The Tucker Carlson Show - The Megachurch Scam & Nonprofit Loophole: How Celebrity Pastors Exploit the Bible to Get Filthy Rich
Episode Date: June 19, 2026Turns out the Israeli government is targeting American churches to indoctrinate unsuspecting Christians. Nathan Apffel, director of “The Religion Business” explains. Nathan Apffel is an investiga...tive documentary filmmaker best known for creating the docuseries The Religion Business, which examines financial fraud and abuse within American religious institutions while calling for the institutions to realign with the ethos of Christ. Now available to stream on https://tuckercarlson.com. Paid partnerships with: VanMan: Use code TUCKER for 15% off your first order at http://vanman.shop/tucker Vulnerable People Project: Stand with Christians in the land where Christianity began, go to SaveWestBankChristians.com Defend: Enter code "Tucker" for 20% off your purchase at https://defendcellcam.com TCN: Watch 'The Religion Business' only on https://tuckercarlson.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thanks for coming back.
Yeah, thanks for having.
Maybe you can help solve a mystery.
So I've always known that different people have different views on Israel.
I've never been upset about it.
Post-Gaza, I'm rethinking about if all those views are legitimate, but I know that decent people have different views on Israel.
Totally fine.
And that includes Christians.
And but in the past year, it does seem that for some Christian leaders, I'm going to call anyone out by name, but Israel's the only thing that matters.
so they'll approach fellow Christians with one question in mind,
where does this person stand on the government of Israel?
And so it occupies a much greater percentage of mental disk space than I ever imagined,
certainly than it does for me.
So what is that?
Well, it's the old covenant.
I was raised just non-denominational Christian in large-scale churches,
and we were pro-Israel.
Yeah, yeah.
It's just a consistent deal when you look at,
I'm always going to.
go back to scripture. So I'm always going to use the Bible to reference my perspective and what I
think is going on. Yes. The nation state of Israel has just become an idol to the church in regards to how
they, not all of them, but how some of them perceive it. And you have to ask why. And so we've done a
little digging in regards to some farofilings and others. And when you look at the old covenant in the
Bible, it's one of those spots or parts of the covenant that you can weaponize. Israel is one of them,
giving and generosity, tithing is one of them. And when Christ came, he came to fulfill that whole
old covenant, that whole contract, a new covenant. It's literally a new covenant. So that old covenant is
complete, done, fulfilled, put on the shelf. A new contract is in place. And that's Christ's contract,
Christ covenant. And if you're a Bible believing Christian. But with that new,
covenant does is it takes the teeth out of the old covenant, the old contracts, you know, that mosaic law.
But people like to lean on that contract in that law because you can weapon, I'm going to say weaponize it.
You can build empires again and build power structures around basically double dipping in covenants.
So you can take some things that Jesus said and grab a couple things from the old covenant and mash them together.
And you have just a different thing.
You have Judeo-Christianity.
You know, not Christianity and not Judaism.
You have Judeo-Christianity.
It's like a racist peanut butter cup.
Exactly.
It's neither or.
It's so Israel, the nation state, has become one of those cards that you can pull and say,
hey, if you don't back the nation state, then you clearly don't believe this book or, you know, that God is our God.
And so I always push back.
I consider myself kind of an auditor in this regard.
So I wanted to audit the nation state of Israel and say, what is it exactly?
scripturally. So that is, boy, it's it's jarring to hear you put it so plainly, but that is really what
they're saying. If you don't support the Netanyahu government, you're not a Christian.
Yeah, I've heard it. I've heard that. Some, like the dimmer ones, like Huckabee, just say it out loud,
but that is the assumption behind a lot of it. Well, and if my fellow brothers and sisters in
Christ haven't read the book in its entirety, then they'll take what Huckabee or what their
potential pastor says from the stage as scripture.
sound. And so that's what I've had a great time doing.
I disagree. I mean, yeah, I've read the book, by the way, more than once, but I didn't need
to read it to know that Jesus is probably not endorsing killing the innocent, killing kids.
Well, I would say there's even a naivete. There's strategic ignorance around that, right?
Like in season one of the religion business, a development economist breaks down what strategic
ignorance is. And we as humans want to stay strategically ignorant of things that push against
our bias. Boy, I've been there.
Yeah, and so have I.
And so that's the thing is as we grow and hopefully mature,
we look at the surroundings and say, okay, what is truth and what is not truth?
Yes.
