Showing posts with label Televangelists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Televangelists. Show all posts

Jul 17, 2023

Gilbert Deya: Kenyan 'miracle babies' pastor acquitted of child trafficking

Basillioh Rukanga
BBC News
July 17, 2023

A controversial Kenyan televangelist, who claimed he created miraculous pregnancies, has been acquitted of child-trafficking charges due to insufficient evidence.


The prosecution failed to prove that Gilbert Deya stole five children two decades ago, a Kenyan magistrate said.

He had been accused of handing them to women struggling to become pregnant.

The self-styled pastor was extradited from the UK in 2017, after his decade-long legal battle to remain failed.

Concerns were first raised about the conduct of Mr Deya, who ran a church in London, in a BBC investigation in 2004.

Women experiencing difficulties conceiving who attended the Gilbert Deya Ministries church in Peckham, south-east London, were told they could have "miracle" babies.

But the babies were always "delivered" in backstreet clinics in Kenya's capital, Nairobi. The prosecution said the babies were stolen from poor Kenyan families.

Mr Deya later moved to Scotland, and was arrested in Edinburgh in 2006 under an international arrest warrant issued by Kenya.

In his ruling on Monday, magistrate Robison Ondieki said the prosecution had "failed to establish circumstantial evidence".

Speaking outside court where his supporters cheered him on, Mr Deya said that he had forgiven those who wanted to see him in jail.

"Today I'm acquitted of this kind of burden, a yoke on my shoulder… it has damaged my reputation," he told reporters, adding that it was "sad that I have been labelled as a child stealer".

"I'm grateful that I'm free. I'm now going to continue to proceed to the mission that Jesus gave to me on earth."

He hinted that he may seek to return to the UK.

In 2011, Mary Deya, Mr Deya's then wife, was jailed after being found guilty of stealing a baby from the main referral hospital in Kenya's capital Nairobi and falsely stating she had given birth to the baby.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-66221990

Dec 16, 2021

Kenneth Copeland is the wealthiest pastor in America. So why does he live in a tax-free Texas mansion?

Jay Root, Staff writer
Houston Chronicle
December 15, 2021

FORT WORTH — At his 2015 Southwest Believers’ Convention in Fort Worth, wealthy Texas televangelist Kenneth Copeland explained how he wound up living in a mansion. It all started when God told him years earlier to build that dream home his wife Gloria had described to him.

“Minister this house to her,” he recalled the almighty saying. “It is part of your prosperity.”

Her vision was vast: Rising up three stories and sporting white columns in front, the six-bedroom, six-bath estate on the shores of an exclusive lake community outside of Fort Worth has enough room to fit nearly four basketball courts — more than 18,000 square feet of living space in all.

“You may think that house is too big,” Copeland told the believers’ convention. “You may think it's too grand. I don't care what you think. I heard from heaven. Glory to God, hallelujah!”

What he didn’t mention is that his heavenly plans are being underwritten by Texas taxpayers. Under a little-known statute that county appraisers say is too vague and permissive, the $7 million mansion owned by Copeland’s Eagle Mountain International Church is considered a parsonage — a clergy residence — qualifying for a 100 percent tax break.

That means Copeland’s church gets a pass on what would otherwise be an annual property tax bill exceeding $150,000 — money that other local taxpayers must backfill to cover the cost of schools, police and firefighters.

“You may think that house is too big,” Copeland told the believers’ convention. “You may think it's too grand. I don't care what you think. I heard from heaven. Glory to God, hallelujah!”

What he didn’t mention is that his heavenly plans are being underwritten by Texas taxpayers. Under a little-known statute that county appraisers say is too vague and permissive, the $7 million mansion owned by Copeland’s Eagle Mountain International Church is considered a parsonage — a clergy residence — qualifying for a 100 percent tax break.

That means Copeland’s church gets a pass on what would otherwise be an annual property tax bill exceeding $150,000 — money that other local taxpayers must backfill to cover the cost of schools, police and firefighters.
'Abides by biblical guidelines'

Texas began allowing religious organizations to exempt clergy residences from property taxes nearly a century ago. But the law limits the properties to 1 acre of land and, at least in theory, prohibits ministers from using the generosity of the tax code for “private gain.”

Evans said Copeland’s church easily found a way around both restrictions.

The luxurious 1-acre parsonage is surrounded by a 24-acre lakefront tract valued extraordinarily low – $125,000 – so Copeland’s Eagle Mountain International Church pays less than $3,000 a year in property taxes on it, records show. The district agreed to the value as part of a dispute resolution agreement with the church, Law said.

Real estate experts say that much waterfront property minutes from Fort Worth would sell for many multiples of that on the open market.

“Texas law states that the parsonage exemptions are limited to an acre,” Evans said. “Copeland's mansion is like a textbook example on how lawyers can get around the spirit of the law, using the letter of the law.”

Kenneth Copeland Ministries did not respond to the Chronicle’s request for an interview. But in a written statement spokesman Lawrence Swicegood criticized the “many unfounded claims, misreported facts or grossly exaggerated statements” by the media and others.

“Eagle Mountain International Church (Kenneth Copeland Ministries) always abides by biblical guidelines. Our church also adheres to the various federal, state, county and local codes, statutes and ordinances applicable to the church ministry,” Swicegood said. “Our Church, with a worldwide impact, is helping proclaim and teach Christians around the world how to apply the principles of faith found in God’s word.”
Drawing attention of Congress

Copeland doesn’t seem to be ashamed of his wealth. On the contrary, in the prosperity gospel he champions on the pulpit, wealth is an outward sign of God’s blessing. He routinely exhorts followers to give generously to his church in order to receive material blessings in their own lives.

His parsonage is the architectural embodiment of that blessing. Built in 1999, it “has a sweeping spiral staircase and a bridge that spans across the living room and connects the two sides of the house,” a report by the U.S. Senate Finance Committee found in 2011. “It also has crystal chandeliers and, according to Gloria Copeland, doors that came from a castle.” The report said the bedroom boasts a “huge drop-down ceiling projector and screen.”

Outside, a tennis court graces the grounds. The two garages together are bigger than most homes. A covered boat dock with three slips perches on the shores of Eagle Lake.

Copeland commands a fleet of tax-exempt planes and lives within walking distance of an airport — that would be Kenneth Copeland Airport — giving the octogenarian preacher a jet-setting lifestyle few of his congregants could ever dream of enjoying.

The Lubbock native also tops virtually every list of the wealthiest American pastors, including one compiled in 2018 by the religion lifestyle website Beliefnet, which pegged Copeland’s net worth at $760 million. Never mind that he declared himself a billionaire as far back as 2008.

“I’m a very wealthy man,” Copeland told Inside Edition’s Lisa Guerrero in a viral 2016 interview. He said his wealth derived not from “offerings alone.” He pointed to “a lot of natural gas on our property.” Copeland, who also owns property outside of Tarrant County, didn’t say where his royalties came from.

“When you go back to the Bible, it’s full of wealth,” he told Guerrero.

A protégé of the late Oklahoma televangelist Oral Roberts, Copeland, 85, is a teetotaling Pentecostal preacher who speaks in tongues and can look almost maniacal on stage — like when he’s laughing at the notion that Joe Biden won the presidency or blowing the “wind of God” straight into the camera to snuff out covid-19.

