Listen Live!
join BAW
forgot password
LIFE
WORK
PLAY


blAck americaweb.com

Commentary: A Crooked Preacher May Have Dangled the Apple, but Greed Made Churches Bite

Date: Tuesday, February 08, 2005
By: Tonyaa Weathersbee, BlackAmericaWeb.com

Abraham Kennard should have saved the sermon for Sundays. It was way too lame to sway a federal grand jury – a group that tends to be a tougher crowd than church congregants.

“It’s not a law against riding in a Cadillac if you don’t want to ride in a Volkswagen,” Kennard, a preacher, told a Rome, Ga., jury during his recent trial on theft charges. Apparently, Kennard managed to convince about 1,600 black churches to invest in Christian resorts that he was developing around the country – and they did so to the tune of nearly $9 million.

But as it turned out, Kennard lied. That money didn’t go toward building places for the faithful to luxuriate, but toward building a lavish lifestyle. According to news reports, he used the money to, among other things, rent private jets and limos, and to amass a fleet of luxury cars.

Good thing the jury got it that living large wasn’t Kennard’s crime. Stealing was. They convicted him on 132 criminal counts including theft, tax evasion, fraud and money laundering.

Maybe the pain of prison will force Kennard to think about how he wronged those churches. But what I really hope happens is that the congregants of the black churches Kennard bilked use the experience to do some soul-searching of their own.

They really need to.

The first question they should ask themselves is why would they invest millions in developing Christian resorts when those same millions could be invested in tackling some of the problems that beset so many black communities?  Why invest in building resorts, say, when in most communities affordable housing is scarce, and many black people are on waiting lists for public housing for several years? Wouldn’t investing in building affordable housing be a more caring, Christian use of their money? Or to build supplemental schools that help struggling black students?

The other question they should ask themselves is why, even with Kennard’s promise that the resorts would be profitable, and they would get their money back more than 100 times over, whether they fell for his scheme because they were excited solely by the prospect of making money rather than the prospect of using that money to improve the lives of struggling people.

I hope the answer isn’t the former.

Now, I’m sure that some people will think that I’m being unfair and harsh to some churches that simply made the mistake of trusting the wrong man. I also realize that perhaps a crook peddling affordable housing could have cheated them as well.

But I’m not criticizing their decisions to entrust their money with Kennard as much as I’m criticizing the profit mentality that seems to be driving many churches these days. And while I know that pastors need to live, and edifices have to be paid for, I can’t help but think that churches, more than any other institutions, have more of a duty to use their power and their money to first tend to the needs of the community than the comfort of the flock.

I admit that I have higher standards for churches because the civil rights movement spoiled me.  When Martin Luther King Jr., was alive and the SCLC was in full swing, the black church was there tackling the evils of discrimination and poverty. Before King died, he was working on organizing a Poor People’s March. Nowadays though, the gospel of prosperity rules, and it seems as if many black churches have grown so comfortable in assuming middle-class values and materialism that they have forgotten that many of their own people are still grappling with the same problems that existed when King was alive.

King and his compatriots, for example, believed in using Christianity to confront the obstacles that hindered black people from getting access to basic opportunities in life – and to thereby make life fairer for them. But now, you have preachers like Kennard who have trivialized fairness to mean whether one should be relegated to ride in a Volkswagen versus a Cadillac.

Somehow, I believe he’s missing the point.

Kennard was greedy. His greed led him to dangle an artificial apple of a promise in front of a bunch of gullible church people.

But they should ask themselves whether it was their own greed that made them bite.



Fellas, meet single women
Ladies, meet single men

Discuss

RENOVIMUS says:

RENOVIMUS says:

I attended a large church with a friend that had an ATM in the lobby - LOL, I considered this a read more

tetsou says:

At the request of my Aunt I accompanied her to church, The Church had big screens, cameramen the whole shabang. read more

rntaylor1963 says:

But just remember...Men & women are men & women and God is still and forever God...Don't blame God for read more

rntaylor1963 says:

Ps. Reguarding my previous post. Judgement begins at the house of God...It's time do do some house cleaning read more

More Headlines

Commentary: When it Comes to Drug-Related Crimes, We Need More Treatment, Less Imprisonment

America has a problem with drugs. To be more specific, the way America’s justice system deals with individuals who have drug addictions is problematic.

Commentary: The ‘Look-at-Me’ Generation, Fueled by YouTube, is Long on Shock but Lacking in Shame

On the one hand, YouTube is a blessing in that it offers glimpses at things that would otherwise be swept under the rug. It's also become a curse.

Commentary: Race Card? The Only One on the Table is the White Supremacy Card – and Clinton Played It

Ah, I love the smell of Democrats playing the race card in the morning! The Democrat in this case? Why, it's Sen. Hillary Clinton, now in Week Two of serious denial.

Commentary: God and Percocet Make Strange Bedfellows – and Offer Insight into Life’s Pains and Pleasures

Under the influence of so much medicine, my head was beginning to spin. Given the amount of pain I had been in, it was indeed a very pleasant feeling.

Commentary: Want to Have a Debate About Obama’s Candidacy? Fine, but Let’s Stipulate a Few Things First

I don’t know him personally and probably never will. But he's clearly neither the boogey man nor the bootlick that some folks ache for him to be.

Commentary: Want to Avoid Drama at Any Costs, Brothers? Then Grow Up, and Just Say No to Strip Clubs

An entire conversation on the subject boils down to a simple math question: What do half-naked women + booze + guys + strip club usually equal? A mess of trouble.

Commentary: Obama’s Effort to Represent the Audacity of Hope Being Obscured by the Politics of Fear

His skills and strengths aren't at issue for many white voters. They’d rather judge him by what a black person who isn’t running for president says.

Copyright © 2001-2005 BlackAmericaWeb.com, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
About Us | Advertise | Help | Privacy Policy | Search | Terms of Use | Unsubscribe