“Leave Us Alone” – Why Every MMM Participant Has Already Lost (2), By Sunday Adelaja

Our pulpit must stop talking about miracles and breakthroughs because the message our youth are hearing is that through miracles and breakthroughs, you can get something out of nothing. What they are hearing is that it is possible to reap where you have not sown. The national psyche of Nigerians today is more like “if it is good for me now, it doesn’t matter what happens later.” If truth be told, our churches have largely contributed to this.

Ponzi Schemes Only Reveal Who We Are

As evil as Ponzi schemes and pyramids are, it would be wrong to put all the blame on them for our national decay and corruption. They only reveal who we are. What MMM has revealed about the Nigerian population is that we are a nation devoid of the true understanding of good and evil. We have been deprived of true virtues and handed religion. We have become a nation famous for our religiosity without virtues.

Is religion really possible without virtues? I think this is the description of paganism. Religious but devoid of character and virtues. We must retrace our steps. This task has to be undertaken not just by the government, but by the religious leaders and the Nigerian elite. Schemes like MMM have only come to uncover our nakedness. We have been naked for a long time before they came. It is high time for us to use this opportunity to revisit our virtues as a nation.

Our pulpit must stop talking about miracles and breakthroughs because the message our youth are hearing is that through miracles and breakthroughs, you can get something out of nothing. What they are hearing is that it is possible to reap where you have not sown. The national psyche of Nigerians today is more like “if it is good for me now, it doesn’t matter what happens later.” If truth be told, our churches have largely contributed to this. Our messages of instant gratification have led to a whole generation of people who only want to see instant results, immediate relief and a painless profit. This is not the natural course of things. For our youth to change, our messages must change. For our nation to change, our pulpit must change. We must begin to deliver relevant messages which are capable of building a healthy nation and future. Instead of messages that are only promising blessings, miracles, breakthroughs and wonders. We must replace these messages with preaching on virtues such as hard work, creativity, dedication, commitment, perseverance, diligence, responsibility, etc.

We must stop glorifying people who became wealthy from unexplainable sources. The brother who became a millionaire because he simply sowed a seed, either to the pastor or to the church should no longer be those who are testifying in our churches. We should be giving the microphone to the hard workers who have, through a lifetime of perseverance, diligence and dignity of labour, attained true success. Until we do this, our churches and nation will keep on celebrating symbols of instant success like the “yahoo yahoo” boys, the scammers, the 419s and MMMs.

Unfortunately, as of today, these are the only type of success stories our messages are capable of producing. If we are to produce quality youth and future leaders, we must begin to invite to our pulpits people who attained their success and wealth through biblical principles of hard work, faithfulness and diligence. We have to downplay the roles of sowing and reaping for prosperity. It is time to begin to emphasise principles of wealth creation and the production of goods and services.

Instead of teaching in our churches every Sunday, “give and it shall be given to you”, our messages must change to teaching principles like: planning, critical thinking, analysis, strategy, visibility plans, systems building, market and customer analysis, process of production of goods and services, etc. This is how noble people are produced, not by what is being propagated by our pulpits today.

With the messages we have today in our churches and society at large, it is no wonder that these young people now act as if God is a rewarder of laziness and mediocrity. Please! Please!! Please!!! I want to use this avenue to appeal to my fellow pastors in ministry: Let’s stop preaching the pseudo gospel, and begin to preach the real gospel of the kingdom.

It is greed that makes us to close our eyes at the consequences of our actions, thinking only of the gains and profits. Some Nigerians who participate in MMM are actually rejoicing and telling stories of how they brought in hundred or two hundred people and how much they were able to make. Meanwhile they laugh and joke that others lost but they won.

Our youth must know that Christianity is not magic. We must tell them that because somebody is making pronunciations doesn’t mean that those pronunciations are godly. We must let them know that they don’t need a pastor’s blessing to make it in life. We must let our young people know that the shout of “I receive it!” alone is not enough to be blessed for that week. We must open their eyes to realise that the shout of “Amen!”, no matter how loud, doesn’t make God to fulfill all their wishes. Our nation needs to be delivered from religious superstitions, and real Christianity must be introduced afresh.

A Culture of Greed

Unfortunately, a lot of Nigerians seem to think that the difficult economic situation in the nation is enough an excuse for the involvement in shady and deceptive schemes. It is alarming to even tolerate this kind of mindset in any society. What these type of people are saying is that they can do anything to gain or profit. This mindset is evil and dangerous. We must begin to let our people know that economic difficulties and recession in the land is not a justification for evil and corrupt practices.

“He who is not contented with what he has, would not be contented with what he would like to have.” ― Socrates

To think that any kind of riches brings satisfaction and happiness is a total lie. “Food gained by fraud tastes sweet, but one ends up with a mouth full of gravel.” – Proverbs 20:17. The truth be told, it is not economic recession that is driving people to pyramids and Ponzi schemes and other fraudulent practices. It is greed! It is greed that makes a person to want something so bad that he or she is willing to violate the rights and trust of others to get it.

