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The God Biz A
Secular Writer Looks at Religious Charlatans
[This article was
originally published in Penthouse, December 1980.] --------------------------------------------
Gospel fervor gleamed in 3,000 faces at the $30
million city arena at Charleston, W.Va. People around me, arms
upraised, jerked in spasms as they loosed the unknown tongue:
"Shend-a-la-goosh-a-ma. Dee-dee-dee-dee." A young woman
beside me leaped and squealed. Others wiped tears, swaying and
rocking.
Evangelist Ernest Angley from Akron, a squat
dynamo in a toupee, evoked the passion like a symphony conductor
building a crescendo. He chanted faster into the transmitting
microphone concealed in his elegant three-piece suit. His voice boomed
from huge banks of speakers on each side of the stage:
"You've got to have the old-time power at
this final hour. How many want to be blessed during the Ernest Angley
program?" All hands rose. "Just open up to God. Say, 'I'll
take the anointing, Lord.' Say it: 'Lord!' " The crowd shouted,
"LORD!" "All of you that God has spoken to at some
time, raise your hands." Two thousand hands went up. "See,
we're not so crazy. We're in touch with heaven. It doesn't matter what
people say, because we're on our way to heaven. The Lord's with us!
The Lord's with us! Come on, everyone: The Lord's with us! The Lord's
with us!" The chant spread over the arena. Vaguely, I recalled
Gott Mit Uns on Wehrmacht belt buckles.
While the fever was high, Angley launched a
40-minute collection: "Everyone say, 'Lord, tell me what to give
in this offering tonight.' It's good to make a covenant with God. I'd
rather give my money to God than to doctors and drugstores. I know
there are some here who could make a $1,000 covenant, or $500. Don't
be afraid. God will stand by you."
He asked a show of hands by all who would make a
$100 covenant. Barely a dozen hands rose. He exhorted and pleaded:
"Not a penny goes to me or the singers. It all goes for TV time.
Your money will reach new souls. Through TV, I preach to more people
every weekend than Christ did in his whole time on earth. Isn't that
wonderful? And you're part of it.... Don't worry about your finances.
Put it all in the hands of God." Then he called for $50
covenants. About 100 hands went up. "All right, everyone who can
make a $25 covenant, stand up and say, 'Lord, I love you.' Stand up
for Jesus. Stand and say, 'I love you, Jesus'.... Now $10 covenants:
Stand up and say, 'I love Jesus. I love him. I love him. I love
him'.... Now $5 covenants...."
Finally, after all had stood, the stocky
preacher told the crowd to sit and write checks to insert in envelopes
that had been distributed. While the people wrote, Angley's gospel
rock combo -- with electric guitars, trap set, and grand piano -- sang
about going to heaven when the Rapture comes.
Afterward, the evangelist asked everyone to wave
the filled envelopes over their heads. Then he called for a second
offering of dollar bills to pay $1,000 arena rent and stagehand cost.
Angley asked everyone to wave envelopes in one hand and dollars in the
other. An ocean of fluttering mammon engulfed us. Ushers gathered the
money in buckets and took it to a locked room under the bleachers.
The show concluded with a healing line. A mother
presented her brain-damaged little boy. The preacher seized him with a
shrieking "Heeeaaalllll!!!" and then chortled: "He felt
that, all right." Arthritic crones and hard-of-hearing laborers
went through the line, many failing backward in a holy swoon when they
were grabbed.
Angley also bestowed healing upon various
cripples in wheelchairs in the front row. After the service, relatives
wheeled them away.
In the arena lobby, assistants sold Angley books
and magazines containing endless testimonial letters from followers
saying their cancers or diabetes or rheumatism or warts had vanished
at the healer's touch. Angley's columns say that God gave him the
power to "discern spirits," thus he can see ugly demons
inside the ill. Likewise, he says, he can see an angel beside him
onstage at every arena, while other angels move through crowds,
plucking out demons and curing ailments.
After the show, Angley's troupe boarded two
vista-dome buses and two tractor-trailers for the next city, and the
next convention arena. On weekends the evangelist returns to his home
base: a garish Akron cathedral that cost his followers $2.5 million.
It has imported chandeliers, Italian statues, 24-karat gold veneer on
the pulpit and piano, a red-lit "fountain of blood," and
side-by-side pictures of Angley and Jesus. The cathedral is dedicated
to the healer's late wife, who died of ulcerative colitis despite his
demon- extracting powers. Her tomb is under a 23-foot-high, 20-ton
marble angel on the church lawn.
The day after the Charleston revival, I
interviewed several people who had been healed onstage. A retired
roofer with only four teeth claimed that he had been cured of
hardening of the arteries, diabetes and myriad other ailments. He
lapsed into the unknown tongue while telling me about it. As for a
deaf-mute young man, his mother said his condition was unchanged. A
plump matron mistakenly thought I worked for the Angley organization.
She said her nerve and stomach trouble was improved, and "an
inch-long thing that flopped in my ear is gone, praise the Lord!"
She promised to begin mailing money soon. She asked if Angley's staff
would pray for "my boy Jack, who has a demon in him." When I
asked the nature of the demon, she said: "Well, Jack got sent
back to prison because he couldn't stay out of fights while he was on
parole."
