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David Cerullo and Family’s Holy Blessings for a Price

Article from here, May 23 2009

“As Easter approached, the ad ran repeatedly on the Inspiration Network: David Cerullo, clutching a Bible, told viewers they, too, could receive prosperity, physical healing and other blessings God gave the ancient Israelites.

All they had to do, the televangelist said, was send $200 or more.

“Go to your phone,” he said. “Sow your Passover offering and watch God do what he said he would … Call now.” Pitches like this have transformed the Charlotte-area cable network into one of the world’s fastest-growing Christian broadcasters, beaming into more than 100 countries on five continents. They’ve also helped turn Cerullo, Inspiration’s CEO and on-air host, into a wealthy man.

He brings home more than $1.5 million a year, making him the best-paid leader of any religious charity tracked by watchdog groups. His salary dwarfs those of executives leading far larger religious nonprofits.

David and Barbara Cerullo live in a 12,000 square-foot lakefront home in south Charlotte — complete with an elevator and an 1,100-square-foot garage. Their grown children also receive handsome salaries.

His network, with a budget of nearly $80 million last year, sprang from the remnants of Jim Bakker’s PTL Club. Cerullo and his colleagues have raised much of the money by repeating this on-air assertion: God brings financial favor to those who donate.

Cerullo says he’s heard from many people who’ve “reaped a harvest” after contributing.

But some donors are disillusioned. Rebecca Mills, 54, of north Mississippi, gave about $400 two years ago. Money was tight. But it was a time when she was recovering from breast cancer and trying to get closer to God.

The more she read the Bible, the more she wondered why she’d written those checks: “I could just … tell that what they were saying wasn’t right.” Much of the money sent by people like Mills is now funding the City of Light, a 93-acre campus in northern Lancaster County, S.C., where the network’s plans include a sophisticated training and broadcast center.

Taxpayers are also helping to pay for it. Eager to bring jobs to a county with 19 percent unemployment, South Carolina offered the network incentives worth up to $26 million to land the campus — a deal that has been questioned by economic development experts.

Cerullo said he works hard for his salary and has turned down recommendations that he be paid more. He said his appeals to donors are based on God’s promises in the Bible, and that 80 cents of every dollar donated is spent to spread the Gospel.

“Ours is an organization based on accountability, based on integrity, based on trust,” the 56-year-old minister told the Observer. “We’ve proven that in the last 18 years over and over again.”

Rise of a broadcast power

The son of a well-known evangelist, David Cerullo didn’t grow up wanting to follow his father’s path.

As a teenager, he planned to be a doctor. But, at his parents’ request, he agreed to try Oral Roberts University, a Christian school in Oklahoma. There, he said, he began to feel God point him in another direction.

“In that still small voice in my spirit,” Cerullo said, “I felt God suggest to me, ‘Look, change your major to business, and I have other plans for you.’” After graduating with a business degree, he joined his father’s ministry and eventually helped run it. He was ordained in 1974 by the Assemblies of God, but said that even today, “I am probably more comfortable in a roomful of CPAs and lawyers and bankers than I am in a roomful of preachers.” His father, Morris, grew up in a Jewish orphanage in New Jersey and converted to Christianity at age 14. Later, Morris Cerullo staged worldwide crusades in which, his Web site says, “the lame walk, the blind see, the deaf hear.” The Inspiration Network launched in 1990, when Morris Cerullo paid $7 million to buy the assets of PTL’s cable television network out of bankruptcy. David Cerullo became president.

Throughout most of the 1990s, the network differed from many other religious TV stations: It didn’t ask for donations on the air. Instead, it generated revenue by selling advertising and airtime for programs produced by other ministries.

That changed in 1999. David Cerullo decided Inspiration should create its own programs to spread God’s word. “We started to put a face on the network,” he said.

That required money, so the network began soliciting donations from the public. Increasingly, it came to rely on “prosperity preachers” — guest evangelists who told viewers that God favored those who donated.

The gifts grew rapidly, from about $200,000 in 1999 to about $40 million last year.

The influx of money has created a powerhouse of religious broadcasting.

The ministry’s flagship Inspiration Network carries a variety of programming, from shows featuring controversial evangelists John Hagee and Benny Hinn to Christian hip-hop videos and an adventure show for children. Twice a day, the network airs its homegrown “Inspiration Today!” show, in which Cerullo and other evangelists ask for contributions.

