The controversy surrounding Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor’s recent
receipt of the gift of a jet has cast a harsh glare of scrutiny on the
Church and its leaders. It has also caused no small dissension among
pastors and Christians. This has been amplified by the social media
where the vigorous debate has gone viral. As president of the Christian Association of Nigeria and the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria,
he is seen not only as an important and influential figure in Christian
circles but also, the most prominent
representation of Christian
leadership in the country. His profile also makes him influential in the
corridors of power where he is seen to represent the Christian position
on national issues.
All this has made his acquisition of a jet an issue
of contention. Of course, he is not the first to own a private jet.
Some other pastors and clerics do and so do a number of politicians,
tycoons and socialites. But perhaps because of his profile, his pastoral
vocation and prominence, Oritsejafor has drawn attention and ire. Or
perhaps because the media in very recent times has been awash with
heated debate on the issue of ownership of jets in Nigeria, the
acquisition of yet another jet by yet another prominent Nigerian was
just more fuel for the fire of contention.
On one side, there are those who have vehemently condemned the
ownership of jets by pastors. They criticize the trend as too
ostentatious, too flamboyant and as being at complete variance with the
sobriety and low profile expected of ministers of the gospel. They have
gone ahead to berate especially, Pentecostal pastors for fleecing the
people. Furthermore, they argue, such displays of wealth are not in
consonance with a reality in which the vast majority of the country’s
population is mired in poverty. The opposition counters that Oritsejafor
is well within his rights as an individual to receive gifts from his
congregation in appreciation of his service to God and humanity.
They
say that the jet is less a luxury than a necessity; a tool for aiding
the ministry of an evangelist whose missions require him to be able to
travel swiftly and at short notice without suffering the bottlenecks and
aggravation of the airports and public aviation. Thus, the jet should
be properly seen as an instrument of the gospel. Perhaps if Paul the
Apostle were alive today he would have achieved much more if he had a
jet and a mobile phone. There is also the idea that Oritsejafor has been
justly blessed by God for his 40 year meritorious exertion for the sake
of the gospel; and that the new jet is simply an example of God
rewarding his servants with material prosperity. Therefore, those
criticizing him are belly-aching, envious and speaking out of a mindset
conditioned by poverty that cannot grasp the awesome grace of God in the
lives of his servants. How can we mediate this collision of
fiercely-held views?
The truth of the matter is that clerics are well within their rights
to acquire or receive jets or other material assets. They have the
inalienable right to pursue after ownership of property or other
material acquisitions. God is a God that cares about the material
endowment of His people and asking His servants to swear to vows of
chastity and poverty negates the tenets of our faith and becomes a
throwback to the medieval days of the Church of monks, nuns and
monasteries. But as we delve deeper into Scripture we begin to see other
considerations that inform our perceptions of what is right or wrong. Paul the Apostle in
1 Corinthians 6:12 says, ‘All things are permissible but not all things
are beneficial or expedient.’ Or as The Message Bible succinctly
renders it: ‘Just because something is technically legal doesn’t mean
that it’s spiritually appropriate.’ The import of the Apostle Paul’s
admonition is clear – the fact that something is legal does not mean
that it is beneficial. While pastors might be well within their rights
to acquire or receive jets, what makes it right at this time is its
interpretation on the platform of motive and expediency.
So the question is not ‘is it right or wrong to own a jet?’ It goes
deeper. The more penetrating issue being unearthed is ‘is it expedient
at this time to own a jet?’ Elisha the Old Testament prophet berated his
servant Gehazi who had surreptitiously obtained some gifts from Naaman
the Syrian General. Elisha asked Gehazi, ‘Is it the time to receive
money and to receive clothing?’ (2 Kings 5:26). The question for Gehazi
was that of expediency of the moment. There were other issues at stake.
There were other considerations. Solomon the wisest man who ever lived
said ‘To everything there is a season and time to every purpose under
heaven.’ (Ecclesiastes 3:1) The Apostle Paul also urges us to ensure
that our liberty in Christ does not become a source of grief to others
or cause them to sin. He said, on one occasion, that he was legally
justified to eat food offered to idols, a practice that would have
horrified many of his listeners who found such pagan practices
abhorrent. But Paul conceded that if something he had a liberty to do
caused his brothers to stumble, he would refrain from doing so.
Thus, careful and continuous thought must guide our daily decisions
beyond the technical issues of right or wrong. There is another process
of thinking that should inform our perceptions of what is permissible
and what is not. Therefore, legitimate questions can be asked about the
propriety of owning a jet in a country where poverty is rife
(unfortunately it is often done in cruel and contemptible language).
People’s perceptions of issues are their own realities. The ownership of
jets currently paints a picture of pastors who live in alienated
opulence, quite removed from the laity to whom they minister. This
unfortunate and unflattering portrait casts a dark shadow on our witness
and our ministry. With the growing trend of jet ownership, we also run
the risk of being ensnared in the trap of competitive acquisition and
conspicuous consumption. For instance, a jet that can only cover the
African continent might soon be deemed unsatisfactory and discarded in
favour of a jet that is capable of transatlantic distances.
After a
while, it may not be enough to be able to fly to Europe at a moment’s
notice; one may find it necessary to find a jet that can cover greater
distances, perhaps reach America or the Far East. How far do we go in
acquiring such expensive items in the name of facilitating the gospel?
Secondly, the more we seek or accept such expensive gifts, which are not
just pricey but also inordinately expensive to maintain, the more
beholden we will be as pastors to those who can afford us the means to
maintain them. Already, in many churches, attention is heavily skewed in
favour of the rich and the powerful. In a country where corruption and
abuse of power are rife, this leaves the pastors open to charges of
colluding with the corrupt. Indeed, we must humbly admit that many who
bring gifts to our churches may have obtained them through dubious means
and questionable methods. This exposes us to accusations of sanctifying
greed, theft and graft, in return for receiving expensive gifts and
status symbols. It also negates our ability to operate with moral and
prophetic authority and fulfill the function of speaking truth to power –
a much needed role in our society which is steeped in moral
degeneration. Under these circumstances, the ownership of jets must be
deemed, as Paul the Apostle clarified, ‘technically legal but
spiritually inappropriate’.
So also are all displays of ostentation that cast clerics in the
mould of the super-rich elites. The argument that a pastor is entitled
to a jet because bank chieftains, moguls and CEOs own theirs as well
reflects a misunderstanding and misrepresentation of pastoral ministry.
There should be no basis for comparison. Our goal should be to emulate
Christ, not to compete with CEOs. There is a need for sobriety in the
times in which we live. We have to always balance the things that are
permissible with sensitivity to the expediency of the times in which we
live and continuously process the ethical demands of our higher calling –
– an understandably difficult and arduous task. Indulging in displays
of opulence is currently inconsistent with those demands. This is why
pastors in a spirit of deference, ought to see this debate, not through
the prism of technical legality, but through the prism of spiritual
propriety. The gospel is already, in the words of Paul, ‘a stumbling
block.’ Our insensitivity in these depraved and trying times need not
constitute another stumbling block. We live in times of national
turmoil, combustive passions and volatile emotions; times in which the
people we lead, as God told Jonah concerning Nineveh, do not sometimes
know their right hand from their left.
* Dr. Rapu is the Senior Pastor and head over the
multi-faceted group of ministries comprising This Present House, God
Bless Nigeria, The Underground Church and The Waterbrook.
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