Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Pastor Chuck Smith To Surrender Radio Empire

Pastor Chuck Smith To Surrender Radio Empire To Man He Calls Morally Unfit

God's word, plus static, on Calvary Satellite Network
Amid accusations over sex, money and control, Pastor Chuck Smith is about to surrender much of the evangelical radio empire to a man he calls morally unfit for ministry.

By Christopher Goffard, Times Staff Writer

WHEN Chuck Smith, founder of the worldwide Calvary Chapel movement, decided to invest big in radio, the Orange County evangelist joined forces with a pastor he trusted.

Mike Kestler was one of his proteges, a folksy preacher with a ponytail who had ridden the Calvary phenomenon to a pulpit in Twin Falls, Idaho.

Smith had presided at Kestler's wedding. He'd helped Kestler keep his job after a churchgoer complained that Kestler had begged her to run away with him.

Now, the pastors would be business partners. Kestler knew how to run a radio station. Smith had money and a famous name. They shared a vision of FM radio as a megaphone for God's word.

Bolstered by $13 million from Smith's Costa Mesa church, Calvary Satellite Network grew into a spectacular recruiting tool for the evangelical movement. In listening areas across the nation, Calvary Chapels proliferated.

But relations between the two pastors deteriorated. In 2003, Smith cut off funding for the radio network, precipitating a crisis that continues to roil Calvary's leadership. It sparked a war for control of the network on terrain Smith had preached against for years: the earthly courts.

The two sides have hurled accusations of lust and greed, betrayal and embezzlement. As part of the battle, Smith funded a lawsuit against Kestler by a former Dallas Cowboys cheerleader who said he had fired her from her radio job for rebuffing his sexual advances.

Now, after a year of hugely expensive legal sparring, the 79-year-old Smith is so eager to settle the case that he is willing to do so at a staggering loss.

He is about to surrender much of the radio empire to Kestler, a man he calls morally unfit for ministry. Smith says that by walking away, he is making a Christian gesture.

Lori Pollitt, the former cheerleader, said Smith told her he had hoped his legal maneuvers would bring Kestler to repentance. "But it appears it won't, so I think they just want to wash their hands of the whole thing," Pollitt said. "He said basically it was just time to turn Kestler over to Satan."


SMITH opened the first Calvary Chapel on a Costa Mesa lot in 1965 with a handful of congregants. Combining literalist Bible teaching with casual dress, contemporary music and an aversion to ritual, the church quickly became famous as a sanctuary for disillusioned hippies and a hub of the Jesus People. The doctrinal cornerstones included the depravity of the world, hell for unbelievers and the promise of a Second Coming.

The church became the symbolic center of one of the nation's largest religious movements. Smith, a deep-voiced man fond of Hawaiian shirts, remains its undisputed father figure.

Kestler was drawn to Smith's church in the early 1970s, when it still occupied a tent. He joined the movement and with Smith's blessing opened his own church in Twin Falls in 1979. Before long, he had built a small Christian radio station there.

In 1994, Kestler's fortunes appeared to teeter on the brink. A parishioner had accused the married pastor of showing up at her home and office uninvited and pleading with her to run away with him. Kestler stood to lose both his pulpit and his radio station.

Smith took a plane to Twin Falls, defended Kestler before his church board and fended off his ouster. In a recent interview, Smith said he believed Kestler's claim that the woman's accusation stemmed from a misunderstanding.

In salvaging Kestler's career, Smith also rescued plans the two were hatching for a radio ministry.

Smith's son, Jeff, had been paying Christian radio stations to broadcast his father's sermons for years. Kestler and the younger Smith had become close friends. They approached the Calvary Chapel founder with an idea: Instead of handing money to other stations to carry the Calvary message, why not invest in their own radio network?

Kestler would handle technical matters out of Twin Falls, the younger Smith would handle the finances out of Santa Ana, and Chuck Smith would bankroll the project. Calvary Satellite Network was born.

Broadcasting a mixture of sermons and worship music, the network started with two stations: Kestler's in Twin Falls and another in Yucca Valley, Calif. From 1996 to 2003, Chuck Smith poured an estimated $13 million — much of it from the collection bowls of Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa — into expanding the network.

Kestler and the younger Smith snapped up broadcast licenses, built towers and invested heavily in satellite technology that beams low-power signals to remote pockets of listeners. As host of a daily call-in show, Kestler became one of the network's best-known voices.

