Gambling-defined as a paid game
of chance-increasingly impacts more and more people all over the world.
The concept of winning at the expense of others has become a modern curse.
Society pays the escalating cost of associated crime, victim support,
and family breakdown which erodes the quality of life. Seventh-day Adventists
have consistently opposed gambling as it is incompatible with Christian
principles. It is not an appropriate form of entertainment or a legitimate
means of raising funds.
Gambling violates Christian
principles of stewardship. God identifies work as the appropriate method
for gaining material benefit; not the playing of a game of chance while
dreaming to gain at the expense of others. Gambling has a massive impact
on society. Financial costs result from crime committed to pay for the
gambling habit, increased policing, and legal expenses, as well as associated
crimes involving drugs and prostitution. Gambling does not generate income;
rather it takes from those who often can ill afford to lose and gives
to a few winners, the greatest winner of course being the gambling operator.
The idea that gambling operations can have a positive economic benefit
is an illusion. In addition, gambling violates the Christian sense of
responsibility for family, neighbors, the needy, and the Church.1
Gambling creates false hopes.
The gambling dream of "winning big" replaces true hope with a false dream
of a statistically-improbable chance of winning. Christians are not to
put their hope in wealth. The Christian hope in a glorious future promised
by God is "sure and certain"- unlike and opposite to the gambling dream.
The great gain that the Bible points to is "godliness with contentment."2
Gambling is addictive. The
addictive quality of gambling is clearly incompatible with a Christian
lifestyle. The Church seeks to help, not blame, those suffering from
gambling or other addictions. Christians recognize that they are responsible
before God for their resources and lifestyle.3
The Seventh-day Adventist Church
organization does not condone raffles or lotteries to raise funds and
it urges members not to participate in any such activities, however well-
intentioned. Neither does the Church condone state-sponsored gambling.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church calls on all authorities to prevent
the ever-increasing availability of gambling with its damaging effects
on individuals and society.
The Seventh-day Adventist Church
rejects gambling as defined above and will not solicit nor accept funding
that is clearly derived from gambling.