
Juliana Schweikle
3.8K posts

Juliana Schweikle
@Ultimateilonah
Jesus loves you. Diasporan OBI_dient. 🇩🇪




Why Christians who call themselves “prophets” MUST NOT promote cryptocurrency for personal gain? Because this isn’t prophecy. It’s greed dressed up in holiness. The Bible clearly warns against false prophets. “They will exploit you with fabricated words out of greed… their condemnation has long been hanging over them.” (2 Peter 2:3) When someone says “God showed me this coin will make you rich,” yet their own pockets are the ones getting filled, you’re dealing with a classic false prophet. Trust in “God’s man” turns into a business transaction. Believers invest not based on research, but because of a supposed “revelation.” When the coin crashes: “God is testing you.” When it pumps: “The prophet was right!” Either way, only one person wins: the “prophet” himself. The prosperity gospel is not the Gospel. God is not a crypto exchange or your personal financial advisor. The Bible teaches: “No one can serve two masters , God and Money.” (Matthew 6:24) If the prophet’s main message is “Invest in the coin I recommend,” then his true master is Money, not Christ. This hurts the Body of Christ. Tens of thousands of ordinary believers have lost their savings because they trusted “God’s man.” It’s not just financial loss, it’s a loss of trust in God Himself. Many walk away from church disillusioned, saying: “If this was a scam, maybe the whole Christian faith is a scam.” A true prophet does not seek personal profit. A true prophet confronts sin, calls people to repentance, and points to Christ. He doesn’t create his own crypto token or sell “prophetic investment courses.” If you see someone who calls himself a prophet and pushes crypto on you “by God’s command” just walk away. This isn’t spiritual ministry. It’s a business using Jesus’ name as a cover. “Watch out for false prophets!” (Matthew 7:15)












