Whom
Can We Trust? by David Servant
Behold,
You desire truth in the innermost being (Psalm 51:6).
Last month when I was
in Sri Lanka, I made a point to visit a world-famous orphanage director. He
told me about ominous dreams he'd had some days before the Indian Ocean tsunami
swept ashore on Sunday morning, December 26, 2004. He knew something was going
to happen that would submerge his orphanage. But before December 26, 2004, the
concept of a tsunami was foreign to him, as it was to most people in the world.
His orphanage was
located on a thin strip of land right on the coast. When he saw the far-off
tsunami racing from the horizon that morning, he quickly got all his children
into a boat that was docked in the lagoon behind his orphanage. The motor
started with the first try, a small miracle in itself he said, and they were
able to get the boat out into the water. When the first wave crashed over the
thin strip of land that separated the ocean from the lagoon, he turned his
little boat and faced the wave head on. Two other waves followed. While
thousands of others in his immediate region perished within minutes, he and his
children all survived.
His story soon circled
the globe, and he was interviewed by many reporters and news agencies. He gave
me a DVD copy of CNN's report in which he was very bold to give credit to God
for the deliverance. He eventually came to the U.S. and traveled all over
telling his story in churches. He even met president Bush in the oval office,
and I noticed photos of that occasion in his own office as I spoke with
him.
He then told me that
two major American ministries, among others, had also come to Sri Lanka with
their film crews to interview him and record his story. He told me how he later
watched their productions on TV and heard them make appeals for donations to
help rebuild his orphanage. But
they never sent him a dime.
He then told me about
an interview he did via phone that was broadcast on a nationally-heard American
Christian radio show, and during which listeners were told that their donations
would be used to help him rebuild his orphanage. But he never received a dime from that ministry either.
All three ministries
are huge and would be recognized by any evangelical Christian in North
America. He figured they may have raised millions of dollars using his story.
In spite of the
dishonesty he suffered, his travels to U.S. churches resulted in all the
funding he needed to buy land and build a new orphanage---what is the nicest
orphanage I've ever seen. And those big American ministries that profited from
telling his story have hopefully used the money they raised for other good
things. Yet I left his orphanage that day saddened. These things ought not to
be. That orphanage director was clearly embittered by his experience.
I'm not going to
reveal the names of the three ministries that he exposed to me, simply because
I haven't heard their side of the story. I doubt that the men who head each of
those multi-million dollar ministries even know what happened. And I'm not
telling you this so that you will distrust all large ministries. Smaller
ministries face the same challenges, because it only takes one dishonest person
for something dishonest to occur. You can take every precaution to keep people
accountable and honest, but if they aren't motivated by the fear of God or love
for God, there are always those who will find a way around the system to line
their pockets. Let's face it, if the heads of publicly-held corporations can
sometimes fool the heads of the accounting firms who audit them, we would be
foolish to think that there is some foolproof way to keep everyone honest in
financial dealings. According to World Christian Trends, trusted church treasurers are embezzling sixteen billion dollars
each year out of church funds, and only five percent are ever caught! (www.gordonconwell.edu/ockenga/globalchristianity/gd/findings.pdf)
When I attempt to
ascertain if I can trust someone financially who heads a ministry, I generally
look first at his or her lifestyle. Christian leaders are required to be free
of the love of money, and they are to be judged by us on that basis (see 1
Tim. 3:3). So obviously, the love of money must be something that can be judged
by the observation of one's outward actions, and is not just something that is
a hidden motivation of the heart and therefore known only to God.
It would seem safe to
conclude that Christian leaders who accept enormous incomes and live lavishly
are in the category of those who are not free from the love of money. Their
actions reveal their hearts, as Jesus plainly told us (Luke 12:34). For that
reason, there are some heads of large ministries whom I do not trust. I thank
God, however, for those who follow Jesus' example. I was glad to learn, for
example, just the other day, that successful and celebrated Christian author
and pastor John Piper still lives in the same small house he bought twenty-five
years ago in the Philips neighborhood of Minneapolis, a very undesirable place
to live from a natural standpoint. He is obviously denying himself, as he could
afford much better with his book royalties. I would tend to trust him with my
money more so than those ministers who are living in mansions.
I particularly
distrust those ministers who have become very rich as heads of ministries that
exclusively help the poor. To me, they are exploiting the poor. I don't know
how anyone can head a ministry that shows photos of starving people to motivate
us to contribute, and who then keeps for himself $400,000 of what we send in to
help the poor.
When I evaluate
Christian leaders in developing nations whom we might potentially help or
partner with, I also look at their lifestyles. But it is not so easy as it is
in wealthy nations, because many Christian leaders in developing nations live
very modestly, not because they want to, but because they have no choice. If
they had more, they would spend it only on themselves. They are often waiting
for foolish Americans to have pity on them.
When I was in Myanmar
just a few days ago, I sadly discovered that an orphanage director to whom we
had given $6,000 to buy a rice field had used only part of the funds he had
requested to purchase a field. The remainder he used to purchase two motor
scooters, which he then gave to family members. That was a blatant misappropriation
of funds, and I've just confronted him about it. I would never have suspected
him, because he runs an orphanage that he founded himself long before I met him
or began helping him. He wasn't living in a mansion, but in a run-down bamboo
shed. How could such a virtuous person be (or become) dishonest?
I've since learned
from others that he has repeatedly proven himself to be untrustworthy in small
things, and so it should be no surprise that he has now been proven to be
untrustworthy in large things (as Jesus told us in Luke 16:10). He never faced
a $6,000 temptation before, but that $6,000 didn't change his character, it
only revealed his character to
me. I learned what others
already knew.
This is one reason
that we generally don't assist orphanages that have been in existence for
less than two years. We know of cases where people have started an orphanage
just for the money it would attract. I can't imagine God is pleased with
someone who exploits orphans to enrich himself.
The lesson in all of
this? Take a tip from banks. Before they lend you money, they check your credit
history. They don't trust you until they know you've already proven yourself
trustworthy.
So before you trust
anyone with God's money, check out their track record. Trust must be
earned, and it must continue to be earned. (And it never hurts to pray for
guidance, since God knows everything!) And it is probably a mistake to send
money to someone you've never met in Nigeria or Pakistan or Haiti who sent you
email with a sad story. In Nigeria, such scams are big business.
As I was lamenting the
above-mentioned incident of the motor scooters to one of our team members in
Myanmar, he reminded me that even Jesus had problems with embezzlement by one
of His ministry employees---a guy by the name of Judas. That made me feel
somewhat better.
©2010 David Servant and ShepherdServe.org.
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