Enjoy!
“How can you trust God with your salvation, if you can’t trust him with your finances?”
Another tool of manipulation used by
charlatans and their enablers is the rhetorical question above, or variations or implications of it. I’ve heard this question,
or some form of it, so many times by so many pastors, that I’m not going to
attribute it to anyone in particular. You have probably heard it too, or will soon, if not already. Usually, the pastor will trot out this
seemingly logical rhetorical question during his tithing sermon. Or when you are not doing what he wants. The implication is that you are indeed
trusting Jesus for salvation (which we all certainly should do), but you are
not trusting God with your finances (because you are not giving enough). You should do both, right? WRONG.
Here are a few obvious problems with this
type of question and this dangerous line of thinking. First, and I mean number one, is that the
pastor is not God. The 501(c)(3) that hired him and pays him is not God. Therefore, how does writing your church a
check equate to trusting God with your finances? In other words, another way to say this is
for the pastor to say:
“You can’t trust me for your salvation, and you can’t
trust this 501(c)(3) for your salvation, so why in the world would you trust
your finances to us?”
But they don’t
want you to hear it that way. They want
you to be coerced into agreeing with a statement about trusting God with your
salvation (which we all must do), with giving money to the church to pay its
overhead, salaries, debt and a small percentage going to actual ministry to the
lost, poor, hurting, orphan and widow.
Second, in answer to your question pastor
and enablers, is that we should only be trusting in God for things God does,
and not for things God does not do. Only
God can bring salvation. The doctor can’t
save us. The policeman can’t save us. The
auto mechanic can’t save us. We don’t go
to those people for salvation. We go to
God. We trust God with our salvation because He is the only one that can
possibly save us. Does that answer your question brother pastor?
Third, the reverse implications of this question are just as true as the one your pastor is trying to make. Have you ever stopped to consider that you don’t trust God with your high blood
pressure? Of course not. If you have HBP, you take a pill every single
day, day in and day out, for the rest of your life. But your arrogant preacher isn’t asking you “If
you don’t trust God with your HBP, how can you trust him with your salvation?”
It makes no sense to do so does it? What about your
safety. Do you pray for God’s protection and then live in a gated community,
hire a team of security officers, carry
a concealed weapon, lock your doors at night, and stay out of dangerous places? Do you
call the police, or rely on your local police and Sheriff’s department to keep
your city safe? Then you are not
trusting God for your protection are you? But is your preacher asking you "How can you trust God with your finances if you don’t trust him with
your security?" The biggest slice of our
city budget here in Jacksonville is for our brave and highly trained police
force. We are not trusting God with
this vital area, we are trusting our police. And what
about your finances? Are you getting up
and going to work, working hard long hours day after day, month after month,
year after year to earn money so you can have food, clothing, shelter and transportation? Then you
my friend, are trusting in your efforts, reaping what you are sowing, and not trusting in God (or your
pastor, or your church) to put food on your table, support your family, and pay
your taxes that pay those indispensable police men and women.
What about technology and
transportation? You love the advances
that science and “the world” have made in technology, cell phones, computers,
automobiles, river boats, cruise ships, airplanes, and medicine. Yet, you criticize science and scientists who
don’t believe the same facts you do about your religion. You certainly trust them when you get in your
car, get on that plane, and use that cell phone to call for help, or perform
your job duties. So has your pastor
asked “How can you trust God with your salvation if you don’t trust him with
your transportation needs, or technology needs, or physical needs?" If your car breaks down, do you trust God to fix it? Of course not.
The question makes no sense except as one to try and manipulate people that love Jesus and want to serve God.
Do Christians go to the doctor when we are
sick. Do surgeons save our lives if we need surgery? Or do we “trust God” to heal us? Does the Mayo clinic call pastors or faith
healers to heal those in need of a heart bypass? Seen any faith healers over at
Wolfson’s childrens hospital's cancer treatment center?
What about Autism and Alzheimer’s disease that afflicts our young and
old? Are you trusting in the church, or
God, to heal those conditions? Or are you hoping science will find a cure
through research and education and training? And are you elderly or disabled. Guess what, your government is paying your
disability and your social security and providing police and fire protection
and paving your roads, and paying our military, and providing parks, and
feeding the poor and on and on. But your
pastor criticizes them while doing none of the above. But he does advertise the Holy Land trip he is leading and the cruise he will be taking. Makes you sick doesn't it? No? Why not?
So, the better question then the one your pastor asks above, is why trust your pastor/church with your finances at all? Why trust them
to do anything that you actually rely on and need each day. They don’t protect you, they don’t pay your
bills, they don’t heal you, they don’t transport you, they don’t build roads,
they don’t provide parks, they don’t support the poor or disabled, and they don't do anything for you at all. So next time your pastor asks you “How can
you trust God with your salvation if you can’t trust him with your finances?”,
you can tell him to his face, or quietly reply in your heart: “That’s easy. I only trust God for what only He can do, which is my salvation.
And you preacher, and this church, are not God.
So I agree, I don’t trust you with my finances, but I easily trust God with my salvation.” Next question please.
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