I have looked at the related questions, such as "How to give back a bounty, that I should not earn?" And I agree with the apparent consensus that it is ok for @halfbit to keep those rep points. But I think I have something different enough to merit asking this question again.
A very generous and prolific contributor recently asked for help with an algorithm. I spent maybe two hours, figured it out and posted an answer with a fiddle and a semi-decent explanation. He expressed that the algorithm I provided was exactly what he needed and thanked me for it. I dismissed his thank you and said he'd owe me a beer if we ever met in real life. I meant that completely in jest. I don't even like beer. But today, in reply, he gave me a bounty of 500 rep points!
In halfbit's previous question, it was a matter of 50 points that had already been offered as a bounty, whereas I am dealing with ten times that, and these are points that were never offered as bounty, but given only after I made an ill advised joke. In terms of the whole philosophy of what rep-points are for, I think this is a very different case.
From a quick glance at the OP's profile, he is generous in giving bounties, and his posts gather tons of views and upvotes. I would probably trust his posts more than I trust my own. I feel like I should give most if not all of that bounty back. I could look through his answers and give bounties to them.
Is this appropriate? It keeps to the whole rep-points = trust-level philosophy. I don't want to offend him in his generosity, but I also don't want him to have done this because he felt obligated. Giving generously can be a blast, and I would not want to take that away from him either, but it seems like way more points than my answer merited. What would you do in my place?