A 2015 research has shown that more than half of the world billionaires have been identified as Christians.
The study, from the nonpartisan wealth
research firm New World Wealth, found that of the 13.1 million
millionaires in the world, 7.4 million, or 56.2 percent, identify
themselves as Christian when asked about their religion.
The study also revealed that the richest
countries are also Christian-dominant. According to New World Wealth, 7
of the 10 wealthiest countries—ranked by number of millionaires—are
“Christian dominated,” according to the report.
Here’s a list of the billionaires and
entrepreneurs who are Christians from all around the world – the richest
Christians in the world – deducing from the result obtained from the
study. As you read their short biographies, you will see as the
scriptures came alive in their lives yielding massive results for
them.
Checkout the list below:1. John D Rockefeller
He was the founder of the Standard Oil
Company, which dominated the oil industry. Rockefeller revolutionised
the petroleum industry and set the standard for modern philanthropy.
He was a devout Christian who taught in
Sunday school and supported many church-based projects throughout his
life. Rockefeller was quoted as saying “God gave me money”, and he did
not apologise for it. He followed John Wesley’s principle of “gain all
you can, save all you can, and give all you can.”
From his very first paycheck,
Rockefeller tithed ten percent of his earnings to his church. As
Rockefeller’s wealth grew, his giving also increased, with most of his
giving going towards educational and public health causes, as well as
basic science and the art.
He became the world’s richest man and the first American worth more than a billion dollars. After taking into account inflation, he is often regarded as being the richest person in modern history.
He became the world’s richest man and the first American worth more than a billion dollars. After taking into account inflation, he is often regarded as being the richest person in modern history.
2. Mary Kay Ash
Mary
Kay Ash retired in 1963 after being passed over for a promotion in
favour of a man that she had trained. She intended to write a book to
help women in business. The book soon turned into a business plan, and
in 1963, Mary Kay Ashbegan Mary Kay Cosmetics with a $5,000 investment.
The founding principle of Mary Kay
Cosmetics was known as the “Golden Rule”, upon which the company’s
marketing plan was developed to allow women to advance by helping others
to succeed. She advocated “praising people to success” and her slogan
“God first, family second, career third” expressed her belief that the
women in her company should keep their lives in the right balance.
Mary Kay was honoured as the number 1 leading female entrepreneur in American history.
3. Tyler Perry
Within a few years, Tyler Perry went
from being homeless to selling out theatres. Tyler Perry is an outspoken
Christian who credits his success to God. In 2006, he established Tyler
Perry Studios and in 2008 it moved to its current location – a 200,000
square foot studio facility situated in Southwest Atlanta, USA.
4. Henry Heinz
Henry Heinz was a nineteenth century
Christian businessman who founded the Heinz company 1869. Heinz based
his business on Christian principles and proclaimed that his success was
a direct result of his faith in God. Heinz was committed to bringing
out the best in people and his company was credited for its fair
treatment of workers and for pioneering safe and clean food preparation.
Today the Heinz company is worth around
$12 billion. It’s most famous product is tomato ketchup, with 650
million bottles of Ketchup being sold every year.
5. Sam Walton
Sam Walton was an American businessman
and entrepreneur, best known for founding the Wal-Mart retail stores.
With his strong Christian background based on ethics and hard work,
Walton excelled in school, college, and business. Early in his career,
he worked as a management trainee for J. C. Penney.
In 1998, Walton was included in Time’s
list of 100 most influential people of the 20th Century and Forbes
ranked him as the richest man in the United States from 1982 to 1988.
Interestingly, Bill Gates only topped the list for the first time in
1992, the year Walton died.
6. Cher Wang
Cher Wang is a Taiwanese entrepreneur
who co-founded smartphone maker, HTC Corporation and VIA Technologies.
Her late father was Wang Yung-ching, who was one of the richest
individuals in Taiwan.Wang is a devout Christianwho was quoted as saying
that the Bible is “the best book about management practice”. One of the
most important things she has learned from the Bible is that a person
must have a vision, otherwise he or she will be destroyed. The vision
for HTC Corporation came during her early career whilst Wang was working
in First International Computer. As she dragged bulky, heavy computers
to client offices, she knew there must be a better way of designing a
computer that could fit in the palm of your hand. In 1997 she acted on
that vision and HTC Corporation was born.
In May 2011, Forbes ranked her and her
husband Wen Chi Chen as the richest people in Taiwan. Following some
challenges with HTC’s sales dropping in recent months, Forbes ranked her
and her husband’s as Taiwan’s 13th richest people with a combined net
worth of US$2.5 billion in 2013.
7. Folorunsho Alakija
Alakija started out her professional
career in the mid 70s as a secretary at the now defunct International
Merchant Bank of Nigeria, one of the country’s earliest investment
banks. In the early 80s, Alakija quit her job and went on to study
Fashion design in England, returning to Nigeria shortly afterwards to
start Supreme Stitches, a premium Nigerian fashion label which catered
exclusively to upscale clientele.
The business thrived, and Alakija
quickly made a tidy fortune selling high-end Nigerian clothing to
fashionable wives of military bigwigs and society women.
In May 1993 Alakija applied for an
allocation of an Oil Prospecting License (OPL). The license to explore
for oil on a 617,000 acre block – (now referred to as OPL 216) was
granted to Alakija’s company, Famfa Limited. The block is located
approximately 220 miles South East of Lagos and 70 miles offshore
Nigeria in the central Niger Delta.
