The contemporary writer and pro-church advocate has come with another exclusive article and has hit hard at some of Nigeria's popular pastor and bishops. This time, he is critically analysis the foundational essense of prosperity and Gos's view on wealth.
Read exclusive according to Vanguard
Bishop David
Oyedepo says poverty is not of God. He
insists a child of God has no business being poor and declares: “There’s a
proven covenant cure for poverty.” If
this were true and proven, all the world’s poor would have become rich
Christians by now.
Let us
juxtapose the bishop’s enticing words with the word of God and see whose report
should be believed. Jesus says: “You
will always have the poor among you.” (John 12:8). Moses says: “The poor will never cease from
the land.” (Deuteronomy 15:11). So where
does that leave Bishop Oyedepo’s “proven covenant cure for poverty?” It is a pie in the sky.
Wealth
transfer
A few years
ago, Pastor Matthew Ashimolowo organised a crusade in Port Harcourt, Nigeria
captioned “The Coming Wealth Transfer.”
The import of this crusade was to bring to the notice of Nigerians that
God was getting ready to transfer the riches of non-Christians to Christians.
You need to
ask people like Pastor Matthew how long this wealth transfer will take to
come. Ask him why it has not yet taken
place in the 2000 years since Jesus came.
Ask him if this wealth transfer is likely to take place in your
lifetime; otherwise of what interest is it to you? Be cynical when he asks you to make a
down-payment for this wealth transfer now, in order to get the one that is
coming in the by-and-by.
In the
churches, truth has fallen in the pews and falsehood has become the established
doctrine.
It is
important to get clarity on such issues because some years earlier, officials
of the Charity Commission in England detected another wealth transfer in Pastor
Matthew’s Kingsway church. That transfer
was not from God to the congregation: it was from the congregation to Pastor
Matthew.
Hundreds of
thousands of pounds of church funds had been dubiously transferred overseas
from Kingsway. A 120,000 pounds birthday
party was given for Pastor Matthew at the expense of the church, out of which
80,000 was used to buy him a Mercedes Benz.
It was also reported that Pastor Matthew used the church’s visa card to
buy a timeshare apartment in Florida. In
contravention of British charity law, church payments were made to his private
companies which were operated from church premises.
As a result
of these irregularities, Kingsway was placed in the hands of receivers, new
trustee managers were appointed and Pastor Matthew was asked to repay 200,000
pounds to the church. The upshot of this
was that he relocated temporarily to Nigeria, where he started preaching
messages of “Sweat-less Wealth,” “101 Answers to Money Problems,” and
“Twenty-Four Hour Miracles.”
Witches and
wizards
Some pastors
declare that they have the anointing to make people rich. This makes them no different from
“babalawos.” Jesus says believers should
be as wise as serpents. (Matthew 10:16).
Therefore, Christians need to determine exactly where this
poverty-eradicating anointing comes from because all our springs must come from
the Lord. (Psalm 87:7).
There is no
biblical record of Jesus ever making any man financially rich. On the contrary, he sought to make the rich
young ruler poor by requiring him to sell all he has and give the proceeds to
the poor as a precondition for discipleship. (Matthew 19:21). He then tells all Christians to do likewise.
(Luke 12:33). Jesus even refused to
assist a man in obtaining his rightful share of his family inheritance; telling
him instead: “Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man’s life
does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” (Luke 12:15).
When Pastor
Wale Adefarasin became the Lagos State President of the PFN (Pentecostal
Fellowship of Nigeria), he declared grandiloquently that his primary goal would
be the eradication of poverty in Lagos State.
You may well ask how he proposed to do that. This turned out to be nothing more than the
usual vain platitude of pastors. The
proverb goes: “Physician, heal yourself.” (Luke 4:23). To date, Wale Adefarasin has yet to eradicate
poverty in his church, Guiding Light Assembly; how much more in Lagos State.
Fake gospel
The
preaching of the gospel is not intended to eradicate poverty. Indeed, the gospel acknowledges the existence
of the poor and confers spiritual blessings on them. (Luke 6:20). Simultaneously, it proclaims woe on the rich.
(Luke 6:24-25). Jesus even warns that it
will be virtually impossible for the rich to enter the kingdom of heaven.
(Matthew 19:24). If so, why are pastors
presenting the antithesis of the counsel of God as our exalted objective in the
service of Christ?
Televangelist
Kenneth Copeland insists that: “You can draw on heaven like a magnet. We don’t have to wait until we get to heaven
to get God’s blessings. Now’s when we
need them.” However, in sharp contrast
to this preoccupation with earthly riches in the churches of today, Jesus
counsels that we should not lay up treasures for ourselves on earth. (Matthew
6:19). He says we should go into the
world and make disciples of all nations. (Matthew 28:19). He does not say we should go into the world
and make successful businessmen of all nations.
It is in the
nature of this world whose prince is Satan to promote poverty. In the kingdoms of men, a few
strategically-placed individuals monopolise a preponderance of the resources
ensuring, for instance, that the rap-artist sometimes makes far more money than
the heart-surgeon. Jesus does not
prescribe a reform of this unjust world system through the gospel. But he offers a different kingdom not of this
world where spiritual conscientiousness and industriousness will be handsomely
rewarded. (Matthew 25:14-30).
Pastors of
divination
A pastor
friend told me a lady in his church asked him to pray for her so she would get
a job. When she finally got one, he
discovered on questioning her that she only earned 15,000 naira a month. He appealed to me for understanding: “What is
she going to do with such a small amount?
How much can she possibly give to the church out of that?” So he set the church’s prayer-squad back to
work to pray for a bigger salary for her in Jesus’ name. Clearly, his interest in her financial
well-being was not unconnected with the amount he expected to be able to extort
from her as contribution to his church.
Lola Afolabi
was indignant. She asked: “If a man asks
his pastor to pray for the success of his business, will he not pray?” Lola’s annoyance comes from the fact that in
the churches, truth has fallen in the pews and falsehood has become the
established doctrine. We should not
presume that our success is always the will of God. Solomon says: “The prosperity of fools shall
destroy them.” (Proverbs 1:32). Peter’s
prayer for Jesus’ success turned out to be devil-inspired. (Matthew 16:22-23).
Therefore,
Agur utters in Proverbs a peculiar but far more insightful prayer than those of
pastors pretending to have the anointing to make people rich: “Keep falsehood
and lies far from me; give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my
daily bread. Otherwise, I may have too
much and disown you and say, ‘Who is the Lord?’ Or I may become poor and steal, and so
dishonour the name of my God.” (Proverbs 30:8-9).
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