That's one glimpse into the gospel gold mine
that is producing billions -- billions -- of dollars in America.
Angley keeps his revenue tightly secret, but the scope of his national
tours and 100-station telecasts indicates a gross between $10 and $20
million a year.
Here's a look down a different shaft of the gold
mine:
A young Californian, Timothy Goodwin of Long
Beach, was paralyzed in a car wreck that wasn't his fault. That was
his first tragedy. His second was religious. He later filed a fraud
suit in Auglaize County Court in Ohio, telling this pathetic story:
He was convinced by leaders of "The
Way" Bible society, a talking-in-tongues outfit, that his
paralysis would be cured in a year if he moved to the sect's
headquarters in Ohio and donated large sums from his accident
settlement. He gave $210,000 -- and later paid $10,000 more for a
Cadillac for a Way leader, and $11,000 for a BMW auto for another Way
chief, and $13,000 for extraneous gifts requested by Way officials.
The healing didn't work, and Goodwin felt "took."
After he sued, The Way countersued him for
slander. The case was settled out of court in secret, and the
quadriplegic moved back to California. Goodwin's attorney, Craig
Spangenberg of Cleveland, told me that the sect refunded all of
Goodwin's money on the condition that he never discuss the matter.
"He has kept his promise," Spangenberg said. "Tim's a
decent young man. He didn't want people to know he had been such a
fool."
Another vein of the gold mine was worked by
Bishop John W. Barber of Alabama, a dazzler who wore white tuxedos and
drove luxury cars. He persuaded believers to buy $1,000 bonds in his
Apostolic Faith Church of God Live Forever, Inc. Oldsters paid $100
down and sent installments to the Christian Credit Corporation of
Nashville. His operation spread over eight states and then abruptly
folded, and Barber moved to North Carolina. Lawyer Henry Haile of
Nashville was appointed U.S. receiver. Haile told me:
"It's unbelievable. He sold $1.5 million in
worthless bonds and also borrowed from 20 banks, but I can't imagine
why anyone trusted him. He testified under oath he didn't file income
tax returns for six years; yet he always had a new Lincoln and a big
home."
Among Barber's victims were members of Highway
Church of Christ at Marion, S.C., who lost $57,000. Their pastor,
Raymond Davis, told me: "He sounded like an angel of the Lord,
and my people thought he was rich. He told us the bonds would be worth
twice what we paid for them. We trusted him to open us a bank account
at Huntsville, and we sent our money to it. Later I flew to
Huntsville, and there wasn't a dime left." Highway Church filed a
fraud suit.
The Ernest Angley television miracle crusade,
The Way International, and the Apostolic Faith Church of God Live
Forever, Inc., are three eddies in the much-publicized gospel flood
swirling over America.
Old-time magical religion has become our chief
cultural phenomenon as we enter the 1980s. Celebrity evangelists in
lavish hairdos have won followings that alarm mainline churches. The
Gallup Poll says 45 million Americans now consider themselves
"born again," and they shell out enough money to support a
booming fundamentalist industry. Sales of gospel books, magazines and
records have soared to $1 billion a year. A million families have
removed their children from public schools and pay for them to attend
5,000 new evangelical schools. A consortium of born-again businessmen
has joined with the Campus Crusade for Christ to raise $1 billion for
the world's biggest advertising campaign to prepare everyone for the
Second Coming.
Revival tents of yesteryear are forgotten
relics. Now the action is in astrodomes and multi- million-dollar
gospel television studios. Four fundamentalist "networks"
keep broadcast dishes aimed at fixed-orbit satellites, bouncing
programs over the continent 24 hours a day. Competing evangelists buy
$600 million worth of radio and television time a year, paid for by
their followers. At last count, the United States had 1,400 all-gospel
radio stations and about 30 gospel television stations, some operated
by born-again folk, some run by shrewd businessmen who know where the
money is.
The boom has political power. Coalitions are
trying to mobilize fundamentalists into the nation's strongest voter
bloc to pass "moral" laws and elect "moral"
candidates. In March, Anita Bryant and revivalist Jerry Falwell
launched a "Clean Up America" drive against pornography,
abortion and homosexuals.
Other gospel big guns summoned 200,000
born-again believers to the April "Washington for Jesus"
demonstration to back "pro-God" legislation. Evangelist Pat
Robertson declared: "We have enough votes to run the country. And
when the people say, 'We've had enough,' we are going to take
over." Anti-abortion groups defeated U.S. senators Dick Clark of
Iowa and Thomas McIntyre of New Hampshire, and have targeted others
for elimination. And fundamentalist uprisings against
"ungodly" textbooks have forced several school systems
around the United States to change books.
The gospel boom is under intense study by
pundits. Author Jeremy Rifkin says it's "the single most
important cultural force in American life" and might lead to
fascism. Some sociologists think it's a backlash to the radicalism of
the 1960s. Some say it's a breakaway from insipid conventional
churches. Some say it's a search for security as the economy worsens.
Some say it's part of the "me generation," in which people
focus on themselves.
