Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Dasamsa(Also called Dashamabhaga vrata)

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Dear Sweet members of our group,

 

Dasamsa(Tithing) is a spiritual law of giving, where a person gives

10% of their increase back to the source of their spiritual

teachings. Those who have practiced tithing have reported tremendous

positive results in their finances, relationships, health and careers.

 

Dasamsa is a spiritual law given by God to humankind to assist people

in finding abundance, fulfillment and gratitude in their everyday

lives. The tithing law is to give 10 percent of one's increase back

to God, with God being represented on the physical level by the

source of one's spiritual teaching -- often a church, synagogue,

mosque or spiritual teacher. When a person tithes, the universe that

works under the spiritual law of tithing says, " If you have that much

to give, that means you are open to receive more. "

 

As humankind fulfills its part of the covenant by giving 10 percent

to God, then God fulfills his part by continually blessing us. So,

you may want to check it out with a joyful attitude of saying, " Lord,

I am open to receive whatever it is that you bless me with. " And then

discover for yourself the blessing of fulfilling God's covenant.

 

Bring the whole tithe into the storehouse, that there may be food in

my house. Test me in this, " says the Lord Almighty, " and see if I

will not throw open the floodgates of heaven and pour out so much

blessing that you will not have room enough for it " (Malachi 3:10

NIV).

 

One of the fundamental errors t hat we have as human beings is greed,

which is manifested mostly in terms of money or monetary value.

Greed, by its very nature, is a striking against the riches within

oneself because it appears that there is never enough here in the

world. Our eyes are always " hungry. "

 

We can help to break the greed pattern by tithing, giving 10 percent

of our personal wealth. When we tithe, two levels are activated--a

level here in this world and, at the same time, a mystical, invisible

level. The mystical is a communication saying, " You are abundant and

handle abundance well, so here's some more. " The other level, in this

world, is when we look at our abundance and contribute joyfully

through tithing. We are actually cheerful about it. This action sets

up a countenance that is a form of glory in the human being, and that

glory attracts more abundance.

 

When one person becomes free of materiality, it's like an infection

going the other way. Instead of greed affecting honest people, honest

people start affecting the greedy. You let go and give to God,

joyfully and unconditionally.

 

It's simple to tithe: you just give back 10 percent of what you earn

to the source of your spiritual teachings. It's done for the joy of

giving. When you lovingly donate in this way, the abundance starts to

come to you in many ways.

 

Tithing is actually a spiritual law: to give back to the source of

your spiritual teachings. When you commit to doing it, something

inside you works differently from that day forward. Conditions may or

may not immediately change in the physical, but inside, it can work

wonders.

 

In the heirarchy of giving, tithing is at the top. It is giving to

God -- the source of your spiritual teachings, in other words, God's

represenative

on this level -- 10 percent of the harvest or increase. After that is

fulfilled, then donations or givings to charity can be done.

 

 

Knowing that all of life's bounty and abundance comes from God,

Hindus take joy in giving back a generous portion. Here men, women

and children bring baskets of fruit, cloth, jewelry, foods and money

to lay at Lord Siva's Holy Feet for Saivism to flourish on the

Earth. Dasamamsa

 

 

 

 

 

 

Resource 2

Religion's Dues

 

 

NOW I SHALL EXPLAIN HOW THE SPIRITUAL PRACTICE OF TITHING, PAYING

MONTHLY RELIGIOUS DUES OF TEN PERCENT, CREATES WEALTH OVER TIME FOR

INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES ALIKE -- A WEALTH THAT IS BLESSED TO NEVER

GAIN LOSSES, but to perpetuate itself generation after generation.

Read on and learn! Tithing is giving ten percent, not a dollar more,

not a dollar less; not a rupee more, not a rupee less; not a pound

more, not a pound less; not a lira more, not a lira less.

 

God's Money

 

Everything from a lump of carbon to a dazzling diamond, a molecule of

oxygen to the galactic explosion of a star gone supernova is of the

Being of God. We place lesser and greater value upon things usually

dependent upon our interests. Ultimately, we would have to say that

everything is God's, including what we manufacture from native

elements. Indeed, if all the trillions of dollars, rupees, yen,

pounds, rubles, Deutschmarks and francs, and all the precious metals

and gems were gathered and compressed together into one giant cube,

any Hindu would readily have to admit that man's money and the

planet's minerals are really God's.

 

So, in the first sense, God's money is the sum of all monetary

values. Connecting this idealistic perspective to a practical one,

where we as individuals are engaged in the dharmic pursuit of wealth,

God's money is what we dedicate to God, as our religious dues, to

perpetuate His greater spiritual design for our planet. This is also

true for our personal use of time. God's time is what we dedicate, as

roughly ten percent of our time, toward service that furthers our

religion. This is outside of the time spent in our personal spiritual

practices: home puja, scripture reading, japa, sadhana and meditation.