And a really simple truth is the nation state of Israel is not the ethnic tribe
that's described in the Torah.
And so if that's our baseline, then, okay, now we can reshape our,
we can look at what's truth and not truth and see, you know,
where people are leveraging that card or weaponizing that card for their own gain.
But you would think, again, even if you're not familiar with the details of that book, you haven't read the Older New Testaments, you would sort of intuit, you would sense that Jesus is not in favor of, say, like, genocide.
Correct. I would hope. But there's always a counter argument, like in these far documents, you know, the, you know, these, literally the foreign agent is Israel Minister of Foreign Affairs, you know, and.
So I keep stepping up. So what are those documents? So you're basically saying, in order to understand,
understand this, you look not just at the theology, but at the money. Correct, at the money,
because so, okay, yes, I think most people would say genocide in Gaza is wrong, right? But then they
will always find a counter, which is, well, there's bad things, there's, there's evil inside Gaza
that needs to be removed, right? Yes. And so that's where this FARA document's interesting,
is because you can see the nation state weaponizing the American church to sway their opinion to say,
hey, you know what, no, the genocide is rationalized, and we're not going to call it genocide because
of X, Y, and Z. So that's what this document just shows. It shows that millions of dollars came from
the nation state of Israel to sway massive megachurches in America, or at least the pastors,
because when you can sway the pastor, the pastor can sway their congregation. So how does it
work? How does it, in regards to the system? Yeah, the system. What are the, the Farrah means
foreign agent registration act? Correct. What do those documents show?
So this one shows in particular basically, we'll call it like a marketing effort.
And ironically, this is fun.
There's multiple pages of just hundreds of churches on the West Coast that have very large audiences.
And what it is is it's a marketing effort.
It's a geo-fencing effort.
So if you go to your church and you walk into that building, there is a digital geo-fence.
And if you ping your phone, that geofense is triggered.
And what that means is they're going to get your phones.
IP address, they're going to start sending you messages and sending you advertising that's pro-Israel
and, you know, anti-Palestine for lack of a, and it says all this in the documents.
And so ironically, this is what I called my dad this morning because I was like, hey, what church
did we go to when we were kids? And sure enough, the churches, the two churches I went to from
the day I was born to 21 years older on that list. And so that means had I walked into those
churches, I could have potentially been geo-fenced and then they would have tracked my phone
and they could ping me pro-nation state Israel material. And so this effort is funded by Israel,
by the nation state of Israel. And is it, when you say funded, like, does money flow to the church?
Does the church know that it's congregations being geofenced?
No, not necessarily. So that's where it gets dark is the church doesn't even know that they're being
targeted. And so it's like a, it's like a subversive targeting. This is a foreign government doing
this to our churches here? Correct. A great example would be like, hey, if I, if my kids are in
college and the Chinese, Iranian government was doing this to us. What, China, Russia, Iran,
what happens if they were targeting our universities? We would be up in arms. So we have a foreign
government targeting our churches. And then at the same time, they also are targeting the pastors,
wanting them to come over to Israel, the nation state.
They walk through, you know, the, you know,
they give them tours of the historical sites,
which is awesome.
But they're leveraging the Old Testament
in these historical sites to basically calcify the nation state
and say, oh, what we're doing is biblical
and what Palestine and these evil,
these other evil people are doing these to be wiped out.
Like a great, like there's some,
I highlighted some of it for you in this document,
but it's wild.
Once you get past the list of,
of hundreds of churches.
It's such a long document.
But so a Christian ready show faith by works,
a Christian education and Israeli information campaign.
The goal is to combat low American evangelical Christian approval of the nation state of Israel.
It says it right there.
So this entire goal to geo-fence your church is to combat your low approval rating of a nation state.
Well, maybe we should question like, why is there a low approval rating?
Are you committing genocide?
Like that might be a reason why there's low-
And that does affect approval ratings.
100%.
And so the messaging that we are going to use inside this geo-fenced,
it's all pro-Israel and an anti-Palestinian state.
And they list the messaging that they're going to hit these churches.
The anti-Palestinian state?
Yep.
The first is, of course, Hamas is a Palestinian terrorist organization.
There was never a state of Palestine at any time in history.
So these are the bullet points that you're going to see on your phones from this campaign.
and then you can just keep going.
There's a pastoral and education resources,
so they're going to give pastors educational resources
that's pro-nation state Israel and anti-Palestine.
