(CBS) CBS News producer Laura Strickler wrote this story for
CBSNews.com.
As the Televangelist Kenneth Copeland continues to defy a Senate
Finance investigation, internal ministry documents shed new light on
how Copeland runs his $100 million church.
Church bylaws obtained exclusively by CBS News say Copeland is
"empowered to veto any resolution of the Board" concentrating all key
decision-making power in the televangelist.
The bylaws indicate the president of the board is Copeland but
Copeland’s family members also play a critical role. His wife is the
vice president. The senior pastor, secretary and treasurer roles are
filled by Copeland’s son-in-law. The operations vice president and CEO
slots are both filled by Kenneth Copeland’s son, John. Other documents
previously obtained by CBS indicate in addition to family members there
are ten other members of the church’s board.
"My first reaction was that Kenneth Copeland was a control freak," says
William Josephson, the former head of New York State’s Charities Bureau
after reviewing the Kenneth Copeland Ministries bylaws.
"Because control is vested in him and his family to the exclusion of
any alternative source of authority and it is very unusual," Josephson
tells CBS News.
And the many donors to Copeland’s ministry have no say in how the
ministry functions. According to the bylaws the church "shall have no
class of membership entitled to vote." Josephson says that with the
exception of Catholic parishes, this is also unusual. "Most churches
are congregational and the authority comes from the congregation. They
are the ones who approve who becomes the pastor and who succeeds the
pastorate."
Another ministry document filed with officials in Tarrant County,
Texas, indicates the church spent $28 million on salaries in 2006.
$13.3 million went to administrative staff. Former employees tell CBS
News the Copelands have about 500 employees on staff at their sprawling
Ft. Worth, Texas, compound. In a prior broadcast Copeland said his
ministry takes in about $100 million a year in revenue, leaving the
unanswered question of what the church does with the remaining cash
flow.
Copeland has refused to provide Senate investigators with any of these
financial details.
Kenneth Copeland Ministries CEO John Copeland recently went to the
local IRS office to offer cooperation should the IRS conduct a
church-tax inquiry. Copeland has said repeatedly that it is the
responsibility of the IRS to police church-tax issues and not the
business of Congress.
Original
Source
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
||||
|
|
||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)