 

This resource is about joyously returning each month ten percent of

our earnings and gifts to God for our own spiritual upliftment and

economic welfare, and for the support and perpetuation of our Hindu

religion, the Sanatana Dharma, the " Eternal Path. " This is the

spiritual practice, the unfolding process of dashamamsha. In the West

it is known as tithe, which means " a tenth. " Among the world's

religions and faiths, it is an ancient common denominator. In the

earliest known historical civilizations, Egypt, Sumeria (Mesopotamia)

and the Indus Valley, all of which were theocracies, or " God-

governed, " the totality of the annual produce of the land was in

principle pledged to the Gods in their temples, then redistributed to

the populace.

 

Imagine the phenomenal results if the ancient practice of dashamamsha

were fully revitalized today. There are over a billion Hindus

worldwide. Some 940 million live in India. A large percentage of

those, say 600 million, are financially poor -- the per capita annual

income in India is around US$444. Yet even if each offered one dollar

(which is only a little more than two thousanth's of one percent) as

God's money every year, that would total $600 million annually for

Hindu institutions from the poor sector alone. If a full ten percent

were paid, the amount would be $26.64 billion each year. The

remaining 330 million Hindus in India, being mostly in the newly

formed middle class (paying, say, an average of $400 tithe per year),

would provide an additional annual fund pool of $132 billion. This

does not take into account over sixty million Hindus living outside

India, some of whom, especially in Western countries, make very high

salaries, many as doctors or engineers, and even dot com founders

making hundreds of millions. This ancient spiritual levying of

dashamamsha, religion's dues, would give Hinduism some $150 billion

dollars each year. Since dashamamsha is paid by each individual to

the institution of his choice, the distribution of the money would be

fairly evenly widespread.

 

Hinduism, having fully entered the 21st century, urgently needs this

monetary strength. Hinduism is incalculably rich in religious

knowledge, mystic ceremony and spiritual experience. This inner

treasure house of Hinduism will never diminish. But the great

periphery that touches every Hindu's life does need constant

sustenance. Our temples should look like exquisitely wrought jewelry,

worthy earthly abodes for God and the Gods, spiritually uplifting for

devotees. Our monasteries and lecture halls, schools and cultural

centers should glow with inviting beauty and radiate the best the

Hindu mind can offer to the world. All Hindus should be well-educated

in their faith and have every facility available for advancing

spiritually, socially, economically and culturally. In the past, the

present and into the future, the practice of dashamamsha has no equal

in instilling closeness to God through our dharma of gaining wealth,

and in a steady provisioning of our religion. It is a proven system

needed now.

 

In this brief presentation, we also outline the benefits an

individual or an organizational body will gain from giving God's

money. Saiva Siddhanta Church has been managed for almost fifty years

on a tithing basis. It achieves results of people's lives unfolding

into a greater spirituality, financial security and religious

fellowship. These are day-by-day rewards, not easily summed up in a

few sentences. But it distills down to the fact that members, largely

because they practice dashamamsha, are happy, healthy, at peace

within themselves and among themselves and energetically enthusiastic

about advancing their religion. They have cultivated a deep sense of

selflessness that recognizes God in all dimensions of their lives.

The practice of giving God's money, religion's dues, has become a

doorway into tangible inner experience.

 

Hinduism has always celebrated the merits of giving, both of wealth

and knowledge. The householder gives to the children, the poor and

the sadhus, the children give to the parents in old age, the elderly

give to the community, the student and sadhus give to the guru, and

the guru gives to all. It is so much a part of our soul nature to

give. Every time we give, more of our soul nature is expressed. Yet,

when it comes to our hard-earned money, which in Hinduism we call

artha, " wealth, " it is sometimes difficult to give, especially on a

regular basis and to a society or institution we may not have a voice

in governing. Nevertheless, it is our dharma to give of our artha.

Only by our generous contributions, individually and as a group, will

Hinduism flourish and grow from strength to strength. On that the

scriptures are unequivocal.

 

The powerful man should give to one in straits; let him consider the

road that lies ahead! Riches revolve like a chariot's wheels, coming

to one man now, then to another.

 

Rig Veda, 10.117.5. VE, P. 850-851

 

To not give generously and regularly is to be unduly self-interested,

a condition that will cloud our divine nature and make us feel guilty

and stressful. The practice of tithing will do just the opposite:

create positive karma of abundance and financial opportunity,

cultivate family and community bonding and enhance healthy states of

mind. And, a group that is jointly paying religious dues will enjoy a

fulfillment, accomplishment and spiritual joy that is collective.

 

Examples

 

An excellent example of the practice of tithing is a group of

devotees of Lord Murugan who, to support His temple, generously gave

an even larger portion of their income than ten percent. They are the

Chettiar salt merchants of Tamil Nadu, South India, who 400 years ago

began dedicating one-eighth or 15 percent of their earnings to Lord

Palani of the Palani Hills Temple. Recorded testimony of the

merchants states that, because of the payment of religious dues,

their businesses prospered to the extent that even the maharaja took

favorable notice. In the Hindu traditions of South India, donating to

charity a fixed percentage of one's income is called makimai in the

Tamil language.

