I was wrong, Pastor Adeboye apologises for saying people who don’t pay tithe will not make heaven

Pastor Enoch Adeboye
Enoch Adeboye

General overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) Pastor Enoch Adeboye has admitted he was wrong when he said people who do not pay tithe will not go to Heaven.

Tithe in Christendom is one-tenth of one’s earnings. The biblical figure Abraham is believed to have originated it.

Tendering his apology while delivering a message at the church’s ongoing annual national youth convention at the RCCG Redemption City, Adeboye said: “I am going to be talking to everybody as soon as God permits me, I am going to apologise for making a mistake for saying that if you don’t pay tithe, you will not be making it to Heaven. That is wrong.

“That is not in the Bible. What the Bible says is to make peace with all men and holiness without which no man shall see God. What the Bible says is, to follow peace with all men and holiness without which no man will make heaven.

“It is possible to be right and wrong at the same time. I will prove it to you. For years, we taught that light travels in a straight line. Later we say it travels in waves.”

Adeboye further narrated his experience at one of the conventions of the ministry of Kenneth Hagin in Tulsa, United States. He said there was a man at the programme who pledged to give more than all participants at the convention. The cleric noted that all participants gave about $3.5 million towards the building of Rhema Bible College.

He said: “The man told me how he had started a business with $500 and had told God if he blessed him, he would not insult him with 10 per cent.

“Five years after the man started the business, he said he was making a turnover of $50 million. And that was what inspired me also to give towards God’s work violently.

“If you want to dominate, you must know how to praise God violently. How did David become king? He was not the first in the family, he was not even recognised but he knew how to praise God, he did not do it gently but violently, with all his might.

“Unfortunately, most of us don’t appreciate that. When we are much younger in the Lord, we praise God freely. As we begin to grow in the Lord, our praise becomes gentle, more civilised, and more polite. David, even after he became king, danced so vigorously that even his wife mocked him.

“Your giving must be of the violent type. King Solomon gave thousands of burnt offerings to God and God said there would not be a king before or after him, and he would not fight a single war, because kings fight war to retain their domain and the Bible records that he had peace all round.”