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Preacher Sneakers

Preacher Sneakers

 

PREACHERS AND THEIR $5,000 SNEAKERS: WHY ONE MAN STARTED AN INSTAGRAM ACCOUNT SHOWING CHURCHES’ WEALTH

From his couch in Dallas, Ben Kirby began asking questions about the lifestyles of the rich and famous pastors when he was watching some worship songs on YouTube on a Sunday morning in 2019. While listening to a song by Elevation Worship, a megachurch based in Charlotte, the evangelical churchgoer noticed the lead singer’s Yeezy sneakers were worth nearly the amount of his first rent check.


Rapper Kanye West sports Yeezy shoes during a meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington D.C. on Oct. 11, 2018.© Calla Kessler/The Washington Post Rapper Kanye West sports Yeezy shoes during a meeting with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington D.C. on Oct. 11, 2018.

Kirby posted to his 400 followers on Instagram, “Hey Elevation Worship, how much you paying your musicians that they can afford $800 kicks? Let me get on the payroll!”

Plus, Kirby wondered, how could the church’s pastor, Steven Furtick, one of the most popular preachers in the country, afford a new designer outfit nearly every week?

With a friend’s encouragement, Kirby started a new Instagram account @PreachersNSneakers posting screenshots of pastors next to price tags and the street value of shoes they were wearing. Within a month, the account had attracted 100,000 followers.

“At the beginning, it was easy for me to make jokes about it,” he said. “Some of the outfits are absurd, so it’s easy to laugh at some of the designer pieces. The price tags are outlandish.”

On his feed, Kirby has showcased Seattle pastor Judah Smith’s $3,600 Gucci jacket, Dallas pastor T.D. Jakes’s $1,250 Louboutin fanny pack and Miami pastor Guillermo Maldonado’s $2,541 Ricci crocodile belt. And he considers Paula White, former president Donald Trump’s most trusted pastoral adviser who is often photographed in designer items, a PreachersNSneakers “content goldmine,” posting a photo of her wearing $785 Stella McCartney sneakers.

As the Instagram account grew, Kirby started asking more serious questions about wealth, class and consumerism, including whether it’s appropriate to generate massive revenue from selling the gospel of Jesus.

“I began asking, how much is too much?” Kirby said. “Is it okay to get rich off of preaching about Jesus? Is it okay to be making twice as much as the median income of your congregation?”

The Washington Post tried to contact several pastors featured on the Instagram account for comment, including Carl Lentz, White and Jakes, but none of them replied.

For the past two years, Kirby has posted and podcasted without sharing his real name, but recently he decided to share his real identity with The Post with the release of his new book, “PreachersNsneakers: Authenticity in an Age of For-Profit Faith and (Wannabe) Celebrities.”

Kirby, 31, who grew up in a Christian home schooling family in Ruston, La., holds a degree in marketing management and an MBA. He attends a nondenominational church and considers himself an evangelical, he said, “not as in, ‘Trump is the chosen one,’ but I believe in sharing my faith.”

When Kirby began showcasing pastors’ high fashion, he was putting dollar signs on designer items for everyone to see just how expensive the clothing items were valued, said Whitney Bauck, a journalist who writes about ethically sourced fashion and first wrote about the Instagram account.

“He is someone who gets Christianity enough and gets fashion enough, but also has a really critical eye,” Bauck said. “He’s not a known professional in either space, so he was willing to say things that people in those spaces weren’t.”

Kirby’s father is a family-practice doctor, so he grew up in what he describes as a “comfortable but modest lifestyle,” where his parents gave generously to their church. He remembers feeling confused when he saw his “Pastor Charles” driving a royal blue Harley Davidson cruiser, worth more than one year of his parent’s tithes. That’s when, he said, he realized that there was a “somewhat fuzzy line” between successful ministry and booming business.

In his new book, Kirby highlights a nationwide trend of pastors wearing oversize glasses, tight jeans and pricey kicks who look like they belong at “your local craft-cocktail watering hole instead of church.”