 

A contemporary example of tithing is the Swaminarayan Fellowship,

whose leader, Sri Sri Sri Pramukh Swami Maharaj, was accorded the

Renaissance Award by HINDUISM TODAY and named 1995 Hindu of the Year.

His congregation of hundreds of thousands all pay their religious

dues through dashamamsha. With so many dedicated Fellowship devotees

paying their tithe to their guru, and on top of that giving gold each

year in measure equal to his weight, and selflessly contributing vast

quantities of their time and encouraging their children to do the

same, that all adds up to a truly powerful force in the world. On the

strength of a tithing membership, they built a $4 million temple in

the middle of London, inaugurated in August of 1995. They support a

strict monastic order of over 650 sadhus, run numerous social

services and are single-handedly educating millions of people all

over the world in the cultural sophistication of India's wonderful

Hindu traditions. If more Hindus were to follow their tithing

example, Hinduism would be even stronger than it is today. We look

forward to an abundant future in the decades to come.

 

Hindu Children

 

Here is a story that demonstrates the spirit of dashamamsha. A

businessman in Texas had made several large gifts to the temple and

to local charities. Few calls to him for contributions ever failed to

receive a willing response. His generosity to community causes was

well known to many people who were identified with the organizations

he supported. One evening he was introduced as the key speaker at a

banquet. The chairman told of a number of instances when the man's

generosity had helped to make financial campaigns successful. When

the Texas businessman arose to begin his address, he was evidently

embarrassed. " I want to make it clear that I do not deserve credit

for what I give to my temple or to any cause in our community, " he

said. " The way I look at it is that I have contributed none of my own

money. The money all belongs to God; for, you see, I am a tither,

having in early childhood taken my tithing vow, my dashama bhaga

vrata. "

 

Most long-time tithers are humble about their regular habit of

setting aside a tenth of their income, especially if they started the

habit at an early age. For they truly have come to feel that they are

but the stewards of God's money and pay their religion's dues with a

heart full of gratitude for their abundance, whether large or small.

 

A California financier related the story of how he began the habit of

tithing. He was one of four boys, all about twelve years of age, who

were received into membership of a Hindu society. At the conclusion

of the puja, an observer remarked to a respected temple elder, " That

was certainly a very auspicious event, wasn't it, Sir? " " To what do

you refer? " the trustee inquired. " Why, those four boys coming

forward into membership and surrendering themselves to our Gods, " the

man replied. " Yes, it was, " the trustee commented, " but they did not

bring fruit and flowers as an offering, nor did they give anything to

the hundi. "

 

One of the boys (the financier) overheard the conversation. Later he

approached the elder and asked what he would traditionally be

expected to give when coming to pujas and for the support of the

temple. The elder explained that every Hindu should bring fruit and

flowers when coming to a puja and that it is a spiritual privilege to

pay one-tenth of one's income to God in appreciation for His

blessings. The elder asked how much the boy was earning. He replied

that his part-time wages were only $35.00 each week. The elder

suggested that the lad think of $3.50 a week as his contribution for

the support of the temple and that he should take the dashama bhaga

vrata before he begins to set aside his dashamamsha. In Sanskrit,

vrata means vow or pledge, dashama means tenth, and bhaga means part

or share, the elder told the boy. Dashamamsha means tithe, and tithe

means a tenth. Immediately setting aside the tithe as soon as money

is received sanctifies the remaining balance. Once the money has thus

been blessed, it would be difficult to use it for a profligate,

adharmic purpose.

 

The elder explained to the boy that this is a custom as old as our

Hindu religion and that many other religions practice it as well.

Thus, the taking of the dashama bhaga vrata and then beginning to pay

dashamamsha, religion's dues, can be a very important part of every

modern Hindu's life. The lad was pleased to hear that dashamamsha was

an ancient religious practice of giving one-tenth of one's income

back to God and the Gods to perpetuate their work on Earth. At the

next auspicious occasion in the temple, the boy prostrated before

God, Gods and a picture of his guru and took his vrata without

hesitation. A few elders witnessed the event, smiled and signed his

certificate. All were pleased to see the brightness on his face as he

put the envelope with the $3.50 into the hundi before he left the

temple. He was now truly one of the congregation in his heart and in

the hearts of all.

 

Now the pattern was set and the boy began the life-long habit of

setting aside one-tenth of his income for God's work. Years later, as

a seasoned businessman, he declared that he had never ceased to

tithe. He felt that he was helped personally more by tithing than by

any other habit he had observed throughout his life. It is important

to note that the financier began tithing as a boy. Many of the men

and women who tithe in this generation say that they also began the

practice in their early youth.

 

Tithing ought to begin in childhood. If boys and girls have the

example of their parents to encourage them, the decision to tithe

will not be a difficult one to make. Devout children who have been

raised in a kindly manner readily respond to the suggestion that God

has given us so much that it is only right that we should set aside a

portion of all we receive and bring it as an offering to the temple

for its support. This is one way of thanking God and the Gods for

their goodness. And this is the only way that we truly bless the

remaining nine-tenths. Yes, the pattern of a lifetime can best be set

by carefully teaching a young person to begin tithing with the first

money he or she is given or earns.