They're going to go to Christian college universities
and do the same thing.
And you can just go through it.
So this was millions of dollars was spent on this campaign,
and this is my favorite one.
Ready, they proudly, in their digital support effort,
this is the largest geofencing and Christian targeting campaign
in U.S. history.
That's what they call it.
their own in their own documentation. We're targeting Christians. And this is the largest targeting
of Christians ever. And then they go to Christian events. And this is a funny one for me, if you know
Greg Lowry, but his church is harvest in Riverside. And he puts on these big festivals. And he's in,
he's in a big scandal right now because he ran orphanage. His church ran orphanages in,
in where was it? Ah, man. It's in the show in Eastern Europe. And,
one of the pastors there allegedly raped and sodomized hundreds, potentially hundreds of orphans there.
And Greg Lowry knew about it. They sent a team over and he did nothing about it because it was such a big revenue generator.
And he's one of their, he's actually, he's ironically, hopefully their main spokesperson.
They've got a photo of him in their deck too saying we want Greg Lauer to be the face of this.
Seriously?
Yeah.
So millions, the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
spends millions of dollars geoffencing our churches for pro-Israeli,
pro-Nation state Israeli propaganda.
And if your pastor's behind it, then, hey, your pastor's going to say the same thing.
It's just hard to believe.
You know, there's this line in Mark 13, I think, where Jesus is saying to the Pharisees,
he's like, we're saying to others, religious leaders are in trouble because they wander around
in their long-flowing robes, they get respect from everyone in the marketplace,
but they're actually cheating widows out of their property.
And you read that and you're like, would a religious leader really cheat a widow out of her property?
Like, that's just crazy.
Only in first century Palestine could that ever happen?
And then you hear.
Like, it's just amazing.
It's just hard.
It's hard to believe a religious person would do that.
Well, there's religious organizations that are registered at churches that literally buy out permanent life insurance policies from elderly people that need money for pennies on the dollar.
Actually?
Actually.
Yeah.
Part of their business model.
the church is to basically go up to a widow or elderly couple that's struggling and say,
you know what, we're just going to buy your permanent life insurance policy that you've been
paying down for 40 years for pennies on the dollar because you need money.
There's one that's built.
I was told a $700 million war chest came off of that.
They have $700 million sitting in the bank off of buying out elderly people's permanent life
insurance policies.
Oh.
So they are.
And my translation reads, devouring widows houses.
and they're devouring houses in the name of Jesus.
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Who registered for this?
This was an LLC named Show Faith by Works,
registered in my hometown, San Diego, California.
But the name of the foreign principles, Israel,
Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
right on the cover, page one.
How many pastors know that there's an effort like this behind their views on Israel?
I'm going to say strategic ignorance.
I think they just see it as gossip online.
They don't want to get involved.
This is a hot button topic for my family, you know, because I have family that are retired pastors
or my uncle's a missionary in Kiev.
like I'm very, very close to this, and most of them just don't want to believe it.
So they don't believe that money is actually coming from a foreign government to influence
the opinions of their...
Correct.
Well, and if I even put this in front of them, they'd point to the book.
And say what?
And they'd say, Nathan, like, Israel bless Israel and you'll be blessed.
Does it say that?
No, no, no, no.
And we went through the...
We had a great conversation about this.
I just love that.
Yeah.
Yeah, we had a great conversation about this earlier.
It's this idea.
And since our last conversation, when we were talking about it is finished, when Christ says it's finished on the cross, I just went down a full rabbit hole in regards to digesting that old covenant versus new covenant concept.
And there is no way, scripturally, you can double dip in both the old covenant and the new covenant in the Bible.
If you are a Christ following Christian, that old covenant, that old contract is fulfilled and done.
We don't look backwards.
There's a great analogy that I was...
Why the curtain in the temples rent.
Yes.
Let me know if this is a good analogy or if I'm way off base.
But like, I'm a laborer, right?
And I need a job.
And you're like, hey, Nathan, here's the contract.
If you mow my lawns, cut my trees and clean my pool, like, we're good.
I'll pay you at the end of the day.
So that day I show up, I mow your lawn.
I cut your trees to, like, exactly how you want it.
I clean the pool.
And you're like, here's your payment, Nathan.
And I go on.
And I'm like, I fulfilled my contract.
