed toward caring for the administration of the organization raising the money. Getting people to send thirty dollars a month to support seven-year-old Elias, living through a famine in some far-off nation, is a little easier. Of course, most of us recognize that our thirty dollars is not just going to Elias and his family. Some of it is being used to pay the company's administration costs, including paying the CEO and other administrative workers, and a portion is directed toward other projects in the area where Elias lives. Poor Elias is nothing more than an advertising prop to get our money.
I am not saying that any of this is wrong. Money needs to be raised for everything I have mentioned, but few of us want to pay to keep the lights on at World Vision or some other organization. However, without payments that keep the doors open, there won't be anyone around to try to help Elias and his friends survive the famine or the war that jeopardizes their futures. It is a reality that we need to understand, but it also is a recognition that those within compassionate organizations need to keep these expenses to a minimum.
When Moses raised the need for gold, silver, and other metals so that the implements of the Tabernacle could be produced, the people responded. It seemed that all of Israel wanted to know that they had played a part in building and furnishing the Tabernacle, the place where God would live in their midst.
But after that successful offering had been raised, there was still a need for more mundane things. One of those more mundane things was pure oil from pressed olives. This oil was used to keep the lamps burning inside the Tabernacle. These lamps were the only light source inside the Tabernacle and needed to be kept burning at all times. And that meant a continual supply of pure olive oil was required.
Maybe it wasn't as "sexy" as donating gold for the Tabernacle, but it was just as important. The olive oil was essential to the operation of the Tabernacle. It was an administrative cost that needed to be paid.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading: Leviticus 25