 

Paying Religion's Dues Monthly

 

Many Hindus have never learned to give systematically. They follow no

plan in facing their responsibility to the temple they worship in,

the society they belong to or the community they live in. Tithing

provides a spiritual plan for meeting these responsibilities. The key

is to regularly, on a monthly schedule, set aside in a special saving

account or envelope one-tenth of one's income as soon as it is

received; then, again on a monthly schedule, to give that sum to a

religious organization of one's own choosing.

 

Most Hindus give if they are specifically asked for a contribution

and their name is published. Others give generously if they hear the

temple needs an extra amount to pay a deficit. Many such persons feel

virtuous if they are enabled to pull the temple out of what they

think is a " financial hole. " They fail to consider that the deficit

would never have occurred if they, and others, had voluntarily and

regularly contributed their share during the first week of each

month. Some Hindus give only if they like the priest, others if they

are supporting some phase or all of a special festival. Still others

only give out of a sense of appreciation for prayers being answered.

 

We were acquainted with a negligent Hindu in London who never failed

to boast about how he had helped to erect a temple, even though he

had not attended a puja for many years. Yet, he often bragged that he

had helped build the temple. We came to believe he had given a very

substantial sum for the building. He had left such an impression with

so many people. But one day someone took it upon himself to look into

the past financial records of the temple and discovered that the man

had contributed the " magnanimous " total of $101! All this time he had

avoided his responsibilities to the Gods and to their temple by

giving the false impression that he had given so much that he should

not be expected to contribute any more.

 

The Rediscovery of Tithing

 

Our young generation of modern Hindus are awakening to an awareness

of the need for a fuller and more dedicated life in God

consciousness. The trends in current civilization in this

technological age indicate that we must go deeper into our faith and

into ourselves if we are to spiritually unfold and experience the

bliss that is ours to enjoy. Thoughtful contemporary Hindus are made

aware every day of the conflicting forces which war in the world

during this time in the Kali Yuga. They know that it is a time which

cries out for a more complete surrender of money, time and talents to

the will of God and our Gods. They are also well aware that it is the

religious institutions that keep the knowledge of Hinduism alive in

the world and that the temples provide open doors for devotees. Many

Hindus conclude that they must teach their children the spiritual

merits of tithing from their gifts and later from their earnings.

 

Money has assumed a place of increasing importance in the life of

everyone this century. With each passing year fewer people live the

kind of existence in which they themselves produce the basic

necessities of life. Money has become the buying power to satisfy

almost every physical demand. Even the farmer has come to rely upon

money. Only a few decades ago the tiller of the soil raised the food

which met the needs of his family. The power to work his fields came

from animals which themselves had their subsistence in the land. But

now he needs money to operate a farm. He buys rather than raises much

of his food. Money pays for the electric power to operate his

machinery and for the fuel to run his tractor. His clothing is bought

at a store, and his recreation is purchased by the investment he

makes in a radio or television.

 

What has happened in recent years to the farmer has long been the

experience of millions of workers who earn their livelihood in the

factory or the office. For many people the possession of money has

become an end in itself in life. The growing importance of money has

turned the focus of attention from the true source of the world's

goods. The man who worked the fields to produce the necessities for

sustenance was in a position to observe the creating and sustaining

power of God and the Gods in his life. When he was dependent upon the

rainfall, the sun and the fertile earth for his well-being, it was

natural to recognize loving Gods. But such recognition becomes more

difficult when money is the source of one's physical and

psychological satisfaction. It is harder to see God and the Gods at

work in the product of a machine or a factory. Then man is tempted to

give his worshipful devotion to a pay envelope or a checkbook. That

means money to him. It is the source of his personal comforts and

pleasures.

 

A New Standard Is Needed

 

In this technological age people are tempted to believe that their

skills and ingenuity which produce material commodities come from

themselves alone. They either assume the absence of God's power in

the world, or God and the Gods are pushed back so far in their mind

that no vital contact is felt with these great beings or even their

own Divinity. A new standard is needed to put God consciousness first.

 

When Hindu children recognize God's creative gifts by setting aside a

tithe from their gift or income immediately upon receiving it, before

any money is spent for themselves or others, they express their

conviction that God is the giver of all that they have. Each young

person inwardly admits that the product of the mine or the fertile

field can only be explained by the long creative process which is the

direct result of the existence of God and the Gods that Hindus

gratefully acknowledge. The money that the computer engineer, the

baker or the manufacturer earns has its ultimate source in those

elements which man did not and could not create. Each occupation or

profession engaging the efforts of mankind deals with factors beyond

the range of man's ability to make.

 

Children who pay their tithe learn that God continues to be the owner

of the material possessions entrusted to them. They know that the

final title to property or money does not rest with the individual,

but with God. They learn that people may be stewards of worldly

possessions for many years; yet, inevitably they must surrender that

stewardship at the end of their earthly life. The trust is then

transferred to some other person. They slowly come to realize through

experience that people do not own the material world; they are merely

its stewards.

