Note: This post originally published on 09/11/2017 on my old blog
It is always funny and annoying sometimes, that every time we have to rant about clergymen living or spending lavishly, we always stir the argument towards the point where it becomes an attack on Tithe and Offerings or those that try to pay it faithfully and diligently. This is largely done in disguise as an attempt to educate or liberate faithful payers. ..then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.
The fact is that an average registered and regular churchgoer does not pay his/her tithe faithfully, give or take a maximum of 60%. I am saying this based on personal experience and closeness to the Altar a couple of times. You can also verify this if you are close to your church finance committee (if you have one) or if you have the time to go to your church’s monthly, quarterly, or annual report meetings if your church does.
Paying Tithe is solely based on belief and is more like a contract between you and your God, not you and your Pastor. The benefits are far beyond financial prosperities which we always overemphasize around here, maybe due to our economic situation. The condition around it is very simple If you don’t believe in it, don’t pay it.
I have yet to meet any faithful Tithe payer complaining about how his/her Tithe is being spent and I have also met quite several non-tithe payers who are financially doing fine. You don’t need to be a tither to be monetarily rich, you don’t even need to be a Christian. There are succinct non-tithe related, biblical, and non-biblical principles that guide one as regards being rich, diligence is just one of the many. If you are paying your Tithe solely because of financial breakthroughs, I will say you are doing it wrong. Also, the modalities of where and how to pay your Tithe and Offerings are well stated in the Bible. Still not sure whether paying Tithe is biblical or not? Read your bible, and pray for guidance from the holy spirit.
HOW COME CLERGYMEN HAVE OR MAKE SO MUCH MONEY? FROM WHERE?
From Outsiders:
Some clergymen do get quite a handful amount as “blessings or rewards” from outsiders who might have come for spiritual guidance or assistance, based on recommendations from someone who has had an earlier successful encounter with the “man” or from a church member and they tend to reward the clergyman afterward for his supposed successful divine intervention. Whatever proceeds come out of this, is for the clergyman and not for the church. I will say a clergyman will get more of this based on his or her audience, strategy, manifestation, and anointing.
Personal/Impromptu Projects:
I have observed this one long enough and I think it generally fits in with our ego as Nigerians: always looking for an avenue to show off. I am not saying this is bad or not, each man to his own. All I am saying is people tend to answer a public (altar) call for donation/giving, which is sometimes done with additional “emotional” exercise from the clergyman rather than a secret one where people will not notice the donor/giver. Proceeds from this too rarely go into the church account unless clearly stated that it is a church project which might also be a deciding factor in determining the form of emotional gymnastics applied.
Honorarium:
This affects clergymen who are rewarded when invited to programs outside their primary place of worship. Programs such as Bible study, conventions, revivals, and the like and I don’t think most of them reject it nowadays, which is also fine and can be quite a handful. This also includes respected church workers e.g. instrumentalists, Teachers, and Deliverance ministers and it has nothing to do with the church account but that of the individual.
Personal Ventures:
Also, just like any human being, quite a number of clergymen have their personal ventures which they run and through which they make additional income. Some are prolific writers, teachers and speakers and this is their money and not that of the church.
I support taxing:
- for-profit ventures of churches or any religious setup e.g. Educational Institutions, Consulting arms, Sports Institutions e.t.c because they are businesses regardless of who runs them.
- Clergymen with a notable and regularized income because they are not different from regular tax-paying persons.
- For-profit ventures of clergymen (this I think they do already, not too sure).
MY CHALLENGE TO YOU:
- If you are not comfortable with the lifestyle of your pastor, you can change your worship center. Your aim is to worship God and not your pastor.
- You are free to criticize your(any) Pastor’s lifestyle but not Tithe (since they are arguably not feeding off it as argued ) nor the faithful payers. Most of the prominent pastors supposedly living large are arguably doing so mostly through personal incomes not limited to the aforementioned ones.
- Ask your Pastor or church committee to start giving out general reports (finance inclusive) monthly, quarterly, or annually as best suited.
- Ask your church to set up a finance committee if you don’t have one already. This will help everyone to be more accountable.
THE SOLUTION:
The state needs to come up with a structure to tax as much as possible these high-earning clergymen just like it will tax any high-income earners. It might be difficult to achieve as this is a subset of a larger state system or structural failure and some of these income routes are passive.
My argument, in conclusion, is, therefore, that, if every faithful church member stops paying Tithe and Offerings today (the regular victim of our rant), that will not stop our clergymen from making money and inadvertently spending lavishly.
…the argument of whether clergymen are supposed to morally or rightfully live-large will be for another day after all “dey sef, dey be human beings“
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