On his award-worthy HBO program Last Week Tonight, John Oliver revels in exposing hypocrisy, from the compromised snake oil salesman Dr. Oz to âthin-skinnedâ megalomaniac Donald Trump. Sunday nightâs edition saw the intrepid British satirist target Americaâs shady fraternity of televangelists bleeding their brainwashed acolytes dry.
âThis is about the churches that exploit peopleâs faith for monetary gain,â Oliver announced.
Yes, in 2015, televangelism is still thriving in America. Back in March, The Daily Beast reported on Creflo Dollar, a pastor whoâd thoroughly convinced his loyal congregation that God wanted him to own a $65 million private jet, and wanted them to foot the bill.
Joining Dollar in his pursuit of the high life is Mike Murdock, a televangelist who shamelessly bragged in front of his congregation about purchasing not one, but two private jets with straight cash. And Kenneth Copeland, a televangelist whoâalong with his equally opportunistic wife, Gloriaâcalls his private jet a âpreaching machineâ that he uses only for church activities, yet was revealed to use it to fly to luxury ski resorts and gaming trips to India to hunt exotic animals.
All of these televangelists and more preach âThe Prosperity Gospelâ that, Oliver says, âargues that wealth is a sign of Godâs favor, and donations will result in wealth coming back to you. That idea takes the form of âseed faithââthat donations are seeds that you will one day get to harvest.â
Last Week then played a series of damning clips of televangelists requesting âseedâ money on their programs, including Murdock convincing those deep in credit card debt to donate $1,000 to his church in order to sow a âseedâ to God that will eventually wipe out said debt.
Even more harrowing is the case of Bonnie Parker, who, instead of seeking treatment for cancer, was convinced to âsowâ money into Copelandâs church due to the ministryâs teaching. After Parker died in 2004 from cancer, her daughter, Kristy Beach, claimed to have found her motherâs diaries that detailed the words she heard on TV from Kenneth and Gloria Copeland.
âIf she went to a doctor, it was a sin,â Beach told the AP. âYou didnât believe enough if you did. She just wrote: âGod heal me. God heal me. God heal me.ââOliver then played a video of Gloria Copeland, who hawks a series of âhealing faithâ products, suggesting to her congregation that itâs better to pray then to seek medical treatment for cancer.
âWe know whatâs wrong with youâyouâve got cancer,â preached Copeland. âThe bad news is we donât know what to do about it except give you some poison that will make you sicker. Now, which do you want to do: do you want to do that, or do you want to sit here on Saturday morning, hear the word of God, and let faith come into your heart and be healed? Hallelujah.â
Whatâs more, these âProsperity Gospelâ and âseed faithâ practices are not only legal, but, since these money-suck factories are technically churches, the vast sums of money people donate to them is tax-free. Even the IRS admits that its regulations concerning churches and religious entities are âpurposely broadâ and âa little vague.â In the IRS Tax Guide for Churches & Religious Organizations, âthe term church is found, but not specifically definedâ and the âIRS makes no attempt to evaluate the content of whatever doctrine a particular organization claims is religious, provided the particular beliefs⌠are truly and sincerely held⌠and the practices⌠are not illegal.â The IRS also rarely audits churches to prove their validity, examining just two churches in 2013 and one in 2014.
And, since they run a âchurch,â the Copelands can live in a $6.3 million mega-mansion tax-free, since itâs designated a âparsonage.â
To further prove his point, Oliver and Last Week Tonight claimed to have corresponded with televangelist Robert Tiltonâs Word of Faith Worldwide Church for seven months, first mailing him $20 in January along with a kindly-worded request to be added to his mailing list.âWithin two weeks, he sent me a letter back thanking me for my donation, and claiming, âI believe that God has supernaturally brought us together.ââ A couple of weeks after that, Oliver received an envelope with a $1 bill in it and a message that read, âSend it back to me with your best Prove God tithes or offering.ââThatâs right,â Oliver said, âI had to send the $1 back with an additional recommended offering of $37, which I did. So at this point, weâre just two letters in and itâs like having a pen pal whoâs in deep with some loan sharks.âOliver claims that in March, he was sent three packets of colored oil that he was instructed to pour on letters and send back to Tilton by specific dates, accompanied with more money. He did it. Then in April, Oliver was sent a manila envelope with a check enclosedâonly the check was for $5 from Oliver made out to Pastor Tiltonâs church. Seven letters later, he received pieces of fabric and was told to mail them back to Tilton with more money, which he did. Oliver later received a letter with a single $1 bill inside, requesting that he place the bill in his Bible overnight, then send it back the next day with $49. In return, heâd receive a $1 bill that had been blessed. âThat did not stop him,â Oliver said. âThe letters kept coming. I received another oil packet, more prayer cloths, and evenâand this is trueâan outline of his foot which I was asked to trace my foot on and mail back to him with more money. So, as of tonight, Iâve sent him $319 and received 26 lettersâthatâs almost one a week. And again, this is all hilarious until you imagine these letters being sent to someone who cannot afford what heâs asking for.â
To add insult to injury, Oliver claimed to have filed paperwork last week establishing a new church called Our Lady of Perpetual Exemptionâa process he describes as âdisturbingly easy.â Preach, Pastor Oliver.