“Gone are the days of a choir, suited up pastor and random people sitting in velvet chairs onstage. No,” Kirby writes. “Now it’s a U2 incarnate worship band, perfectly placed LED wash lights and a pastor … motivating, edgy and might even let a cuss word slip if you’re lucky.”

From suits to denim, many pastors of all kinds of denominations have shifted in their dress in recent years. The Rev. Melech Thomas, who was born in Baltimore and now pastors an AME church near Raleigh, N.C. said he started attending a Black church in the 1990s, when all the pastors wore black suits. He watched as a generation of young Black male youth pastors began trying to reach a hip-hop generation by wearing jeans and Jordans.

“First it was a theological statement,” Thomas said. “Now it’s a statement of status.”

Thomas, who has been a minister in places with lower-income populations, said he buys most of his clothes from places that set an example to his followers that they don’t have to go into debt to impress people.

“They’re making deliberate choices with the DaVinci, the Prada,” Thomas said. “It seems like they’re choosing to do ministry to people who can afford shoes like that.”

In his book, Kirby writes that these pastors who have enormous social media followings aren’t simply pastors anymore, he writes. Often they are motivational speakers, corporate coaches and leadership consultants. Kirby said he has heard of churches where a volunteer was designated solely for the purpose of carrying the pastor’s Bible. Often, he writes, these pastors have private entrances, reserved parking spaces, security details and a gaggle of personal assistants or handlers. And, often, they promise blessings from God to their followers if their followers bless the church.

“Like Hollywood — a world so often criticized by the pietistic — these institutions and their leaders celebrate and reward the ‘blessing’ of fame, popularity and influence,” he writes. “Pastors function like ‘talent’ performing for an audience or like a spokesman for the church’s ‘brand.’ ”

In recent years, the line between who is a pastor and who is a celebrity has been blurred. Kirby notes how often Hollywood celebrities and preacher celebrities will be seen together in social media posts, such as Lentz playing basketball with Drake, pastor Rich Wilkerson Jr. FaceTimeing with Justin Bieber or pastor Craig Groeschel hanging out with Kanye West at his ranch in Wyoming.

Tim Gloege, a historian who wrote a book called “Guaranteed Pure” about marketing in evangelicalism, said fashion has always been important in religion. In Catholicism, dress was once simple and drawing on ancient Roman dress before liturgical dress became quite regal. The dress was so elaborate that it was the theme of the 2018 Met Gala.High church meets high fashion: How Catholic style took over the Met

During the Protestant Reformation, Gloege said, clergy dress became more academic during a movement toward simplicity.

But in the early 20th century, an evangelist named D.L. Moody made a big splash by dressing in business attire instead of clerical dress. Moody’s business attire made a class statement by associating himself with the respected leaders of his day, according to Gloege, and other pastors began to follow his example.

“Dress often reflects who people currently admire, and how you generate authority in society,” he said. “Do you trust the Koch brothers or George Clooney?”

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates the median salary for clergy was $53,180 in 2019, but Kirby’s Instagram feed showcases how a nationwide evangelical market has become lucrative for leaders with celebrity status. Like other social media influencers, sometimes these pastors are gifted the shoes and clothes they wear.

Kirby notes how the fancy-sneaker-wearing preacher trend has taken off while the resale market for sneakers has also boomed. In 2019, Kirby posted a picture of Pastor John Gray wearing the coveted Nike Air Yeezy 2 Red Octobers, selling at the time on the resale market for more than $5,600. If a pastor buys or receives a new pair of shoes as a gift with a lucrative resale value and chooses to wear them, it can demonstrate to followers that he can afford to not resell them.

Across the United States, the biggest-name pastors and worship leaders produce best-selling books and albums, often earning huge salaries and housing allowances from their churches. And many of the biggest churches, which do not have to disclose their revenue publicly, often generate opulent untaxed revenue.

In recent years, West has helped to bring merchandise into churches with his creation of “Sunday Service,” eventually selling $50 socks that said “Jesus Walks” and $225 crewneck sweatshirts with “Holy Spirit” on the front. Many megachurches began follow, developing their own merch with streetwear elements.

