Weird pastor tells follower to give up his property to God
Weird pastor tells man to give up his property to him, sorry, i mean to err…. to God… yeah! he he!
A pastor in Honduras asked a man to give him his land by “God’s order.”
Great controversy is causing the video of a pastor who asks a man to give him his land by “God’s order”. The events that occurred in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, involve Jorge Pompa, founder of the Fuente de Vida International Ministry in Apodaca, Nuevo León, Mexico. In the video, the pastor of Mexican origin can be seen asking a parishioner for the papers of a piece of land valued at more than 3 million lempiras (120,000 dollars). “God spoke to me last night as an apostle, and he told me
‘tell him that I gave him life, I gave him children and I can give him more than he has now if he gives me that land, he, handing over the land will only take 130 thousand dollars, if he gives it to me I will give him 400-500 thousand dollars if he can have the faith to believe“, said the pastor in front of the believer.
Another pastor asks for a private jet
Kenneth Copeland is a Texas-based televangelist who’s worth over $760 Million. Several years ago, the Houston Chronicle discovered he had been living in a $7 million mega-mansion tax-free. Copeland lives in an 18,000-square-foot home with six bedrooms and six bathrooms in an exclusive lake community outside Fort Worth. I was confronted by a reporter who grilled him for his massive wealth.
Lisa Guerrero, a reporter for Inside Edition, asked why Copeland won’t fly commercial. He defended the practice and said it was vital to his work. He said, “If I flew commercial, I’d have to stop 65% of what I’m doing.” When she asked about the private jet he purchased from celebrity filmmaker Tyler Perry, he responded “Well, that’s none of your business.”
Copeland, who runs Kenneth Copeland Ministries and owns a massive property with a private airport, said Perry “made it so cheap” he couldn’t help but buy it. He cited a recent trip where he visited five continents for why he needed the plane. He admitted to using his private jets to travel to his vacation homes. The journalist grilled him over comments he’d made previously.
In 2015 Copeland said flying commercial was “flying in a long tube with a bunch of demons — and it’s deadly.” Initially, the Televangelist denied these comments, but he recanted and explained the remarks as a “biblical thing.” He further justified his actions by saying “People get pushed in alcohol,” he said. “Do you think it’s a good place for a preacher to be and prepare to go preach to a lot of people? “
He bizarrely made a feminist argument when he said “When somebody in there is dragging some woman down an aisle, it made me so mad to see that on television that I want to punch the guy out myself. I can’t be doing that while getting ready to go preach.” The journalist also drew attention to Copeland’s massively expensive clothing and lifestyle.
He acknowledged this and said, “I’m a very wealthy man.” He also responded to his critics. “They’re wrong,” he said. “It’s a misunderstanding of the Bible. If you go into the Old Covenant, do you think the Jewish people believe you should be broke?” This confused the reporter who asked him “Are you saying that Jewish people appreciate money more?”
He responded by saying “They believe in wealth.” She replied, “Some people would find that offensive.” Copeland clarified “I’m not talking about some people, I’m talking about the Bible.” When the reporter brought up a Bible passage about rich men having a hard time getting into heaven, Copeland replied “All things are possible with God.”
The pastor has defended his lavish lifestyle before. The televangelist said “You may think that house is too big. You may think it’s too grand. I don’t care what you think. I heard from heaven. Glory to God, hallelujah!’” The property was built in 1999 and “has a sweeping spiral staircase and a bridge that spans across the living room and connects the two sides of the house,” according to a 2011 report by the US Senate Finance Committee.
These are the followers of “Poor Christ” their founder….or so they claim.
