|
"They told me, 'You have
to make some money through a campaña of Israel.'
I told them, 'I'm not going to do that. I am against that,'"
Suhett says. "They said 'Then you are not good enough to
be there.' I told them, 'that's true. I am no good for that.'"
Suhett was transferred to San
Diego. Macedo himself moved from Miami to Los Angeles, to oversee
the daily television and video productions of his media company,
Latin American Television, which is now called Total Digital
Productions, and to stimulate the growth of his church.
Under Suhett's leadership, the
San Diego congregation grew as fast as the church had in Los
Angeles. In September 1995, he was told that he would be transferred
again, this time to San Francisco. Suhett felt he was being used
by the church to increase the levels of tithing at various temples.
What hurt Suhett most were rumors
about the high-pressured collection of money at the Los Angeles
temple. Expensive campañas and the ever-increasing
demand for donations was the new way of life. "I saw that
they were abusing those people my wife and I had treated with
such tenderness," Suhett says. "That's when I took
the decision that was in my heart -- to leave the church."
During his two years in the United
States, Suhett never received a call from Macedo, he says. But
Suhett did call Macedo, to tell him that he was resigning over
their profound differences about fund-raising practices.
He had developed a close bond
with many members of the Los Angeles and San Diego congregations.
He later told them that he had not filled them in on details
of his departure because he had not wanted them to lose their
faith in God. "They were like a family to me. They are still
my family," Suhett says.
Without saying goodbye to his
flock and friends in San Diego and Los Angeles, Suhett and his
wife returned to Brazil in September 1995. He left behind the
two most important temples in California, with congregations
that would soon become the Universal Church's biggest in North
America.
Suhett's public disagreement,
voiced in countless interviews with the Brazilian media, bothered
church officials. They countered by having pastors spread word
that the former bishop was possessed by demons, and gay -- which
the church considers depraved. "We were told to throw away
his audio cassettes," Quiñones says. "But I
didn't throw away mine. To me, he was the sweetest man I ever
met." Still, Suhett insists that he does not hold a grudge.
The differences, he says, were doctrinal, especially when it
came to campañas and excessive tithing.
"With campañas,
the church makes a lot of money. It is only a way to take people's
money," Suhett says. "How can you pay to obtain God's
blessing? God does not do that. He does not accept that."
Salaries vary for Universal pastors,
depending on their levels of authority. U.S. bishops earn up
to $4,000 and pastors $1,000 monthly, Suhett says. Their lifestyle
is spartan compared to their counterparts in Brazil, where bishops
drive church-owned BMWs and Mercedes Benzes.
Suhett went on to found the Church
of Amor e Graça. He says other pastors and bishops would
leave the church, but are afraid of becoming possessed by demons.
"It is really easy to do [such exorcisms]," says Suhett,
who no longer believes in the Devil. "If a person has a
headache, it is demons. So I start shouting 'Demons, get out!'
And the person falls and ends up confused and believing she had
demons."
BISHOP EDIR MACEDO started out
as an evangelical street preacher, one of hundreds who have sprouted
up in Brazil. The social and religious landscape of that nation
was to be changed forever by this fragile-looking Rio de Janeiro
lottery worker.
Macedo was born in 1945 in the
small town of Rio das Flores, in the state of Rio de Janeiro.
Like most Brazilians, he and his seven brothers were raised Catholic
in a tough and poor environment. In one of the few interviews
he has granted, Macedo told the Brazilian magazine Veja
that among his most enduring childhood memories was a lesson
taught to him by his strict father. As a boy, Macedo had stolen
ice cream from a local deli. When his father found out, he beat
him and forced him to pay for it and confess to his friends.
"At least I learned my lesson,"
Macedo said. "Sometimes talking has no use. A beating is
the only solution."
During his youth, Macedo tried
indigenous Brazilian religions, such as Umbanda, which uses trancelike
states called "sessions" to chase out Indian spirits.
In 1969, at age 24, he "accepted Jesus" at Igreja Nova
Vida (Church of the New Life), one of the many Pentecostal churches
on the rise in Brazil. Knowing Jesus, Macedo told Veja,
was "such an intense pleasure that it cannot be described.
Much more pleasurable than a man has coming with a woman."