But one aspect has hardly been mentioned:
rip-off. Part of the billion-dollar industry is cunning fraud, or bald
opportunism, or exploitation of the superstitious, or tyrannical
misuse of donated money by weirdo leaders. In my job as newspaperman
and religion writer, I've covered the territory for 20 years and
watched it grow.
While the born-again bandwagon gathered momentum
through the 1970s, gospel scams and abuses surfaced with increasing
frequency. In the past two years, they've become an epidemic. For
instance:
-- Dapper Oklahoma evangelist James Roy Whitby
was known in the gospel world for saving Anita Bryant when she was a
Tulsa schoolgirl. In 1978 he was convicted of swindling an 83-year-old
religious widow out of $25,000. In 1979 he was charged with selling $4
million in worthless Gospel Outreach bonds. Accused with him the
second time were three convicted swindlers, including the Rev. Tillman
Sherron Jackson of Los Angeles, who had previously bilked the
born-again in the Baptist Foundation of America -- a $26 million fraud
that caused a congressional probe in 1973. In the widow case, Whitby's
appeals ran out in 1980, and he's in prison. The Gospel Outreach case
ended in acquittals, but U.S. attorney John Osgood took it
philosophically. "Their kind usually show up again," he told
me.
-- America's all-time champion evangelist was
Garner Ted Armstrong, whose national broadcasts drew $75 million a
year to the Worldwide Church of God run by Garner and his father,
Herbert W. Armstrong. (That's double the amount collected by Billy
Graham.) Money poured in from followers, many of whom met in secret
groups and donated 30 percent of their incomes. Garner lived like a
maharaja in a California mansion with his own private jet, elegant
sports cars -- and, allegedly, female believers in bed. Trouble hit in
1976 when some members published a protest. They accused Garner of sex
and Herbert of self-enrichment. Chess champion Bobby Fischer said the
elder Armstrong had used "mind control" to take nearly
$100,000 from him. In 1978 the father fired the son, who started a new
television religion.
In 1979 the California attorney general filed a
receivership suit accusing Herbert and treasurer Stanley Rader of
"pilfering" at least $1 million a year for themselves. Gold
bullion owned by the sect was reported missing. Financial records
indicated that Herbert and Rader each got salaries of $200,000 plus
fabulous expense accounts. Garner accused Rader of taking $700,000
from the church in one year. Garner's sister said Rader had three
homes, a horse stable, a Maserati, a Mercedes and a limousine. On June
2 the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the attorney general's right to
investigate the church. Meanwhile, little is left of perhaps $1
billion of believers' money that was squandered over the years.
-- Handsome, tuxedo-clad, faith healer LeRoy
Jenkins of South Carolina grossed $3 million a year by selling miracle
water and prayer cloths and healing T-shirts to believers who watched
him on 67 television stations. He made an emergency appeal for
$300,000 to pay church debts and then bought himself a $250,000 home
two weeks later. He heavily insured a vacant cathedral just before it
was hit by a mysterious explosion.
In 1979 Jenkins was sentenced to a 12-year
prison term for conspiring to (1) burn the home of a state trooper who
had given his daughter a speeding ticket, (2) burn the home of a
creditor, and (3) mug a newspaperman who had exposed his money abuses
and drug arrests. Evidence came from a police undercover agent in the
evangelist's staff. (The reporter, Rick Ricks, told me that police had
warned him in advance he was to be "set up" by an anonymous
telephone offer of information; so when the call came, he didn't go to
meet the informant.) After Jenkins entered a South Carolina state
prison, his staff distributed rerun tapes of his "Revival of
America" show. For several months in 1979, the preacher still
looked out of television screens around the United States and begged
"love offerings," although he actually was in a cell.
-- The Justice Department filed suit in March to
force the PTL ("Praise the Lord") Club of Charlotte, N.C.,
to open its books on $51 million it grossed last year. The suit said
the FCC wants to know whether the gospel television show broadcast
"fraudulent and misleading" appeals by begging money for
overseas missions but spending it on overhead. During a 1978 crisis,
PTL leader Jim Bakker announced that he and his singer wife were
"giving every penny of our life savings to PTL," but they
soon bought a $24,000 houseboat, and their salaries and benefits rose
to $90,000 a year. Because of PTL's enormous cash intake, a Charlotte
radio station mockingly advertised a "Pass the Loot" Club.
(PTL attracts all varieties of fundamentalists
because the show's superslick production conveys clean-cut, happy,
old-time faith. But I spent a week at PTL's $20 million national
headquarters last year and saw bizarreness not revealed on-camera. A
worship leader gave incantations to "bind demons" and bind a
"prince" devil in charge of Charlotte. She also sang in the
unknown tongue and distributed written incantations to exorcise demons
through miracle anointing oil. A distraught young man leaped down a
stairway beside me, yelling "I'm Jesus Christ!")
-- The Rev. Hakeem Abdul Rasheed (alias Clifford
Jones) and a young woman aide were convicted of mail fraud in
California in February 1980. They had operated a $20-million-a- year
church in an Oakland movie theater. Members who donated $500 became
"ministers of increase." Then, periodically, the pastor
called them forward to receive $2,000 "increases from God,"
while the congregation cheered. Bigger gifts drew bigger returns.
Spreading excitement caused joiners to donate as much as $30,000 each.