Since starting the Instagram account, Kirby has been dipping his own toes into the evangelical marketplace, entering a world that he has so openly critiqued. Like church leaders, his income is partially dependent on his podcast advertising and book sales, and he sells merch based off the brand. The difference, he said in a later clarification, is that he doesn’t leverage his position as a congregation’s spiritual leader, asking people to donate to a ministry that builds his personal brand.

He has had his own brushes with fame, texting with people such as once-major megachurch preacher Lentz, befriending Joel McHale of the TV show “Community” and attending a Super Bowl party thrown by NBA star Carmelo Anthony.

Kirby doesn’t want Christians to abandon fashion or celebrities, but he does want more transparency and accountability.

“I’m getting people to question the status quo within the church and hopefully push for a reevaluation of what we value,” he said. “People aren’t going to reach God without this guy wearing Yeezys? Come on.”

This story has been updated to correct the spellings of Ruston, La. and Joel McHale’s name. An early version of Kirby’s book suggested that Kirby had been to churches where a volunteer was designated for carrying a pastor’s Bible. He later clarified that he has heard of those churches.

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Preacher Jets

Preacher Jets

 

PREACHER JETS & SEED MONEY

Watch this video —

PREACHER JETS

CREFLO DOLLAR

In 2015, Creflo Dollar asked his congregation to donate $300 each – to his fundraiser. For what, you ask? A $65 million private Gulfstream jet, so that he could travel safely and comfortably to spread the word of the Gospel.

He has a Gulfstream Jet and a Gates LearJet

JESSE DUPLANTI

New Orleans televangelist Jesse Duplantis says people have misunderstood his reasons for wanting to buy a fourth private jet.

The pastor angered many Americans earlier this week when he solicited donations for a $54m plane. “If the Lord Jesus Christ was physically on the earth today, he wouldn’t be riding a donkey,” he told his followers in a video posted on his site. “He’d be in an airplane flying all over the world.”

Following critical headlines, Duplantis reiterated that his motives for buying a luxury Falcon 7X are entirely godly. Speaking to Good Morning America, Duplantis said he needed the plane for “preaching the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. It has nothing to do with luxurious.”

Earlier media reports said the coveted Falcon 7X would be the pastor’s fourth private plane, but Duplantis also said “there was a misnomer on that one. I said I’ve had three jets, I don’t have three jets.” Two of those jets are “now in other ministries. I only own one airplane now.” The pastor also stated that he would donate his old jet once he got the new one.

Duplantis, who is worth a reported $40m, had previously assured viewers of This Week With Jesse, a vlog on his website, that the new private jet would save money as well as souls. “People say … can’t you go with this one?” gesturing at a picture of one of the private jets he already owns. “Yes, but I can’t go it one stop. And if I can do it one stop, I can fly it for a lot cheaper, because I have my own fuel farm. And that’s what’s been a blessing of the Lord.”

View image on Twitter

Duplantis isn’t the only televangelist to have asked his supporters to help him get 30,000ft closer to God. In 2015, megachurch pastor Creflo Dollar put out a video asking people to help him purchase a Gulfstream G650, which cost about $65m. His ministry had a private jet already, but it was getting rather old, and was no longer fit for purpose. Nor were unholy commercial airlines up to scratch. Perhaps there is a forgotten commandment only televangelists are aware of: thou must never fly coach.

Dollar, who says his monetary moniker is his real name, despite some reports that he was actually born Michael Smith, preaches the “prosperity gospel”. So too does Duplantis, along with a number of other high-profile American televangelists such as Joel Osteen and Kenneth Copeland. Osteen owns a number of million-dollar mansions and, of course, has a private jet. Copeland also has a private jet; he once described flying on a commercial flight as “getting in a long tube with a bunch of demons”.

The prosperity gospel is an American theological tradition, which essentially says that God is a rampant capitalist who makes true believers wealthy and blessed. (The prosperity gospel popularized the term ‘blessed’ and helped turned it into a hashtag.) A 2006 Time poll found 17% of American Christians identify with the movement, while 31% believe that “if you give your money to God, God will bless you with more money”.