Generous pay As their networks grew, David Cerullo and his wife built a comfortable life. Their home, in a gated south Charlotte community, is valued at $1.7 million, real estate records show.

Few nonprofit leaders are paid more than Cerullo. In 2007, he received roughly $1.52 million in base pay, along with other compensation totaling about $69,000, according to the ministry’s IRS filing.

Guidestar, which monitors nonprofits, compiles a database on thousands of charities — including 13,000 religious organizations that filed IRS returns for 2006, the last year with complete records. None of the faith-based groups paid their leaders more than the Inspiration Network.

Even religious nonprofits with vastly larger budgets pay their presidents substantially less, the Observer found. The Christian Broadcasting Network, founded by Pat Robertson, has a budget roughly four times larger than Inspiration’s. Compensation to CBN’s president totaled $344,000 in 2007.

Concern about Cerullo’s salary prompted Wall Watchers, which monitors religious charities, to issue a “donor alert” to caution people about giving to the Inspiration Networks.

“That amount of salary is outrageous and out of sight,” said Rodney Pitzer, research director for the Matthews-based group.

Cerullo declined to discuss Wall Watchers’ warning.

His family is also on the payroll. His wife, Barbara, received about $198,000 in total compensation in 2007, according to Inspiration’s IRS return. Son Ben, daughter Becky and their spouses, who also work there, received a total of nearly $400,000, according to a network spokesman.

Barbara heads Inspiration’s women’s ministry. Ben, ordained by his grandfather’s ministry, oversees youth efforts. Becky is starting a network aimed at 18- to 34-year-olds. Becky and Barbara are not ordained ministers.

IRS rules prohibit nonprofits from paying “unreasonable compensation” to officials. But the agency examines the returns of fewer than 8,000 of the 1.8 million tax-exempt organizations each year.

A paid independent consulting firm recommends the salaries of Inspiration’s executives, including Cerullo, according to spokesman John Roos. The board of directors makes the final decision.

Cerullo said he and his wife, both of whom sit on the board, recuse themselves from discussions about his salary and abstain from the votes.

For a while, though, that arrangement apparently left just one board member to decide his salary. From late 2005 to 2008, the board consisted of only three members, including Cerullo and his wife.

The board expanded to four members last year and to six members this year, officials say. Today, the board is chaired by Cerullo and includes a fundraising expert and a neighbor who helps run a communications firm.

Cerullo says he earns his pay, typically working 60 to 80 hours a week. He oversees four cable networks, a ministry and a television production company, all while playing a key role in developing the City of Light complex, he said.

The board received a recommendation that he be paid “substantially” more, Cerullo said, but he turned down the additional money because “I am blessed beyond my imagination … I don’t need it. I don’t want it. I won’t take it.” He said he knows of other religious nonprofits that pay their CEOs more, but he wouldn’t identify them. He also declined to share a salary survey used to set his pay. But he said that study looked at compensation for cable network CEOs, church pastors and ministry leaders.

Cerullo said the “average preacher” probably would not have the business know-how to do what he does, and that his salary is still below what his peers earn at cable networks such as Discovery and CNN.

Cerullo’s staff is also well-paid. More than 25 of the network’s 330 employees collected over $100,000 in 2007, the IRS filing shows.

Roos, Inspiration’s senior vice president for marketing, said the network examines national salary averages before setting any employee’s pay.

“This is a high-tech, very specialized (operation),” he said. “…That comes with a price tag.” Still, two larger religious broadcasters, Trinity Broadcasting Network and CBN, had fewer employees earning six-figure salaries, records show.

Inspiration has chosen not to join the 1,385-member Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability (ECFA), which sets standards for governance and fundraising by Christian charities. “I don’t believe in organizations that set themselves up to create burden with very little benefit,” Cerullo said.

U.S. Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, who is investigating the finances of six other televangelists, questioned why any religious nonprofit would decline to join ECFA, which he likens to a Good Housekeeping seal of approval.

Grassley would not comment specifically about the Inspiration Network, but told the Observer that leaders of religious nonprofits should be careful not to use viewers’ donations to adopt “filthy rich” lifestyles. Grassley wants to know whether some nonprofits are violating the spending rules that allow them preferential tax treatment.

“I saw (PTL’s) Jim Bakker treating his organization like a personal ATM,” said Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, which helps shape the nation’s tax laws. “Any religious organization ought to get away from that impression.” “Debt cancellation!” Emotional on-air pitches generate much of the money used to pay network salaries. In March, Morris Cerullo appeared on Inspiration’s “camp meeting” with a message to fire up prospective donors.

