TOKONAKI MA’ASI 7, 2026
TEUTALONOME 24-27; SENESI 4:1-7
We should never give God what is left over, but rather offer him the first and best of what he has provided.
‘Oku ‘ikai totonu ke tau foaki ki he ‘Otua ‘a e toetoenga, ka ke tau foaki ange ‘a e tu’ukimu’a mo e lelei taha ‘o e me’a kuo ne tokonaki.
We have to look back to creation to understand fully the importance of Deuteronomy 26:1-2:
When you come into the land that the LORD your God is giving you for an inheritance and have taken possession of it and live in it, you shall take some of the first of all the fruit of the ground, which you harvest from your land that the LORD your God is giving you, and you shall put it in a basket, you and shall go to the place that the LORD your God will choose, to make his name to dwell there.
Genesis 1 and 2 tell us that God is the Creator of everything. As the Creator of everything, he owns everything. I am a painter. After I have gone to my studio and completed a painting, it belongs to me, because I made it. God, as Creator, is the rightful owner of all that is. This means he owns me and everything that I am and have. Nothing belongs to me; it all belongs to him.
As the Creator of everything, God not only owns everything, but he also determines everything's purpose. If you sit down to sew a garment, you don't start aimlessly, hoping that your sewing will turn into something. No, you sit down with a distinct purpose in mind. You make every stitch to accomplish that purpose. God not only owns everything, but he also has a purpose for everything he has created.
So when God asks his children to give him the firstfruits of their crops, he is not asking them to take what belongs to them and give it to him. He is asking them to return to him a portion of what already belongs to him. Nothing we own is ours to use however we choose to use it. It all belongs to God, and is to be stewarded as he directs. Now, this is important to understand: God does not want whatever is left over after we have satisfied ourselves with the fruit of our work. God wants us to make our offering to him first. When we do so, we acknowledge that all we are and all we have belong to him to be used as he pleases.
God is protecting his children from the idol of possession. He knows that the acquiring and maintaining of material things and the pleasure they give can rule our hearts and shape how we live. There's grace in this command to offer God our firstfruits. God is rescuing us from us, so that we can know the joy of worshiping the Creator rather than living in bondage to the creation. He made us. We belong to him. He is where true life is to be found. So, offer him your first and your best. You'll be glad you did.