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The Church and the Price of Vulnerability

11 November 20259 November 2025

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about how much money I gave to the church over the years. How much I tithed, sowed, sacrificed, and “trusted God with my finances.” And I’ve come to a point where I know, deep down, that I’ll never give my money to the church again. Not because I’ve hardened my heart, but because I finally see the system for what it is—a well-oiled machine built on people’s pain.

It’s not that paying for help is wrong. Psychologists charge for their time, therapists do too, and that’s fair—healing work takes skill and effort. But what happens in church isn’t that. What happens there is emotional manipulation dressed up as faith. It’s not a fair exchange; it’s a guilt trip. You’re told that your life isn’t working because you haven’t given enough, prayed enough, or believed enough. And when you finally break down, they offer you healing—for a price.

I’ve seen churches built right in the middle of poverty, where people barely have enough for food, yet are pushed every Sunday to give more—tithe, offering, seed, project money, car fund for the pastor. They’re told that their breakthrough depends on how much they can give, that God blesses the cheerful giver, that sacrifice brings favor. So they give. Out of fear, guilt, and hunger for a miracle. And the pastor drives home in comfort while the congregants go back to empty cupboards and heavy hearts.

That’s the real danger—the way the church profits from vulnerability. It doesn’t just take people’s money; it takes their agency. You start believing your well-being depends on your obedience. You surrender your power in the same way you lift your hands at the altar—eyes closed, palms open, waiting for someone else to give you a new identity.

It’s not that healing should be free of cost—it’s that it should never cost your dignity. When a psychologist charges you, it’s a transparent exchange. When a pastor demands money while tying your miracle to it, that’s coercion. It’s spiritual blackmail wrapped in scripture.

What I find most haunting is how easily we confuse the two. The church speaks the language of love—healing, freedom, restoration—but behind those words is a quiet transaction: your pain for their power.

I’ve found more peace outside those walls than I ever did inside. Singing with my choir, reading books that challenge me, taking quiet walks—all those small, honest things have healed me more deeply than any altar call. They don’t demand obedience or payment. They just ask that I show up as myself.

So no, I’ll never give my money to the church again. Not out of anger, but clarity. I’ve learned the difference between generosity and exploitation. One frees you. The other binds you.

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