The radio system did not carry advertising, relying instead on listener donations, money from preachers whose sermons it broadcast, and monthly subsidies from Chuck Smith's church.

Calvary Satellite Network now has about 400 low-power stations and 49 full-power stations in 45 states. Its coverage area has 22.5 million potential listeners. It estimates its worth at $250 million, derived mostly from the value of its broadcasting licenses.

As the network grew, so did tensions between Smith and his son. Stations were opened at a ferocious clip, but it typically took years for them to break even.

The elder Smith said his son and Kestler took to siding against him, refusing to listen to his pleas for a more conservative business plan.

"I thought of myself as not having a voice," the elder Smith said. "When I see a ship sinking and I'm voting to put plugs in the hole and they're saying 'No, no, no, make more holes,' I don't want to go down with a sinking ship."

In January 2003, he resigned from the network's board and cut off the monthly subsidies. Apart from misgivings about the network's direction, Smith said, he had developed moral qualms about Kestler.

A Calvary parishioner, a California woman, had come forward saying Kestler had made passes at her. Smith said he called Kestler about the accusation.

"Mike confessed and [said] sorry and so forth and so on," Smith said. "At that point, I felt, 'There's something wrong with this guy.' I really don't want to maintain much of a relationship with him, so I resigned."

Kestler's lawyer declined to comment on the allegation.

Kestler himself did not respond to requests for an interview.

A month after Chuck Smith resigned, Kestler and the younger Smith, looking to raise cash, approached the Costa Mesa church's board of directors with a surprising offer: For $21 million, they could buy the radio network and assume control of operations.

The board considered the offer "foolishness" and "turned it down flat," said Hal Fischer, a former Placentia police chief and a Calvary board member at the time.

"We all almost laughed at it, because it was so ridiculous," Fischer said. "We weren't going to purchase something back that we had financed originally."

Still, the offer underscored a fact that some members of the church had been slow to grasp: Despite the money they had poured into the network over the years, they had no control over it. The church and the network were separate entities.

As matters worsened, so did the church board's distrust of Jeff Smith. After rejecting the sale offer, the Calvary board pushed for an audit of the Word for Today, a church-affiliated book and tape ministry that Jeff Smith used to raise money for the radio network.

The review found shoddy accounting and oversight, 10 bank accounts, $184,000 in computer purchases for obscure reasons, undocumented loans to employees or friends, plus $568,000 in loans to the radio network in 2002 and $350,000 in 2003.

Jeff Smith, who was removed as top administrator of the Word for Today, said he had not seen the auditors' report but that the loans were legitimate and nothing improper happened under his watch. He said he was targeted by a church board dominated by "good-old boys" whose aim was to divide him from his father and take control of Calvary Chapel.

Ultimately, the friction between father and son abated. The elder Smith said his son was "blinded by the promises" Kestler was making about how quickly the network could expand, but that "his heart is pure and his motives are pure." For his part, Jeff Smith, 53, said he wished he'd heeded his father's advice about moving more slowly.



BY late 2004, the younger Smith and Kestler were the radio network's sole remaining board members. Deadlock ensued.

Word reached the Smiths that another woman was complaining about Kestler. Sarah Meyer, an Idaho parishioner, said he had offered her a radio job, only to try "using Jesus to seduce me."

"He'd prayed, and felt God was saying I was the one he was supposed to be with," Meyer, now 28, said in an interview. She said she turned down his advances and the job. Now, when she hears Kestler's voice on the car radio, "it makes my flesh crawl," she said.

Kestler's lawyer declined to comment on her allegations.

In late 2005 and early 2006 came the volley of lawsuits. Chuck Smith filed suit against Kestler in state court in Twin Falls for $1.3 million, demanding repayment of a loan to build Kestler's church.

Smith had long been troubled that he defended Kestler in 1994 against accusations from a female churchgoer, only to see other women voice similar complaints. Now, he bankrolled a federal lawsuit by Pollitt, 46, the former Dallas Cowboys cheerleader.

Pollitt said Kestler lured her from Dallas to Twin Falls with the promise of a job at Calvary Satellite Network, only to fire her after she rejected his come-ons. In court papers, Kestler has denied retaliating against Pollitt and has said she made sexual overtures to him.

Returning the Smiths' fire, Kestler filed suit in Orange County Superior Court, seeking control of Calvary Satellite Network and accusing the younger Smith of seizing donations intended for the network.

