SPIRITUAL HUSTLING: BEGGING IN THE NAME OF GOD
By: Bodé
Adeboyejo
Have you ever received junk mails
from Christian ministries soliciting you for money to help support their
ministries? If not, you have at least heard similar verbal appeals on
Christian radio/TV programs, asking you to send money to help keep the
program on the air. The pleas sound something like this, “This
program is made possible by the generous giving of listeners/viewers
like you. We need your financial support to stay on the air.
Without your financial support, this program may be discontinued in
your listening area.”
As for the junk mail, some of them are so outrageous that
one does not have to be spiritually astute to tell it’s a scam. Like
the kind of mail you get from Rod Parsley, of World Harvest Church and
Breakthrough World Ministry, who claims to have prayer cloths that give
people a double portion anointing. He wants you to send in your prayer
request, along with your prayer cloth, and of course your “VERY BEST
GIFT,” so that he can lay hands on the prayer cloth and send it back to
you. And bam! You receive your double portion anointing!
In his letter, Rod Parsley writes,
“God is ready to pour out a DOUBLE blessing in your
life…an anointing to take you through the barriers and trials of life!
But you have to ask for it. You must reach out and receive it in faith!
I ask you to step forward in faith…reach out for your
miracle by giving your very best gift to this ministry as a seed of
faith for your miracle harvest.”
Then there are some solicitations that are not so
blatant. There are those that are so well written that they fool even
the most spiritually astute Christians. These are usually from
well-respected, well-intentioned ministries – often ministries that you
glean from. Ministries such as FamilyLife Today (Dennis Rainey);
Prison Fellowship (Chuck Colson); The Bible League, Dennis
Mulder, etc.
Here is an excerpt of Rainey’s letter:
“Today, for your marriage and family…we need you to
invest in this ministry through prayers and giving this summer. Many
ministries have a difficult time financially in the summer. I understand
that people get busy. But your family’s needs for care, support and
love don’t decrease over the summer. We want to continue to minister to
you and your family and keep “FamilyLife Today” on the air…but we
need to stand together, faithfully, in prayer and giving. So, I boldly
ask you to send support, using the enclosed coupons and envelopes marked
JUNE and JULY. Your gift couldn’t be more timely than in these two
months.”
The letter goes on to say, “Thank you for putting your
love and understanding into Action!”
Solicitations like these, whether by electronic medium or
regular mail, give Christianity a bad rap. Regardless whether they are
from your most respected televangelist or radio program host or not.
There’s so much hustling in the Body of Christ today that
it makes you wonder if that’s what Christianity is all about -- one big
fund raising event! I believe that one of the reasons Christianity
lacks credibility or the respect of the society today is due to this
pimping in the name of God! Think about it. Who wants a God that
cannot meet the needs of His people, if all they do is beg continually?
But between you and me, we know that that’s not what the
Bible teaches. Regardless of what these ministry leaders want us to
believe, nowhere does the Bible teach or suggest solicitations either by
mail or electronic medium. Rather, it teaches the contrary. For
instance, when Jesus in Matthew 10 sent His disciples to preach the
gospel, He charged them to, “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise
the dead, and cast out demons. Freely you have received, freely give.
Provide neither gold nor silver nor copper in your money belts.
Matthew 10:8
And in Luke 22:35, Jesus asked the disciples,
“When I sent you without money bag, knapsack, and
sandals, did you lack anything?” So they said, ‘Nothing.”
Neither did Peter, John, Paul, Barnabas or the other
apostles ask the people they ministered to for money. Rather, the
people gave to them as led by the Holy Spirit. So much so that Paul
talked about the generosity of the Philippian Church. He said, “For
I bear witness that according to their ability, they were freely
willing, imploring us with much urgency that we would receive the
gift and fellowship of the ministering of the saints.” 2
Corinthians 8:3-4
True, the Bible commands giving alms, and taking care of
the poor, the needy, the widows, etc. But it does not say that it has to
be done through arm-twisting or begging. Rather, it says, “So let
each one give as he purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of
necessity; for God loves a cheerful giver.” 2 Corinthians 9:7
Some ministries even suggest and encourage people to give
using their credit cards! God never commands us to give out of what we
don’t have, but rather from what we have. Jesus said, “But rather
give alms of such things as you have; then indeed all things are clean
unto you.” Luke 11:41.