Macedo's conversion to Pentecostalism marked the beginning of
his life, he says. It also ignited a hatred of Catholicism.
Macedo became a pastor at Igreja
Nova Vida. The bespectacled, studious-looking preacher transformed
himself into a fiery orator with an almost hypnotic stare. He
could hold a crowd's attention for hours.
In the Veja interview,
Macedo shared his strong views on more than religion. He called
himself a former womanizer, and said women should be submissive
to men. He quoted the New Testament to reinforce his beliefs,
which are now church doctrine.
"A woman can lead a man
to the presence of God, but she can also lead him to hell,"
Macedo told Veja. "When she is the devil, she can
bring disgrace to men. We saw many of them like this when they
first came to the Universal."
Despite Macedo's mistrust of
women, Ester, the granddaughter of a Pentecostal preacher, caught
Macedo's eye. They married in the mid-1970s and remain together
today.
In July 1977, Macedo and a group
of three other pastors left Igreja Nova Vida to form their own
church. Originally called the Church of Divine Grace (Igreja
da Benção), Macedo later registered it under the
name Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus.
Macedo's Jesus was not the footsore
rabbi preached about in the Catholic churches of Brazil. While
the Catholic Church promised a better life in the world to come,
Macedo assured Brazilians of a more prosperous life on Earth,
one without pain.
"Jesus was never poor,"
Macedo said to Veja. "He [Jesus] said, 'I am the
Lord of Lords and King of Kings.' A king is never poor."
Mário Justino, a former pastor who worked for the church
from 1980 till 1991, believes that preaching materialism instead
of salvation for the soul is the reason for the success of Macedo's
message. The church sells empowerment to those who feel left
out of the mainstream.
Another factor in the overwhelming
success of the church is the way it blends most of Brazil's religions
into one, says Kenneth Serbin, a professor at the University
of San Diego who has studied the Universal Church in Brazil and
in the U.S. Macedo, he says, borrowed elements of Pentecostalism,
Catholicism, French Spiritism and Umbanda. "In effect, he
has created a mirror image of Brazilian religion and reformulated
that image into a new religion," Serbin says. "And
he's exporting it!"
Many of the Brazilian converts
are drawn from the ranks of the Afro-Brazilian religions, Chesnut
says. The church has followed the same successful formula all
over Latin America and the United States, where it preaches against
indigenous Caribbean and Mexican practices, such as the ritual
cleansing of Santería and faith-healing curanderismo.
The Universal's practice of exorcisms goes beyond that of most
Pentecostal churches. "They actually invoke the demons,"
Chesnut says.

Keeping the faith: Melanea Quiñones
Photo by Slobodan Dimitrov |
|
|
The church's logo, "Pare
de Sufrir" ("Stop Suffering"), was embraced
by many Brazilians suffering from physical, spiritual or mental
maladies. The message contrasted sharply with classical Latin
American Catholic stoicism, which preached the endurance of pain
as a way to purge sins.
In a 1997 church video marking
Universal's 20-year anniversary, Macedo and his wife say they
were inspired to form a church by the birth of their daughter,
Viviane. Like her father, Viviane was born with five fingers
and no thumb. "When our daughter was born, I learned the
pain of those persons who don't have anybody's help," Macedo
said. His wife, Ester, added, "That's when the Universal
Church was born, with the birth of Viviane." |
- MACEDO KNOWS THE power of the
media. Taking his cue from American televangelists, he acquired
radio stations and bought television time all over Brazil to
spread the word. In the mid-1980s, the church attracted notice
when Macedo filled Rio de Janeiro's Maracana soccer stadium.
The gathering of more than 150,000 believers at one of Brazil's
historic sports sanctuaries was the first of many such stadium
shows held throughout the country.
Justino, a pastor at Salvador
in the state of Bahia, remembers an early 1980s revival in Fonta
Nova stadium. Macedo, asking the throngs for bigger donations,
compared them to the Rio crowd.
"'Can it be that the Cariocas
(citizens of Rio) have more faith than Bahianos?'"