In a countersuit, the younger Smith charged Kestler with misappropriating millions of dollars in listener contributions. The suit also accused Kestler of "sinful sexual and flirtatious misconduct with numerous women over the years" and of spending network funds on vacations and purchases at Victoria's Secret.

To fundamentalist Christians, taking a quarrel to the secular courts is considered a drastic option. Believers point to 1 Corinthians, Chapter 6: "If any of you have a dispute with another Christian, how dare you go before heathen judges instead of letting God's people settle the matter?"

Jeff Smith's lawyer, Janet Carter, a born-again Christian, said the rule doesn't apply when dealing with people such as Kestler. "You don't get to be protected by 1st Corinthians 6 if you're acting like a heathen," she said.

In vain, Chuck Smith has asked Kestler to stop using the Calvary name. It still adorns his Twin Falls church. "They're free to use the secular courts to try to stop him," said Lloyd Walker, Kestler's attorney and brother-in-law. "Until then, we're not going to."



TODAY, management of the network is split between Jeff Smith in Santa Ana, who controls a host of full-power stations, and Kestler in Twin Falls, who controls the much more valuable translator network.

The younger Smith said the network could have weathered his father's withdrawal of financial support were it not for Kestler's alleged financial mismanagement. Jeff Smith said the network had to sell $9 million in assets to stay solvent.

Michael Newnham, an independent pastor in Medford, Ore., and a longtime critic of Calvary leadership, maintains a website that chronicles the conflict. He blames Chuck Smith for entangling the church's fortunes with Kestler's.

"Why would you go into business with someone you know is of less-than-sterling moral character, when we're talking about millions and millions of dollars?" Newnham said.

The sides are close to a settlement of their legal dispute. Chuck Smith has offered to drop his suit against Kestler, withdraw funding for Pollitt's suit and give Kestler the network's low-power stations, worth an estimated $200 million. Calvary Chapel would keep most of its full-power stations, valued at about $50 million.

"My thinking is, just leave him to God," Smith said. "God is the ultimate judge."

Pollitt said Smith's change of heart left her feeling like Uriah, the loyal soldier from the Old Testament whom King David dispatched to be slaughtered in battle. "Sent to the front lines," she said, "and abandoned."

Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times

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Truth is Stranger Than Fiction by L. A. Marzulli


BEYOND THE VEIL
W/ L. A. MARZULLI


Truth is Stranger Than Fiction

By L. A. Marzulli
SpiralofLife.com

February 28, 2007
RaidersNewsNetwork.com

When I was researching material for the second book in the Nephilim Trilogy, The Unholy Deception, I decided a great premise that would engage the reader and challenge the core belief of Christianity at the same time, would be the "what if," of someone finding the ‘tomb’ of Jesus.

The recent claims by director James Cameron and others that ossuaries discovered more than 26 years ago are that of Jesus of Nazareth and his family, is certainly cause for concern. The media is having the usual orchestrated field day with it - I admit it’s better than listening to another story about Anna Nicole Smith, ad nausea.

As the Apostle Paul penned millennia ago, "If Jesus did not rise from the dead than your faith is in vain and you are the most miserable of men…"

But what is really happening here? Is there an underlying current of something more sinister? I believe there is and here’s why.

There are two areas of attack that have been foisted upon believers in "The Way", which is what Christianity was originally called in the first century.

The first point of attack is to dispute the ‘work’ of the cross. This is the precept that Jesus didn’t die on the cross. That someone else was put there in his place, or that he was hustled off by Joseph of Aramethea, who revived the nearly dead man. Of course this would mean that the Romans, who were very skilled at putting people to death somehow botched this one execution.

The other point of attack is that Jesus was not divine, that he wasn’t really God and man together as one equally.

Invalidate either one and Christianity falls of its own weight.

But there’s something else in play here and it’s what I refer to as a Luciferic agenda / conspiracy.

In Ephesians 6 Paul tells us that we fight not against flesh and blood but with principalities and a host of spiritual beings in heavenly places. In other words the unseen world of the spirit. Lucifer, also referred to as Satan, has an agenda, and it is one of deception.

As a precursor to the great deception that will come upon the earth, he is laying down the first volleys to weaken the one thing that could hinder his plans; Christianity. I believe that one of the first salvos was Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code.