Copeland’s church empire and wealth have generated attention in the media and Congress. In 2007, WFAA-TV’s Brett Shipp reported that Copeland used church-owned aircraft to visit vacation spots. Church officials have said previously that any plane trips made for non-church business are reimbursed.

Comedian John Oliver also skewered him on his show "Last Week Tonight" for his life of luxury. And the U.S. Senate Finance Committee put Copeland in its crosshairs during a probe sparked by allegations of possible misuse of donations by six top televangelist ministries.

In Tarrant County alone, Copeland’s Eagle Mountain International Church has at least 1,400 acres worth of land, buildings and personal property that are valued at almost $60 million, a Chronicle tally of online appraisal district records show.

Besides the religious tax breaks, much of the land carries agriculture exemptions, which dramatically lower the amount owed. Other non-exempt tracts owned by Copeland’s church are valued far below what one might expect for such a sought-after location on Eagle Mountain Lake, a playground for Fort Worth’s well-to-do.

As a result, the church faced a property tax liability of only $23,000 or so this year on that $60 million in property, online tax records show. That’s about what the owner of a $1 million home might expect to pay in taxes in Houston.

Among the tax-free church property are several aircraft worth over $19 million. The church has argued to county appraisers — successfully — that the planes play a vital role in its religious mission.

Copeland’s church made a 2018 video requesting donor help to rig out and store one of his jets — a Gulfstream V he bought from Hollywood producer and actor Tyler Perry.

“Praise God!” he said after the plane arrived on the tarmac outside his tax-free hangar. “Isn’t that good?”
Fighting the county

Copeland’s Eagle Mountain International Church is no stranger to disputes with the Tarrant Appraisal District in Fort Worth — or getting its way.

After the appraisal district set the parsonage’s market value at $10.8 million in 2020, the church protested, and it was lowered back to $7 million this year, according to Law, the chief appraiser. That’s more than $1 million below its 2008 value when adjusted for inflation.

Having a total exemption means the church would pay zero in taxes regardless of the value affixed by county appraisers. So why did Copeland’s church fight the nearly $11 million parsonage value? The chief appraiser speculated the church wants to keep the value low in case it ever loses the exemption.

Evans, the Trinity Foundation activist who has tracked Copeland’s tax-free wealth for decades, has a different theory.

“It makes sense that they would want their tax appraised value to be low so their congregants don't think they're living too extravagantly,” Evans said.

It’s not the only time Copeland’s church has prevailed in a tangle with county appraisers.

In 2008, the district denied an exemption on the church’s Cessna 550 jet after it refused to comply with a routine request to provide a list of salaries, which appraisers wanted in order to ensure the compensation was “reasonable” as the tax code requires.

The church sued.

“Salary information is confidential and not subject to disclosure,” its lawsuit said.

Law recalled the dispute came just as U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, was bearing down hard on Copeland’s lavish living and possible misuse of donations. The chief appraiser said the church was vigorously fighting any disclosure of compensation details.

The most recent and publicly available salary information the appraisal district got for Eagle Mountain International Church dates back to 1995, when Copeland, his wife and family members had been paid $1.5 million. Grassley’s committee wanted more up-to-date figures, but the church balked.

“They knew that if they provided it to us, for exemption application purposes, that it would be public information,” Law said, “and Senator Grassley could get his hands on that information.”

Then, suddenly, Law said the state comptroller’s office in Austin changed its application and dropped language that instructs applicants to “attach a list of salaries and other compensation.” Soon thereafter the district settled the lawsuit after agreeing to accept an affidavit from the church’s CPA saying the salaries were reasonable, Law said.

Chris Bryan, spokesman for state Comptroller Glenn Hegar, said the decision to change the form, which was promulgated without the salary and compensation language in January 2011, preceded the current administration.

Law said his office no longer asks for salary information from religious groups.

One piece of information the appraisal district never bothered to ask Copeland’s church: what clergy member lives in the parsonage on the lake. Nor could the appraisal district provide any records showing Eagle Mountain International Church has ever been asked to reapply for the parsonage tax exemption it first got 21 years ago.

Other churches have faced far more scrutiny. Some have been asked periodically to reapply for their parsonage exemption. And in letter after letter to clergy residence applicants, the appraisal district in Fort Worth warns religious organizations they will lose their exemption unless they say who lives there and how they’re connected to the ministry.

“Give the name of the person who resides at this property. Where did this person live before moving to this location? Give the name and location of the church,” the Tarrant Appraisal District demanded in a letter to New Hallelujah Church in 2010. “Unless you furnish this information within thirty days … the exemption must be denied.” The church complied.

Asked how his office was able to determine the house was dedicated to “the exclusive use as a dwelling place for the ministry,” as the Texas Constitution requires, without asking the church to provide the names of clergy members living there, Law replied: “That’s a good question. I don’t have an answer.”

But more than two decades after the appraisal district first granted a parsonage exemption to Copeland’s church, Law said he will be asking the ministry to reapply.

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/investigations/unfair-burden/article/kenneth-copeland-wealth-pastor-tax-free-mansion-16662283.php

Jan 3, 2021

CultNEWS101 Articles: 1/2/2020

Recovery Workshop, Gregg Schoof, Rwanda, Uganda, Legal, Mount Gerizim Baptist Ministries, Hillsong, Sexual Abuse, Televangelists, Child Marriage, Israel, Legal

To New and Returning Participants,

If you would like to attend Saturday,  1/9, 12:00 Noon – 2:00 Pacific Time, please send in your payment of $50 for one session or $150 for three sessions to reserve your place.  I keep the total participants to about 10 each time to allow for your exploration of relevant issues in your lives. Some of you have already paid but if you could please confirm your attendance, I'd appreciate it.   Janja and I look forward to seeing you on the 9th !

Colleen Russell, LMFT, CGP
415-785-3513
 
"Gregg Schoof claimed the Rwandan government had "taken a stand against God with its heathen practices" before being arrested last year.

Gregg Schoof, the controversial evangelical pastor deported from Rwanda last year, is now living and working in Uganda. 

In a "prayer letter" published today on Fundamental Baptist Missions International, Schoof wrote that his family plans to start new radio stations and local churches in Uganda, and has recently found funding for their work. "In Rwanda, we were entirely by ourselves, but in Uganda, there are several good churches that we can work with," wrote Schoof, who launched the NGO Mount Gerizim Baptist Ministries in Uganda this summer. "From the radio station we had in Rwanda, I still have a love for the radio ministry … I am looking at seven different cities where we could start radio stations with local pastors. We also have an open door to start three stations in Burundi." He then requested funding for radio equipment for four different stations, where each setup, he said, "costs about $15,000."

In Rwanda, Schoof's radio station, The Amazing Grace Christian Radio, was shut down in 2018 after one of the station's presenters, Nicolas Niyibikora, referred to women as "evil" during multiple broadcasts. This prompted the Rwanda Utilities Regulatory Authority to revoke the radio station's license. 

Schoof, a missionary, also had his Baptist church shut down for not complying with city regulations regarding noise pollution and building safety standards. (This closure was not specific to Schoof, and was one of many in Rwanda at the time.) During his 16 years in Rwanda, Schoof frequently critiqued the government for teaching evolution and allowing access to family planning services like condoms and abortion. (Schoof has also continued to struggle with science: At a livestreamed September event in the Lighthouse Baptist Church in Ohio, Schoof told attendees and viewers that believed he had the coronavirus in 2019, and said he "took God's medicines … good old fashioned exciting raw garlic." There is no scientific evidence that eating raw garlic will cure COVID-19.)