“Is anybody ready for the greatest financial breakthrough you’ve ever experienced in your life?” he asked.

The elder Cerullo, a Pentecostal minister, at times appeared to speak in tongues. His gravelly voice periodically rising to a shout, he urged members of the audience to fill envelopes with $900 donations.

“When you sow for your financial anointing, the windows of heaven are going to open for you,” he said. ” … In the next nine months, you are going to experience more financial blessings than you’ve ever experienced in your life! 100 fold! Debt cancellation!” Soon, these words appeared on the screen: “Call now with your $900 offering and receive God’s debt cancellation.” Until about four years ago, the elder Cerullo had served as an unpaid member of the network’s board.

Like other prosperity preachers who raise money for INSP, Morris Cerullo has been criticized for his fundraising methods. In 2005, he was indicted in California for tax evasion, but the charges were later thrown out.

David Cerullo says he believes in his father — and that good things will happen to donors. He said he has gotten many letters and e-mails from contributors who “received what I would call a harvest.” He declined to name them.

“I don’t back off … the concept that seeds produce harvest,” he said. “It’s naturally accurate. It’s biblically accurate. It’s spiritually accurate…. The Bible says give, and then what? Then it will be given unto you.” Laura Gamble is among those who believe her seeds have yielded fruit. The 69-year-old Easley, S.C., resident said she’s a regular viewer and contributor. She believes her donations have had something to do with improvements in her health, she said.

“I just got out of the hospital, and I’m having a good recovery,” she said. “It’s God looking out for me.” Donors fuel rapid growth Texas televangelist Mike Murdock, Morris Cerullo and the other ministers raising much of the network’s money adhere to a much-criticized brand of evangelism called prosperity gospel, which holds that God rewards them and their faithful donors with financial prosperity. With the Inspiration Networks and other broadcasters spreading their messages around the globe, those prosperity preachers have in recent years watched their audiences swell.

The financially desperate are among those most likely to be drawn to such pitches, experts say.

Janet Gibbens, 60, of northern California, was holding down odd jobs and barely making ends meet about five years ago when she saw Morris Cerullo on the Inspiration Network. She’d been reading Cerullo’s books and listening to his preaching for years. When he called himself a prophet of the Lord, she believed him.

On the air, the elder Cerullo urged viewers to donate to the network — and then prepare to receive “financial blessings that would stagger the imagination,” she recalled.

“I wanted to have something more than this poverty,” she said. “If I coughed up the $200 … He was God’s emissary, you know. If you did that in obedience, the sky was the limit.” So she sent about $200 — all that remained in her bank account, she said.

But her financial situation never improved. About three years ago, she began reading information that caused her to doubt the claims of the people she had trusted. Her faith in those ministers evaporated and was replaced by rage. She now wonders why she ever believed Cerullo’s claims. “It’s almost like a brainwashing, that they can convince you to give all your money,” she said.

In recent years, the debate over the prosperity gospel has been the subject of cover stories in national magazines, theological conferences and Grassley’s Senate inquiry. Critics say preachers who espouse it — from PTL’s Jim and Tammy Bakker in the 1980s to Missouri-based Joyce Meyer today — distort the Bible to justify their luxurious lifestyles.

“If that was Christ’s message, then I want to know why he wound up on the cross. That’s not prospering,” said the Rev. Mike McDonald, pastor at Broad Street United Methodist Church in Mooresville. “He warned against seeking material gain — often quite explicitly.” Rev. Michael Horton, a California theology professor who edited “Agony of Deceit,” a book that examines the claims of fundraising televangelists, said such appeals lead to “a kind of Ponzi scheme.” “Certainly it works out very well for whoever’s at the top,” he said.

One former Inspiration employee, who asked not to be named, said many of the network’s donors were elderly people of limited means who hoped that giving to the network would help them “turn their own situations around.” She said she valued the network’s mission of saving souls, but was troubled by the growing number of on-air promises that God would bring good things to donors.

“That teaches people that the things of God are for sale,” she said. “I just have a problem with that. That stuff’s not for sale.” 

May 24, 2009 - Posted by endtimespropheticwords | Barbara Cerullo, Ben Cerullo, David Cerullo, False Prophets, Jim Bakker, Mike Murdock, Morris Cerullo, Prosperity Gospel/Seed Faith, Pulpit Pimps, Word of Faith | , , | 27 Comments

27 Comments »

  1. 1. “ordained in 1974 by the Assemblies of God.”