The church collected up to $350,000 a night. Rasheed-Jones had
ankle-length mink coats, diamonds, a $100,000 Rolls-Royce, and a
million-dollar yacht. His downfall came after he reported to police
that four armed robbers took more than $300,000 from him aboard his
100-foot boat, and detectives began wondering why a minister had so
much money. It turned out that his church was a "Ponzi
scheme," using new donations to pay former donors.
-- The Rev. Robert Carr of Durham, N.C., was
sentenced to 10 years in prison in April for taking paychecks, food
stamps, and welfare checks from members of his Church of God and True
Holiness. He and other church leaders kept believers like slaves in a
dormitory, forced them to work in a poultry plant, and pocketed their
earnings. Carr's daughter and son-in-law also got prison terms, and a
fourth church official is a fugitive. U.S. attorney H.M. Michaux Jr.,
told me that Carr was arrested by state police, but the case was
turned over to him for prosecution under a federal slavery law.
-- Bethesda Christian Center at Wenatchee, Wash.
-- a gospel church, radio station, school, magazine publishing house,
college, and gasoline station -- was jolted in January 1980, when more
than $1 million was reported missing and administrator James Eyre was
jailed on embezzlement charges. About $340,000 that members lent to
the church has vanished, authorities said. So has nearly $1 million
that members put into deals such as diamond investments.
-- American Consumer Inc. was indicted on 1,000
counts of mail fraud for selling the "Cross of Lourdes" at
$15.95 each, falsely claiming that the crosses had been dipped in
France's miracle pool and blessed by the pope in Rome. The company was
fined $25,000 in 1979 in U.S. District Court at Philadelphia and
ordered to refund $103,000 to buyers.
-- Frost Brothers Gospel Quartet of Columbus,
Ohio, launched Consumer Companies of America, a 20-state chain.
Born-again families who paid $534 for orders of merchandise were
entitled to enlist others and collect commissions on their orders.
When enough were signed up, CCA was to build discount stores and give
each member a share of the earnings. Evangelist Bob Harrington,
"the chaplain of Bourbon Street," boosted the plan, saying,
"God wants his people to succeed... and I thank God I'm
identified with CCA." (I interviewed several CCA leaders --
ex-gospel singers in flashy suits and high-rise hairdos.) The Frost
Brothers lived like kings. President Alvin Frost bought a $1 million
mansion. But they were convicted of stock violations, sued for fraud,
slapped with a $370,000 tax lien, and charged with running a pyramid
scheme. CCA collapsed in 1979 with losses for all.
-- The Rev. Jerry Duckett of Williamson Church
of God in West Virginia was indicted last February on charges of
stealing $40,000 from his church's building fund. (His denominational
superior swore out the embezzlement warrant and then was chagrined
when I made the theft public.) Earlier, Duckett was fined $100 for
pulling a pistol on a service station aftendant who wouldn't put
leaded gasoline into his unleaded-only car.
-- Before the Rev. Jim Jones went entirely nuts,
his People's Temple was a money machine. He required members to give
40 percent of their income and sign over their homes, insurance
policies, savings accounts, welfare checks, and Social Security
checks. To hook the credulous, he staged cancer cures, dramatically
seizing the ill, who were stooges in disguise, and pulling out tumors
-- chicken gizzards. While his Temple still was in San Francisco, two
disillusioned members, Al and Jeanie Mills, led defectors in leaking
to New West magazine that Jones's cures were fake and he was milking
followers. After Jones moved to Guyana -- and led 900 believers in the
cyanide horror that stunned the world -- troves of money were found.
More than $7 million was discovered in two Panama banks, $3 million
was in Guyana banks, and $200,000 was in other Caribbean banks, while
$700,000 cash and $2 million in real estate were still in California.
In 1978 Al and Jeanie Mills started a refugee
center for Jonestown survivors, amid reports that Jones had left
behind a "hit squad" to kill defectors. In 1979 the Millses
published a book about the minister's abuses. On Feb. 26, 1980, the
couple and their 15-year-old daughter were executed by being shot in
the head.
-- The Rev. Roland Gray of Bethel Missionary
Baptist Church in Chicago was convicted in 1979 of theft, fraud and
corspiracy. He reported his income was only $20 a week so he could
falsely collect $43,000 in welfare checks and food stamps -- while he
concealed that he had $46,000 in cash, several luxury automobiles,
expensive furs, and three homes. He also engaged in insurance fraud,
collecting $56,000 from 73 bogus insurance claims. He's serving two
years in prison.
-- Marjoe Gortner, an aging boy evangelist,
confessed in 1972 that his exuberant revivals were a moneymaking
fraud, carefully rehearsed and timed to suck big offerings from the
yokels. He said his parents pocketed $3 million from his boyhood
tours. To expose the racket, Gortner made a documentary movie of
himself milking congregations and gleefully counting piles of money in
motel rooms, whooping, "Thank you, Jesus!" Gortner went on
to be an actor, and fundamentalism went on unfazed.