After his radio station was closed in Rwanda, Schoof tried to host a news conference in 2019 to discuss his situation. The conference did not occur, as he didn't have government approval. "I did not come here to fight the government," he said in a written statement. "But this government has taken a stand against God with its heathen practices." Schoof was then arrested for, according to Reuters, "disturbing public order," before he was deported. 

Uganda, where Schoof and his family have lived since November 2019, has its own contentious history with evangelical missionaries from the United States, many of whom have been linked to promoting anti-LGBTQ legislation and exporting homophobia. In his letter today, Schoof said, "Truly, God has given us a wide open door in Uganda. Thank you again for your interest in our ministry and for your prayers and support."

"Last month, news broke that Carl Lentz, one-time "spiritual confidant" to celebrities including Justin Bieber and head pastor at Hillsong megachurch, was "released" from his job due to unspecified "moral failures." Soon afterward, it was revealed that Lentz cheated on his wife, having had an affair with Brooklyn-based fashion designer Ranin Karim (and potentially, many others). As of last week, it appeared like his redemption arc was beginning to unfold, having reportedly entered treatment for anxiety, depression, and "pastoral burnout." Except, of course, new information about a seedy, "sexual inappropriate" culture at Hillsong has begun to emerge, and I just don't get how a "religious man" gets out of this one!

According to Page Six, back in 2018, whistleblowers within the Hillsong organization sent a letter to church leaders citing "verified, widely circulated stories of inappropriate sexual behavior amongst staff/interns," allegedly labeling Hillsong "...dangerous and a breeding ground for unchecked abuse."

Apparently, one high-ranking church leader was instructed to leave after the letter exposed he had "multiple inappropriate sexual relationships with several female leaders and volunteers and was verbally, emotionally, and according to one woman, physically abusive in his relationships with these women." Another high-ranking male church leader was accused of "not respecting physical and sexual boundaries within dating relationships with female church volunteers."

The letter also stated that church volunteers face "harsh words, belittlement, name-calling from certain pastors and staff," and one pastor in particular was guilty of "losing his temper, bullying, yelling and outright screaming at other volunteers and leaders... that's just how they are—it's their personality/culture."

How very Christian of them! The time for a reckoning is nigh."

"With every verse and refrain, Bryan Dougan's voice becomes more urgent. "We are so weary of this coronavirus and so hungry for the physical community of the Holy Family. Feed our desperate hungers with your divine mercy and grace. Bread of the world, hear our prayer." Despite the intention in his timbre, his prayers echo hollowly in the cavernous nave; its pews sit empty. A member of Church of the Holy Family in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Dougan is one of the congregants who helps create Sunday's weekly video service, a necessity of the pandemic given the dangers of mass gatherings.

"We're basically producing a TV show," observes Reverend Clarke French, who says the process has been the steepest learning curve of his twenty years in the clergy. "I had to learn five new software platforms since the pandemic started."

In March, two days after the state reported its first COVID-19 death, North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper issued an executive stay-at-home order that banned gatherings of more than ten people — essentially outlawing in-person religious services. A May order that moved the state to 'Phase One' of the reopening process relaxed general restrictions by allowing retail stores to resume business at 50% capacity, but permitted religious institutions to exceed the ten-person gathering limit only if their services were held outdoors. That decision provoked a lawsuit from a coalition of religious conservatives who argued that churches were being unfairly targeted, an infringement on the First Amendment protection of the free exercise of religion."
"Parents of girl who was set to marry 24-year-old man arrested, daughter transferred to custody of welfare authorities; mother insists child was mature enough

Police prevented a Haredi wedding of a 14-year-old girl to a 24-year-old man in Jerusalem, at the last minute.

The ceremony had been slated to take place last week, Channel 12 said Thursday, reporting that police were tipped off shortly beforehand and arrested the girl's parents.

They have since been released to house arrest, but the child has been placed in the custody of welfare services.

In a recorded phone conversation with Channel 12, the girl's mother insisted that she was not aware Israeli law bars marriages of children under the age of 18, and insisted there was nothing wrong with the arrangement.

"I didn't know this was like a person stealing or murdering or that it is something that harms anyone," the woman claimed. "I know a lot of girls who get married at the age of 15. It happens a lot [in our community]. There are a lot of girls who are ready for it."

She lamented that relationships between teenagers in the "secular world" are deemed legitimate, while the marriage of children in Haredi communities are not. The mother went on to demand that authorities return her daughter home."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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Oct 23, 2020

CultNEWS101 Articles: 10/23/2020

"Scientology is a word that leaves a poor taste in some people's mouths. Opinions of the Church of Scientology are divided, with critics on one side and devoted members on the other. Some people refer to the religious movement as a cult.

Some high-profile members advocate for the organization. One celebrity that joined the church years ago was Chicago P.D. actor Jason Beghe. He came out years ago about being a member and why he left."

NXIVM cult founder Clare Bronfman has barely been in jail a week, and she's already asking a federal judge to let her out.

The Seagram's heiress, who's being held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, requested Thursday that she be released from custody while she appeals her 81-month sentence.

Her lawyers took issue with the stiff sentence of more than six years, since federal prosecutors only asked for five years.

"Her sentence of eighty-one months of imprisonment is disparate with the sentences received by other individuals who pleaded or were found guilty of similar non-violent crimes," wrote Bronfman's lawyer, Ronald Sullivan."

" ... Former NXIVM member Sarah Edmondson, who was coerced into being branded with leader Keith Raniere's initials, told Insider that executives of the group wouldn't allow licensed psychologists to come to the group's training.

Leaders also barred life coaches or consultants, except for certain cases if top officials interviewed them and deemed them acceptable.

High-ranking NXIVM members told lower-ranking ones that therapists were barred because Raniere's self-improvement methods were so helpful and original, psychologists would steal them and use them as their own.

However, Edmondson, whose mother is a therapist, now believes that this rule (and the explanation for it) was a cover-up used to protect Raniere."

" ... William Wasmus was a Grove City evangelical minister who conducted services on Public Access Television back in 1994.

"He referred to himself as God's prophet in the land of the last days," says former church member Dave Wexler. "His ministry was a miracle healing ministry."

Wexler later discovered Wasmus was using his ministry to connect with children who he molested and even raped."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.

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Please forward articles that you think we should add to CultNEWS101.com.



May 20, 2020

CultNEWS101 Articles: 5/20/2020





Multi-Level and Network Marketing, Mind Control, Conspiracy Theories, Televangelist Jim Bakker, Eliezer Berland, ultra-Orthodox, Shuvu Bonim

Komo News: FTC warning to Multi-Level and Network Marketing companies: Cool it on the claims
" ... The FTC is going after multi-level marketers that use the coronavirus pandemic in their pitches to sell products or recruit new people.

"Two concerns that you have to be aware of when you're a MLM participant," said FTC Regional Director Chuck Harwood. First, you want to make sure that you're passing on reliable information."

Recent warning letters to 10 MLM companies point to unsubstantiated health claims related to COVID, that have no scientific verification and violate the FTC Act, which prohibits misleading and deceptive practices.