 

Honoring God by Sharing

 

American-born entrepreneur William Colgate was a tither throughout

his long and successful business career. He gave not merely one-tenth

of the earnings of Colgate's Soap Products; he gave two-tenths, then

three-tenths and finally five-tenths of all his income to the work of

God in the world. During the latter days of his life, he revealed the

origin of his devotion to the principle of tithing. When he was

sixteen years old, he left home to find employment in New York City.

He had previously worked in a soap manufacturing shop. When he told

the captain of the canal boat he was traveling on that he planned to

make soap in New York, the man gave him this advice: " Someone will

soon be the leading soap maker in New York. You can be that person.

But you must never lose sight of the fact that the soap you make has

been given to you by God. Honor Him by sharing what you earn. Begin

by tithing on all you receive. " William Colgate felt the urge to

tithe because he recognized that God was the giver of all that he

possessed, not only of opportunity, but even of the elements used in

the manufacture of his products.

 

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ON RELIGION'S DUES

 

How can tithing help eliminate debt? My finances are a mess. Tithing

helps to establish order in mind and affairs; and when order exists,

debt is vanquished. All conditions that are not in order are

eliminated. New avenues of supply open up. Intuition is strengthened.

Giving opens the door for receiving.

 

Shall I tithe before my debts are paid? Yes, tithing is the best-

known and most practical method of consecrating all your finances to

God. You can tithe your way out of debt if you do it through prayer

and in the spirit of love and understanding. Practiced properly,

tithing will help solve the conditions that create debt. This has

been accomplished by thousands of others; it can be done by you. The

tithes that you lay at God's lotus feet in loving consecration may be

likened to drops of water that, drawn up by the sun, form rain clouds

and descend again to Earth in refreshing showers.

 

Should I tithe on the money I borrow to consolidate debt? No. Nor

should you use borrowed money for any purpose other than that for

which it was secured.

 

If I am tithing and my debt becomes heavy, should I stop? A few do

tithe for years and, when their expenses become heavy, stop in order

to meet their bills. In stopping tithing their desires increase and

debts are piled so high that there seems to be no way out. This also

leads to a worldliness that causes a distance between themselves and

their religious institutions.

 

Would it be wiser for me to wait before deciding to tithe? If you

feel an inner urge to tithe, now is the time to make a start. Those

who wait until they feel they have abundance to spare usually never

begin.

 

Won't tithing change my accustomed standard of living? In Hinduism,

one's standard of living is measured by the four aims: dharma

(virtuous conduct), artha (wealth), kama (enjoyment) and moksha

(liberation). Dharma governs artha and kama so that they are not

overly self-centered. Tithing is a dharmic act. Your standard of

living will be spiritually higher, and in many cases the tither's

standards are raised culturally and financially as well.

 

Will my income improve if I depend totally on God to help? As you

tithe faithfully and your affairs become established in divine order,

your visible supply will increase. You will be able to avoid debt and

to learn to live as befits a child of God. The tithe always returns

to you, the tither, as further prosperity and abundance for you and

for your loved ones. You can't give anything away but that it

eventually comes back to you, even God's money.

 

Then tithing is an act of faith. Is this correct? Yes, tithing is an

act of faith. When you give love with your religious dues, you become

receptive to God's blessing of love. Tithing is a positive use of the

law of karma. When you give freely and joyously with the

consciousness of plenty, you draw back to yourself abundance and many

happy experiences. This spirit of giving magnetizes the unseen devas

of the inner worlds who then can give to you by opening opportunities

for you.

 

Will I be convinced once I experience the positive effects of karma

in my life as a result of tithing? People are most aware of the

negative karmic effects in their life. But when they become free in

their giving, they experience more in return. In conforming to the

divine law of karma, wonderful things occur in their lives. Karmic

effects (being either positive, negative or mixed) are created

unknowingly by most Hindus and knowingly by some. To use this law to

your best advantage, ask for divine guidance and wisdom in spending

your money. You will be delighted to see how much more you can do

with it and all the benefits that will return to you.

 

Tithing for the Self-Employed

 

Is there one key to successful tithing for the self-employed? Yes. It

is to separate one's business finances from one's family finances.

This is done by maintaining two checking accounts, one for the

business and one for the family.

 

How do the self-employed calculate their tithe? An owner or partner

tithes on the income he receives from the business. Firstly, he

tithes on his monthly draw from the business. Secondly, he tithes on

his share of any net profits earned for the year which exceed his

monthly draw.

 

Please give an example to illustrate this concept for someone who

owns his own business. Firstly, a theoretical owner of a sole

proprietorship draws $2,500 a month from the business by writing a

check on his business account, depositing it in his personal account,

then he writes a tithing check for $250. Secondly, in January the

year-end financial statements for the business are completed and show

a net profit after taxes of $45,000. Since he has already drawn

$30,000 during the year, the net profit exceeds his monthly draw by

$15,000. Therefore, he needs to tithe $1,500 on this amount. To do

this he draws an extra $1,500 from the business, deposits it in his

personal account and writes a tithing check for the full $1,500.