-- At the start of the 1970s, America's top
faith-healer was pugnacious A.A. Allen, who toured the land with his
miracle tent. He displayed jars of small embalmed bodies he said were
demons he had removed from the ill. Some observers said they were
frogs. A California newspaper said he should be prosecuted for running
a racket. Time magazine said he grossed $2.7 million a year plus
personal "love offerings." Allen vanished during a tour,
then rejoined it at Wheeling, W.Va., then vanished again. He was found
dead in a San Francisco hotel room, with $2,300 in his pocket. Cause
of death: acute alcoholism. (Gortner said that Allen once advised him
how to know when a revival is finished and it's time to move to the
next city: "When you can turn people on their head and shake them
and no money falls out, then you know God's saying 'Move on,
son.'")
-- The Rev. DeVernon LeGrand, who headed St.
John's Pentecostal Church of Our Lord in Brooklyn, recruited many
teenage "nuns" who solicited money for his church. In 1975
the pastor, age 50, was convicted of raping one of the 17-year-old
nuns. In 1976 the bodies of two more of the girls were found in a pond
at LeGrand's farm in the Catskills. He and a son were convicted of
murdering them. In 1977 the pastor was found guilty of murdering his
former wives, who died in 1963 and 1970. He's serving life in prison.
-- Bishop Lucius Cartwright and Pastor Albert
Hamrick of St. Phillip's Pentecostal Church in Washington, D.C., were
sent to jail in 1976 for embezzling $250,000 while administering food
stamp distribution. They used the money to buy a car, an ice cream
parlor, and a bank building.
-- A white revivalist, the Rev. James Eugene
Ewing of Los Angeles, acquired thousands of black followers around the
United States through an odd promise: If they sent him monthly
donations, God would bless them with Cadillacs, color televisions,
Mark IV Continentals, new homes, etc. "God's Gold Book Plan for
Financial Blessings," it was called. Those who mailed their Gold
Book pledges faithfully could expect "power to get wealth,"
Ewing said. His monthly newsletter was filled with photos of
pledge-payers beaming over new Eldorados or stereos. Followers were
also urged to buy "miracle billfolds" and "golden
horn-of-plenty neck charms." (An architect friend of mine sent a
fake name to Ewing and collected his mailings to pass around the
office as funny-sad reading.) The Los Angeles Times said Ewing grossed
$4 million a year. Newsweek said he spent only 1 percent of it on
charitable work. Even so, his church filed bankruptcy in 1977, and he
moved to Atlanta.
-- The Children of God enlisted 5,000 teenagers
to testify for Jesus in city streets. Members were required to give
the sect all their income for life. New York Attorney General Louis
Lefkowitz issued a report in 1974 accusing the group's leaders of
fraud, tax evasion and bizarre forced sex.
-- Dr. Billy James Hargis was the king of the
anti-Communist preachers after the McCarthy era. He denounced
socialism, sex and satanism -- and drew millions from right-wing
supporters. He lived in a $500,000 Tulsa mansion, had a farm in the
Ozarks, and enjoyed the national spotlight. But he was ruined in 1976
when Time magazine revealed that he sodomized male and female students
at his tiny fundamentalist college. (The truth leaked out after Hargis
performed a wedding of two students and on their honeymoon each told
the other of going to bed with their spiritual leader.)
-- The Rev. Guido John Carcich was convicted in
1978 of embezzling $2.2 million from the Pallottine Fathers in
Baltimore. The Catholic group collected $20 million in donations to
help "the starving, sick and naked," but only 3 percent of
the money reached charitable work. Incoming contributions were handled
at a secret warehouse, where Carcich told workers to throw away
prayer-request letters unless they contained money. He was sentenced
to a year of prison counseling work.
-- Flamboyant "Reverend Ike"
Eikerenkoetter of New York wears $1,000 suits, his fingers drip with
diamonds, he has 16 Rolls-Royces, and he enjoys luxury homes on both
coasts. From his palatial church, a converted Broadway theater, and
over 85 radio stations, he tells a million black believers to "do
what the rich do: start thinking big." He demands "silent
offerings" of paper money and chides his adoring flock: "Be
proud of the way I look, because you spend $1,000 a week to buy my
clothes." His United Church and Science of Living Institute keeps
its income secret, but it has been estimated at $6 to $15 million a
year.
Ironically, victims of a gospel rip-off rarely
realize that they're victims. They usually stay devoted to their
preacher, no matter what, and view all accusations against him as
tricks of the devil.
I learned that truth years ago as a cub
reporter. A faith healer named Dr. Paul Collett came to Charleston,
started a radio revival in an old movie theater, and proclaimed that
cancers were dropping onto his stage. He said he turned water into
wine and might resurrect the dead if bodies weren't embalmed. I wrote
a warning article about his multitudinous collections to "build
the biggest tabernacle in West Virginia." But his followers
weren't warned. Instead, 40 of them stormed the Charleston Gazette
newsroom, looking for me. Luckily, I was out. Dr. Collett later moved
away, leaving no tabernacle or residue of the collections. But his
adherents didn't complain. They bickered over doctrines and eventually
scattered to other churches.
