WASHINGTON (BP)--Four television ministries still have refused
to comply fully with a U.S. Senate committee's probe into their
financial records nearly nine months after first being asked.
The ministries of Kenneth Copeland, Creflo Dollar, Eddie Long
and Randy and Paula White have provided only partial information
or none at all, said Sen. Charles Grassley, R.-Iowa, who
initiated the investigation by requesting information from six
televangelists in early November.
The ministries of Benny Hinn and Joyce Meyer, however, gave
"extensive answers to all questions," Grassley said.
Grassley's questions of the televangelists were based on
accounts of abuses from watchdog organizations and
whistleblowers, as well as investigative news reports, he has
said. Accusations of contributions being used to support lavish
lifestyles have been leveled against at least some of the
televangelists.
In a news release, the minority leader on the Senate Finance
Committee said of the noncompliant televangelists:
-- Copeland has provided partial answers to a majority of
questions but nothing on inquiries about compensation. He has
said he will not give further answers even if served a subpoena.
-- Dollar has refused to provide any responses, and attorneys
for his church said the televangelist has not changed his mind.
-- Long has given only general information on his ministry.
-- The Whites have submitted answers only on certain matters.
Finance Committee staff members are communicating with lawyers
for the ministries in an attempt to gain responses, Grassley
said. In Copeland's case, the staff is seeking advice from
Senate lawyers on what should be done next, Grassley said.
"The ministries that continue not to cooperate appear to be
heeding the advice of attorneys who are not familiar with
congressional oversight in general and specifically the Finance
Committee's oversight and legislative work in the area of
tax-exempt organizations over the last seven years," Grassley
said in the July 7 release. "These attorneys who aren't part of
the ministries themselves have a natural incentive to prolong
the process as long as possible."
Grassley commended Meyer and Hinn, saying they had "provided
information over and above what was requested." Both
televangelists have communicated they are "instituting reforms
without waiting for the committee to complete its review," he
said.
In his initial request, Grassley asked the televangelists to
provide personal and ministry-related financial records. Sen.
Max Baucus, D.-Mont., the Finance Committee's chairman, joined
Grassley March 11 in calling for the ministries to cooperate.
They set a March 31 deadline for compliance.
All the televangelists targeted by the committee are identified
with the "word of faith" movement, Copeland has said on his
ministry's website. "Word of faith" teaching normally includes
the "prosperity gospel," which asserts that the Bible promises
physical and financial blessings to followers of Christ.
Evangelical critics of the teaching, however, say such doctrine
mistakenly equates God's promises of blessing with temporal,
materialistic success.
The founder of a watchdog organization said the noncompliance of
televangelists such as Copeland and Dollar appears to be
prompting Grassley to consider further regulation of nonprofit
ministries.
"Religious conservatives, like ourselves, believe this to be an
unfortunate development, but if donors do not insist on even
greater levels of ministry cooperation with donor advocate
[organizations], unneeded government regulation is sure to
follow," Rusty Leonard of MinistryWatch.com said in a written
statement.
"It has been donors' willingness to ignore the clear warning
signs from a relatively few questionable ministries that will
partly cause any increased government oversight," Leonard said.
"The ministry community's unwillingness to call out those who
are simultaneously abusing donors, the Word of God and current
government regulations through meaningful self-policing also
[is] to blame for any burdensome new regulations."
Letters on behalf of Copeland and Dollar were sent March 31 to
inform members of the Senate Finance Committee of the
noncompliance, saying it was based in part on the targeting of
teachers from the "word of faith" movement. The lawyers said
Copeland and Dollar not only objected to the investigation's
potential infringement of the First Amendment's protection of
free religious exercise but also the senators' failure to
operate through the current process provided by the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS).
Both ministries said they would comply with an examination by
the IRS under the protections it provides.
The names of the televangelists and their ministries, plus the
locations of their headquarters, are: Kenneth Copeland, Kenneth
Copeland Ministries, Newark, Texas; Creflo Dollar, World
Changers Church International, College Park, Ga.; Eddie Long,
New Birth Missionary Baptist Church, Lithonia, Ga.; Joyce Meyer,
Joyce Meyer Ministries, Fenton, Mo.; Benny Hinn, Benny Hinn
Ministries, Grapevine, Texas; and Randy and Paula White, Without
Walls International Church and Paula White Ministries, Tampa,
Fla.
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