"There's simply no substantiation that the kinds of products that are being marketed and sold through these MLM schemes will prevent someone from contracting COVID-19 or help you recover from COVID-19 any faster than you would otherwise," Harwood said

Another big problem is inflated claims about the money you can make with a network marketing business.

"You have to be very careful if you're investing in one, be sure that the promises of how much money you're going to make, are actually truthful. a lot of times they're inflated," Harwood said. "A lot of times, what we find is that people who get into these kind of schemes- whether it's related to COVID-19 or anything else- find that they lose far more money than they ever make." 

The FTC website dedicates an entire section to multi-level marketing businesses and pyramid schemes and how to tell the difference. You can also learn what to look for and how to research a company before you get involved."

"A celebrity cook who called the coronavirus a government trick to plant mind control chips into Germans under the guise of vaccinations was hauled away by police from an unlawful demonstration in front of the parliament building. A pop star attacked face mask requirements and demanded evidence that Covid-19 really exists, while a leading Roman Catholic Cardinal in Germany added his name to a letter claiming the pandemic was a pretext to create a global government.

Prominent supporters of conspiracy theories are focusing on the Covid-19 shutdown that has crippled economies around the world, with angry protests against government-imposed limits on freedoms erupting across the country in the past week, despite rules banning such gatherings.

Police and journalists have also been injured in spasms of violent outbursts at the at-times unruly demonstrations. There are growing fears that the eclectic groups could exacerbate doubts about democracy in Germany by capitalising on the turmoil of the coronavirus."

CNN: Televangelist Jim Bakker is recovering from a stroke, his wife says

"Famed televangelist Jim Bakker recently had a stroke, his wife said. His eponymous TV show will continue to film without him while he recovers.Lori Bakker announced her 80-year-old husband would take a sabbatical from "The Jim Bakker Show," the Christian TV program the couple cohosts.Working nonstop took a "huge toll" on her husband's health, she said. Bakker was recently sued by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt for claiming a silver product could kill coronavirus."We are thankful that Jim is okay, and that he is now at home with our family," she wrote in a Facebook post from the show's page. "Jim will be back!"For decades, Bakker and his then-wife, the late Tammy Faye Messner, ran the evangelistic empire "Praise the Lord," or PTL, from their own theme park in Fort Mill, South Carolina, near Charlotte, North Carolina. The two hosted "The PTL Club," one of the best-known Christian programs of its time, throughout the 1970s and '80s.He stepped down from the ministry in 1987 amid financial and sex scandals. The Charlotte Observer reported then that he'd paid off a church secretary with whom he'd had sex. He briefly handed over the reins to fellow televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr.Two years later, he was charged with fraud and sentenced to 45 years in prison, though he served just under five.He returned to TV in the 2000s with "The Jim Bakker Show," this time filmed from Missouri with his second wife, Lori, as cohost.But on a February episode of the show, Bakker and a guest discussed a product, called "Silver Solution," that they claimed could eliminate the coronavirus from the body within hours. There's currently no cure for the novel coronavirus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."

"The Jerusalem District Attorney's Office announced Monday that a sex offender rabbi who has been accused of defrauding his sick and elderly followers out of millions of shekels will be indicted, pending a hearing, for a number of alleged fraud and tax offenses.
Eliezer Berland will be charged with tax evasion, violations of money laundering laws and other offenses for failing to report and even concealing income generated through his activities at his ultra-Orthodox Shuvu Bonim sect.
Berland allegedly carried out counseling, fundraising and teaching and also offered what were called life-saving benedictions — all for a fee that wasn't declared to the authorities.
In addition, he is expected to be charged for paying employees millions of shekels without salary slips or paying tax as required.
The expected charges are in addition to a parallel case in which he was arrested for fraud after hundreds of people filed a police complaint against him for selling prayers and "wonder drugs" to desperate members of his community, and for promising families of individuals with disabilities that their loved ones would be able to walk and families of convicted felons that their loved ones would be freed from prison."



News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.
Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.

Selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view in order to promote dialogue.

May 18, 2020

Televangelist Jim Bakker is recovering from a stroke, his wife says

Televangelist Jim Bakker is recovering from a stroke, his wife says
Scottie Andrew
CNN
May 8, 2020

(CNN)Famed televangelist Jim Bakker recently had a stroke, his wife said. His eponymous TV show will continue to film without him while he recovers.

Lori Bakker announced her 80-year-old husband would take a sabbatical from "The Jim Bakker Show," the Christian TV program the couple cohosts.

Working nonstop took a "huge toll" on her husband's health, she said. Bakker was recently sued by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt for claiming a silver product could kill coronavirus.

"We are thankful that Jim is okay, and that he is now at home with our family," she wrote in a Facebook post from the show's page. "Jim will be back!"

For decades, Bakker and his then-wife, the late Tammy Faye Messner, ran the evangelistic empire "Praise the Lord," or PTL, from their own theme park in Fort Mill, South Carolina, near Charlotte, North Carolina. The two hosted "The PTL Club," one of the best-known Christian programs of its time, throughout the 1970s and '80s.

He stepped down from the ministry in 1987 amid financial and sex scandals. The Charlotte Observer reported then that he'd paid off a church secretary with whom he'd had sex. He briefly handed over the reins to fellow televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr.

Two years later, he was charged with fraud and sentenced to 45 years in prison, though he served just under five.

He returned to TV in the 2000s with "The Jim Bakker Show," this time filmed from Missouri with his second wife, Lori, as cohost.

But on a February episode of the show, Bakker and a guest discussed a product, called "Silver Solution," that they claimed could eliminate the coronavirus from the body within hours. There's currently no cure for the novel coronavirus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In March, Schmitt, the Missouri Attorney General, sued Bakker and "The Jim Bakker Show" production company for misrepresenting "Silver Solution" as a coronavirus cure.

"Anyone who has bought 'Silver Solution' from 'The Jim Bakker Show' should know that it cannot cure or treat coronavirus," the Missouri Attorney General office announced in a statement.



https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/08/us/jim-bakker-stroke-trnd/index.html

Oct 2, 2017

David Mainse put Canadian take on his television ministry, avoiding scandals that felled U.S. televangelists

David Mainse
The gift of Mainse, who died Monday at 81, was his ability to present deeply religious programming that did not come across as fire-and-brimstone preaching
Graeme Hamilton
National Post
September 26, 2017

David Mainse was a Pentecostal pastor in the Ottawa Valley in the early 1960s when he noticed TV aerials popping up on people’s roofs. He approached the owner of the TV station in Pembroke, Ont., about a weekly show, a way of entering the homes of people who weren’t filling the pews Sunday morning.

The owner was not a Christian, but he was intrigued by the promise of musical performances by Mainse’s wife, Norma-Jean, and her brothers, a popular local act. In 1962 he gave Mainse a 15-minute slot Saturday nights between the news and the late-night movie, laying down one rule: no preaching.

From those unlikely circumstances a television ministry — which in 1977 would become 100 Huntley Street — was born. The show would span decades and become a fixture on the dial for Canadians, whether they were seeking out the good word or simply flipping channels.

The gift of Mainse, who died from leukemia Monday at the age of 81, was his ability to present deeply religious programming that did not come across as the fire-and-brimstone preaching dreaded by the Pembroke station owner.

“Dad always said it’s amazing how much of the gospel you can pack into the introduction to a song,” his son, Ron, said in an interview Tuesday.