I actually have met those who believe in the premise of the book, which is that Jesus sired a child with Mary Magdelene

Could Cameron and his cronies and the alleged remains of Jesus be used in much the same way? This interview, taken from "The Today Show" with Matt Lauer and Meredith Vierira proves my point. Why is it that these ‘reporters’ are rushing to embrace this?

(This is a portion of an article that ran on the World Net Daily web site.)

Vieira: "And then we have a potentially amazing story. Have we possibly found the tomb of Jesus Christ? You're looking live at the boxes that could have contained the remains of Jesus and Mary Magdalene. They are in an undisclosed location. There's a news conference later today but we're gonna talk to the filmmakers first, here on the Today show about that discovery."

Lauer: "More research needs to be done but if this turns out to be true this changes everything."

Vieira: "Oh it's a huge story, absolutely."

When the segment finally aired, Vieira said, "While the Bible tells the story of Jesus and his resurrection, this box could show physical evidence that he existed, was buried and that he had a son, Judah."

Vieira noted that this was the central claim of Dan Brown's book "The Da Vinci Code" – that Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene and had a child – which was turned into a movie heavily promoted by the "Today" show.

Vieira concluded the segment telling Cameron, in her interview, the claim is "absolutely fascinating, potentially, I mean, many would argue the biggest story or one of the biggest stories of our lifetime if you are correct."

When I wrote The Unholy Deception, I used the term Great Deception. Although fiction, it is based on my belief that a great deception will take place and that it will affect the worldview of every person on the planet. What stands in the way is Christianity, which is based on Jesus’ resurrection. If the enemy can refute that, he creates a vacuum in which to insert his agenda, the worship of himself as God. Make no mistake that this is happening in real time and the Cameron documentary is another attempt to weaken the faith of millions who believe and those who are sitting on the sidelines.

In my upcoming new book, Politics, Prophecy and the Supernatural: The Coming Great Deception and the Luciferian End Game, published by Anomalous Publishing house, I delve into this dynamic in detail. Let us be on guard for the enemy is cunning…and truth is stranger than fiction!

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Tuesday, February 27, 2007

What the hell happened to Christianity?



What the hell happened to Christianity?

By Jay Bakker and Marc Brown
Special to CNN

NEW YORK (CNN) -- What the hell happened? Where did we go wrong? How was Christianity co-opted by a political party? Why are Christians supporting laws that force others to live by their standards? The answers to these questions are integral to the survival of Christianity.

While the current state of Christianity might seem normal and business-as-usual to some, most see through the judgment and hypocrisy that has permeated the church for so long. People witness this and say to themselves, "Why would I want to be a part of that?" They are turned off by Christians and eventually, to Christianity altogether. We can't even count the number of times someone has given us a weird stare or completely brushed us off when they discover we work for a church.

So when did the focus of Christianity shift from the unconditional love and acceptance preached by Christ to the hate and condemnation spewed forth by certain groups today? Some say it was during the rise of Conservative Christianity in the early 1980s with political action groups like the Moral Majority. Others say it goes way back to the 300s, when Rome's Christian Emperor Constantine initiated a set of laws limiting the rights of Roman non-Christians. Regardless of the origin, one thing is crystal clear: It's not what Jesus stood for.

His parables and lessons were focused on love and forgiveness, a message of "come as you are, not as you should be." The bulk of his time was spent preaching about helping the poor and those who are unable to help themselves. At the very least, Christians should be counted on to lend a helping hand to the poor and others in need.

This brings us to the big issues of American Christianity: Abortion and gay marriage. These two highly debatable topics will not be going away anytime soon. Obviously, the discussion centers around whether they are right or wrong, but is the screaming really necessary? After years of witnessing the dark side of religion, Marc and I think not.

Christians should be able to look past their differences and agree to disagree. This allows people to discuss issues with respect for one another. Christians are called to love others just as they are, without an agenda. Only then will Christianity see a return to its roots: Loving God with all of your heart and loving your neighbor as yourself.

The Apostle Paul describes this idea of love beautifully in 1 Corinthians 13:4-7: "Love is patient and kind. Love is not jealous or boastful or proud or rude. It does not demand its own way. It is not irritable, and it keeps no record of being wronged. It does not rejoice about injustice but rejoices whenever the truth wins out. Love never gives up, never loses faith, is always hopeful, and endures through every circumstance."

But don't take our word for it; look at what Jesus and his followers stood for in his time and what Christianity stands for today. Then come to your own conclusion.


Check out Jay's Documentary "One Punk Under God"!

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