 

If my business is not earning a profit, should I still tithe? It is

even more important to be tithing on one's family income if one's

business is not doing well.

 

I know this is rather technical, but how do I adjust my tithe if the

amount I have drawn from the business during the year exceeds my

share of the business's net profit? This is carried forward and

adjusted from one year to the next. For example, say in 1995 your

year's draw exceeds your share of the net profit by $10,000. In 1996

your profit share exceeds your draw by $8,000, and in 1997 your

profit share exceeds your draw by $15,000. The extra tithe at the end

of 1995 is zero, 1996 is zero and 1997 is 10 percent of the $13,000,

or $1,300.

 

Tithing and the Hindu Institution

 

I have not even given a dollar or a rupee to the temple for a long

time. Now I am being encouraged to tithe? When you ceased to give,

did you not feel as though you had closed an inner door? Many

devotees give a little something as a means of opening the way into a

larger measure of loving, living and giving, even if they do not

tithe.

 

How do I decide where to pay my religious dues? The most obvious

choice is the Hindu leader or institution that is most relevant to

your spiritual life and represents the tradition you find solace in.

This benefactor could be in your community, or 10,000 miles away. Or

there may be a temple in your community that you and your family

worship that would be strengthened and encouraged by your support. If

you are not blessed with such an association and do not know exactly

where your religious dues would best be used to promote Sanatana

Dharma, you can begin by giving to one or more Hindu Heritage

Endowment funds of your choice, or create a new fund to benefit one

or more institutions of your choice. HHE is a very special foundation

designed to support India's diverse spiritual paths and traditions.

Begin right away paying ten percent of your income to HHE. Then in

the months ahead find the exact institution or project that you feel

most inclined to strengthen by your strength.

 

With this in mind, should I look carefully into each institution?

Yes! Tithing should be approached much like investing in the stock

market for a secure return. Religious leaders have a duty to perform

in spending the money wisely, as do corporate presidents. Choose an

institution that will grow and bring spiritual dividends.

 

Is there a responsibility on receiver as well as the giver? Yes! Both

are stewards of God's money. Wisely choose a worthy temple, Hindu

church or institution that you feel good about paying your tithe to.

 

Ways and Means of Giving

 

My tithe will not be much to begin with. Will the leaders judge me

because of this? A religious leader does not or should not judge the

offerings of devotees. Hindus give according to their means. If a

devotee's circumstances dictate a small tithe, then that tithe is

worth great value to God, for the wealthy can easily afford to tithe.

Tithing is totally fair; for each one is paying his religious dues of

ten percent of his income, small or large. Someone earning $300 a

month or someone earning $300,000 dollars a month are giving the same

proportionate amount.

 

Is tithing a gift? The religions of the world don't look at the tithe

that they receive as a gift. They look at it as a payment. More than

often, those who cannot pay their tithe also do not pay their

creditors.

 

Is it appropriate to give more than ten percent? After the dues of

tithing are paid, further religious giving can take place, such as

sponsoring temple construction and supporting other religious

endeavors. There is a big difference between dashamamsha, which is an

obligation or payment, and religious giving from the remaining 90%.

Many tithers give five to ten percent above and beyond their tithe

for building funds and other inspiring projects. This is especially

frequent in the case of single men and women.

 

Does tithing include produce grown on one's property for non-

commercial purposes? Yes, give a tenth of any food you grow: one

coconut for every ten, one banana for every ten. This is only proper,

for the one coconut, one banana are not your own. They belong to God

and the Gods.

 

What about tithing of one's time? Tithing can and should also be

applied to time, skills and talents. For example, if a devotee is a

carpenter or seamstress, those skills may help a local Hindu

institution. Everyone, no matter what their skills, can and should

give ten percent of their time each week in service to their

religious institution. We calculate it as four hours a week, which is

ten percent of a forty-hour work week, which amounts to 208 hours a

year. It is also acceptable to tithe one's time in intense projects

all at once, rather than each week. For example, many of the devotees

who helped build the Swaminarayan temple in London took time off from

their professions for a full month and labored twelve hours a day to

build that magnificent edifice. It has been our experience that those

who tithe openly, honestly, spontaneously also give 10 percent of

their time in service. Those who live beyond their means, juggle

their income and manipulate don't have time to give 10 percent of

their time for religious service. That has been our experience.

 

Shall I tithe on my monthly social security check? Yes. As the amount

of your social security check has no direct relationship to the

amount of social security withholdings over the years from your

paychecks, it is best to look at what was withheld as a tax that you

paid to the government for the privilege of receiving social security

in your retirement years. Your employers have also contributed to the

social security program based on the wages they paid to you. It is

even possible that the amount of your total social security

withholdings is only a small fraction of what you receive back from

social security in monthly checks.

 

What is the difference between gross and net income? Gross income is

your salary or wages before any deductions are taken. Net income is

the amount after deductions which, of course, is the amount of the

paycheck. Deductions are withholdings for federal and state taxes,

social security and other such items. The tithe is calculated as ten

percent of the gross income.

