CHRISTIANITY IS not about money, it’s about people. Sadly modern Christendom has been overwhelmed with the salesman who sells Christ as ware and treats the holy things as a way to profit financially.150 It does not take much discernment for the worldly person to see the counterfeit preacher on TV who makes money look like their god.151 Yet, sadly, believers who are asleep spiritually, and have not been seeking the Lord, are given over to this delusion which is coming upon them in masses.152 False teachers abound and the saints are sleeping. There needs to be a clarion cry across all nations that God is not for sale and is against those who love money and equate righteousness with financial gain and profit.153
The abuse of seeking after money even in the position of elder or preacher154 is something that goes back all the way to the Old Testament. Characters such as Balaam and others sought ministry endeavors for their greediness to gain financially.155 The Scriptures speak of the error156 of Balaam, the way157 of Balaam and the doctrine158 of Balaam. He was hired and sought to do his priestly work for monetary gain even teaching things contrary to the Word of God.159 Such hirelings sadly abound in Christendom today.
All true coworkers in the Lord never seek for money160 but for God’s anointing to serve other people. Many in our day state that we need large sums of money to do the work of God and this is false.161 God never said that the work to disciple the nations required large amounts of money but rather it requires sacrifice162 which in some cases ends in martyrdom for the Gospel witness.
In the early Church sacrificial giving was a way of life. As stated in Acts: “They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need.”163 Jesus did not stop the poor widow from giving her last money. He knew that His Father would provide for her. The early Church took up special collections for the poor and saints in need. Tithing was not practiced in the early Church but Christians gave to each other to support those in need. They also supported the Apostles and the brother of Jesus who were in ministry. First Corinthians chapter 13 teaches us that if we do anything without love then it is worthless.164 If we give in order to get something from God it is worthless. If we give under duress when we really did not want to give, it is worthless.
In the days of Eli the priest, his two sons were greedy for gain and used fleshhooks to take back the best sacrifice meat for themselves.165 “This was happening in the house of God. Robbing God of His portion. What a sin. The same thing is happening today among God’s servants in God’s house. The love for money, love for power, love for fame and Name. These are the three great fleshhook teeth today among God’s people and God’s servants. Doing much for money’s sake never satisfied. Telling false stories for more money. What a shame. Making God a beggar.”166
In many countries we find that there are preachers and evangelists demanding payment and a certain status of living.167 We find in the New Testament something opposite, where Paul the Apostle willingly suffered and lived with less so as to serve them as an Apostle: “Was it a sin for me to lower myself in order to elevate you by preaching the Gospel of God to you free of charge?”168
In the New Covenant, giving should not be by compulsion of any law or commandment like it was under the Old, but rather men should yield to the compulsion and urging of the Spirit according to God’s natural order.
Though there has been such an abuse of pastors seeking to be greedy after money yet that does not nullify God’s desire to provide for those who truly minister in the Gospel. It is a Gospel principle that a worker is worthy of his hire.169 Therefore, those who serve as full-time workers are to trust the Lord and thus the Lord’s people will give to them as they are led of the Spirit. Such giving should be done privately to the individual and should not be demanded. Yet there should be an expectation of giving if one is truly sowing and ministering the Gospel as a full-time worker called of the Lord. God’s design for providing natural things in exchange for spiritual things goes back to the priests and Levites 170
If there is a certain need that arises in the local fellowship—or for another cause—an offering171 can be set aside but this is not something that needs to happen weekly; rather it is something that might be done on a needs basis as the body of Christ is led by the Spirit. There were collections made by the Apostles from time to time for great needs in the body of Christ such as in this case for believers in Jerusalem: “On the first day of every week, each one of you should set aside a sum of money in keeping with your income, saving it up, so that when I come no collections will have to be made.”172 So there cannot be a law about giving and each Assembly of the Lord’s people needs to be led of the Spirit in these matters. Servant leaders in small gatherings of believers should not seek to receive money from believers. Only those who God clearly calls as full-time workers should expect the Spirit to provide—through the saints—the needed resources. Keeping themselves free from the love of money and seeking to be content with the Lord’s provision in their lives.173 Such freedom in the body to give as the Spirit leads will result in greater giving174 to the actual work of God and to things that truly build the kingdom of God such as giving to the poor175 and to those who truly serve in the Gospel.