Justino says, quoting Macedo. "'No!' was the thunderous
response." By 1985, Macedo had opened a temple in neighboring
Paraguay and, soon after, opened one in Argentina. In 1986, Macedo
moved to New York. Traveling back and forth from New York to
Rio, the bishop managed a church that had turned into an empire
and extended throughout most of South America. By 1995, the church
was sending missionaries to established churches in Portugal,
the United States and South Africa. That year, Macedo held a
rally of 100,000 people in Johannesburg, on the same day that
Pope John-Paul II held one the same size.
Since 1986, Macedo has encouraged
his disciples to vote for politicians who back the church. Dozens
of Brazilian senators and state assemblymen have been elected
by Universal Church voters. Among those elected with Universal
Church votes have been the bishop's siblings Edna Fernandes and
Eraldo Macedo.
Macedo captured the attention
of mainstream Brazil with his 1990 purchase of Rede Record. With
64 affiliates, the TV network is the second largest in the country.
By then, the church had just over 3 million followers in Brazil
alone, with more than 2,000 temples in the country. Macedo was
now ready to declare war on two of the most powerful entities
in Brazil: the Catholic Church and Latin America's largest media
group, Organizaes Globo.
Brazilian magnate Roberto Marinho,
the owner of the top-ranked network, saw his audience begin to
dwindle. He plotted ways to retaliate. Suddenly, "O Globo"
reporters became very interested in Rede Record and the Universal
Church. They were to receive some help from an informant, Carlos
Magno de Miranda, one of Macedo's top lieutenants.
Miranda joined the Universal
Church back in 1977, when Macedo was just another street preacher.
By 1990, Miranda had become Macedo's right-hand man, with the
number-two position in the church and with insight into its finances.
That year, however, Miranda left the church and went to the Brazilian
press with lurid stories of alleged money laundering by high-ranking
church officials. He told the press that Bishop Macedo had flown
him and a group of pastors with their wives in a private jet
to Colombia. Once there, he said, Miranda and the pastors had
been asked to carry back with them $1 million from a cocaine
dealer of the Cali cartel, which had agreed to help the church
buy Rede Record. Miranda refused, he said, but the rest of the
pastors and their wives hid the money in suitcases and in the
underwear they were wearing.
|
Miranda also alleged that
the church had smuggled large amounts of high-tech radio equipment
from the United States into Brazil by bribing custom agents.
Miranda's allegations prompted investigations by Brazilian authorities,
but no evidence to substantiate them was ever found.
Macedo denied all of these charges.
The bishop's aides told the Brazilian press that Miranda's accusations
against the church were ludicrous. "The accusation is just
too ridiculous," said Felisberto Pinto, one of Macedo's
lawyers. "If it had been $50 million, it might have been
intelligent. But why would he take such a risk for $1 million
if he already had $45 million [to buy the network]?"
Renegade bishop Renato Suhett
says that he never witnessed anything remotely confirming Miranda's
allegations. He believes that the church's alleged drug connection
is a myth. "The problem with the Universal Church is her
love of money," Suhett says. "[But] the church does
not need to get involved in drug-dealing to make money."
The scandal managed to put the
Universal Church and Macedo in a permanent spotlight. Many predicted
that the church would crumble after Miranda's accusations, but
the contrary |
|

Escalating the war against
Catholics: Bishop Sergio
Von Helde kicks a statue
of Brazils patron virgin
From Brazilian TV broadcast |
|
occurred. "Jesus' message
was not accepted at first, and he was persecuted. Now our message
is not accepted, because we preach the word of God with great
intensity," Universal Church president Odenir Laprovita
told the Brazilian press. "You can't judge the work of Jesus
by the word of Judas."
Macedo and his pastors dismissed
Marinho and O Globo as doing the work of the devil. The faithful
were told not to watch the O Globo network, or buy any of its
publications. Two years later, in 1992, Macedo was arrested upon
his return to Brazil from the United States, for fiscal fraud
in his acquisition of Rede Record. Millions of his followers
prayed for him.
Observers believe that incidents
such as Macedo's arrest have only made his stand seem firmer.
In the Veja interview, Macedo admitted that, rather than
hindering the church, his arrest had helped it. "The Universal
Church does a pretty good job of portraying themselves as victims
of religious intolerance," Chesnut says. "They definitely
milk that for all it's worth -- particularly when Macedo went
to jail. That was probably great for the cause."