Tucker and I'm going to go to the next house, right? But instead I wake up the next morning. I go,
you know what? I'm going to go back to Tucker's house. And I'm just going to start doing stuff,
cut the trees, mow the lawn again, even though it's already done. And he's not going to pay me.
Because I fulfilled the contract with you. I'm supposed to look forward and move on to the new contract.
But this is what churches are doing. They're like, I don't know, we're going to come back to this old
one and play in it because we like some of the things in here. We like to cherry pick parts of
the old covenant because it justifies our current model.
the tithe justifies how we can fund the business right israel justifies how we can drum up
attention for this idea of old tribal old tribal israel but it's we're just grasping at straws
if that makes sense because christ's message in his new covenant is a it's it's an unconditional
but very unknown you you march into the unknown in his covenant you have to have
full faith in him and the Holy Spirit. Legalistic covenants, just they're easy to understand,
right? You give me 10% or 23.3% based off of Old Testament tithe laws, and you're good, right? You're
done, Tucker. Go on your way. But Christ says, no, no, no, no, you have the capacity and the knowledge
to give. What does your heart tell you? Yes. So it means you have to stand up and lead, right?
In Hebrews, it talks about you are your own priest now. Like, there's no mediator between the
the Holy of Holies and the other courts.
Like you, Christ is that mediator and you walk straight through into the Holy of
Holies.
But that means you have to stand up and understand it and take responsibility and be that
priest.
But so if you're that priest, what does it mean?
You don't need the institution anymore.
The model, you don't need to sit in that pew.
Right?
Like you have, you have Christ.
You have his word, his logos, like is in you, on your heart and mind.
So you've got to lead, Tucker.
You got to lead like Christ.
That's a dangerous, dangerous man or woman to be walking around in any community or any government
because, hey, this architecture, this legal architecture of America doesn't hold me in.
This does.
This book does.
And so we've knee-capped Christianity and we've put it on a shelf and we've consumerized,
consumerized, we've turned it into a consumer product.
And now we just have a bunch of knee-capped Christians walking around giving their
10% if that to a church, to an institution that is not biblically sound. And then we can support
nation state of Israel and say, hey, I'm a Bible believing Christian when at the end of the day,
like, no, I believe in what we've built. I believe in the institution we've built, but I don't
necessarily believe this book. Well, that's a wrong turn if you arrive at that conclusion.
So how, I mean, I always want to assume that people are employing what you called strategic
ignorance. They don't know because they don't want to know. And therefore,
they're not honestly quite as guilty as someone who knows and does it anyway. But given that,
how big is the economy around this question? Like I notice all these pastors going to Israel on
these trips. I've known a lot of them who do that. Is that all paid for by donors or the government?
Yeah, there's an estimated, let me, I want to make sure I pronounce the name right. It is
where is it s j something it's uh about 320 million a year is dumped into this bucket to get to get pastors
overseas oh there we go uh the international fellowship of christians and jews generates about 315 million
a year in individual donor giving and what that does is it so let's let's let's dissect that name
for a second right international fellowship of christians and jews okay 315ish million goes into that
pool every year. You'd think it's to educate people on the historical sites, right? I'm a Christian.
I'd love to see all these beautiful historical sites. I've been to Rome and hunched down in the prison
where Paul was held. You get to experience this stuff and you're like, wow, this is real.
It happened. I can see Paul's journey and I can see the Hill Christ died on and it's real powerful.
But that $315 million is going to border security. It's going to ambulances inside Israel. It's going to
Border security.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
That's what...
Israeli border security?
Yeah.
So it says it on their website.
This is where this money goes.
So when you think about this, this isn't an international fellowship of Jews and Christians.
Because if it was an international fellowship of Jews and Christians, you'd care about the Christians in Gaza.
Of course.
You'd care about the Christians in Lebanon.
You'd care about these Christians in these other parts of this region just being obliterated.
Who were being killed by the government, yeah.
But so what this is is, it's actually a fund that's just...
halcifying the nation state of Israel and utilizing the historical sites as the rationale for this fund.
But the money is going to the ongoing operations of the government of Israel?
Part of it, yeah. And then what you're doing is you're bringing pastors over and saying,
look at all these beautiful historical sites. Does that make sense? So you're taking the faith
and you're using the faith as the cookie, so to speak, or the carrot, to explain the nation state
of Israel in their actions. And you're using Christian donor money. That's $350 million from
Christians, individual Christians that are giving generously to this fund with strategically ignorance,
with their ignorance, you know, with their, what does the Bible talk about?