 

The Proper Spirit of Tithing

 

What are some of the abuses of tithing? Many clever people who are in

business create " tithing shelters. " They only pay themselves a little

bit out of their own business, and the rest of the profits go toward

business expenses, like the rent, the food and everything. In other

words, they establish a tithing shelter, so they won't have to give

much tithe. Finally, their conscience will come up and hurt and they

will straighten out their methodology. Others are happy to tithe

because they save on taxes. They figure out right to the penny, right

to the rupee, how much tax they save by how much they tithe. That is

also not the spirit of tithing. There are those who have taken a

pledge to tithe who, instead of tithing monthly, actually use God's

money for two or three months to get interest or to pay debts, then

finally regather the funds together and tithe with a great effort.

Bargaining and manipulating in that way is not the spirit of

dashamamsa.

 

Devotees of our organization tithe freely, wholeheartedly, without

thought of such matters. The Singaporeans or the Malaysians get no

tax benefits from tithing. They tithe because of their heart, and

therefore, punya, good merit, comes back to them. So, we can see it

as a spiritual practice, not an intellectual practice. Tithing is a

very simple practice, giving the first payment first -- giving one-

tenth of God's money back to God. Someone gives you ten dollars; one

dollar goes to God, and the rest is for you. If you get a paycheck

for $1,000 before deductions and $700 after deductions, you don't say

to yourself, " Well, I can't give $100 of the $1,000, because some was

deducted for social security and other benefits. " No, tithing is on

gross income and the right way is to give the full $100.

 

What is the best attitude to keep in mind to avoid such abuse?

Tithing, giving one-tenth of one's income, possessions or time, is a

deeply religious commitment. It is not a business proposition. It is

a religious commitment, based on the principle that 100 percent of

one's energy comes from God, 100 percent of one's belonging comes

from God, 100 percent of one's activity and creativity comes from

God. God gives back 90 percent. And God and the Gods keep 10 percent

for their work. What is their work? Uplifting humanity through

religious organizations of all kinds.

 

There is a great swami in India who began his entire organization

largely on income from coconuts. Of every thirty coconuts that

religious growers take off their trees, they give him three. They

don't give excuses and say, " Swami only needs two out of every thirty

coconuts, because I am saving one coconut out of that batch for my

social security. " They don't look at all the coconuts and say, " I'll

give Swami the smallest ones, the ones that I cannot sell. " No.

Because they are true devotees, they take three of the best coconuts

and give them to the swami. The swami sells those coconuts to help

support his religious institutions. And through this practice the

entire community has come up.

 

There is another Guru Mahasannidhanam in South India. His local

devotees give 10 percent of the rice they harvest. They don't count

each grain. They simply take a 10 percent portion and present it to

the swami. We have been at his ashrama and seen rice piled twelve to

fifteen feet high in the great hall.

 

Begin Tithing, Then Take Your Vow

 

If you, as an adult, have not already taken the tithing vow yourself,

there is no better time than now. But first begin tithing for six

months or more to set the pattern in your own mind that, " yes, " you

can in the long run actually fulfill this commitment. Once you have

convinced yourself, then set an auspicious date to take the vrata.

 

Include your children. If they believe in the divine laws of Sanatana

Dharma and have faith in the principle of dashamamsha, they may be

ready to begin tithing. Once they also feel comfortable and fulfilled

with this ancient religious practice and you feel they are ready, let

them take their dashama bhaga vrata. Those taking the vow should

repeat the following paragraph in the home shrine or temple before

God and the Gods, family, guru or a respected elder. Repeat the

dashama bhaga vrata, the vow to pay religion's dues, three times and

create a covenant to tithe. We have enclosed here a vrata certificate

to document the vow taking. It can be photocopied and enlarged,

signed and then framed or kept safely with other valuable papers.

 

O Divine beings of all three worlds, let us bring our minds to rest

in the darshana of Him who has one tusk. Let us meditate on Him who

has the form of an elephant with a curved trunk. May He guide us

always along the right path. I, ________________ [name of devotee],

believe in you, the one Supreme God, Lord Siva, and the Gods of our

Saivite faith, and in the Saiva Dharma. In love and trust I recognize

your goodness in providing for my every material and spiritual need.

I accept the principal of dashamamsha (giving one-tenth of my gross

income) as the method by which I may acknowledge my gratitude to you,

Lord Siva, and share in helping you fulfill and perpetuate your work

on Earth. As an act of dedication, I am resolved this day to begin

(continue) the regular practice of tithing.

 

Announce Your Intent to Tithe

 

After you have made your vrata, tell the trustees of your temple,

Hindu church or society about the decision to pay your dashamamsha,

your religious dues, to their organization during the first week of

each month. They will be pleased that they have been chosen by you

and be able to plan your contributions into their yearly budgets.

 

SOUND FINANCIAL PRACTICES

 

Once you have been inspired to tithe regularly, there are a few

financial practices that will assist you. These have been developed

over several decades of tithing experience.

