Google
 

View Full Version : Televangelist's family prospers from ministry


watsayu
07-27-08, - 09:00 AM
Texas religious empire under scrutiny over its tangle of kinship
updated 11:42 p.m. ET, Sat., July. 26, 2008
NEWARK, Texas - Here in the gentle hills of north Texas, televangelist Kenneth Copeland has built a religious empire teaching that God wants his followers to prosper.

Over the years, a circle of Copeland's relatives and friends have done just that, The Associated Press has found. They include the brother-in-law with a lucrative deal to broker Copeland's television time, the son who acquired church-owned land for his ranching business and saw it more than quadruple in value, and board members who together have been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars for speaking at church events.

Church officials say no one improperly benefits through ties to Copeland's vast evangelical ministry, which claims more than 600,000 subscribers in 134 countries to its flagship "Believer's Voice of Victory" magazine. The board of directors signs off on important matters, they say. Yet church bylaws give Copeland veto power over board decisions.

While Copeland insists that his ministry complies with the law, independent tax experts who reviewed information obtained by the AP through interviews, church documents and public records have their doubts. The web of companies and non-profits tied to the televangelist calls the ministry's integrity into question, they say.

"There are far too many relatives here," said Frances Hill, a University of Miami law professor who specializes in nonprofit tax law. "There's too much money sloshing around and too much of it sloshing around with people with overlapping affiliations and allegiances by either blood or friendship or just ties over the years. There are red flags all over these relationships."

Neither Kenneth Copeland nor John Copeland, Kenneth's son and the ministry's executive director, responded to interview requests.

Prosperity gospel
Kenneth Copeland, 71, is a pioneer of the prosperity gospel, which teaches that believers are destined to flourish spiritually, physically and financially — and share the wealth with others.

His ministry's 1,500-acre campus outside Fort Worth is testament to his success. It includes a church, private airstrip, a hangar for the ministry's aircraft and a $6 million, church-owned mansion.

Already a well-known figure, Copeland has come under greater scrutiny in recent months. He is one target of a Senate Finance Committee investigation into allegations of questionable spending and lax financial accountability at six large televangelist organizations that preach health-and-wealth theology.

All have denied wrongdoing, but Copeland has fought back the hardest, refusing to answer most questions from the inquiry's architect, Republican Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa.

The Senate committee didn't set out to determine whether Copeland or the others broke the law, although it could provide information to the Internal Revenue Service if something seems flagrantly wrong, a committee aide said. The main goal, Grassley has said, is to figure out whether existing tax laws governing churches are adequate, which could carry sweeping implications for all religious organizations.

The committee could subpoena Copeland if he remains uncooperative. Neither he nor John Copeland, his son and the ministry's chief executive officer, responded to interview requests.

FACTS ONLY
07-27-08, - 09:10 AM
Televangelist's family prospers from ministry? SHOCKING!!:rolleyes:

nationbuilder
07-27-08, - 09:30 AM
Watsayu is sumtpin else. But when ya post sumptin bout da Catholic Church, he wan get he underoos in a bunch.

blp
07-28-08, - 05:43 PM
Televangelist's family prospers from ministry? SHOCKING!!:rolleyes:
They are not the only ones. There are a number of bahamian pastors out there trying the same thing and are doing the same.

FACTS ONLY
07-28-08, - 05:46 PM
They are not the only ones. There are a number of bahamian pastors out there trying the same thing and are doing the same.


NO SHEET?:sarcastic

cynthialily
07-29-08, - 10:14 AM
This is the sort of thing that cause a lot of people to cut their ties with the 'Church' and seek other paths to God! More fool the congregation for giving their money to so called 'God's Work'. More like Paster Enrichment Programme if you asked me. I live in a community as does everyone else, and if we would only use our eyes we can see those who need assistance all around us. To tell the truth we are much better placed to helping out on the ground than the so called Ministers of the Gospel can ever be. So why give them your money to do what you can do for your neighbours?

blp
07-29-08, - 11:32 AM
NO SHEET?:sarcastic
Did you guys saw the interview with the Bishop B Davis from Full Gospel Church with Wendal Jones on Platform. He stated that God dont want us to look poor and run down. We should have the finest of all things. This the type of thing the churches are now headed into. They seem to have move away from the saving souls thing and now teaching to be rich and bring what ever you have to them and God would bless one. I still lives in Ida Street but these pastor living at Westridge and thing.:realmad:

cynthialily
07-29-08, - 11:50 AM
BLP I hope you know what not to do with your money now!?! Save it long enough and perhaps you too can be living some where near the BISHOPs and I use that term as loosely as it is applied to the 'men of the cloth' in Nassau. I work to hard for my money and give far more than I would like to the Inland Revenue, for me to then take the bread from my children's mouth and give it to some person driving a Lexus, for him to send his children to the best school, wear Prada and live out West. I'ld have to be a fool to do something as crazy as that.

blp
07-29-08, - 11:55 AM
BLP I hope you know what not to do with your money now!?! Save it long enough and perhaps you too can be living some where near the BISHOPs and I use that term as loosely as it is applied to the 'men of the cloth' in Nassau. I work to hard for my money and give far more than I would like to the Inland Revenue, for me to then take the bread from my children's mouth and give it to some person driving a Lexus, for him to send his children to the best school, wear Prada and live out West. I'ld have to be a fool to do something as crazy as that.
AMEN AMEN SISTER>:footmouth

blp
07-29-08, - 11:59 AM
BLP I hope you know what not to do with your money now!?! Save it long enough and perhaps you too can be living some where near the BISHOPs and I use that term as loosely as it is applied to the 'men of the cloth' in Nassau. I work to hard for my money and give far more than I would like to the Inland Revenue, for me to then take the bread from my children's mouth and give it to some person driving a Lexus, for him to send his children to the best school, wear Prada and live out West. I'ld have to be a fool to do something as crazy as that.
Sister Cynthialily,
It was sad to watch that Platform with Mr.Jones and Bishop B W.Davis. Mr.Jones try his best to get his point across to that bishop about the church should not appear to be in the business of riches but the bishop held his position that he drives and lives the finest and he would not change that for no body.

cynthialily
07-29-08, - 12:25 PM
BLP, that is all the Church is to them ...A Business & Free Meal Ticket. It is a shame I was unable to watch the programme you mentioned but to be honest, I guess I wouldn't even if I could. I was taught RE by BWDavis and he was a bit dodgy then. My Grandmother used to say 'not all that claim to be of God are'.

blp
07-29-08, - 03:22 PM
BLP, that is all the Church is to them ...A Business & Free Meal Ticket. It is a shame I was unable to watch the programme you mentioned but to be honest, I guess I wouldn't even if I could. I was taught RE by BWDavis and he was a bit dodgy then. My Grandmother used to say 'not all that claim to be of God are'.
Amen Again.

Sunnyjohn
07-29-08, - 04:17 PM
I still like Kenneth Copeland...BOL


I jes doon send em no money!