It should be said that the Bible is full of verses that would seem to dispel this view. In Luke 18, for example, Jesus says: “It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.” However, that was in the days before aviation. It stands to reason that the kingdom of God is far more easily accessible by jet plane.

KENNETH COPELAND

Cessna 550 Citation Bravo and Cessna 750 Citation X

JOYCE MEYER

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Mark Humphrey/AP/REX/Shutterstock (6147956aw) Rick Warren, Joyce Meyer Pastor Rick Warren, right, and author Joyce Meyer present an award at the Dove Awards, in Nashville, Tenn Music Dove Awards, Nashville, USA

JOEL OSTEEN

MARK BARKLEY

Citation III 650

PAUL CROUCH – TBN

A Hawker 800XP and a Bombardier BD-700-1A10

THEY ALSO HAVE 13 MANSIONS (AND A $100,000 MOTOR HOME JUST FOR JAN’S TWO DOGS).  HERE IS AN EXAMPLE OF ONE OF THEIR MANSIONS;

PAT ROBINSON

C-21 Learjet Model 35

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Lutheran

Lutheran

 

Martin Luther

On The Jews and Their Lies, Luther’s anti-Jewish rants from the 1500s influenced the leaders of the Nazi party in the 20th century.

“First, their synagogues should be set on fire, and whatever does not burn up should be covered or spread over with dirt so that no one may ever be able to see a cinder or stone of it. And this ought to be done for the honor of God and of Christianity in order that God may see that we are Christians… secondly, their homes should likewise be broken down and destroyed… thirdly, they should be deprived of their prayer books and Talmuds… fourthly, their rabbis must be forbidden under threat of death to teach anymore… To sum up, dear princes and nobles who have Jews in your domains, if this advice of mine does not suit you, then find a better one so that you and we may all be free of this insufferable devilish burden, the Jews…”        Martin Luther

“What harm would it do, if a man told a good strong lie for the sake of the good and for the Christian church […]a lie out of necessity, a useful lie, a helpful lie, such lies would not be against Godhe would accept them.

Martin Luther cited by his secretary, in a letter in Max Lenz, ed., Briefwechsel Landgraf Phillips des Grossmüthigen von Hessen mit Bucer, vol. I. “

[Martin Luther 1483 – 1546]

“But an heretic is one that introduces false opinions and doctrines against the articles of the Christian faith, contrary to the true meaning of Holy Scripture, and stubbornly maintains and defends them. The papists do not call me a heretic, but a schismatic; one that prepares discords and strifes. But I say, the pope is an arch heretic,for he is an adversary to my blessed Saviour Christ; and so am I to the pope, because he makes new laws and ordinances according to his own will and pleasure, and so directly denies the everlasting priesthood of Christ. “

‘Luther was, it should be remembered, thoroughly in accord with pope and with emperor in the belief that it was the duty of the faithful to destroy heresy. He only differed from the pope as to what constituted heresy. In 1525, we find him invoking the aid of the censorship regulations of Saxony and of Brandenburg for the purpose of stamping out the “pernicious doctrines” of the Anabaptists and of the followers of Zwingli.’

[Martin Luther 1483 – 1546]

“The multitude of books is a great evil. There is no measure or limit to this fever for writing; every one must be an author; some out of vanity, to acquire celebrity and raise up by name; others for the sake of lucre and gain. The Bible is now buried under so many commentaries, that the text is nothing regarded….The aggregation of large libraries tends to divert men’s thoughts from the one great book, the Bible, which ought, day and night, to be in every one’s hand….Never will the writings of mortal man in any respect equal the sentences inspired by God. We must yield the place of honour to the prophets and the apostles, keeping ourselves prostrate at their feet as we listen to their teaching. “

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Pentecostal

Pentecostal

 

PENTECOSTAL

is a term used within Christianity to denote those Christians who place a primary emphasis on the so-called “gifts of the Holy Spirit”. According to Pentecostals, “gifts” such as faith healing, prophecy, and speaking in tongues occupy a primary place in the life of the church.