 

1. Make Tithing Your First Budgetary Expense

 

Put tithing at the top of your household budget list. We suggest that

you purchase a book on household budgeting from your local bookstore

and, if you don't already have one, purchase a household budget

program for your computer. Putting our dashamamsha first creates a

fine feeling and presence of God in our home and lives. We know that

our income, as it goes toward home, food, clothing, education,

entertainment and culture, is sanctified because ten percent was

dedicated to God. As we enjoy our home, its furnishings and the

bounty of our life style, we can also feel content that God's work,

the welfare of Hinduism and our local Hindu institution are well

provided for.

 

Everybody dreads the time near the beginning of the month when they

sit down to pay the bills. Try not to treat the setting aside of

God's money as paying one of the bills. Why not create a separate

time at the beginning of the month when God's money is calculated and

the check is written or cash placed in an envelope? This will help

create the proper spirit and attitude. While calculating your

dashamamsha, think how it is helping your religion, your fellow

Hindus, yourself and your family now and in the future. Try to sense

how you are both a steward of God's money and a partner with God Siva

and the Gods in earning and providing for the family, the community,

the nation and the religion.

 

2. Complete a Formal, Written Reconciliation Annually

 

For your and the institution's records, it is important to execute

a " dashamamsha reconciliation " once a year. We have provided two

sample forms for this procedure, one for individual use and one for

self-employed businesses or partnerships (you may photocopy and

enlarge these for actual use). These reconciliations give tithers a

clear record of their tithing for the year and enable benefiting

institutions to create realistic financial plans based on the tithing

of its members.

 

Nandinatha Sutras on God's Money

 

Sutra 161: ONE-TENTH BELONGS TO SHIVA

 

Siva's close devotees take a vow and joyously tithe ten percent of

their gross income to their lineage monthly. This is God's money.

Using it otherwise is forbidden -- a karma reaping loss exceeding all

anticipated gain. Aum.

 

Sutra 162: TITHING IS THE FIRST OBLIGATION

 

My close devotees consider tithing their first expense. They provide

a written reconciliation each April, including with it all unremitted

tithing. Those behind in tithing are counseled to help them fulfill

the vow. Aum.

 

Sutra 163: TITHING'S MANY BLESSINGS

 

Siva's close devotees delight in the unfailing law that by tithing

freely and wholeheartedly, with a consciousness of plenty, they

become receptive to God's blessings and draw to them abundance and

happy experiences. Aum.

 

Tiruvalluvar's Tirukural on Earning and Utilizing Wealth

 

KURAL 81: The whole purpose of earning wealth and maintaining a home

is to provide hospitality to guests.

 

KURAL 85: If a man eats only after attending to guests' needs,what

further sowing will his fertile fields require?

 

KURAL 87: Charity's merit cannot be measured by gifts given.It is

measured by measuring the receiver's merits

 

 

 

Try it. Test it to see if it's true or not. Almost everybody who

tithes keeps tithing because they say it works. tithe, to try God,

and she'll pour blessings upon you. Some people think, " If I tithe,

I'll get lots of money. " That isn't what was said. It was said that

God will pour blessings upon you.

 

You may suddenly lose your headaches, or a backache may disappear. Or

you may find that your spouse is getting along real well with you, or

that the plumbing that was always getting stuck is no longer stuck,

or that the person at the bank who was always hassling you has been

transferred. These little miracles of perfect timing take place, and

you say, " I can't believe this is all due to tithing. "

 

You have to check it out in order to know for yourself.

Tithing is an ancient Indian practice having it's roots in Agamas and

Vedas for those who think this is a Christian practice. The spread of

massive spread of christianity is because of this singular practice

of 'Dashamsa'

 

Happy tihing and prospering,

 

Subodha

 

 

PS:Popularise the concept of 'dasamsa' to everyone. We should be proud of

Hinduism and our ancient traditions and Im pretty sure almost 99% of what is

going on the spiritual world today and in the past had their origins in India

and its hallowed spiritual traditions.

 

This was a secret of the tantrics but took by Jesus to the west and the

prosperity of the western world lies deep in this practice. Believe me Iam not

telling parrot stories here!! Certain things go beyond the realm of logic!

 

YOU CAN TITHE YOUR GROSS INCOME TO :

 

SREE RAJAGOPALA SWAMI-FOUNDER AND INCHARGE OF RAJARAJESHWARI TEMPLE

SREE SARVAMANGALA RAJARAJESHWARI ASHRAM,

18/29 16TH STREET

THILLAI GANGA NAGAR

CHENNAI

600061

TAMILNADU

INDIA

PHONE:011-91-44-22332330

 

Dasamsha to this temple is very powerful as Rajarajeshwari is in the form of

SARVAMANGALA to bestwo all forms of auspiciousness not just wealth and also in

the mantrarupini form in the mahameru prasthara form there urdha prasthara.

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Please mention my name as Shreeram Balijepalli of

Canada when you talk with swamiji regarding sending the 'dasamsa' by casier's

check or money order.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

 

OM AIM HREEM SREEM SVOM SARVAMANGALAAYAI NAMAHA SWAHA

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...