First Fruits Giving

Dec 10, 2025

Lee Anne Dixon's journey with the church began with a strategic, generational focus: she and her husband were looking for children's and youth programs that could foster their kids' spiritual growth over their education. The church quickly felt like home because her children knew many kids from their neighborhood school, and the presence of her sister and brother-in-law provided comfort with the church's direction.


Signing Up for Spiritual Awakening


Raising her sons, Jacob and Carter, in the church's youth group yielded the most memorable experiences—especially the youth group trips. It was through these trips that her sons truly learned the meaning of serving God. Lee Anne recalls joking with friends because she and her husband never even asked their kids if they wanted to go; they simply signed them up every time the doors were open for youth programs.


This commitment was based on a fundamental understanding of faith development: spiritual awakening doesn't happen in one event. It requires many different core memories that string together and build a relationship with Christ alongside friends going on the same spiritual journey.


Her own experiences as a leader on many of these trips have become meaningful for Lee Anne as well. Her favorite mission trip memories aren't the hard work during the day, but the evening reflections. Hearing others (especially new believers) express how God spoke to them makes her more aware of what to listen for and how to live in God's purpose. This is the narrative she loves to hear from the youth.


Sacrificial Giving: The Lesson of the Best Lamb


The practice of generosity was a value passed down through generations in Lee Anne's family. Her father was faithful to teach about giving, showing her how to set aside a tenth of her small earnings by paying her in coins so she could physically see what 10% was. He taught her that giving is about training your heart to give your first fruits, not just whatever is left over. He reminded her of the Widow's Mite—that even the smallest amount makes a big difference.


The lesson that stuck with her forever came from the Old Testament command to the Israelites to sacrifice the best lamb. Lee Anne realized it is easy to give something that is old or broken, but true sacrificial giving is to give your first fruits—the very best, something you think would be able to set you up for the future. Give something like that to God and you truly are living out the principle of the first fruits.


An Encouragement to the Hesitant Giver


For those struggling with generosity, Lee Anne offers a powerful encouragement: stop looking at the total dollar amount you could have used for something else. Instead, be continually reminded of the first fruits lesson—giving your best and first, not after you've spent money on what you feel like you need.

This approach trains the heart to feel like you never needed the money in the first place, because "it's never been ours.”