Congregation speaking in tongues.

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Marcus Wesson

Marcus Wesson

 

Marcus Wesson

Convicted of nine counts of first-degree murder and 14 sex crimes, including the rape and molestation of his underage daughters.

MARRIES HIS 8 YEAR OLD DAUGHTER (GOD TOLD HIM TO DO IT)

Wesson became involved with Rosemary Solorio, a married woman living in San Jose, California. Soon Solorio broke up with her husband, and Wesson moved in with her and her children.

In 1971, Solorio gave birth to Wesson’s son. At the same time, Wesson was cultivating a relationship with one of Solorio’s daughters, Elizabeth, telling her that God had chosen her to be his bride.  In 1974, at the age of 8, Elizabeth was “married” to the 27-year-old Wesson in a home wedding ceremony.  He began sexually abusing her at age 12.  At age 15, they married legally when she became pregnant.  Four months later, she gave birth to her first child.  Eventually the Wesson and his daughter had 10 children together

One of Elizabeth’s younger sisters left her own seven children with them, claiming to be unable to care for them. Wesson never held a steady job; he lived off welfare, and had his adult children work and give him all of their earnings.

Wesson was abusive toward his wife and children. He prevented Elizabeth from participating in the children’s upbringing. He home-schooled the children and taught them from his own handwritten Bible that focused on Jesus Christ being a vampire. He told the children that he was God and had them refer to him as “Master” or “Lord”.

He taught the children to be prepared for Armageddon and said that the girls were destined to become Wesson’s future wives. He separated the boys from the girls, fearing they would develop sexual feelings for each other. He had the boys stay in a shack in a heavily wooded area and the girls on a rundown boat for several months.

Wesson sexually abused two daughters and three nieces, “marrying” each in home ceremonies when they were around 7 to 9 years old. Each of the five girls became pregnant as a result of the incest. The mothers never disclosed the paternity of their children because Wesson threatened to harm them and the children if they did so. Court records indicate that Wesson fathered up to 18 children with 7 women, including his five daughters.

MURDERS

Prior to March 12, 2004, Wesson had declared his intention to relocate his daughters and their children to Washington state, where Wesson’s parents lived.  On March 12, 2004, several members of Wesson’s extended family, along with two nieces who rebelled against him, converged on his family compound demanding the release of their children.   

Fresno police were summoned to what was described as a child custody issue, and a standoff ensued.  Fresno police testified they did not hear gunshots being fired shortly after, though other witnesses present at the standoff testified they did hear gunshots fired at that time.  In the aftermath, police discovered nine bodies, including two of Wesson’s daughters and a total of seven of their children, in a bedroom filled with antique coffins.   Each victim had been fatally shot through the eye. Wesson’s other children, who were not present inside the house, survived the incident. 

VICTIMS

  • Sebhrenah April Wesson (age 25)
  • Elizabeth Breahi Kina Wesson (age 17)
  • Illabelle Carrie Wesson (age 8)
  • Aviv Dominique Wesson (age 7)
  • Johnathon St Charles Wesson (age 7)
  • Sedonia Solorio Wesson (age 2)
  • Marshey St Christopher Wesson (age 2)
  • Ethen St Laurent Wesson (age 4)
  • Jeva St Vladensvspry Wesson (age 1)

TRIAL

At Wesson’s trial, the prosecutor was Chief Deputy District Attorney, Lisa Gamoian. Wesson was represented by public defenders Peter Jones and Ralph Torres. They presented the defense that his 25-year-old daughter Sebhrenah, committed all the murders, including of her son Marshey and then committed suicide.  The murder weapon, a .22 caliber handgun, was found with her body, and Sebhrenah’s DNA was found on the gun, which lent credence to Wesson’s claim.  The jury declined to find that Wesson fired the fatal shots, but convicted him of murder anyway, presumably finding that he had persuaded his children to enter into a suicide pact. 