I learned it again in 1973 when the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission and West Virginia Securities
Division issued cease-and-desist orders on $12 million worth of gospel
bonds sold by TV evangelist Rex Humbard of Akron. The authorities
warned that -- despite his $4 million cathedral, $250,000 mansion,
private jet, $10 million office tower, church-owned girdle factory,
and other holdings -- Humbard lacked enough assets to back up the
bonds. I interviewed investors, and they said they'd gladly double the
amount "because it's an investment in souls." Humbard begged
emergency donations and reaped enough millions to lift the government
freezes. (He also sold the unprofitable girdle factory because
"panty hose killed us.") In June, Humbard and his sons
bought a $650,000 vacation home complex, in addition to their mansions
in Akron.
I learned it in 1974 when the Rev. Marvin Horan
led an army of Charleston fundamentalists in violent protest against
"atheistic" school books. Horan got three years in prison
for helping to bomb elementary schools. Trial testimony said he
suggested wiring dynamite caps into the gas tanks of cars in which
parents were taking their children to school during a boycott. The Ku
Klux Klan held a rally for the convicted preacher on the state capitol
steps. His followers stuck by him. He's out of prison now and running
as a 1980 candidate for school board in Charleston.
While I mixed among crowds at the PTL Club in
North Carolina last summer, I talked to supporters of evangelist LeRoy
Jenkins, who had just gone to prison across the line in South
Carolina. They said cryptically: "Satan attacked his
ministry." (I don't know whether they meant that Satan had led
Jenkins into sin, or that Satan falsified the arson charges against
him.)
Over the years I've covered only one gospel news
event in which believers turned against their leader. Radio preacher
Charles Meadows testified before the West Virginia legislature in
support of the death penalty and ran for the Charleston school board
to fight "lewd-minded" sex education. After losing the
election, he started his own fundamentalist school. But his flock was
stunned when he dumped his wife and departed with a gospel teacher.
Because of my job, religious folks write me
letters and phone me. Some recent samples: (1) Bobby Cremeans said she
and her husband sent $1,000 to PTL and soon were blessed with an
unexpected $710 tax refund and a large profit in a land sale. "We
didn't expect anything when we gave the money to PTL -- so I know PTL
is of God." (2) Zella Jarrett told me her 28-year-old son was
drawn into a Milwaukee Pentecostal sect that controlled his life and
took his money. "He earned $6 an hour making sink tops at Lippert
Corporation, but they let him keep just enough to get to work. When we
sent him checks, the group prayed and the answer always was for him to
sign the money over to the church." She said her son
"finally escaped" and lives in Virginia but wants his
whereabouts kept secret because he fears reprisals. (3) Jim Young told
me: "The money my wife and I send for the work of the Lord far
exceeds our grocery bill each month, and I am thankful for every
penny." He said he supports about 10 television evangelists
including Rex Humbard, "who got 554,000 people in Brazil and
Chile to accept Jesus Christ. It's the only way we can obey the last
commandment Jesus gave" to proselytize the world. (4) Rita Schott
said she was "caught up for six years" in a tongue-talking
church in which the preacher received such divine prophecies as
"five members are going to give $5,000 each." She told me
she felt "brainwashed, unreal," but finally broke loose from
the group.
An Episcopal priest who does social work in
Michigan said that poor families often tell him they send part of
their welfare checks to evangelists. "We taxpayers are
subsidizing it," he said. "In the old days, people
complained about the poor blowing their welfare money on whiskey --
but now it's on evangelists."
Whistle-blowers of the sort who denounced the
Armstrongs in the Worldwide Church of God or Timothy Goodwin, who sued
The Way, are rare. But a few exist. More consumer lawsuits by
disgruntled believers have hit the courts recently. Julie Titchbourne,
21, of Portland, Ore., won a $2 million verdict against the Church of
Scientology in 1979. Her suit said the church's claim that it could
raise her I.Q. was fraudulent. In February, jazz guitarist Gabor Szabo
of Los Angeles sued the church, saying leaders had embezzled $15,000
from him, kidnapped him, and forced him to undergo a $12,000
"life repair course."
Scientology is a controversial religion started
by science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard, who netted millions from
members around the world. He was convicted of fraud by a French court
in 1978 but remains at liberty on his oceangoing yacht. His wife and
eight of his followers were sentenced to prison last December for
conspiring to steal U.S. documents in Washington. A grand jury at
Riverside, Calif., is investigating reports that Scientologists
obtained millions through fraudulent bank loans. (When I wrote about a
West Virginia coal millionaire who gave $110,000 and a farm
headquarters to Scientology, the church sent my newspaper a bound,
indexed, 52-page "falsehood correction.")
Also, Douglas and Rita Swann of Detroit sued the
Christian Science Church last February, saying that two church healers
allowed their baby son to die. Their suit doesn't claim malpractice
(three other malpractice suits against the Christian Science Church
have been lost in recent years) but accuses the two healers of failing
to follow proper miracle cure procedures.
Redneck religion has always been part America --
since the Scopes "Monkey Trial" in Tennessee, since Carry
Nation smashed the saloons, since Aimee Semple McPherson was buried
with a live telephone in her ornate coffin in case God resurrected
her. The United States always had a fringe of scripture literalists
obsessed with sin, of one- preacher denominations, of Pentecostals who
spout "the tongues," of faith healers who grab the lame, of
hillbilly congregations picking up rattlesnakes, of Adventists who
periodically announce the end of the world, of sex-haters who burn
books and rock albums, of tabernacle-goers who "dance in the
spirit" and writhe on the floor, of Bible prophecy fans who think
that the Lost Tribes of Israel moved to England and became American
settlers.