    Gee, AoG huh? That in itself says it all. AoG is NOT of God. The AoG is the devil’s palyground.

    2. “I am probably more comfortable in a roomful of CPAs and lawyers and bankers than I am in a roomful of preachers.”

    Why? Because lawyers/liars and bankers are very unlikely to be true Xns.

    3.”Hs father, Morris, grew up in a Jewish orphanage in New Jersey.”

    Yup, ashkenazi counterfeit jews are 100% obsessed with money.

    Figures.

    4. I hope God will crack down on all these crooks – they never PRODUCE anything but schemes to channel $$$$$$ into their own piggy pockets, from people who have to EARN their money.

    5. Why is the govt so LAX on these “not-for-profit” false prophets?

    Comment by Lawrence Luprypa | May 24, 2009

  2. Morris Cerullo (David’s dad) is the one who said that “when we stand here, you’re not looking at Morris Crullo, you’re looking at God, you’re looking at Jesus.”

    Has his son ever publicly rebuked him for saying this? No.

    Blasphemy in the extreme.

    Perhaps Cerullo’s ministry should do what Paula White seems so fond of saying: Give and you’ll get 100 fold in return.

    She has said on TBN’s fleece-a-thons, that those who give to TBN can receive 100 fold.

    Why then don’t all those like Benny Hinn and those who might be on stage behind here when she is speaking write million dollar checks? They believe what she is preaching, right? Don’t they?

    If they give 1 million dollars, they’ll get 100 million dollars back from God, right?

    Then next year, they can give 50 million dollars to TBN and get back 5 billion dollars, right?

    In a couple of years, they will all be trillionaires, right?

    See the utter fallacy of believing in the 100 fold return baloney that she and others have preached?

    So, we can see that that scripture of getting 100 fold in return when you give to TBN (or any other ministry) is taken out of context, and so is the scripture of sowing into ministries like David Cerullo’s.

    The scripture where Jesus Christ speaks of the sower going forth to sow seed is Him speaking of the word of God being sown, some on stony ground, some on hard ground, some on good ground and so on, with that on good ground being those (people) hearing the word, receiving it, growing in God and bearing fruit.

    It has nothing to do with giving money to Cerullo’s (or anyone elses) ministry.

    Why are there so many suckers out there that believe their lies?

    Comment by Ray | May 24, 2009

  3. what is the third wave referring to? Is it the third day which we are supposed to be in or something demonic coming or the big revival for Jesus Christ??

    thanks

    Comment by Leslie | May 24, 2009

  4. #02 Ray:

    Well Put!!! My belief is that all of us at some time or another look for a miracle to happen and naturally gravitate to God, then hey! presto!! the airwaves are full of these people saying ‘look no further, we have the answer.’ If we are not grounded in the Word, all of us are vulnerable. It would be interesting to send these guys a letter telling them that I will give them an unprecedented, one time only, open heaven to become the richest ministry on earth by sowing 1 billion dollars into my bank account. It will be the Elisha double portion until Jesus comes back deal of a life time but they have to send it within 15 minutes or no deal!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Comment by Canadanorth | May 25, 2009

  5. You know we should set up a competition so all could vote
    on who is the most successful ‘false minister’ of the gospel.And then we could ask them to list the reasons why
    they are so successful….like what is the SCAM and minipulation they are using, that allows them to deceive so many….

    We could say. Jesus

    Comment by Paula | May 25, 2009

  6. You know we should set up a competition so all could vote
    on who is the most successful ‘false minister’ of the gospel.And then we could ask people to list the reasons why
    they are so successful….like what is the SCAM and manipulation they are using, that allows them to deceive so many….

    We could say. Jesus warned that they would rise, and DECCEIVE many using His NAME…..so the competition would be 1. How can we KNOW them. What methods/tatics do they use.?

    This would/could open eyes, and make them become Bereans.

    Comment by Paula | May 25, 2009

  7. Passover (The TRUE Lamb)is God’s gift to us not the other way around!
    The best gift we can give to God is to accept His GIFT to us:His Precious Son Yeshua!

    Comment by My Beloved is Mine and He is Yours too | May 25, 2009

  8. Building a ‘City of light’
    By Tim Funk
    tfunk@charlotteobserver.com
    Posted: Saturday, May. 23, 2009

    INDIAN LAND, S.C. David Cerullo wants to turn a 93-acre spread outside Charlotte into a worldwide Christian media capital.