CONVICTION AND SENTENCE

Wesson was convicted of nine counts of first-degree murder on June 17, 2005, and also found guilty on 14 counts of forcible rape and the sexual molestation of seven of his daughters and nieces. Wesson was sentenced to death on June 27, 2005 and is currently in San Quentin State Prison. 

Marcus Wesson Books

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christian leaders

Christian Leaders

Christian Leaders

 
Jimmy Swagert

"I have sinned against you Lord, ... but I loved that prostitute ......"

TODAYS CHRISTIAN LEADERS

In 1990 Americans gave, donated, coerced into giving over 48 Billion to T.V. evangelicals, churches, religious cults - non-taxable.    Associated Press

swaggartswaggert

I have sinned against you, my Lord.– Jimmy Swaggart

If I do not return to the pulpit this weekend, millions of people will go to hell.– Jimmy Swaggart

The minister of the Gospel is really the yardstick by which the nation measures its morals.– Jimmy Swaggart

I'm on T.V. raising money so I can afford to be on T.V. to raise money. - Jimmy Swaggart, Associated Press

His impassioned sermons were aired on an astounding 200+ networks, all of which shared his message (and his requests for donations).  He was involved in a number of sex scandals involving prostitutes coming to light. Swaggart made an epic confession, taking his characteristic intensity to the max with his tearful declaration, “I have sinned” (imagine in a Louisiana accent). Swaggart was defrocked and de-affiliated.  He continued his ministry unaffiliated and, through his incessant efforts, rebuilt both his following and his millionaire status.

swaaggert

Still Preaching to his congregation

Jim and tammy

Jim Baker and Tammy Faye

I started out by believing God for a newer car than the one I was driving. I started out believing God for a nicer apartment than I had. Then I moved up.– Jim Baker

Why should I apologize because God throws in crystal chandeliers, mahogany floors, and the best construction in the world?.– Jim Baker

I feel like God has forgiven me of so much, that I will forgive everyone who has hurt us.– Jim Baker

Most of you are so young you don’t know who I am, and that’s good.– Jim Baker

jimmy crying

Embezzled millions...

tammy fey

"I'm Saved!" - Tammy Faye

tammy fayetammy and dog

Oral Roberts

Oral Robertstower of powercity plex Oral healing

“God told me to build the tower,” Oral Roberts.

Warren Jeffs

warren jeffs

"I am the Prophet," Warren Jeffs.

warren jeffs

Had 87 wives.  At the culmination of the trial, on 25 September, Jeffs was found guilty of two counts of being an accomplice to rape (assaulting/arranging marriages of "child brides,"). He was sentenced to life in prison for the assault of a 12-year-old girl, and 20 years more for the assault of a 15-year old girl. The judge ordered that the sentences be served consecutively, and Strickland also said that Jeffs must serve at least 35 years of the life sentence and half of the other sentence.  But with the U.S. legal system, this could change since many with life sentences only serve 7 years, some as little as 5 years. A life sentence doesn't mean for the life of the criminal.

 

Don’t think for yourself. Just listen to me and follow me” (translation: support me with money). – All TV evangelists

 

Jerry Farwell

jerry farwell

Jerry Farwell sued because of being depicted in a cartoon screwing his mother.  It is well known that this is the right of a free press to do this.  He felt this didn't apply to him.  He pushed the suit all the way to the Supreme Court.  He lost all the way up to the Supreme Court.  And then he lost a final time at the Supreme Court.

Paul and Jan Crouch

crouch and wife

Spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on her hair.

wife Jan and hairJans hairJans hair

Love your hair, Jan .... you are so beautiful.

Jan crafted her look after a pink puppet she used to use in one of her kids shows.

crouch and wife

It used to be that you prayed with your palms touched together.... Today the holy rollers pray with both hands high in the air ....

Paul Crouch dressing like a Catholic

"I should have been a Catholic Priest" ..... Paul Crouch.

F you paul crouch

Crouch tells the audience graphically to .... "Go to Hell."

Paul Crouch died in 1973 and Jan took over the ministry.