“It was a kind of a music and interview variety show, and not a preaching show.” His style was not “to beat people over the head with a Bible” but to “speak the truth in love,” Ron Mainse said.

While some American televangelists were purporting to heal the lame and appealing for donations that they would use to pad their bank accounts, 100 Huntley Street offered a decidedly Canadian take on religious programming.

Mainse was born in 1936 in Campbell’s Bay, Que., and was raised outside Ottawa by his missionary parents. When his mother died when he was just 12, he turned away from church, but at age 16 he experienced a religious conversion. He studied theology and was ordained, serving as a pastor in the Ontario communities of Brighton, Deep River, Sudbury and Hamilton.

But it was on television that Mainse shone. “He had an amazing kind of magic with the lens,” said George McEachern, who worked alongside Mainse on 100 Huntley Street for 25 years. “He was a tremendous communicator.”

Lorna Dueck, who was a co-host with Mainse on 100 Huntley Street and is now CEO of the not-for-profit parent corporation Crossroads Christian Communications Inc., said he had an ability to connect with viewers. “When he looked into the camera, hundreds of people phoned in for prayer,” she said. The show’s 24-hour prayer line receives 1,200 calls a day from people seeking spiritual help, she said.

When scandal felled American televangelists Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart in the 1980s, the image of the whole business suffered. Crossroads saw a steep drop in the donations that paid to keep 100 Huntley Street on the air.

In 1992, as Mainse dealt with a financial crisis that forced him to lay off more than a quarter of Crossroads employees, he told the Ottawa Citizen the U.S. scandals had made people suspicious. He said he began carrying around his T4 income tax slip showing his annual income of $48,000 to prove he was not in the business for the money.

“I don’t need to make more. The Lord promised to supply our needs, not our greeds,” he said at the time.

“The televangelist scandal of the ’80s deeply affected David,” Dueck said, noting that he was called in to help set the PTL Club back on course after host Jim Bakker was charged with fraud. “He knew the players who had fallen, Jimmy Swaggart, Jim Bakker,” she said. “He knew them personally, and it deeply troubled and grieved David.”

She said his integrity was apparent, and it allowed him to weather the storm. In 2008 the Christian Council of Canadian Charities honoured Mainse and Billy Graham for their “lifetimes of integrity.”

Mainse waded into political debates, most recently coming out against the legalization of gay marriage. In 2003, as he announced his plan to retire as host of 100 Huntley Street, he said he wanted to devote more time to preserving the traditional definition of marriage “as meaning a man and a woman.”

Dueck said he told her that he felt like the champion of losing social causes, having unsuccessfully opposed euthanasia, abortion, and gay marriage. But she said he felt the primary cause of his life was a winner: “Get right with Jesus and love people.”

Despite having created Canada’s longest running daily TV show, which producers say reaches 1.3 million viewers a week, Mainse never aspired to be a celebrity. And the country’s elite did not see him as one. Dueck said his name was put forward several times for the Order of Canada but he was never selected.

“I don’t think the official power structures knew what to do with David Mainse,” she said. “We don’t understand why in some people’s minds he remains a minor player. To the millions of people who know his broadcast work, he remains a hero of love of the highest degree.”

Mainse leaves behind his wife of 59 years, Norma-Jean, daughters Elaine and Ellen and sons Reynold and Ron.

• Email: ghamilton@nationalpost.com | Twitter: grayhamilton

http://nationalpost.com/news/religion/david-mainse-put-canadian-take-on-his-television-ministry-avoiding-scandals-that-felled-u-s-televangelists

Mar 4, 2017

Peter Popoff, the Born-Again Scoundrel

Peter Popoff
Peter Popoff
MARK OPPENHEIMER
GQ
February 28, 2017

Once, Peter Popoff was a magical, mystical man of God—a giant among '80s televangelists. And Lord, was he rich! But he was also an enormous fraud who was ruined in scandal. Ah, but here in America, time absolves all that. And if a fellow is clever enough, he can remake his kingdom and amass quite a fortune. For the Lord worketh in mysterious ways.

He came to me when I least expected. I was in a hotel bed, enrobed in terry cloth, my teeth brushed, my hand aloft holding the remote. This was a year ago, and the soft glow of cable TV was the room's only light. I was flitting between channels when I happened upon BET. There I saw an old white man preaching to an audience of elderly black people. And as I wondered what on earth this pasty alter kocker was doing on black TV, it came to me: I had seen this man before.

It had been years, and he had changed some: a few more wrinkles, a little hitch in his gait, the hair a bit more aggressively black. But it was him. Peter Popoff was back. And he was as mesmerizing as ever.

Sitting on a stage, in an upholstered chair, Popoff implored his television audience to call an 800 number so that he could send them a secret “faith tool” that God had recently given him as he was “praying about the four red moons of this year of Jubilee.” If that wasn't incentive enough, there was more reason to reach for the phone. On the screen, below Popoff, flashed the message “Call now for your free miracle spring water.”
As if to answer the very question that occurred to me—what does one do with miracle spring water?—Popoff explained that good times were ahead, very good times. “I can see God leading people into new homes, new automobiles!… God gives supernatural debt cancellation!… And I'd like to send you the miracle spring water.”

The show cut to video of Popoff working a room of sick, elderly African-Americans. “Is that your cane?” he asked an old woman. “I believe God has given you a divine chiropractic treatment! Amen! Hallelujah! Amen in Jesus's name! You can walk now without the cane. Take a few steps and make the Devil mad!”

The woman stood up, with his help, started shaking her hands, and then, as the organ and drum picked up the tempo, started shaking her hands faster. She never took very many steps, but she vibrated with energy. Popoff yanked her cane away and tossed it up onstage. The scene dissolved to a woman sharing a bit of testimony with Popoff and the crowd. “I took your holy water and put it in my son's shoes,” she said. “I put it in his bed, I put it on his pillow, and my son joined the church and he got saved and he's still in church—and then I got $3,800 and new furniture.”

Such blessings! The prevailing sentiment in the room was Thanks be to God—but also Thanks be to Peter Popoff. He was hugging people, punching the air with them. Everyone had a story: Addictions had disappeared. Appliances had been delivered. All proof of the miracle water's efficacy. And getting off crutches, that was big, too—this is why people needed Popoff's healing touch. “You know where that pain went?” Popoff cried after one healing. “I'll tell you where that pain went. It went back to the pits of hell!”

Staring at the TV, I was transfixed. This was vintage stuff—a sort of resurrection, if you will. Like so many televangelists, Popoff had his heyday in the 1980s, back when preaching on TV was big business—and plenty mainstream. The flamboyant, seemingly pious preachers who solicited cash for enormous, if dubious, ministries were household names. But one by one, they fell to disgrace: Jim Bakker paid off a woman who'd accused him of rape; Jimmy Swaggart was caught with a prostitute at a roadside motel. But none were humiliated quite as publicly as Popoff.

Popoff had been the best at what he did—the boldest and baddest, the most don't-give-a-damn cheesy. He dared you to doubt him, which helped insulate him from charges that he was a fraud. With a promise to heal the sick, Popoff convened huge crowds, where he relied on a shtick that involved calling out the name and ailment of someone in the audience he had never met, as if God had just vouchsafed him the information. “I'm looking for an Ada Mae, and I know that she has kidney problems! Where are you, Ada Mae?”—that sort of thing. (Steve Martin borrowed this bit of Popoff's routine for his 1992 flick Leap of Faith, and Chevy Chase had fun at Popoff's expense in Fletch Lives.)

