With January's Powerball jackpot estimated at $700 million — the largest in U.S. history, according to ABC News — Christians might be tempted to play, but Pastor John Piper explains why he advises people to avoid the gambling trap.
In a post shared Tuesday on DesiringGod.org,
Pastor John Piper, chancellor of Minnesota-based Bethlehem College
& Seminary, discourages Christians from participating in lotteries,
warning, " … you should not gamble with your money this way."
Below, the theologian outlines seven reasons why.
1. It is Spiritually Suicidal
Playing
the lottery could jeopardize your spiritual wellbeing, explains Piper,
who gets right to the point with a quote from 1 Tim. 6: 9-10: "Those who
desire to be rich fall into temptation, into a snare, into many
senseless and harmful desires that plunge people into ruin and
destruction ... "
2. It is a Kind of Embezzlement
Just
as "faithful trustees may not gamble with a trust fund," you are a
caretaker of your money, which belongs to God, says Piper. "Managers
don't gamble with their Master's money. All you have belongs to God. All
of it," he writes.
"The parable of the talents says Jesus will
take account of how we handled His money. They went and worked (Matthew
25:16–17). That is how we seek to provide for ourselves (1 Corinthians
4:12; 1 Thessalonians 4:11; Ephesians 4:28)."
3. It's a Fool's Errand
People
enter lotteries lured by the possibility of winning big, yet their
chances of hitting the jackpot are often very, very minute. "You take
real money and buy with it a chance," says Piper. "That chance is so
infinitesimally small that the dollar is virtually lost. … The smaller
amounts paid out more often are like a fog to keep you from seeing what
is happening."
4. The System is Built on the Necessity of Most People Losing
Piper
likens lotteries to Las Vegas casinos "without any of the glamor and
glitz," saying "the 'house' controls the action; the players will all
eventually lose."
5. It Preys on the Poor
People
in the U.S. with annual take-home incomes of $13,000 or less spend 9
percent, or $645, of their income on lottery tickets each year,
according to a report from The Consumerist.
6. There is a Better Alternative
Piper
says that Americans who play the lottery are being taught to be "fools"
in that 21 percent of people surveyed by the Opinion Research
Corporation felt that the lottery was a practical way to accumulate
wealth.
"If the $500 a year that on average all American
households throw away on the lottery were invested in an index fund each
year for 20 years, each family would have $24,000. Not maybe. Really."
7. For the Sake of Quick Money, Government is Undermining the Virtue Without Which it Cannot Survive.
Here,
Piper quotes from the journal on religion and public life, First
Things: "A government that raises money by encouraging and exploiting
the weaknesses of its citizens escapes that democratic mechanism of
accountability."
Finally, Piper says that if you get rich from playing the lottery, don't bring your winnings to his ministry.
"Christ
does not build His church on the backs of the poor. Pray that Christ's
people will be so satisfied in Him that they will be freed from the
greed that makes us crave to get rich."
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