Why did they cease being a fringe and seize the
foreground with such numbers and money? What -- besides changes in the
national mood -- caused the billion-dollar gospel boom? Much of it was
created by three electronic marvels: (1) superslick videotape
production that gives a "class" look to television shows,
(2) fixed-orbit satellites that relay broadcasts all over America for
pickup by stations and cable systems, (3) computerized fund-raising
centers able to receive miliions of letters bearing $10 and $20 checks
and to mail back machine-written responses selected by coding and
disguised to appear personal.
As television's drawing power grew apparent, a
crowd of celebrity preachers took to the air, competing for
listener-donors. Today more than 1,000 different gospel shows are
bounced off the satellites or distributed by radio tape and videotape
to stations and cables. It's a bonanza for the broadcast industry. A
typical clear-channel radio station, WWVA of Wheeling, sells $1
million worth of evening half-hours to revivalists annually. Billy
Graham pays up to $25,000 per television station per hour for his
prime-time crusades.
Listeners foot the bill. Most shows work like
this: Watchers are invited to write for a free gift, such as a
four-cent "Jesus First" lapel pin. Once a viewer's name and
address go into the computer, he gets letters urging him to beome a
"faith partner" and send monthly donations. The computer
keeps track of big givers and little givers -- and ejects names that
don't produce after three mailings. (Some evangelists raise extra
money by selling their donor lists to others.) Computers also dispatch
monthly newsletters and sometimes choose prewritten replies to viewers
who write about spiritual or personal problems.
The more magnetic a revivalist is, the more
watcher-supporters he draws, which allows him to buy time on more
stations, which draws more donors, which buys more air time, which
draws more donors, etc. His operation also can expand by sale of
books, records, magazines, gospel novelties, and tape cassettes. A big
entrepreneur usually starts his own gospel college and creates an
overseas mission. So far, the top evangelists, their shows, and the
best estimates of their yearly grosses rank like this:
Garner Ted Armstrong (The World Tomorrow) - $75
million Oral Roberts Evangelistic Association - $60 million Pat
Robertson (700 Club and Christian Network) - $58 million Jim Bakker
(PTL Club and Network) - $51 million Jerry Falwell (Old-Time Gospel
Hour) - $46 million Billy Graham Evangelistic Association - $40
million Rex Humbard (Cathedral of Tomorrow) - $25 million Jimmy
Swaggart (Camp Meeting Hour) - $20 million Robert Schuller (Hour of
Power) - $16 million James Robison (Man with a Message) - $15 million
"Rev. Ike" Eikerenkoetter (United Church) - $6-15 million
Ernest Angley (Grace Cathedral) - (secret)
Established, mainstream denominations worry that
one-man television sects are siphoning off members and money that
would otherwise go to hometown churches. Dr. Martin Marty, a Lutheran
scholar, says the "ruffle-shirted, pink-tuxedoed pitchmen"
are formidable rivals, and "the loser is the local church."
Presbyterian Survey magazine sneers at "show-biz religion"
and "TV salvation for sale" and "the hucksterism of
big-time religious broadcasting." Everett Parker, communications
chief of the United Church of Christ, says, "They are on
television to make money so they can expand their television exposure
and make more money."
Paul Stevens, retiring communications director
of the Southern Baptist Church, announced last year that he plans to
start a committee to force financial disclosure by wealthy
"glamour boys of religious broadcasting." Stevens said many
Christians feel "a mass revulsion against these charlatans....
Something has to be done. Morally and spiritually, these people are
doing wrong.... A man who collects, as one did, $71 million in a year
and, as far as we can tell, bought only $10 million worth of
[broadcast] time, leaves $61 million unaccounted for." Later
Stevens told me he had to postpone his retirement and creation of his
committee.
Dr. William Fore, assistant general secretary of
the National Council of Churches, told me he doesn't think all
radio-television evangelists are swindlers -- only some of them. He
sent me a paper in which he wrote that most broadcast preachers are
dedicated, but "some are in the lunatic fringe.... Some are con
artists and manipulators. And a few are just plain crooks and
frauds." He said television religion is "great show
business, a great audience-grabber, a great moneymaker.... But it's
lousy religion."
Even Billy Graham remarked on a national
telecast: "Because of the great evangelical awakening in
America... there are some charlatans coming along, and the public
ought to be informed about them and warned against them." Jimmy
Swaggart, an unschooled but shrewd tongue-talker from the Louisiana
backwoods, wrote in his autobiography that he "detested the
trickery" of "radio evangelists who specialized in selling
so-called miracle billfolds, prayer cloths and anointing oil over the
airwaves." Today Swaggart sells $30 "Jesus Saves"
pen-and-pencil sets on his show.
The suspicions, the talk of charlatans, arise
partly from the fact that U.S. evangelists are allowed to keep their
finances as secret as they wish. Under federal law, anything that
calls itself a church is exempt from taxes and disclosures. (Even a
saint might be tempted if he handled secret money every day. A
revivalist always begs, "Give to God," but he knows God's
name isn't on the bank account; he knows who gets to spend the money.)