    Only two buildings, a 100-foot cross and a few streets now make up what Cerullo’s Inspiration Ministries calls the City of Light.

    But blueprints detail the construction of state-of-the-art training, production and conference centers – all designed to draw budding televangelists from around the globe.

    Once here, the plan is to teach these international visitors how to use TV and the Internet to spread the Gospel among their people, with an eye to converting the unchurched, as well as Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists and Jews.

    CEO Cerullo sometimes likens the future operation to a factory. Other times, he employs the vocabulary of war.

    The idea, he told the Observer, is to “raise an army of trained individuals … who know how to create (Christian) content.”

    In a pamphlet previewing the City of Light, TV and other media are called a battleground on which Christians fight Satan: “The media has quite possibly been the most effective tool in the enemy’s arsenal to kill, steal and destroy people’s souls … It’s time for us to take back the airwaves!”

    The City of Light’s population these days is about 200 employees, with Cerullo and his business staff working in the 118,000-square-foot Worldreach Headquarters for Evangelism & Discipleship.

    In March, Cerullo and his wife, Barbara, co-hosted a televised grand opening of the second building on the site. The 40,000-square-foot International Prayer & Welcome Center includes a 465-seat chapel that’s also a TV stage and the site of a Wednesday morning service that’s open to the public; a call center where “prayer ministers” answer phones; private prayer rooms and a meditative garden, also open to the public; and a bookstore that reserves the most prominent spaces for books authored by Cerullo.

    Also planned: A production facility, ministry centers for children and teens, and a conference and tea house for women.

    Jim and Tammy Bakker’s PTL was also a Christian media empire in the S.C. suburbs of Charlotte. And Cerullo’s Inspiration Ministries began in 1990 when his father, evangelist Morris Cerullo, bought the remains of PTL.

    But David Cerullo shrugs off any comparisons between his ministry and PTL, which ended in scandal in 1987.

    “That was them and this is us. That was then and this is now,” Cerullo says. “We did not buy their company. We bought their assets out of bankruptcy.”

    For evangelical Christians, carrying the Gospel message to distant lands is part of Jesus’ commission to his followers.

    “A few years ago,” Cerullo told viewers in a 2006 video, “God spoke to me about taking a journey of faith and led me to this land I’m standing on.”

    Then, Cerullo told viewers, God told him to call this launchpad for international evangelism the City of Light.

    Cerullo said too many other Christian broadcasters are content with being “keepers of the aquarium.” He’d rather be a “fisher of men,” as Jesus put it in the Bible, reeling in those who are not Christian.

    The desire to help spread Christianity is one reason why Eugene Garrison, 72, of St. Louis, answers Cerullo’s on-air pleas for money.

    “The Bible says that the Gospel is going to have to be spread all over the world,” said Garrison, who has donated dozens of times. “And I think they’re doing it.”
    http://www.charlotteobserver.com/inspiration/story/741832.html

    Comment by Brad | May 25, 2009

  9. And once again, if they believed their own preaching they would beg you to call so that they could give money to receive the 100-fold blessing themselves!

    Comment by gyod | May 25, 2009

  10. “Cerullo said too many other Christian broadcasters are content with being “keepers of the aquarium.” He’d rather be a “fisher of men,” as Jesus put it in the Bible, reeling in those who are not Christian.’

    Yes! The species are suckers!!

    Comment by Canadanorth | May 26, 2009

  11. With his business degree, He should know all of the legal loopholes, and know he scamming people with a giant ‘pyramid’ scheme.

    “Cerullo says he earns his pay, typically working 60 to 80 hours a week. He oversees four cable networks, a ministry and a television production company, all while playing a key role in developing the City of Light complex, he said.”

    >I’d say Jesus earned HIS pay too, but what He got on this earth is the Cross.

    “Cerullo said the “average preacher” probably would not have the business know-how to do what he does, and that his salary is still below what his peers earn at cable networks such as Discovery and CNN.”

    >Yes, the average preacher isn’t quite ‘up to snuff’ compared to Cerullo. Most can not pull off such large scale scams, though I suspect they are learning from his example. His “peers” are not seasoned and wiser preachers and teachers, but the executives of secular networks. Now we know who he identifies with the most.

    Comment by DoubleGrace | May 26, 2009

  12. DoubleGrace,

    I don’t know about you, but I am tired of seeing Cerullo and others playing these apples to oranges games by comparing their ministries and the salaries they draw off of them to what his “peers” make at CNN or Discovery.