We both know that if a person has to charge it, chances
are he doesn’t have it. And even though some people pay off their
credit card balances at the end of the month, most people don’t. As a
result, what we have today are many messed-up, stressed-out, wiped-out
Christians, deeply in debt in the name of God! Bottom line is, if
frivolous credit card spending is bad, it’s bad period. Even for the
sake of the gospel!
Contrary to what these ministers and Christian radio and
TV show hosts want us to believe, money is not the most important
element in spreading the gospel! If it were, Jesus would not have told
His disciples not to take anything with them. Rather, the most
important element in spreading the gospel is discipleship, i.e. everyone
reaching one! After all, Christianity as we know it today was started
by one Man with 12 disciples! Not by radio, TV or the Internet!
You say, “So, if ministers are not to solicit for money
how are they to be supported?” Simple. By trusting and believing in
God to move upon the hearts of the listeners/viewers to meet their
needs. Because giving is not giving if it’s not from the heart.
The Bible makes it very clear how ministries or ministers
are to be provided for – mostly through the tithes and offerings of the
congregation. “Bring all the tithes into the storehouse, that there
may be food in My house…” Figuratively, the “storehouse” here is the
local church. Therefore, in paraphrase, this verse is saying that we
should bring our tithes to the local church, that there might be
provision for the local church and the work of evangelism.
Therefore, the radio and TV ministries (Outreach
ministries) should be provided for from the tithes and offering from the
local church.
Now regarding radio and TV ministries that do not belong
to a local church, these ministries are to be supported by listeners of
that station. “Let him who is taught the word share in all good
things with him who teaches.” Galatians 6:6. But that’s to be done
by the leading of the Holy Spirit, not through unsolicited junk mail!
If God calls a person to ministry, it is His responsibility to make sure
that that ministry flourishes and its needs met. So, the embarrassing
solicitations by those ministries are unnecessary, if they truly see God
as their source.
Two ministries that I greatly admire exemplify this
claim. The ministries are Radio Bible Class (RBC) publishers of the
popular Our Daily Bread devotionals, and From the Heart Church
Ministries (FTHCM) (my local church)!
RBC is an example of a ministry not supported by a local
church. Since I have been receiving their devotionals and other
materials (for several years now), I have never for once received a junk
mail from them soliciting me for money. Which is one of the reasons why
I support the ministry financially. I realize that it takes a lot of
money to run their ministries and publish their numerous publications,
which mostly are free. That’s an example of Christian ministry with
integrity. And like me, I believe there are numerous other people who
support them financially for the simple reason that they do not beg you
for money.
FTHCM is an example of a local church with a TV broadcast
ministry supported solely by the tithes and offerings of the
congregation. Never once do you hear Pastor John A. Cherry ask the
viewers to send money to keep the program on the air. His viewpoint has
always been that if the church cannot support its TV ministry, then it
shouldn’t have one.
Even though Pastor Cherry does not solicit for money,
like RBC, viewers voluntarily send money to support the broadcast. Now,
that’s what God can and will do when we do things His way!
Therefore, may I say to those ministries, ministers,
Christian radio/TV program hosts, etc. (there are many more than I
mentioned) who openly beg for money to keep their programs on the air,
to desist from such practice. They don’t have to use the world’s
method of raising money to run their ministries. It’s unnecessary!
Because when God ordains, He sustains! And to borrow a friend’s
favorite saying, “God’s will, God’s bill!”
On the other hand, I’d like to commend ministries like
RBC and FTHCM who are uncompromising, yet upholding true Christian
principles. And I believe there are many others than the two
mentioned.
Finally, let me also say that some of the ministries I
mentioned that are soliciting people for money are good ministries with
good intentions, such as needed in the Body of Christ, especially
FamilyLife Today. Truly, I have nothing against them or what they
are trying to do. It’s their money-raising method I disagree with,
simply because it’s unscriptural.