Yes, I am both a preacher and a professional sports bettor. To some that sounds like a contradiction. To me, and to the many people I have helped over the years, it represents a deeper truth: faith, responsibility, integrity, and success are not mutually exclusive.
I believe in the Bible. I also believe in mathematics, probability, and discipline. I believe in praying with people, and I believe in investing with purpose. So is gambling a sin? Here is my honest answer.
Betting Is Not the Same as Gambling
To the untrained eye, sports betting looks like gambling. And to be fair, most people do gamble. They chase losses, they bet emotionally, and they take reckless risks. They treat betting as a thrill or a shot in the dark.
I approach sports betting the way others approach the stock market, real estate, or a retirement plan: as a calculated, long-term investment grounded in logic and data. Every wager is backed by research, probability, and discipline. Just like a responsible investor never throws their savings into a single stock, I never encourage anyone to bet more than they can afford to lose. I teach discipline. I preach restraint.
What the Bible Actually Teaches
The Bible never directly condemns investing. In Matthew 25, Jesus tells the Parable of the Talents. The servant who invested his talents and made a return was praised. The servant who buried his out of fear was rebuked.
1 Timothy 6:10 says the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil. Not money itself. Not investing. Not making a profit. It is the love of money, the obsession and the worship of it, that leads people astray.
That is why I draw a hard line between ethical, disciplined investing and reckless, emotional gambling. Done with restraint, a unit plan, and complete honesty, sports betting is a skill and a stewardship, not a sin. The heart behind it is what matters.
Frequently asked questions
Is gambling a sin?
The Bible condemns the love of money, greed, and irresponsibility, not investing or making a profit. Reckless, emotional gambling that harms you or your family is the danger. Disciplined betting treated as a calculated investment, with money you can afford to lose, is a different thing entirely.
Is sports betting a sin?
Sports betting becomes sinful when it is reckless, addictive, or driven by the love of money. Approached with discipline, honesty, and money you can afford to lose, it is a skill-based investment, the way the Wise Guy Team treats it.
What does the Bible say about gambling?
The Bible does not name gambling directly, but it warns against greed, idolatry, and the love of money (1 Timothy 6:10) and praises wise stewardship and investment (the Parable of the Talents, Matthew 25).
Is betting a sin?
Betting itself is not named as a sin. The heart behind it is what scripture warns about: chasing, obsession, and risking what you cannot afford. Discipline, restraint, and honesty are the antidote.
21+. For entertainment and educational purposes, not financial advice. If gambling stops being fun, take a break. 1-800-GAMBLER.