Scales on the eyes, right?
So you can't see through your scales.
But what you're actually funding is parts of this war mechanism.
It's just like the LDS Church and their investments in, you know, defense companies.
Southern Baptist Convention, same thing, Guidestone is heavily invested in weaponry of war.
Are you serious?
Yeah.
So we've created machines.
We've created this Christian machine, this apparatus that funds what we think,
ignorantly, is good intentioned, international fellowship of Christians and Jews.
But no, what it's doing is it's calcifying a nation state that is bombing Christians
in other parts of that region, killing them, and they're justifying it.
And this money is going to those efforts.
Part of that money is going to those efforts.
That is absolutely crazy.
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How many people who are involved in this?
No.
involved in this fund?
Yeah.
I don't think any of them would rationally sit here and say, oh, I know about that.
You know?
No, no, we want to get our pastor over to Israel to experience the historical sites, Nathan.
Okay, cool.
But that's not bad, right?
But what you don't realize is you're funding security on the border.
You're funding, which I think is great.
Ambulances when a bomb comes over into Israel, but you should also be funding ambulances
when a bomb goes into Gaza, if that's your mission.
Yeah, and you certainly shouldn't.
be funding bombs into Gaza. Correct. Which is what in effect you're doing because you're freeing
up those resources. Wow, that is really, so now there is, in part, thanks to your efforts,
an awareness of a lot of this in a way that there wasn't a couple of years ago. Like there are a lot
of people, including the Pharaoh report said it, there are a lot of evangelicals who are
skeptical suddenly about whether it's a good idea to support Israel. What are pastors like this,
are they getting pushback?
Like, what's their experience?
They're kind of, a lot of these past,
so this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this churches are mega churches.
They went after the, they, they, they geo-fenced the big boys.
Mm-hmm.
Right?
Because big, like, if, if you geo-fence a small to rural church in Pennsylvania that has
75 members, what's, what's the point of that?
No.
Right.
Right.
Right.
Right.
And so these, these guys are already big influencers in regards to their, their church, and
in regards to the social media sphere.
So they just like calcify together.
You know, you have groups of them now just going on podcasts, sitting, doing the same thing we are.
Is that true?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Defending these positions?
Yeah, yeah.
His name's Jack Hibbs.
He was on a podcast the other day.
And he said, you know, Israel was created in a day.
And there's prophetic words in the Bible that say that.
Well, no, they signed the documents in a day.
But the nation state of Israel was decades in coming.
And so does that make sense?
They just take, they'll take a scripture out of context and apply it to the nation state.
And then everybody will take that same soundbite.
Similar to what I said with you last, that Christianity is more of a socialist construct than a capitalist construct.
Everybody goes, oh, Nathan's a socialist.
Tucker had a socialist on.
He's a communist.
Same thing.
You take three or four words and you can create whatever, you know, whatever conversation you want around.
So you're not a socialist?
I am not a socialist, no.
Yeah. But it's all part of the propaganda machine. I mean, they don't. For sure.
Right. So, but like someone like Jack Kibbs or not, you know, to call him out by name, but he deserves it.
But sorry, excuse me, trying to stay Christian. Does he get any pushback? Or do, or another way to ask would be, do pastors like that have growing churches or shrinking churches? Like, is this, is Christian Zionism in retreat or is it?
expanding. I can't speak empirically on that, but I would say it's retreating from just my
sphere of influence. A lot of these churches now are their congregation shrinking in the
have these huge buildings. So what they're doing is they're putting up curtains about halfway
through the pews and they shove everybody to the front so people can't sit in the back anymore.
So they're starting to stack their churches, if that makes sense. So they look full, but they're really
at 20, 30% capacity.
Really?
And then what they do, a lot of them do is on their social programs.
Like we have a solid online presence.
We will never delete a comment.
We will never block someone unless they're actually threatening someone.
But what these guys do a lot of times is they'll curate their comments.
So they'll block us or block our followers and just delete any comment that has a negative,
you know, negative pushback on what they're saying.
And so when you go on some of these pastors' Instagrams, it's just,
nothing but hearts and loves and you're 100% accurate pastor, lovely, lovely, lovely.
But it's because they've just curated the content. And so Christianity, institutional Christianity
in these big organizations, is just a curated business set on top of the gospel. And so when I
look at their, especially Jack Hibbs and these other guys who are very pro-Zionist in regards to
their agenda, most of their comments are just curated. And so that always makes me smile.