But a key component of his act eventually spelled his downfall. In 1986, a team of freelance debunkers, including the magician James Randi, took a radio scanner to a Popoff revival, where they overheard Popoff 's wife, Liz, feeding him names and illnesses. Apparently, plants in the audience would chat people up or get them to jot down details, then feed their information to Liz, who passed it on to her husband through an earpiece. Listening through the gizmo in his ear, Popoff would call out to the crowd as if he possessed the omniscience of the Lord.

Randi's tape of the ruse made its way to The Tonight Show, where Johnny Carson—who harbored great disdain for charlatans—exposed Popoff 's technique. The Tonight Show exposé made national news, and in 1987 the Peter Popoff Evangelistic Association filed for bankruptcy. He seemed done for.

Popoff had been the boldest and baddest of televangelists—the most don't-give-a-damn cheesy.

Yet here he was, all these years later, peddling miracle water and his own healing touch to an audience of African-Americans who seemed not to have gotten the memo that he was a mountebank. It appeared to me that Popoff was exploiting more than just American forgetfulness. He was tapping into something far more powerful: our desire to get something for nothing.

Right alongside our Puritan work ethic and entrepreneurial drive runs our instinctive love for the lottery. And in modern Christianity, this yearning for the jackpot has given rise to what's known as the prosperity gospel—the magical thinking that if we give a few bucks, close our eyes, and pray real hard, riches and blessings will be ours. It's the tradition of Joel Osteen, Creflo Dollar, and all the other TV preachers who rose up to take the place of the vanquished buffoons from the 1980s.

He may have once been branded a charlatan, but Popoff could probably see that we never stopped making space in our hearts for a guy like him—a guy who knows what we want to believe. In fact, maybe he realized that today, more than ever, we are primed for what he has to sell. After all, in an age when a TV tycoon can win the White House, vowing to build walls and move markets with sheer chutzpah, there's opportunity for a clever fellow who knows that people running on pure faith fall easily in love with big promises.

What I didn't yet know was the full extent of what the old preacher had gotten himself up to. I wasn't aware yet of the ski vacations or his affinity for tennis or how much he adored his Bentley. I didn't know how it was all funded through a tax-exempt ministry that reaches its flock via live events and a blizzard of mailings, expertly crafted to separate poor people from their money. I had no idea that peddling miracles was, these days, as lucrative as ever.

When I got home, I began devouring episodes of the new Popoff show. I signed up for his mailing list. Almost immediately the letters began to come. The envelopes also included the miracle water or one of various worthless, made-in-China gewgaws: “revelation stones”; red strings that resemble the Kabbalah bracelets Madonna used to wear; and “baruch wallets,” flimsy silver lamé pouches with a slit at the top, in which I was encouraged to insert money to mail back to Popoff. And, of course, everything came with requests for more money: “REMEMBER YOU MUST SOW THE LARGEST BILL YOU HAVE OR THE LARGEST CHECK YOU CAN WRITE.”

I only grew more curious. Why, I wondered, were so many people willing to trust a “prophet” of God who needed an earpiece, and why would they trust his advice on prosperity even after his own financial house had collapsed? I called and sent e-mails to Popoff's organization, People United for Christ, but nobody got back to me. I decided that I'd settle for a glimpse of one of his public crusades, maybe see some people get healed, but I discovered that they weren't advertised. I heard from a veteran Popoff-watcher that the best way to get to one of his shows was to give money—then, if he was planning an event near where you lived, he'd send you a ticket. So I asked friends in ten locales spread across the country to give $10 to Popoff, then sit back and wait for tickets.

I fed my curiosity in the meantime with the broad outline of Popoff's story. I knew he'd been born in 1946 in Germany, where his father, an ethnic Bulgarian, was an evangelical pastor. The family had fled the Communists in 1950, eventually settling in Montclair, California. Popoff was homeschooled after the eighth grade, so he could travel and preach with his father. After graduating from college, Popoff married his wife, Liz, and they embarked on an itinerant life, preaching the Pentecostal gospel across the country. They moved into radio, then television.

In his extracurricular life, Popoff came to see himself, in those Cold War years, as a kind of Christian 007, sneaking Bibles into Communist lands. A photograph in his 1980 memoir, Behind Curtains of Darkness a New Fire Is Blazing, shows Popoff in front of a boat, hair flowing like a Bee Gee's, two Bibles fanned in his left hand. The caption reads: “Peter prepares to drop Bibles into the Black Sea off Istanbul, Turkey. Wrapped in Styrofoam for buoyancy and waterproofing, the Bibles eventually washed up on Communist shores.”

The book makes the claim that Peter was “smuggling thousands of Bibles” into China, and that in Eastern Europe, people would walk 150 miles to hear him preach. Border guards who could have had him arrested let him pass because “they were hungry to know about God.” In 1982 the AP reported on Popoff's use of helium balloons to deliver Bibles and gospel pamphlets from Finland into the Soviet Union.
Religious enthusiasm, as with boy bands, reality TV, and other aspects of pop culture, cycles in and out. After the bankruptcy, Popoff, like some of his fellow Pentecostal preachers, receded somewhat from view. Before long, however, he'd rebranded his ministry as People United for Christ, and he'd reconsidered his audience—this time focusing on African-Americans. “His message hasn't changed,” The Washington Post noted in 1998, “but the audience he is aiming for has.”

The pivot has allowed Popoff to slip from the shadow of his old scandal and, in the years since, quietly rebuild his empire. According to publicly available IRS forms, by 2003, Popoff 's new organization was netting over $9 million a year and Popoff was paying himself and his wife a combined salary of more than half a million dollars a year; their son, daughter, and son-in-law were each netting over a hundred grand. Three years later, revenues for Popoff's ministry were just over $35 million. And according to a document related to his purchase of a Bentley in January 2009, Peter listed his monthly income at $100,000. The couple's 7,300-square-foot house, purchased for $4.5 million in 2007, sits in a gated community in Bradbury, California, and is owned by his church. As a parsonage, it is tax-free.

The actual ministry, though, has been something of a mystery. On paper, Popoff's new outfit hadn't technically been a church—that's because it never had a physical house of worship—but instead functioned as a religious non-profit. But in 2006, it reorganized and aligned itself with a small ministry called Word for the World, which operated out of a tiny storefront church in Farmers Branch, Texas. The apparent oddity of the merger was raised with Popoff in a 2011 deposition when he was asked why an international TV ministry based in California might merge with a minuscule church outside of Dallas. “Our board of directors,” Popoff said, “felt it was in the best interests.” Popoff didn't mention another possible benefit: With this new status, his ministry would no longer be required to disclose its annual income or its salaries to the IRS.

A few months ago, I flew to Texas and tried to visit Word for the World on a Sunday morning, hoping to catch a rousing Pentecostal service. I was surprised when the address for the church I had found online took me to a storefront in an industrial park. The parking lot was deserted, and the building was locked. There was no church sign outside—and certainly no sign of a church inside. Squinting through a window, past venetian blinds, I glimpsed a carpeted foyer, and beyond that, an empty room. This didn't look like a house of worship; it looked like a mailing address. Later, Popoff's people would tell me that the church had recently moved and it was going by a new name now, too. Its new address was just down the road, I discovered, in a strip mall.