This was in 1993. Many wealthy Nigerian
businessmen and military bigwigs who had been allocated oil blocs by the
military administration at the time had no clue as to the
technicalities in operating an oil block, so many of them typically
acquired OPLs, and then flipped them off to international oil companies
for substantial profits but Alakija was intelligent. She had no
expertise or experience in running an oil field, but she decided not to
sell off her license. In September 1996, she entered into a joint
venture agreement with Star Deep Water Petroleum Limited (a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Texaco) and appointed the company as a technical adviser
for the exploration of the license, transferring 40 percent of her 100
percent stake to Star Deep. Subsequently, Star Deep sold off 8 percent
of its stake in OPL 216 to Petrobas, a Brazilian company.Folorunsho
Alakija and her family owned 60 percent.
After a lengthy court battle which
lasted for several years with the federal government of Nigeria, the
Supreme Court voided the government’s acquisition of a 50 percent stake
in OML 127 and subsequently transferred the 50 percent stake to Famfa
Oil which saw the little-known oil company Famfa owning a 60 percent in
OML 127, one of Nigeria’s most prolific oil blocks in May 2012,
Folorunsho Alakija is the founder of the
Rose of Sharon foundation, a Christian-based charity which gives out
small grants to widows. In 2013, she replaced Oprah Winfrey to become
the richest black woman in the world with a $1.88b net-worth.
8. Strive Masiyiwa
Strive Masiyiwa is a Zimbabwean born
businessman who founded Econet Wireless. South African based Econet
Wireless is now a global telecommunications group with operations,
investments and offices in more than 15 countries. A born again
Christian, Strive Masiyiwa was quoted as saying that he reads his bible
for at least 4 hours a day – if he’s busy! He tithes 10% of his annual
income to his church. Together with his wife, he personally pays the
school fees for over 22,000 Zimbabwean orphans.
According to Forbes, 2015, he has an estimated net worth of US$600 million.
9. David Green
He is a 70 year old billionaire and
founder of Hobby Lobby, an arts and crafts chain with 520 superstores in
42 states. Green and his family own 100% of the company and he ranks
No. 79 on the list of the 400 richest Americans, with an estimated net
worth of $4.5 billion. He was quoted saying; “If you have anything or if
I have anything, it’s because it’s been given to us by our Creator, so I
have learned to say, ‘Look, this is yours, God. It’s all yours. I’m
going to give it to you.’” Green keeps the total amount of his giving
private but Forbes has estimated his total lifetime giving at above
$500million, making him the largest individual financier of evangelical
causes in America.
Green sponsors the YouVersion Bible app
for mobile phones which has already been downloaded over 50 million
times. He also plans to give 90% of his wealth to ministry work when he
dies. He is the owner of the largest private collection of biblical
antiquities in the world and plans to open the Museum of the Bible
within three years.
Green recalls the memory of his parents’
putting their last dime on the collection plate. His father was a poor
preacher yet despite their financial state, Green’s mother stepped out
in faith and regularly gave to the church. He attributes his blessing to
his mother’s giving and the fact that he continues to give today.
10. Jin Sook and Do Won Chang
Jin Sook and her husband Do Won Chang
rank No. 79 on the list of the 400 richest Americans, in joint place
with David Green. They are the founders of fashion retail outlet
“Forever 21”. In 1981 they immigrated to America from Korea. Do Won held
three jobs to survive, doing janitorial work, pumping gas and working
in a coffee shop.
They soon opened their first clothing
store in 1984. Today Forever 21 operates 480 stores with an estimated
annual turnover of over $3 billion. Jin Sook and Do Won Chang make a
point of printing John 3:16 on the bottom of every Forever 21 shopping
bag.
11. Truett Cathy
Truett Cathy is the 91 year old founder
of food outlet Chick-fil-A and ranks No. 89 on the list of the 400
richest Americans. He opened his first Chick-fil-A outlet in Atlanta in
1967.
Forty-five years later, the devout
Baptist is the CEO of the second largest fried chicken chain in the
country, with KFC being the largest. All Chick-fil-A stores are always
closed on Sundays so that employees can attend church services.
12. Henry Parsons Crowell
Henry Parsons Crowell was an
extraordinary Christian business man and founder of the Quaker Oats
Company. He brought oatmeal to the mainstream, revolutionised marketing
and merchandising methods of his time and advanced the Gospel through
the Henry Parsons and Susan Coleman Crowell Trust. The Trust states that
its purpose is to fund the teaching and active extension of the
doctrines of evangelical Christianity.
Henry had no high school diploma or
business qualifications. At a time when the Quaker Oats Company was
struggling, he brought his business problems to the Lord. An idea soon
came to him to package the oats in individual cardboard containers. Up
to that point, oats were presented for sale in an unhygienic manner in
big barrels or boxes on the grocery floors. The idea was a success and
demand soared.
During the depression of 1893, 15,000
other businesses went bankrupt but Henry decided to make bold
investments in advertising. He put billboards on trains and adverts in
newspapers and magazines promoting “Quaker Oats, the World’s Breakfast”.
He pioneered the use of celebrity endorsements and wrote the ads
himself. At a time when others were failing, Henry’s business was a huge
success. Instead of the usual method of approaching stores and
convincing them of why they should stock his product, he advertised
straight to the consumer. The consumer would in turn make a request to
their local stores that the item be stocked. In so doing, Henry turned
housewives across America into his sales people!
Many business people and corporate
giants came to Christ as a result of their association with Henry and
his wife. The more money Henry gave to Christiancauses, the more he
prospered. He became hugely wealthy in various other businesses. He
believed that all things were a stewardship from God. Towards the end of
his life, Henry had given away 70% of his wealth. He went to be with
the Lord at the age of 82, while riding the commuter train back to his
house with a Bible in his hand.
A book was written about Henry titled “The Cereal Tycoon” by Joe Musser.
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