    Those are businesses.

    Then again, if Cerullo wants to say that his “ministry” is in fact businesses, then fine. The IRS should then tax it as such.

    Cerullo wants to act as if his so-called business expertise is worthy of a salary that one would draw at a CNN or Discovery (both of which are businesses), but that is where he would probably want to leave it. I doubt that he would want to take it to its most logical conclusion.

    I seriously doubt that either of the Cerullo’s (David or Morris) would ever call Daystar a business.

    But it looks like Cerullo is acting as if Daystar is indeed a business.

    Cerullo may have backed himself into a corner by the words out of his own mouths and not even know it.

    Comment by Ray | May 26, 2009

  13. City of light? How about city of green, as in lots of green money?

    Comment by justavoice | May 27, 2009

  14. I lie in bed at night watching Pastor Cerullo spew his venomous schpiel about “sowing” seed money for God,this is bull. He is nothing more than a crook and really he can be the anti-Christ. Did not God go to the temple to get rid of the Jews because of their evil ways? How can people believe in something like him and be so gullible.
    He really will burn in Hell because the true God will see to it.

    Comment by Matt | May 30, 2009

  15. I have a book that is just being published titled
    “His Name Is Jesus Not Je$u$” it is available at http://www.publishamerica.com you will probably love it, it is about how we are always being fed that if we give X amount of money then we will get the answer to our prayers, but the Bible states different, it says we are to have faith in God. The sad thing is so many desperate people are being convinced that they have to give $1,000 to receive and that is so wrong!

    Comment by Marlene Ford | June 11, 2009

  16. Marlene Ford,

    One thing that the ministers who teach “give my ministry money and God will give you blessings in return,” (along with those who support them or agree with what they teach), don’t like to hear is the scripture where Jesus says “Ask, and it shall be given.”

    Jesus said “Ask and it shall be given,” and “give and it sghall be given.” Both. We can ask God.

    People should realize that they don’t have to use money to receive from God.

    Asking = giving.

    Yes, James said that when people ask for things to consume upon their lusts that they will NOT receive from God. Neither will someone get anything from God if they are giving to God so that they can receive to consume it upon their lusts.

    And those who read that scripture found in James chapter 4, where James speaks of adulterers and adultereses, should realize that adultery can be not just physical adultery but also spiritual adultery. The Bible is replete with many passages where God condemns spiritual adultery.

    Those ministers that say that they want God to make them rich, so that they can give more money to God’s kingdom, aren’t fooling anyone. They spend it on multimillion dollar homes and expensive clothes and cars. And they do so when Christians around the world are starving and in extreme need.

    Comment by Ray | July 1, 2009

  17. If all the christians, who used to give money to these corrupt tv evangelists who promises you a lot of things as long as you give money to them, would BOYCOT them then probably there will be a Win-win situation. Why? The elderly and desperate people, who normally contributes, can use their money for their own needs or support real and sincere missionaries. Secondly, the income of those scammers would drop dramatically leading to foreclosures of their over-the-top houses and ending their haughty and decadent Hollywood lifestyle. It means that they are forced to really rely on God and His Word. If they would do that, they will be happy and content with what they have and they will express the real meaning of a christian lifestyle to the world. If they are raged, the world can see what they are looking for in the first place, displaying them as hungry, money loving wolves who prey on naive, desperate and not bible critical believers. But unfortunately, this BOYCOT will be wishful thinking because there will always be christians who wants to have their own desires prevail over Christ’s desires. A big house, money, power and fame is a lifestyle that is prefered by many. The cross which Jesus promised us is a lifestyle for losers in their opinion.

    Comment by WatEenZooitje | July 2, 2009

  18. Religious broadcaster David Cerullo builds $4M home despite layoffs at his ministry. The fool has said in his heart there is no God. It is obvious by David Cerullo’s actions that he does not know Jesus as his savior. No follower of Christ would spend donated moneys on something like that

    Comment by Ron Nolan | July 7, 2009

  19. Received this email today. Can anyone verify/confirm the claimed resurrection of the little boy?

    God Can Breathe Life
    Into Your Difficult Situations!

    How often has somebody told you, “Don’t worry”? How often have you been able to take such advice? Jesus said it over and over: “Fear not.” Yet over and over, His disciples quivered in fear!

    I am believing God for something better for you. A life beyond worry or fear. It can happen … by the power of God’s Word … by the power of God’s love.