If I wasn't going to see a service, I still wanted to visit Popoff's office. His organization, People United for Christ, keeps its headquarters in a suite of white buildings in an industrial section of Upland, California, an hour's drive inland from Los Angeles.

I had expected to be rebuffed. “When they see any media come by, it's a total lockdown on the facility,” I had been told by Crystal Sanchez, age 33, who used to work at Popoff's headquarters. I had found Sanchez after reading The Real Truth Behind People United for Christ, the e-book detailing her time there that she self-published in 2013. “There are cameras surrounding both buildings. If news vans come by, the receptionist or security guy, whoever sees it first, she notified all the top people, letting them know the building is on lockdown.”

Popoff's employees are on guard for more than just the media. Sometimes, Sanchez said, those taken in by Popoff's message would breach security. “This lady came in, and everyone said she was nuts,” Sanchez told me. “She'd sold all her belongings. She had come to talk to Peter.” Popoff didn't come out to meet her; nor did any of his employees.

Sanchez said that when she took the job as a “donation processor,” she thought she might gain new skills while serving God, too. But she soon began to worry that she wasn't really working for a church. “I knew about televangelists,” Sanchez said. “I knew there had been scams. But I had never heard about him before.” Sanchez said that the buildings were essentially big processing centers for cash, checks, and valuables. On her second day on the job, opening envelopes, she counted about $30,000 in donations—in a room filled with about 20 other women doing the same job. “When ‘partners’ wouldn't donate so much money, they would cut back on staff,” Sanchez said. When times were good, they would ramp up.

The workload depended on what Popoff was saying on his paid television spots. “The real clincher,” Sanchez said, “was when they started asking for all your gold, your trinkets, your heirlooms. And tubs and tubs of gold and stones came in. They would take the stones out, take the gold to be resold.” Anything that wasn't valuable was shredded. “It was a shame how many shred bins were full to the rim with prayer requests awaiting to be destroyed and never seen again,” Sanchez wrote.

Sanchez, who quit in early 2012, was one of two ex-employees who spoke with me. The other, somebody higher up, told me that the distribution of the “miracle spring water” was subcontracted to a packaging plant in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. So one day I took the Garden State Parkway to have a look at Unit Pack, a family-run firm that specializes in packaging those little samples of shampoo, pharmaceuticals, and the like. I met the very friendly father and two sons who owned the place, and they confirmed for me that they do business with Popoff, but they didn't say much more.

And then, on my way out, I got even closer to the truth. I was walking out toward my car when I saw a guy pulling down the metal door at a loading dock on the side of the building. He looked 30-ish and was wearing a Cowboys baseball cap and a greasy Unit Pack jumper. Two rings through his lower lip framed his broad smile. We started talking. He said he was the only guy in receiving—if it came to Unit Pack, it came to him. I asked about Popoff.

“What troubles you?” Popoff asked. I held up my broken finger. He touched it and le t loose a loud stream of glossolalia, speaking in tongues, as Pentecostals do. “Shabalalalalalalala!”

“Yeah, we do him,” the man said. “We go through Poland Spring.”

“The Popoff water is Poland Spring?” I asked.

“Yeah, they deliver it right here,” he said. “Paul is the guy who does the deliveries. Once or twice a month he comes. For Peter Popoff, we do 35 gallon-size jugs at a time, once or twice a month. One time they came with 130 gallon-size jugs.”

And then he said something mysterious, maybe even beautiful. I still can't decide. Popoff, he said, sends his own pre-blessed water, in a 16-ounce bottle, to add to all the jugs of Poland Spring. So that every little package of water contains a few molecules of holiness.

“I'm the one who pours the blessed water into the drums,” said the man with the lip rings. “I measure it out and add it into the drums.”

Was it possible, I wondered, that Popoff believes in his own powers, just a little? Did he fear God just enough to gesture toward authenticity, so that if he was ever questioned at the pearly gates about the millions of dollars of other people's gold and silver and Social Security money, he could say that in every New Jersey-packed packet of holy water there was a minuscule amount of blessing? I didn't know it then, but I would soon get to ask Popoff in person.

Late last November, my nationwide dragnet for tickets to see Popoff snagged something. One of the friends I'd cajoled into donating got a text message inviting her to an event in Washington, D.C. That's how I found myself, two days later, hustling into the Marriott Wardman Park for a 7 p.m. show. As it happens, I'd broken my left pinkie a month earlier, so my hand was in a splint. I looked like the real deal: a man in need of supernatural healing.

The conference room was packed with a thousand people, maybe two thousand. In this crowd, I was very white, very young, and very male. Some of the ladies had walkers or wheelchairs, some were healthy enough to dance in the aisles to the gospel music playing over loudspeakers. Hired men in suits passed out slips, telling us to jot down the ailments for which we needed intercession.

When Peter Popoff finally emerged, he gave a short sermon, but his heart wasn't in it. No matter: He knew that we weren't there for his preaching. He descended into the crowd, trailing an entourage of security men, his son, and a camera crew. People reached out to touch him, their hands seeming to plead, “Help me.” He picked people out and asked what was wrong. Arthritis, they said. Or kidney problems, a bum ticker, thyroid. Every kind of sickness. He spent two or three minutes with each hopeful worshipper, leaning in to whisper, and then—what they'd come for, what they needed—touching them.

Popoff is of the same generation as Bruce Springsteen, and he clearly shares the Boss's compulsion to never let an audience down. He worked the aisles for two hours that night, back and forth, until finally he was in my section. Before I knew it, he was upon me. The lights of his camera crew were blinding, but here he was, choosing me.

“What troubles you?” he asked. I held up my broken finger. He touched it, and then he let loose a loud stream of glossolalia, speaking in tongues, as Pentecostals do. “Shabalalalalalalala!” he cried. I wiggled my pinkie—which I had been able to do, anyway—and he shouted, “You are healed!” and gave me a long, tight hug. It felt good, as hugs do.

And then came something I didn't expect: love from the crowd, people rubbing me on my back after I sat down, touching me, giving me high fives, saying, “Praise the Lord!” It felt so good that even if my pinkie had been causing excruciating pain, or even if I'd had a far worse condition, something that in my heart I'd known was incurable, I'm sure that, for the moment, I would not have noticed.

The night that I was healed and hugged by Peter Popoff, I saw no sign that he was using an earpiece. If he had any plants in the audience, he didn't make good use of them. As he approached each of us, he asked what ailed us—he didn't pretend to know. And we in the audience were eager to believe in his powers. The earpiece, I realized, was always an unnecessary gimmick. Popoff is better than he knows.

I sensed the same ambivalence when I met Larry Skelton. He was introduced to Popoff when Popoff was only 15; Skelton was the organist in Popoff's father's road show, then in Popoff's, off and on, from 1965 to 1990. Skelton didn't return my calls, so one Sunday, I staked out his house in Mesquite, a hard-luck Dallas exurb. At about half past noon, he and his wife pulled into the driveway, back from church, I figured. Skelton invited me in, with an air of resignation. His wife eyed me warily.

Skelton wanted to make it clear, before we talked about his friend Popoff, that faith healing was real. “I've seen people with a short leg that had, for a while, a six-inch buildup on one of their shoes,” said Skelton, who's 80, ten years older than Popoff. “You could see, there was no fakery to it. All of a sudden, that leg began to grow out to the same size as the other.”

