The Millionaire Soul Church at Heartsease Lane, Norwich, NR7 9NT
At the invitation of a friend, I went to a Sunday service at Soul Church, persuaded that it would be enjoyable. Having been to several Christian churches over the years, the experience was certainly different to anything I’d seen during other services.
For those who haven’t been to Soul Church, it isn’t an old or traditional church. The building is both new and contemporary in architectural style; the service, itself, hosted in a darkened room, with elements not dissimilar to stand-up comedy, but with a religious topic. The people are warm and welcoming. The Fruit of Joy was delivered by Pastor Jon. Full of humour, it was a reminder not to allow life’s negatives to outweigh the positives.
As with all church services, there was a collection. Fundamentally, I have no issue with this, but I had the same amount of cash with me in coinage that I would give to my local church collection.
When the bucket came my way, there was the realisation that the implied ‘going rate’ (ie what others contributed) was more than I had; however, for those without cash, wanting to give, there was the option to add to the collection by contactless card payment.
Bank notes floated from the congregation’s hands into the buckets. I couldn’t control my jaw dropping, staggered by the way people readily parted with their cash; never had I seen this in a single Sunday service in my life.
When I spoke to my friend about this afterwards, she explained that giving is seen as a commitment to God. Soul Church also welcomes monthly tithes by standing order and encourages fundraising.
Whilst appreciating that church funds rely on donations, members of the congregation parting with large amounts of cash didn’t sit right with me, so I took a look at Soul Church online. It is listed on Companies House as a company limited by guarantee. Its latest accounts for the year ending 31st March 2024 show the following total funds position:-
£13,250,280
Compared to 31st March 2023:-
£9,970,560
Financially speaking, Soul Church is thriving; a gain of £3,279,720 between 2023 and 2024 is substantial for any organisation, let alone a church, particularly in the current financial climate.
Giving as a commitment to God is part of the faith that the congregation of Soul Church believe in. I am not sure if this means, in their own way, they believe that the money they give is actually for God, but why does Soul Church need tens of millions of pounds and who is really benefiting out of this?
Personally, Soul Church is not for me. I prefer a traditional service at my village church where I join in the style of worship familiar to me. I’m not at all sure about the sustainability of weekly giving at the level I saw last Sunday.
That eight figure total funds position is difficult to ignore.
2 marzo 2025
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