Despite the years of turmoil,
Macedo's church continued to expand, opening temples in China
and Russia. Reflecting on his troubles and triumphs, Macedo said,
"We are like an omelet. The more they beat us, the more
we grow."
|
But as the church grew,
the war with Marinho and O Globo escalated. In late 1995, O Globo
aired Decadencia (Decadence), a 12-part miniseries
based on the character Mariel Batista, a Pentecostal preacher
who lives a life of luxury by deceiving and blackmailing his
followers. Macedo countered by telling his flock to purchase
wrist ribbons for $50 in a show of solidarity with their church.
He renamed the week of Decadencia's airing "Persecution
Week."
The year 1995 proved to be the
most controversial in the Universal Church's short history. The
outrage over Decadence had barely subsided when Sergio
Von Helde, the man who was the first bishop of Los Angeles and
afterwards the bishop of São Paulo, kicked a statue of
Aparecida, Brazil's patron virgin, during a television broadcast,
to demonstrate his hatred of the Catholic Church. |
|

Bishop Edir Macedo in
Brazilian jail in 1992
From Brazilian TV broadcast |
|
- The O Globo network made sure
that most Brazilians would learn of the virgin-kicking incident
by airing it again and again, day after day. What disturbed Catholics
even more was the fact that it had happened on October 12, the
day of Aparecida's national feast. Catholics in some Brazilian
cities rioted and threw stones and eggs at Universal Church temples.
Universal members retaliated with street demonstrations, 100,000
strong.
Pope John-Paul II intervened
to quell the tension between the churches. Some Catholic bishops
begrudgingly called their faithful to peace, while demanding
that the Universal Church apologize. Through a taped statement
from his home in New York, Bishop Macedo apologized to Catholics.
He said that he would discipline and transfer Von Helde. (Two
years later, Von Helde resurfaced in the Coachella Valley town
of Indio. He has since been transferred to Los Angeles and other
temples throughout the United States.)
The street riots were barely
over when Miranda leaked a stunning video to O Globo in which
the bishop instructed pastors on how to milk crowds for money.
The video, shot by Miranda, also showed Macedo and some of his
bishops frolicking in yachts. Then, Macedo's pastors are overheard
talking about taking off their clothes in a Jerusalem hotel lobby
during a Holy Land tour. In another part of the video, Macedo
can be seen dancing on Rio's Copacabana Beach. Later, the video
shows the bishop making lewd faces and sticking his tongue out
as he counts donations -- proudly flashing $100 bills -- during
an opening night at a temple in New York.
Macedo did not deny that the
video was authentic. But he said that he and his pastors had
done nothing illegal, and that the footage had been shot during
his younger, more immature days.
Stories abound about the contempt
in which pastors sometimes hold their free-giving parishioners.
Walfre Ramos, a former radio technician for Los Angeles' KWKW
1330 AM La Mexicana, worked for almost a year with Universal
Church pastors on the daily radio show Pare de Sufrir.
The pastors would congratulate listeners who called in pledges,
he says, but off the air they'd poke fun. "People would
call in saying they made $150 a week working backbreaking jobs,
and that they were going to donate their entire paychecks,"
Ramos says. "But when the pastors were off the air, they
would laugh at the callers, saying, 'These people are so dumb.'"
THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH has a lofty
goal: to own Christianity in Los Angeles' Latino immigrant community.
Blocking the way, in Macedo's vision, is only one church -- the
Catholic Church. Macedo believes he can steal members away from
the tradition-bound giant here, just like he did in Brazil.
Macedo has learned that it doesn't
take massive architectural monuments to attract the downtrodden
and their money. The Universal Church's network of old theaters
may be easy to miss in Los Angeles, but they represent the core
of the church's stealth presence here. Tens of thousands of the
faithful walk every day into the old movie houses identified
only by marquees and posters in the lobbies.
Universal Church backers like
to say that the Catholic Church doesn't have a clue about how
to win this war of religions. An example, they say, is the Archdiocese
of Los Angeles' plan to close smaller parishes when a new, towering
cathedral opens on the edge of downtown. Such a plan runs contrary
to Universal's cost-saving strategy of establishing a network
of dozens of storefront temples in Southern California.
The L.A. archdiocese -- the biggest
and most influential in the country -- oversees 285 parishes
from Santa Barbara to Orange County, some 4 million Catholics.
