I’m now in huge debt because of ‘paying for prayer and seed offering’ in churches trying to secure a miracle – Church woman laments


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Evarline Okello sobs uncontrollably as she confesses to me that, despite paying a pastor to pray for her, she is hundreds of dollars in debt.

She can no longer support her four children because she lives in a small shack in Kibera, a large slum in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.

As we speak on the phone, Ms. Okello informs me that she hasn’t received any pay in months.

She was eager to see the pastor after hearing that his prayers could improve people’s lives. He demanded $115 (£96; 15,000 Kenyan shillings) from her.

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This is referred to as a “seed offering”: a monetary gift made to a religious figure with a particular goal in mind.

READ ALSO: Pentecost, Presby and Methodist members should stop paying offertory and tithe, the church is already rich  – Evangelist Suro Nyame

Ms. Okello obtained the loan from a friend who did so on her behalf. She had been assured that this pastor’s prayers would be so effective that she would receive a refund of her investment in just one week.

Yet the miracle never materialized. In fact, she claims, things grew worse. Due to unpaid interest, the loan her friend took out has ballooned.

She currently owes more than $300 and is unsure of how she will repay it. She no longer has a job, and her friend has stopped speaking to her.

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“Things have become so difficult I have lost all hope,” she says.

‘Supernatural solutions’

Kenya has been hit hard by the cost-of-living crisis. Food prices rose by almost 16% in the 12 months before September 2022, according to Kenya’s National Bureau of Statistics, while World Bank figures show the number of Kenyans out of work has more than doubled in the past seven years.

“People are living very desperate lives,” says Dr Gladys Nyachieo, a sociologist at Multimedia University of Kenya.

Kenya has seen protests over the rising cost of living
Kenya has seen protests over the rising cost of living

This has increased their desire for supernatural solutions, she says, and many are now willing to pay for a miracle, even if they have to borrow the money.

“People are being told that God doesn’t want them to remain poor. So they plant a seed,” she tells me.

The Prosperity Gospel, which holds that God rewards faith with wealth and health, is the source of the practice.

It is suggested that believers demonstrate their faith by giving money, which it is said will be returned to them many times over by God.

READ ALSO: ‘He uses 6,7,8,9 books of Moses, they’re demonic’ – Akwasi Awuah tackles Adom Kyei Duah

The Prosperity Gospel originated in America and gained popularity there in the early 20th century.

Nigerian pastors began traveling to the US in the late 1970s and early 1980s to learn more about it. In the early 2000s, American evangelists like Reinhard Bonnke, who attracted sizable crowds from Lagos to Nairobi, helped it gain popularity across Africa. Popularity is still increasing today.

American evangelist Reinhard Bonnke, who died in 2019, was hugely popular in Nigeria
American evangelist Reinhard Bonnke, who died in 2019, was hugely popular in Nigeria

Dr Nyachieo also points to another factor tempting people into debt – the offers of loans that regularly pop up on Kenyans’ mobile phones. “People just apply and get the money,” she says.

That’s what happened to 26-year-old Dennis Opili. Feeling disheartened after more than three years looking for work, he asked a friend for help.

“He advised me that there is a church where you go and they pray for you. You give a certain offering, then they pray for you, then you can secure a job,” Mr Opili says.

He was told to make a donation every Sunday for three months and gave a total of about $180.

READ ALSO: We met in 2014, you brought 4 eagle legs and Sabroso and I did rituals for you’ – Obofour exposés Adom Kyei Duah

When his savings ran out he borrowed about $120 from cash apps and from friends.

“I believed in what the pastor told me, that I’ll be able to secure a job. So I didn’t have any problems with borrowing, because I thought eventually I’ll be able to pay off the money.”

But when no job appeared, Mr Opili began to suspect that he had been tricked.

 

paying for prayer
Dennis Opili borrowed from cash apps to pay a pastor

Soon he was being pursued by the loan companies for payments.

“Sometimes I’d just be just sitting somewhere, relaxing, thinking about other things. Then somebody calls you, they want you to pay them back their money, and you don’t have anything to pay them with,” he says.

“I was scared because you don’t know what action they could take if you don’t pay them. You don’t know whether they can sue you, or whether they might take you to police custody.”

Luckily he has now managed to find piecemeal work, which has enabled him to pay back part of the money, both to the loan companies and his friends.

“I still very much believe in God,” he says. “All I have to do is just be a little more careful.”

Pressured into giving

It’s not only in Kenya that people are going into debt in the hope of a miracle. A woman who used to attend a Nigerian church in the US says she and her husband came under crippling financial obligations – including the expectation to make seed offerings, or “sow seed”.

“Sarah”, as I will call her, asked me not to use her name, or to say which state in the southern US she lives in, for fear of intimidation from the church or its lawyers.

READ ALSO: Kenya pastor who claims to be Jesus Christ runs to the police after community vow to crucify him this Easter so he could rise on the 3rd day

She says both congregants and local pastors at her former church were expected to give a “tithe” of 10% of their monthly income to finance the church and its leadership in Nigeria.

And that was in addition to what was called “first fruit” – their entire pay packet of the first month of the year.

paying for prayer
US evangelist Oral Roberts (1918-2009) is known as the father of the Prosperity Gospel

Local leaders were set monthly targets, she says, which forced them to put pressure on the congregation to sow seed. Members were told that they would then be blessed by the head pastor in Nigeria.

Sarah says she saw people paying for “seed money” with their credit cards in church services.

“I remember one time at the church a lady said: ‘I have been paying my tithe, and it seems like I still don’t have enough money at the end of the month.’”

The pastor’s response, Sarah says, was to tell people that giving was more important than paying their rent. And she says anyone who questioned why miracles were not happening was told: “You didn’t pray enough, you didn’t sow seed enough. You didn’t have enough faith.”

She says her husband was pressured to leave her, because she kept asking questions – but they both left the church instead.

Last hope

So why do others stay in such churches?

Dr Jörg Haustein, associate professor of World Christianities at the University of Cambridge, says it is possible to understand why people keep giving when “the promises are not paying off as directly advertised”.

For the middle classes and upwardly mobile, like most of those in Sarah’s church, Dr Haustein says the Prosperity Gospel offers “an air of economic success and upward mobility that people find attractive”.

But it can also appeal to those living in poverty, he says.

“A church that says: ‘We know that you’re suffering, and we have a practical, attainable solution for you,’ will be more attractive than one that preaches some elusive, systemic change.”

READ ALSO: No talk am for here – Christian man begs his pastor not to expose him after he took a prostitute home

But why I ask, do people continue to give even when it means going into debt?

“Is it not like playing the lottery when you don’t have any money?” Dr Haustein asks me.

“It’s something that seems remotely affordable because you can borrow a few hundred Kenyan shillings on a phone to invest and see if it helps.

“Of course, there is an air of desperation as well, it can be the last best hope one has.”

Back in Kenya, Evarline Okello says the experience hasn’t caused her to abandon her faith.

“I wouldn’t say that church is bad. The church is good. It is the pastors who are doing wrong. They are the ones who are asking for money.”

 

Article originally curated by BBC

 



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