Their number was up.

Two New Jersey women were busted allegedly trying to game the system — in a round of church bingo.

Teresa Davis, 71, and Keasha Brockington, 38, claimed they had the winning card to score a $200 prize last Thursday at St. Maria Goretti Church Hall in Runnemede.

But their luck didn’t last long — a church volunteer inspecting the card allegedly found the winning numbers had been taped over the original digits.

The Rev. Joseph Ganiel, pastor of the church, told the Courier-Post that he has trained workers to screen bingo cards for that very thing.

“I tell them to look for anything that has tape on it.

“If it has tape, they should hold it up to the light to see if the same number is on the front and the back,” he told the newspaper.

Cops were called and soon showed up at the house of God to investigate the alleged ungodly behavior.

The Camden residents were charged with improper behavior under a borough ordinance and released on their recognizance, police said.

It’s unclear what punishment the women may face for their alleged misdeed.

Ganiel said it’s the first time in 20 years there’s been a scandal at the church’s typically innocuous games.

Thursday’s planned prize now remains in the hands of the church.

It’s not the first scandal at an area church bingo game.

In 2010, three men in Queens were arrested and slapped with a slew of gambling-related charges for swindling $830,000 from bingo games affiliated with the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

The three accrued the fortune from taking side bets on which number would come up next.

The men claimed the proceeds would then benefit church charities in Queens that didn’t actually exist but instead pocketed the dough.

Davis and Brockington couldn’t be reached for comment.

Additional reporting by Kenneth Garger