Among the legendary pioneers of Christian broadcasting—a list that
includes Pat Robertson, Oral Roberts and Jim Bakker—no one worked harder
to establish Christian TV stations around the world than Paul Crouch
Sr. In spite of constant controversies over his network’s content and
finances, the Trinity Broadcasting Network that Crouch founded in 1973
has grown to be the largest and most profitable religious television
enterprise in the world.
But Crouch died last weekend, and all is
not well at TBN. Crouch’s oldest son, Paul Jr., who at one time was the
heir apparent of the network, abruptly departed in 2011 and went to work
for the Word Network, a predominantly African-American ministry. The
Crouch’s granddaughter, Brittany Koper, in a lawsuit filed against TBN
last year, claimed that millions of dollars of donor funds were misused.
The Crouch’s grandson, Brandon Crouch, has lamented on a blog that the
family is now split apart because his sister was fired for blowing the
whistle on what she considered fraud.
And as Christian friends and
colleagues mourn Crouch’s passing (there will be no public funeral, but
TBN plans to air a tribute on Dec. 8 and 9), the wider Christian public
is asking a lot of questions about TBN—and about Christian broadcasting
in general: Why is televangelism so prone to scandal? Why have so many
Christian broadcasters insisted on living lavishly? Why is our most
visible outreach to the world so embarrassing?
Some people might
say this is not the time to have this discussion. But I think Paul
Crouch’s passing signals the end of an era—and it is time for a
reformation. Crouch’s generation built monolithic organizations with
autocratic leadership, and broadcasters who began their networks in the
1970s created a showy, bigger-is-better style that included endless
telethons, sensational preaching and celebrities in spotlights.
That
may have worked in 1975—and it still appeals to a segment of the
market. But my generation and my children’s generation tuned out long
ago because Christian TV came off as fake, campy and spiritually out of
touch.
If I were asked to suggest ways to improve Christian television in this new era, I would list the following:
1. Support it with advertising, not donations.
Who said Christian programming has to be donor-funded? I’d rather watch
ads for steak knives or dietary supplements than endure two hours of
begging—especially when the slick-haired evangelist running the telethon
reminds you of a used-car salesman.
2. Prosperity preaching shouldn’t be allowed.
Networks need to declare a moratorium on sermons that promise magical
monetary benefits to people who “call now” to give a credit card
donation. This type of merchandising of the anointing of the Holy Spirit
grieves God and drags Christian TV down to the level of scam artists.
3. Preachers—and their doctrines—should be more carefully screened.
Christian networks should not air programs by ministers who have
questionable morals. If we wouldn’t allow that person in our church’s
pulpit, why would we let them preach in front of millions on the air?
4. Donors should never be manipulated.
If there is an appeal for donations, there should be no hanky-panky
allowed. Don’t tell people that if they give tonight, God will give them
a house. Don’t promise that God will heal their bodies if they sow a
“$1,000 seed.” And don’t tell viewers that if they give in this special
“Day of Atonement offering,” God will forgive their sins. This is
witchcraft! Shame on any broadcaster who has allowed this garbage to
deceive audiences.
5. Money should never be misused. TBN
makes millions in donations every year—and the network has donated some
of the funds to charitable causes. But why is it that broadcasters like
Paul and Jan Crouch had to purchase lavish homes, a private jet and an
enormous trailer for their dogs? Donors should demand more
accountability for financial contributions.
6. It should be relevant to today’s culture.
Young Christians today care about justice, world poverty and community
transformation. They also want teaching on relationships, sexuality and
practical discipleship. Christian TV must move beyond the talking-head
style of the 1980s. If we want to appeal to young viewers, the false
eyelashes, pink fright wigs and “Granny hootenanny” music will have to
go.
7. Network owners should not set up broadcasting kingdoms.
Some leaders in the past generation believed that ministries are like
dynasties—that God expects the founder’s son to run it when he dies. But
there is nothing in Scripture that even hints at ministries being
passed down through family lines. God entrusts His work to faithful
people—and He expects us to manage ministries with integrity, humility
and accountability. Many of the disasters we have seen in American
televangelism occurred because men thought they could take ownership of
the work of God.
My prayer for TBN—and every other Christian
television network in this country—is that ministry leaders will take
their hands off of God’s work and let Him use broadcast technology in
new and creative ways to reach the world for Christ.
J. Lee Grady is the former editor of Charisma and the director of the Mordecai Project (themordecaiproject.org). You can follow him on Twitter at @leegrady. He is the author of The Holy Spirit Is Not for Sale and other books.
http://www.charismamag.com/blogs/fire-in-my-bones/19293-it-s-time-to-reboot-christian-television
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