I asked if Popoff was the real deal. He thought for a moment, then replied that, yes, Popoff was the real deal. But I'd noticed his hesitation, and he could tell that I'd noticed, so he explained.

“When you're praying for the sick, it's through the Holy Spirit, and there's some times that it works freely, and then there are other times when the Spirit's just not there,” Skelton said. On the days when the Holy Spirit didn't show up freely, you had to help it along; after all, you still needed to pass the hat. “You're in that auditorium, and you had to pay for that sucker. In advance.”

The day after I talked with Skelton, he called me and asked if I could include one last sentiment, and I said I would. This is what he said: “That mess he got into, that was 30 years ago. He went bankrupt, he lost everything he had, he had to start over. And ever since then, I know, I personally know, that he is by the book and careful. Auditors come in every year. He wants it that way, so there is no question about where the money goes. And that's the gospel truth.”

In December, Popoff's daughter, Amy Cardiff, called me. She had first responded to my pestering a few months earlier, but I never expected that the Popoffs would consent to an interview. And yet, they did. On December 21, Peter Popoff welcomed me into his office, where we were joined by Amy and Nick, the two children who work in the ministry (another son, Alexander, is in the military). He didn't recognize me from the time he healed my finger in Washington (not that I expected he would). For an hour and a half, he answered my questions—about miracle spring water, James Randi, bankruptcy, his tennis game, the Holy Spirit.

Popoff wore a natty suit and a tie knotted to the strangulation point. He moves slowly, but not frailly—more like a muscular man managing his own physique. And the hair truly is something, shiny and monochrome like an action figure's. When I asked how I could have hair like his when I got older, he quoted Exodus: “ ‘I am the Lord thy God that heals thee!’ That's the promise that God gave to Israel. If you can take that by faith, you'll live a life of increase.” And great hair.

Popoff talked about everything, without a trace of defensiveness. According to him, declaring bankruptcy was a mistake, the misguided suggestion of lawyers. In reality, he said, the exposé on The Tonight Show barely hurt his finances. The incoming monthly take “went down by a third for three months; the fourth month it stabilized, and the fifth month it started growing again,” Popoff said. “By the end of that year, we were back to where we were.” He said that they never went off the air, never stopped doing live shows.

He had an answer for everything, or almost everything. When I inquired about the college scholarships and Ukrainian orphanages that, according to their mailings, the ministry funded, he said he'd get back to me with the addresses of the orphanages (he never did) and the details about how much the scholarships were worth (ditto). They did not want to comment on Crystal Sanchez's allegations in her e-book.

But when I asked about the earpiece, Popoff was happy to talk. “We were taping television! And I venture to say anyone doing TV programs...” He trailed off, as if he were saying something so obvious it didn't bear finishing.

I mentioned his $4.5 million house. “It's now worth 10 million!” he said. “So I made the ministry $5 million!”

“It wasn't always like this,” Amy interrupted to say. “When I was born, we traveled in a trailer.”

Popoff seemed to be truly enjoying my company, but his children were uncomfortable. The family business is theirs to inherit, and both told me that they have “the gift” and could take over someday. Meanwhile, as chief administrative officer (Amy) and executive vice president (Nick), they prosper alongside him. They wouldn't tell me what they earn, but Nick enjoyed telling me about the Clydesdale horses he keeps.

“We are a prosperity ministry that preaches prosperity,” Nick added. “We preach financial blessings. God has prospered us.” The good life they lead is proof of their powers. If they weren't noticeably rich, what authority would they have to promise riches to others?

At this point, I had a sense of déjà vu, a flashback to other scandal-plagued gurus I'd interviewed, like the New Age teacher and ex-rabbi Marc Gafni, who had been accused of plagiarism, serial dishonesty, and sexual misconduct with a 13-year-old (his excuse was that she'd been 14), or the Zen master Eido Shimano, who'd been seducing and emotionally abusing his female students for decades. In each case, I was shocked that they'd agreed to be interviewed, until I realized, as I sat with them, that they didn't think they had anything to hide. They're like Jack Nicholson's Colonel Jessup in A Few Good Men—they want to say it. They want to take the stand. Their lawyers and friends can tell them to shut up, but that makes them look guilty, and they don't feel guilty.

Peter Popoff inhabits both hemispheres of our national brain, the Puritan and the magician. He believes in divine magic-but not at the expense of the work ethic.

As I sat with the gregarious, affable Popoff, I understood: He believes he is helping people. If you accept, as Pentecostal Christians do, that God performs miracles, on the body, soul, and bank account, then his ministry offers a series of fair exchanges between him and his audience. They give money; he sends them trinkets. They make him rich, pray with the trinkets, and maybe get rich, too. He touches them and they feel better.

And if they don't feel better? Well, there are no guarantees. “There's nothing magical about them,” he said about the spring water, the baruch wallet, and all the stuff I'd gotten in the mail. “They are simply points of contact”—they help people focus their prayer. God decides what prayers to answer.

I took a bathroom break in Popoff's private lavatory, right off his office. The walls were covered with little inspirational notes. Next to the sink: “But I am trusting you, O Lord, saying, ‘You are my God!’ My future is in your hands.—Psalm 31:14–15.” Below that, on a sticky note: “Whatever you touch will prosper and succeed. You will lend and not borrow.” (That one's from Joel Osteen.) Then, next to the toilet paper, an 8½-by-11 printout listing the family's goals for 2015—Peter's, Liz's, Nick's, Amy's. Peter's list included more crusades, “Book some fun trips including Italy, Skiing, and Lake Tahoe,” and, at number five, “Tax Exemption in Canada.” It was an astonishing précis of the prosperity gospel. Get converts, get time on the slopes, get a tax exemption.

But here's the thing about Peter and Liz Popoff and their kids: They could have all their ski trips and Bentleys and Clydesdale horses without ever working another day in their lives. Yet here they are, hitting mildewy, ticky-tacky hotel ballrooms and convention centers in a dozen cities every year, as if the salvation of the world depended on it. This septuagenarian clocks the hours of a junior lawyer trying to make partner. Which complicates any theory that he is trying to get something for nothing. He's trying to get something, all right—millions of something, in fact—but not for nothing. He works hard for his money.

Peter Popoff is the all-American faith healer because he inhabits both hemispheres of our national brain, the Puritan and the magician. He believes in divine magic—to enrich you, to heal you, or just to entertain you—but not at the expense of the work ethic. He'll do the work, all right, and your part is just suspending disbelief and sending him a check to show that you mean it. He gets rich, you get hope.

It's hard to escape the parallels with another baby boomer, a man born just two weeks before Popoff in the summer of '46, just before the United States entered its long, hopeful postwar expansion. Both men went into the family business, suffered reversals, went bankrupt, seemed destined to be TV-rerun laughingstocks. One became president, the other just became rich. Both seem to be running cons, but both have followers who either don't notice or don't care. Both men have produced nothing, except, for their followers, fervent certainty that they can produce anything. And say what you will about the trust people have in them— it hasn't come easy. “I've been working for 50 years,” Popoff told me. “It's not something I snapped my fingers and it magically appeared. It's been a long and winding road!”

Mark Oppenheimer is the editor-at-large at Tablet magazine. This is his first article for GQ.

http://www.gq.com/story/peter-popoff-born-again-scoundrel?mbid=social_cp_fb_tny