It is the largest church among Latinos in Los Angeles and in
the United States, and its leaders have said Latinos are going
to carry the church in the decades to come. But it's clear to
some that the Catholics are losing ground to evangelical churches.
In a 1998 study by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops,
more than half the bishops noted that Pentecostal-style churches
are luring both new immigrants and established Latinos.
The Universal Church's growth
has not been stalled by complaints from its former members. One
reason, at least in Los Angeles, may be that the existence of
the churches has not been widely known outside church circles.
Consider the case of Maria Chavez. A mother of three, Chavez
was well-known in Aliso Village, a 685-unit public-housing project
in Los Angeles, for making the best homemade pies around. But
two years after she joined the Universal Church, Chavez, then
47, suffered a nervous breakdown and attempted suicide by swallowing
a bottle of pills. Five years later, she still hallucinates about
demons who torment her, and sometimes rambles incoherently about
a world dominated by the Universal Church, says her husband,
Amado Chavez. He blames the church for his wife's mental breakdown.
"She used to be quick-thinking
and very sound of mind," says Amado Chavez. "Now I
can't take her out because she starts yelling at people or says
things that do not sound right at all."
In 1996, Maria began attending
services at the Million Dollar. The couple ä began falling
behind on their bills, and Maria explained that all of her income
had gone for tithing. "We had a big argument," says
Amado. "When my sons found out, they also became enraged.
She would make about $500 a week from pies. She was donating
all of her money, and some of mine, to the church!"
Amado Chavez went to the pastors
at the Million Dollar to complain about what was happening to
his wife and about how they were going broke. "A pastor
told me coldly that they did not obligate anyone to tithe or
to go to their church," Amado Chavez contends. "They
told me to leave -- that this country protected them, and that
if I ever came back they would have me arrested."
Maria Chavez never returned to
the Million Dollar, and is convinced that she was taken advantage
of by an evil church. The Chavezs now live in an apartment complex
in Highland Park. Unable to work because of a back injury, the
58-year-old Amado takes care of his wife the best he can and
struggles to pay rent.
Maria goes about her apartment
in jeans, her hair uncombed. She says the birds outside her window
are Universal spies and that Satan sleeps in their living room.
"We used to be such a happy couple. We would go out to places
for walks," Amado Chavez says. "Now we rarely go out.
We can't trust even our shadows. I think that when you take a
poor man's wife, which is the only thing he has left in his old
age, you are doing a very evil thing."
No one in the Universal Church
would comment on the Chavezs' complaint. It is rare for the church
to respond to its critics, though it has been known to sue its
enemies. In Texas, the church filed a lawsuit in an effort to
silence former members Jesus and Victoria Lorenzo, who had gone
public to complain about tithing abuses. The Lorenzos, who ran
a janitorial service in Houston, showed reporters $70,000 in
checks made out to the church during a five-year period and said
several of their vehicles had been repossessed.
Jesus Lorenzo sought to enlist
the help of then-Governor George Bush, but an aide responded
that his problems were outside the scope of the governor's office.
Left to fend for themselves, the Lorenzos say they live in constant
fear and see the long arm of the church everywhere. "They
have money. They own banks. I know that they were angry about
what I said, but what we said was true."
"I only want to warn people
about the church so that they don't end up like me," Lorenzo
told the Weekly. Houston Bishop Carlos Moncada denied
any wrongdoing and said the Lorenzos' personal problems were
not related to the church, which has since dropped the lawsuit.
For every critic of the church,
there appears to be a stadium full of supporters. In April, a
rally at the Olympic Auditorium in Los Angeles drew 10,000 people.
"La Gran Concentracion de Fe" ("The Great
Faith Concentration") was the L.A. church's first grand-scale
rally, much like the ones it holds in Brazil and Africa.
In the end, who will win, the
church or its critics? Macedo is a true innovator when it comes
to marketing his church among the poor and immigrant communities,
says professor Kenneth Serbin. "But as the church gains
notoriety, it will most likely come under scrutiny of the press
and law enforcement," Serbin says. "The question that
needs to be asked is 'When people put their money in that little
red bag, where is it going?'"
Source: http://www.laweekly.com/printme.php3?&eid=26043 |