Crunchy Con

Prosperity Gospel poltroons

Sunday August 16, 2009

Categories: Evangelicals

Prosperity preachers just burn me up. But how can you save people from themselves? Excerpt from a Times story about how prosperity preacher Kenneth Copeland is still doing land-office business in hard times:

Stephen Biellier, a long-distance trucker from Mount Vernon, Mo., said he and his wife, Millie, came to the convention praying that this would be "the overcoming year." They are $102,000 in debt, and the bank has cut off their credit line, Mrs. Biellier said.

They say the Copelands rescued them from financial failure 23 years ago, when they bought their first truck at 22 percent interest and had to rebuild the engine twice in a year.

Around that time, Mrs. Biellier first saw Mr. Copeland on television and began sending him 50 cents a week.

Others who bought trucks from the same dealer in Joplin that year went under, the Bielliers said, but they did not.

"We would have failed if Copeland hadn't been praying for us every day," Mrs. Biellier said.

The Bielliers are now among 386,000 people worldwide whom the Copelands call their "partners," most of whom send regular contributions and merit special prayers from the Copelands.

A call center at the ministry's 481-employee headquarters in Newark, Tex., takes in 60,000 prayer requests a month, a publicist said.

The Copelands' broadcast reaches 134 countries, and the ministry's income is about $100 million annually.

The Bielliers were at the convention a few years ago when a supporter made a pitch for people to join an "Elite CX Team" to raise money to buy the ministry a Citation X airplane. (Mr. Copeland is an airplane aficionado who got his start in ministry as a pilot for Oral Roberts.) At that moment, Mrs. Biellier said she heard the voice of the Holy Spirit telling her, "You were born to support this man."

She gave $2,000 for the plane, and recently sent $1,800 for the team's latest project: buying high-definition television equipment to upgrade the ministry's international broadcasts.

Mrs. Biellier said some friends and relatives would say the preacher just wanted their money. She explained that the Copelands did not need the money for themselves; it is for their ministry. And besides, even "trashy people like Hugh Hefner" have private airplanes.

"I remember Copeland had to once fly halfway around the world to talk to one person," she said. "Because we're partners with Kenneth Copeland, for every soul that gets saved, we get credit for that in heaven."

You hardly know where to begin with these people. Any of them. These Bielliers are over $100,000 in debt, yet they find the money to send thousands to these televangelists crooks. And somehow, the Copelands live with themselves, knowing that they're taking money from people who cannot afford to give. Like the good book doesn't say, but should, "A fool and his money are soon parted." Still, I would hate to be Kenneth Copeland, having to explain to Almighty God one day why he did what he did, taking advantage of the desperate.

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Comments
Elizabeth
August 17, 2009 8:39 AM

I wonder if it's the old "itching ears" thing -- if people who adhere to the false teachings (and money grabs) of evangelists like Copeland, Benny Hinn et al do so because the message validates, with an up-close-and-personalized "God stamp," people's own human yearning: See, I knew that God wants me to be rich and healthy and to live Kingdom Now!! It's for health, for wealth, for God's personal and specific blessing...and it's a terrible heresy, but those who pursue prosperity teaching aren't grounded in Tradition, much less tradition.

This is hard for me because my sister and her family have pursued "name it and claim it" "prophetic" living for several years...although by now they have developed a more sophisticated framework to explain how God is "legally bound" by the promises in his Word to give them the benefits of the kingdom of heaven now, on earth... But to watch her "shotgunning" through the Bible, looking for verses to speak aloud and thereby to claim the promise contained therein. Sad, so sad...

Jesus said something like "What you do for the least of these, you do unto me" -- buying Copeland a jet creates some dissonance here....

brierrabbit3030
August 17, 2009 9:21 AM

I lived in Mt Vernon for 20 years. Lovely small ozark town with a magnificent victorian era courthouse on the square. Very Mayberrish place. Still live nearby. To think the soiled hands of Copeland are reaching in there and soiling it. urks me. I hate prosperity gospel with an undying hate. I wonder if we could add another level to Dantes Hell, just for these guys.

Bob
August 17, 2009 10:04 AM

The Times article pointed out that the Coplands are being investigated by Congress for possible violations of tax codes, charitable institutions. Sounds good to me.

Your Name
August 17, 2009 3:01 PM

Rod,I know that much of the prosperity " gospel" is sham, but how do you know that these people don't use their jets for the work of saving souls and preaching the true Gospel. And when the Copelands ask for money, I'm sure they don't ask all their donors about their financial situation and about whether it it wise to donate to them. It's not like I know much about the Copelands, that's just the commonsense norm for human institutions, sacred, or otherwise. Whatever the many faults in their theology, we can't really blame the prosperity ministers for their supporters lack of financial wisdom.

John E - Agn Stoic
August 17, 2009 3:07 PM

Whatever the many faults in their theology, we can't really blame the prosperity ministers for their supporters lack of financial wisdom.

It's morally wrong to allow a sucker to keep his money. W. C. Fields

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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