When Pastors Turn Worship Into Fundraising | Bishop Hilliard's Money Appeals Exposed

Bishop I.V. Hilliard is known for his long, intense offering appeals, and in this video we are looking at why these moments are so troubling. At some point, an offering should not feel longer than the sermon. It should not feel like a pressure campaign. It should not feel like people are being spiritually cornered into giving money they may not have. The issue is not simply that a church receives offerings. Giving is biblical. Supporting ministry is biblical. Generosity is biblical. But what is not biblical is turning the offering into a drawn-out manipulation session where people are pushed, hyped, guilted, or pressured into sowing a specific amount in order to unlock a blessing, prove their faith, break a curse, or show that they really trust God. Original video:    • Calibrate Conference '26 - Holy Convocatio...   When the offering becomes the centerpiece of the service, something is wrong. The pulpit is supposed to be used to preach Christ, teach Scripture, call sinners to repentance, strengthen believers, and shepherd the flock. But too often in prosperity-style church culture, the most passionate part of the service is not the preaching of the Word — it is the money appeal. The energy rises when the seed amount is announced. The pressure increases when the preacher starts telling stories. The urgency builds when people are told they need to move now, give now, obey now, sow now. And that is where discernment is needed. Bishop Hilliard’s offerings often sound less like simple opportunities to give and more like religious sales presentations. There are claims of supernatural returns, breakthrough, harvest, debt cancellation, and favor attached to financial giving. But the New Testament never teaches that believers should be pressured into giving under compulsion. Scripture says God loves a cheerful giver — not a coerced giver, not a confused giver, not a desperate giver being told this seed might be the key to their miracle. This matters because many people sitting in church are struggling. Some are single mothers. Some are elderly. Some are living paycheck to paycheck. Some are already trying to be faithful with very little. And the last thing they need is a preacher using spiritual language to make them feel like God’s blessing is locked behind a cash amount. If a church needs money, be honest. If there is a budget, say that. If there is a building project, explain it plainly. But do not dress it up as prophecy. Do not attach guaranteed miracles to it. Do not make people believe that their breakthrough depends on giving into your moment. The gospel is not for sale. The favor of God is not for sale. The blessing of God is not purchased through a seed. Jesus did not shed His blood so preachers could turn worship services into fundraising marathons. Software I use (Ecamm) Sign up with this link: https://www.ecamm.com/mac/ecammlive/?... AFFILIATES Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/allthings... Covenant Eyes: https://covenanteyes.sjv.io/zNYmqG Join this channel to get access to perks:    / @kdubtru   Website: kdubtru.com Music: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1TohV... Subscribe & click 🛎 for notifications of premieres and live streams! Follow me on social media: Twitter.com/kdubtru Facebook.com/allthingstheology instagram.com/kdub.tru/ SUPPORT: Patreon.com/kdubtru Listen on podcast: https://anchor.fm/allthingstheology Email for interviews or booking: [email protected]