Some of Jan Crouch’s personal expenses included mansions, private jets, those custom wigs (the cost of which would surprise you), and an air-conditioned mobile home designed specifically for her little Maltese terriers. Crouch also rented adjoining rooms for herself and said pups at a deluxe Florida hotel for nearly two years while she was building her biblical theme park.  Her ministry includes a theme park called The Holy Land Experience.

crouch today

Jan today

Sun Myung Moon

sun moon

"Romantic love leads to sexual promiscuity," Sun Myung Moon.

"Do you like my crown?"

sun moon

 

sun moon weddings

21,000 couples get married at Olympic Stadium.

sun moon weddings

30,000 couples filled the grounds...

 

Benny Hinn

benny hinnbenny hinn

Benny with his Jesus Novel ....

benny hinn

He heals everyone in the stadium ...

Billy Graham

billy grahambilly at white housegraham with eisenhowergraham with kennedygraham revival tentgraham praying

Embellished Bible stories to the point of ridiculousness ... but was the evangelist to 4 Presidents.

graham today

Pat Robertson

pat robertsonpat robertson

Ran for President

Pat Robertson has declared that the Protestant faith harbors the antiChrist, Islam is Satanic, and Hinduism is demonic. In an interview just after the September 11 terror attacks, Robertson told the interviewer that  “the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays, and the lesbians helped it happen.”

Zola Levit      (the idol worshiping Jew)

zola levit

He, a Jew, a stupid Jew, wanted Jews to become idol worshiping Christians, and be conned by the greatest con who ever lived  ... Constantine.

Dan Quayle

dan quayle

In January, Vice President Dan Quayle spoke at a training conference of the religious right activists in Fort Lauderdate, whose theme was "Rclaiming America.  Before the event began he stood at attention as the crowd of more than two thousand rose, faced a flag with a cross on it, and with hands on hearts, recited in unison,"I pledge allegiance to the Christian flag, and to the Saviour, for whose Kingdom it stands, on Saviour, curcified, risen, and coming again, with life and liberty for all who believe." - New Yorker, July 18, 1994

joyce meyercarelton peterson

robert schullerkeneth copelandwolf in sheeps clothing

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kkk

KKK Christians

KKK Christians

 
kkk cross

They would meet in the Christian Churches...

The Christian KKK

KKK jesus pose
Klan members in Jesus pose

cross burning

kkk meeting

Jesus saves the KKK ...

They met in the Christian Churches

kkk books

kkk church
Jesus Saves!
kkk
The cross meant something.
kkk women
Women want to be included too!
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warren feffs

FLDS

FLDS

Warren Jeffs

warren jeffs

Jeffs was born to Rulon Jeffs and Marilyn Steed, the daughter of Woodruff Steed.[12]  Rulon, his father, was the leader of the FLDS Church.  After the death of Rulon, there survived 19 or 20 of his wives and approximately  60 of his children.  Jeffs held the position of counselor to the church leader, his father.

Following his father's death (2002), Warren Jeffs assumed leadership and took the title  "President and Prophet, Seer and Revelator" as well as "President of the Priesthood".   The latter title applied to an organization of all adult male church members that were deemed worthy to hold the priesthood.

Following his father's death, Jeffs told the high-ranking FLDS officials, "I won't say much, but I will say this—hands off my father's wives."  When addressing his father's widows he said, "You women will live as if Father is still alive and in the next room."  Within a week, Jeffs had married all but two of his father's wives.

As the sole individual in the church with the authority to perform marriages, Jeffs was responsible for assigning wives to husbands. He also had the authority to discipline male church members by "reassigning their wives, children and homes to another man."

Jeffs controlled almost all of the land in Colorado City, Arizona, and Hildale, Utah, which was part of a church trust, the United Effort Plan (UEP). The land has been estimated to be worth over $100 million.

Jeffs, like his predecessors, continued the standard FLDS and Mormon fundamentalist tenet that faithful men must follow what is known as the doctrine of "celestial" or plural marriage in order to attain exaltation in the afterlife. Jeffs specifically taught that a devoted church member is expected to have at least three wives in order to get into heaven, and the more wives a man has, the closer he is to heaven.