It is greed that makes us to close our eyes at the consequences of our actions, thinking only of the gains and profits. Some Nigerians who participate in MMM are actually rejoicing and telling stories of how they brought in hundred or two hundred people and how much they were able to make. Meanwhile they laugh and joke that others lost but they won. In the real sense they didn’t win, and neither did they gain. What they have done is they have just stolen from the people they brought into the company. They have just robbed their friends, relatives and colleagues through deception and violation of trust.

Some of them are thinking they are smart. No you are not smart, you are simply evil. This is the definition of being callous: feeling or showing no sympathy for others. When I suggest to these so-called “smart” guys from MMM who have made “X” amount of money from the scheme to go and return the money to the people they brought into the system, they refuse and say no I am the one who got lucky, they are just not lucky. This goes a long way to underline how much we have lost a sense of compassion, sympathy, empathy and humanity.

That is why I believe that these people who think they have made money through MMM and such schemes have actually lost something far more valuable than money. They have lost themselves and their humanity.

When you lure people to MMM and they lose their money, you have lost them. You have lost their trust. You have lost your relationship with them. What you have gained is a feud for generations to come. Because of you, some children will not go to school next year. Some families will not build their houses. Some couples will not wed.

“If we win by losing ourselves, by losing what we were fighting for, then we never really win.” ― Meg Collett

They are possessed by greed. The danger of greed is it steals your joy, because no matter how much you get, you always want more. Your joy is temporal. That joy is quickly replaced by dissatisfaction. Greed deprives you of real joy. Sooner or later, you lose taste of what joy is, and you will never be able to enjoy anything in life. No amount of money or pleasure will henceforth be able to give you joy, due to lack of inner satisfaction, which is the essence of greed.

Greed causes you to lose something even much more valuable than joy. Greed deprives you of life itself. Life is only meaningful when there is joy and satisfaction in it. Greed deprives you of both, because if you are never satisfied and you don’t have joy, you cease to find meaning in life. At the end of the day, you will eventually lose those finances that were gained in a dishonest way. Greed will lead you to spiritual bankruptcy.

Apart from losing joy and the essence of life, you also lose relationships. We Nigerians know stories told by our parents and relatives that you should never have anything to do with so and so families or nearby villages. Why is that? That is because somebody, sometime had violated trust. Villages have gone to war against villages because of violated trust. Family feuds have continued for generations because of the act of deception of one man.

When you lure people to MMM and they lose their money, you have lost them. You have lost their trust. You have lost your relationship with them. What you have gained is a feud for generations to come. Because of you, some children will not go to school next year. Some families will not build their houses. Some couples will not wed. On the other hand, you have made some people to sell their houses, their lands, their cars, and some have just lost their inheritances.

What do you think my friend? Do you think all those people are praying for you for depriving them of their money? Well I don’t think so. Some of them may actually be raining down curses on your head. So at the end of the day, you have not gained, you have only lost. Despite the money you thought you made, your loss is much greater.

“What you gain here, you lose on the other side.” – Dejan Stojanovic

“Right now the pastors and churches are bleeding after they lost their hard earned money. Some had even borrowed money to invest in the scheme. Pastors are now ashamed, churches have lost members and others accusing each other for introducing them to the scheme. I myself have lost my money. MMM is evil. Don’t stop prophesying against it.”

So to those people in MMM who are telling people who know better that they should “mind your business”, I pray that you will read this article. The issue is not if MMM is coming back in January or not. Even if it comes back in January, it will still collapse eventually, whether you like it or not. This is because it is built on something unsustainable; it is built on deception.

“The works of his hands are faithful and just all his precepts are trustworthy. They are established for ever and ever, enacted in faithfulness and uprightness.” – Psalms 111:7-8

What this scripture teaches us is that the things that are built to last are only sustainable when they are built on faithfulness, truth and justice. It is only when things are done right that they last. Faithfulness and uprightness are the pillars and foundation for any sustainable enterprise. When any of these qualities are missing in any enterprise, they are doomed to stillbirth. MMM is built on the direct opposite of these virtues. It is built on greed and deception, so it is already collapsed in the spirit realm. It is only a matter of time for the woes, curses and the tragedies to hit the participants.
Just as I was about to finish writing this article, I looked into my inbox and saw a letter from an apostle in Zimbabwe. I will paste it here as a confirmation from what I have written above without changing anything in his writing.

“Pastor, thank you for blowing the trumpet against MMM. I’m from Zimbabwe and was part of MMM. I researched about it first and became suspicious of the organisation having heard of people who had lost their money in South Africa and other European countries. What changed my mind was the good report from some pastors who were seemingly benefiting from the scheme. These people have made inroads and penetrated the church using pastors. They give incentives for recruiting new people which obviously is attractive to pastors who command large followings. They are also invited to make presentations in churches. Right now the pastors and churches are bleeding after they lost their hard earned money. Some had even borrowed money to invest in the scheme. Pastors are now ashamed, churches have lost members and others accusing each other for introducing them to the scheme. I myself have lost my money. MMM is evil. Don’t stop prophesying against it. Some will hear what the Spirit is saying to the church and be saved from MMM. CRY ALOUD AND SPARE NOT. Thank you!” – Apostle Enoch Tofa

Let him who has ear hear before it is too late.

Sunday Adelaja is a Nigeria born leader, transformation strategist, pastor and innovator. He is based in Kiev, Ukraine. He can be contacted at sundayadelajablog@gmail.com.

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