Passing the Readiness Test

A Test of Readiness

Ok - this thing is called "Daily Tithe". Today let's compare a lesson that Jesus taught us and how tithing can assist us in passing the test of readiness.  

In Matthew 25, Jesus tells a striking parable about ten virgins awaiting the arrival of the bridegroom. All ten start in the same place—waiting with anticipation. But only five bring extra oil, prepared for a delay. The others, caught off guard when the bridegroom finally arrives, find themselves shut out of the wedding feast.

This isn’t just a story about oil or lamps—it’s about spiritual readiness. The parable reminds us that following Jesus isn’t only about how we start. It’s about how we continue. It’s about staying awake, staying filled, staying faithful—until the very end.

Tithing plays a quiet but powerful role in that spiritual readiness. When we tithe, we do more than give money—we shape our hearts. We build a rhythm of putting God first. With each tithe, we say, “Jesus, I’m living for You and Your Kingdom. I’m not living for myself.” It’s a regular declaration that our lives are aligned with eternity, not with temporary things.

This kind of readiness isn’t abstract. It’s not a hypothetical test—it’s our daily reality. Jesus could return at any moment. Or we could step into eternity at any moment. Life moves forward moment by moment, and while we don’t know when our final moment will be, we know it’s coming.

What makes readiness difficult today is not just sin—it’s distraction. The sheer volume of noise in modern life numbs our spiritual awareness. According to The Times, the average American spends roughly 2.5 hours per day on social media. Teenagers spend even more—nearly 5 hours per day. Add to that the average 2 hours a day watching television (with those over 65 watching over 4 hours daily), and we’re looking at over 31 hours per week of screen-based media. That’s the equivalent of more than 68 full 24-hour days each year—over two months spent consuming content instead of cultivating life.

This isn’t harmless background noise—it shapes us. It builds a rhythm, too—but one designed to distract, dull, and disconnect us from God. Left unchecked, this rhythm draws our attention away from what matters most and slowly erodes our readiness.

Tithing cuts through that noise. It establishes a counter-rhythm—one of surrender, priority, and trust. Most of us receive income on a consistent schedule. Tithing aligns that routine with divine purpose. It turns a paycheck into a spiritual practice. It takes something ordinary and infuses it with eternal significance.

Will tithing alone make every part of your life spiritually ready? Of course not. But it’s a step that invites more of God into your life. It’s a discipline that disrupts worldly monotony and creates space for holy awareness. It’s a practical act of devotion in a world full of distractions.

Let’s not be caught unprepared. Let’s be like the wise virgins, whose lamps were full and whose hearts were ready. Let’s live lives that declare: “Jesus, I know You are coming—and I’m living like it.”
Let’s pass the test of readiness—not by accident, but by intention.

-Mark

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Modern Parables

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