Michigan has passed a state law requiring churches that solicit from
the public to file financial disclosures, as charities do. The
Michigan law already has been challenged in court as a violation of
freedom of religion. Reader's Digest published an appeal last November
for a U.S. law to force disclosure of all church money. it wouldn't
harm reputable denominations, the Digest said, but actually
"would help them by exposing the spiritual con artists who cast
shadows on all religious fund-raising."
Such a disclosure bill was introduced in 1977 by
born-again Congressman Mark Hatfield and others, but it failed. In
1979, Billy Graham and three dozen other revivalists launched a
voluntary disclosure plan. They created the Evangelical Council for
Financial Accountability, which will require members to issue public
audits. Revivalists who refuse to join presumably will be stigmatized
-- if their followers notice.
The Better Business Bureau, which protects
consumers from rip-offs, is doing its bit by citing evangelists who
won't open their books. The BBB lists 50 ministries as failing to meet
BBB's ethical standards.
The toughest crackdown lately, however, has been
by the Federal Communications Commission, the watchdog of the
airwaves. The FCC holds that it's against the fraud-by- wire law for a
broadcaster to beg money for one purpose and spend it for another.
This legal basis is being used in attempts to revoke licenses of some
church-owned stations. FCC Chairman Charles Ferris remarked last year:
"They are public trustees. They use a public resource, the
airways, and they have an obligation to stay within the perimeters of
the law, with respect to the use of these airways, and to serve the
public. Where there is fraud with respect to deceit, or improper use
of those airways, you know, for fraudulent purposes, our obligation to
investigate that and make recommendations as to who the proper
licensee should be."
The FCC recently busted the Rev. Eugene Scott of
California, who grosses $4 million a year by marathon preaching over
three television stations owned by his Faith Center. In 1977 when the
license of one station was up for renewal, the FCC asked to see
Scott's financial records. He refused, saying the government can't pry
inside a church. In 1978 the FCC cited Scott for: (1) refusal to open
his books, (2) possible fraud in fund-raising, and (3) failure to
serve the public interest. On March 17, FCC administrative judge
Edward Luton ruled that Scott's continued refusal to show records had
forfeited his right to the television license. An appeal is pending.
Also, California Attorney General George
Deukmejian demanded Faith Center's records for an investigation of
possible fund misuse. Deukmejian is moving against a few California
churches under a state law that requires him to protect donors to
charity. Scott calls the bureaucrats "monkeys" and says that
he'll never open his books. "I'm either going to beat the hell
out of the FCC or beat them into hell," he declared. His
attorney, Andrew Zanger, said the attorney general "isn't even
going to get to see a voucher for toilet paper."
In 1973 the FCC defrocked a radio station
operated by anti-Communist preacher Carl McIntire on grounds that his
programs against American "subversives" were political
"hate clubs" violating the fairness doctrine. The aging
McIntire, head of multi-million-dollar fundamentalist centers in New
Jersey and Florida, was sued in 1979 by a Virginia Beach widow who
says he took $100,000 from her. After the Russians invaded
Afghanistan, McIntire mailed appeals this year, saying his anti-Red
career had been "vindicated." He asked for donations of
"$100,000, $25,000 -- I am asking you to answer this letter with
as large a gift as possible." He included pre-written wills for
supporters to sign, bequeathing their estates to his ministry. (I got
one because I'm on Mclntire's mailing list, but I didn't will him my
assets.) New Jersey officials said the "mail-a-will" plan
probably isn't legal.
Another federal watchdog, the IRS, tries to
monitor 800,000 tax-free churches, charities, schools, foundations,
hospitals, etc. By law, money of a tax-exempt organization cannot
"inure to the benefit of" any leader. Ministers are limited
to reasonable salaries, parsonages, and legitimate expenses, according
to IRS spokesman Larry Batdorf. I asked him how Rev. Ike
Eikerenkoetter can enjoy 16 Rolls-Royces, $1,000 suits, two mansions,
diamonds and such luxuries. Batdorf replied that the IRS can't discuss
publicly any person's income. "But I'm sure there are
abuses," he added.
The IRS sometimes revokes the exemption of a
ministry that becomes more profit than prophet. It axed the Rev. Ralph
Baney of Kansas City after he spent funds of the Holy Land Christian
Approach Mission for a 236-acre luxury estate, a stable of Tennessee
walking horses, and a yacht in Florida. However, at the National
Information Bureau in New York, a charity data center, director M.C.
VanDeWorkeen told me that the mission had reformed under new
leadership and now operates reputably.
So far, all the turmoil hasn't fazed America's
gospel boom. The evangelical bandwagon continues to roll, spanning all
the way from born-again President Carter to Manson cult killers Tex
Watson and Susan Atkins, now saved and selling paperbacks about it.
And the gospel gold mine continues to produce billion-dollar revenues,
with no end in sight.
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"The God Biz" is copyright © 1995 by
James A. Haught. All rights reserved. The electronic version is
copyright © 1997 by Internet Infidels with the written permission of
James A. Haught. All rights reserved.
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