In July 2004, Jeffs' nephew, Brent Jeffs, filed a lawsuit against him alleging that in the late 1980s his uncle sodomized him in the Salt Lake Valley compound then owned by the FLDS Church. Brent Jeffs said he was five or six years old at the time, and that Jeffs' brothers, also named in the lawsuit, watched and participated in the abuse. Two of Jeffs' other nephews also made similar abuse claims against him. One of the alleged victims, Clayne Jeffs, committed suicide with a firearm after accusing Jeffs of sexually assaulting him as a child.

In June 2005, Jeffs was charged with sexual assault on a minor and with conspiracy to commit sexual misconduct with a minor for allegedly arranging, in April 2001, a marriage between a then-14-year-old girl and her 19-year-old first cousin, Allen. The young woman, Elissa Wall (then only known as "Jane Doe IV"), testified that she begged "Uncle Rulon" to let her wait until she was older, or choose another man for her. Rulon Jeffs was apparently "sympathetic", but Warren Jeffs was not, and she was forced to go through with the marriage. Wall alleged that her new husband raped her repeatedly and that she repeatedly miscarried. She eventually left Allen and the community.

Former church members claim that Jeffs himself currently has 70 wives.

Two of Jeffs' children, a son and a daughter, have publicly claimed that they were sexually abused by him.

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Heavens Gate

Heavens Gate

 
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"All aboard the Spacecraft...."

Marshall Apllewhite

Applewhite (a preacher's son) and his female partner, Bonnie Lu Nettles, concluded that they had been chosen to fulfill biblical prophecies, and that they had been given higher-level minds than other people.[16] They wrote a pamphlet that described Jesusreincarnation as a Texan, a thinly veiled reference to Applewhite.[17]Furthermore, they concluded that they were the two witnesses described in the Book of Revelation in the Jesus Novel.

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Bodies Position

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21 women and 18 men of varying ages–were all found lying peaceably in matching dark clothes and Nike sneakers. The largest U.S. mass suicide.

Each was laid out in bed clad in black sweatpants, black button-down tunics and out-of-the-box Nike Decade jogging shoes. Each torso and shorn head was enshrouded by a square of deep purple fabric.

Each of the dead had exactly $5.75 in a pocket, and all wore a Trekkie-inspired arm patch that read, "Heaven's Gate Away Team." Computers in the mansion flashed a Starship Enterprise-style "Red Alert."

Their leaders preached that suicide would allow them to leave their bodily “containers” and enter an alien spacecraft hidden behind the Hale-Bopp comet.suicide house

Applewhite rented a large home in Rancho Santa Fe, explaining to the owner that his group was made up of Christian-based angels.

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The leader, Applewhite, advocated sexual abstinence, and several male cult members followed his example by undergoing castration operations.  Most of his members followed him for 20 years.

The Hale Bopp Comet was a rocky blob of dirty ice hurtling through the Milky Way.

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The world was alerted by videotapes mailed by the cult to a former member who visited the mansion, then left and called 911.

The tapes, including 90 minutes of Applewhite's New Age babble and pitiful farewells from disciples trying to justify irrationality, have had 2 million views on YouTube. (Former disciples who missed the spaceship maintain the group's website, frozen in time from March 1997).   http://www.heavensgate.com/

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Branch Dividian

Branch Dividian

 
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Branch Dividian

 

Koresh
David Koresh

David Koresh = Vernon Wayne Howell

 

Howell moved quickly to assert his spiritual authority, and one of his first acts was the adoption of a new name, David Koresh. This name suggested that he was a spiritual heir of the biblical King David and that he, like Koresh (Hebrew for Cyrus, the ancient Persian king), was a messianic figure—though not the Messiah, Jesus.  (Cyrus is the only non-Jew to whom the title messiah, or "anointed one," is given in Scripture.)

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David Koresh loved the Jesus Novel
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David the rock star
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David and Davidian Building

February 28, 1993 the Mount Carmel headquarters was raided by the ATF.  After a long standoff ... on April 19, 1993 the headquarter building was burned down by the FBI in an attempt to enter.

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