    Our God is in the business of bringing LIFE from DEATH! How could economic numbers or a medical report or any other circumstance faze Him? Let me tell you just how big, how powerful, and how compassionate our God is.

    One spring day last year, a 2-year-old boy named Cole drowned in a daycare center swimming pool— he was pronounced dead by the EMTs but was then revived and airlifted by helicopter to the hospital. However, once there, he tragically stopped breathing a second time.

    Despite the best efforts of the doctors and nurses, Cole was officially declared dead, and his little body was packed in ice as his grieving family began arranging to donate his organs.

    But then FIVE HOURS LATER, the life-giving Resurrection Power of
    Jesus Christ came upon that little guy—and Cole began breathing again, began living again … RESURRECTED BY THE SAME POWER THAT RAISED JESUS FROM THE DEAD!

    This is a fully documented, true account, covered by the media, the story captured on video by our ministry producers and confirmed by witnesses! You can experience the same Resurrection Power in your own life. To find out how, keep reading below and take a look at our powerful video.

    Your God Is a God of Resurrection!

    Barbara and I strongly believe that the enemy is waging war against Believers with a spirit of fear, doubt, and unbelief. And in response, God’s people are holding on to what they have! They’re allowing FEAR to dominate their decisions and their giving! Who loses? God’s people do! Because they’ve exited God’s economy of Sowing and Reaping, Seedtime and Harvest!

    The key to increase begins with release. Proverbs 11:24-25 declares,”One man gives freely, yet gains even more; another withholds unduly, but comes to poverty. A generous man will prosper; he who refreshes others will himself be refreshed.”

    Your Seed is your bridge to your future. The sooner your Seed enters the ground, the sooner your Harvest comes.

    Look at how Jesus describes this principle in His parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30). The servant given ONE talent was fearful. Instead of using what he had been given, he hoarded—and in the end, he was the one CAST OUT!

    Are you, like that servant, being deceived by the enemy? In Jesus’ parable, the man with FIVE talents … INVESTED ALL FIVE! He didn’t hide behind so-called “caution”—he was bold—he was “going for it” … in the fullness of his Master’s authority!

    Don’t succumb to a spirit of fear; it will hurt. You can’t hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant,” if you’ve hoarded and hidden your God-given talents … the resources He has entrusted to you. And you won’t be the only one who loses—because the work of the Kingdom will be limited … diminished … for the lack of your investment! Let God BLESS you!

    The real answer lies in the spiritual realm! God doesn’t say, “Cut down on dry cleaning” or “Switch from bottled water to tap water.” Those are natural-world solutions.

    God calls us to a simple, straightforward, profound spiritual world strategy: “Obey me,” God says. “Be faithful in giving your tithes and your offerings … and I will take care of you.”

    When you’re giving back your tithe to God—10% of whatever God has entrusted to you—when you’re giving your offerings—gifts of love for the Lord, beyond your tithe—He obligates Himself to meet your every need!

    I’m not saying every Christian should be giving to Inspiration Ministries. But here’s what I am saying: Who’s feeding you? Give there.

    Who’s leading lost Souls into God’s Kingdom? Give there. When you see God at work in people’s lives through Inspiration Ministries, give here. When you’re blessed by our programs on television, give here. And then … as you Sow your Seed, in obedience to God …YOU CAN STOP WORRYING!

    I know what it’s like to search for coins under the sofa cushions. I remember a time when we had no choice but to break open our young son’s piggy bank to find enough money to go and buy a hamburger. But the God of the Resurrection came through for us: He met our need.

    God can breathe life into any situation you’re facing!

    Sow for your Resurrection! Set God’s economy in motion. Release your faith to the One who can give you NEW LIFE! As you give a sacrificial gift of $50 or more, I want to place in your hands our “God’s Answers” library—a series of five blockbuster publications in which you’ll discover:

    Ways you can accelerate your physical healing!
    What you can do to !
    Parenting choices you can make to help your kids (no matter how old they are)!
    And much more! Get more info>>
    Sow Your Seed into the Good Ground of Inspiration Ministries today. Plus, when you Sow Your Gift of Love, we’ll give you a link to enter a prayer for your biggest worry, on our new Prayer Wall for Casting Your Cares on God. You’ll immediately see your prayer request added to the Prayer Wall for others to pray for you, and you’ll be able to see the prayers and praises of others from around the world!

    Yours in Christ,

    David Cerullo

    P.S. We thank the Lord for you and pray His richest blessings upon you. We pray by His Holy Spirit He will inspire you to release your Seed and set His supernatural economy in motion … for your sake! Let’s celebrate! In the midst of so-called “hard times” … we serve a BIG God!

    Comment by DoubleGrace | July 31, 2009

  20. CHECK OUT
    Mainse brothers step down from Crossroads posts during Ponzi investigation
    http://www.canadianchristianity.com/nationalupdates/090702ponzi.html
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/18020892/Is-David-Mainse-An-Unethical-Scoundrel-Like-Benny-Hinn

    Comment by brad | August 11, 2009

  21. The Cerullo’s family is all about money.There are about 75 plus false prophets likes to get pay easy money.Prophet for Profit another words;The whole Prosperity Gospel Movement is a Movement of Balaam.(2 Peter 2:15)

    Comment by Darren Armijo | August 31, 2009

  22. If I had a nickel everytime the wolves open their mouth I would be rich…Ben Cerullo has his owned ministries called “Steelroots”.This site has filthy Christian bands who are hypercrites,pretenders,and professing to be followers of Jesus Christ.These people speaking in tongues are living like devils and using profanity in their lyrics such as: P.O.D.,Gorilla Warfare,and Heartattack.The way I see it,everyone who cause divisions,especially the websites like this and several others will pay the piper…WHERE IS MY GOLD???

    Comment by Leprenchaun | September 13, 2009

  23. Message for Leprechaun,I liked your statement about Ben Cerullo.Ben Cerullo is a good skateboarder like myself and I used skating as a tool to reach people to Jesus Christ.Although,Ben ask for donations for his ministry and why have a tv program if Ben can’t pay the air time? All the preachers on television just want to be seen in the public view.Just go to church and stop being lazy,PEOPLE FROM ALL OVER THE USA!!!

    Comment by Marcus Stevenson | September 18, 2009

  24. If Murdock and Cerullo are in such need of money to furnish their million dollar homes, why don’t you ask them to sew a thousand dollar seed with you. If it multiplies 100 times, that will give them 100 thousand dollars. If they don’t then I guess they have no faith.
    BTW the bible says that you should not put God to the test, as they have suggested. Looks like they are directing their followers to sin.

    If Murdock has so many suits, why doesn’t he give some to the poor? His stories are so unbelievable. What a con artist.

    Comment by Richard | October 14, 2009

  25. Cerullo is one of the most disgusting individuals I have ever seen. Notice his program does nothing but beg for your cash. Never anything else going on, just Cerullo spewing his nonsense, “give me your cash and you’ll be blessed”. Cerullo and his cronies are sick, money grubbing, nutcases who see nothing wrong with what they do, prey on the weak, poor and uneducated in order to live their opulant lifestyles. Cerullo is building a 4 million dollar home while laying off ministry employees! You people who support Cerullo and his ilk need your brains examined to see if they are functioning.

    Comment by Ike | October 26, 2009

  26. I’m from England, where Morris Cerullo caused a lot of controversy about 15 years ago. There is little to distinguish him from other big-time deceivers like Benny Hinn and Todd Bentley. He has repeatedly said that God will bless you to the extent that you give money to him, even claiming that giving money will cause your unbelieving family members to become christians. He said that thousands of people were healed at his “Mission to London”, but medical doctors were unable to substantiate a single case. He proclaimed a child was healed of cancer – she died from it a few weeks later. Also an epileptic stopped taking her medication after being “healed” at one of the meetings and died following a seizure in the bath. He uses the same crowd manipulation/hypnosis techniques as all the other false “faith healers”. It was also reported that he was expelled from India after a congregation stormed the platform and almost lynched him when they realised he was a fraud. If only western christians took the same approach!

    Comment by Fred | October 28, 2009

  27. When the anointing comes and touches, we lose sight of ourselves and begin to focus on His precious presence. All cares and worries disappear. It is at this time, I propose, that one notices a particular pain is absent and somehow then begins to believe they have been “healed”. It would be interesting to survey these folks the next day to see if the pain has reappeared … most likely so. Factor in the emotional frenzy brought on by the “healer” and you have a setting for much misinterpretation – i.e. lack of diccernment and getting “caught up” in the moment of emotion. The “healers” prey on this with the gullible for their false claims and trumped up notoreity.

    Why is there so much emphasis on healing, anyway? In many ways, it has been made a doctrine held up superior to salvation.

    Pity that and those who teach thie error.

    Comment by Sarah | October 28, 2009


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