But does Jack Hibbs have a congregation?
Is there like a church where he's preaching every Sunday?
Yeah, he's a preacher, yeah.
And is it a growing church, do you know?
I honestly, I haven't done much research on Jack Kipps.
I just smile whenever I see his social content.
There's a lot of pastors out here, Tucker.
There's 400,000 churches in the U.S., and so unfortunately, we can't look at them all.
But what we're trying to do is we're looking at patterns, right?
We're recently someone sent me a book in the book.
They defined my character type and yours.
as an auditor, basically.
Like, you guys are here to audit the systems we've built,
whether that be our government,
whether that be our religious institutions.
Right.
And we're here to say, hey, what part of these systems
isn't aligning with the ethos underneath it.
So in Christianity, what part of the machine
that we've built the tradition
isn't aligning with scripture?
And the nation state is one of those.
You know, tithe is one of those.
Running organizations with no external accountability
where millions funnels in is one of those.
None of that is inherently biblical or Christ-like, right?
Tithing is not scriptural.
Tithing is not scriptural for a modern-day Christian.
Huh.
Yeah.
So where does the notion come from?
It's actually only flared back in the last couple hundred years.
So tithing was not a thing.
You can go through the history of Christianity from Christ, from Christ on, and Christians
weren't tithing.
And tithe literally means a tenth.
It translates to a tenth.
Yes.
And so most, not all, but a lot of churches today and pastors today present that, hey, you need to tithe.
Give us 10% of your revenue because the Bible says to tithe.
Well, the Old Testament, the mosaic laws say to tithe.
But what's funny is there's not one tithe in the Old Testament.
There's three.
So if a tenth or if tithe means a tenth, technically you're supposed to be paying three tenths.
Now the difference is the third tithe was only once every three years.
So there's three tithes.
So if you're a pastor out there preaching tithe, you need to be preaching 23.3% from your congregation, not 10% if you want to lean on the biblical tithe.
But so when you look at the tithe laws, Israel, of the Bible, is a theocracy.
So those tithes were actually a form of taxation.
It's what kept up government and religion.
It was combined.
today we're not a theocracy we're a democratic republic so what the church is done is the recent church
the modern church in the last couple hundred years is they needed to figure out a revenue stream
so i'll get i'll say with good intentions these pastors look to the old covenant the old testament
and said hey like the levites were asking for 10% or demanding 10% based off based off the mosaic law so
we should ask for 10% and it baked in this legalistic
demand from your congregation, and then, hey, if you don't tithe, Tucker to me, you're a bad boy.
The Bible says to tithe. But when you look at the New Testament, remember Paul was a Pharisee's
Pharisee. He was the man who knew the law better than anybody. So Paul wrote a bulk of the modern
New Testament. So if Paul expected you to tithe, you better believe he would have said in his epistles,
hey, Tucker, you're going to tithe to your body and then we're going to distribute it. He didn't say
that. Christ never said that. Instead, it was free will generosity. So Tucker, you're going to give
from the desire and passion of your heart, and you're not going to know what your left hand is doing
or your right hand is doing because we don't want you to basically build systems on top of this
generosity. And the crazy part about the New Testament generosity is when these early churches
would pool resources, it would always go to poorer gatherings, to poorer communities. They weren't
insulating themselves and building corporations. They were just distrullating.
it wherever there was a need. And so what the tithe has done is in the last 200 years is it's
given a fixed revenue stream to an institution to a tradition we've built on top of Christ.
And now that we've been teaching, I've been taught, I was taught tithing from childhood.
Now that we've been taught this tithing model, they can't, it'd be really bad for them to go,
hey, actually the tithe really isn't biblically actually.
accurate, we need you just to be generous. And here, this is a fun one. Or it's not fun. It's very sad. Someone, someone sent me this. And it's a slip that a child brought home. And so this was going to a, he was, I think the child was between 10 or 14 years old. And this is what they were taught in their youth group. My commitment, I am expanding my generosity to multiply.
by committing to the following over the next year.
So, Tucker, you're a 12-year-old boy, ready?
You're going to tithe Tucker 10% from your allowance.
It was on the sheet, ready?
You're going to give a percentage of your birthday money
or Christmas money to the church.
You're going to earn money, yard work, et cetera,
and specifically, you're going to do that for multiplication.
And then here's the other, ready,
you're going to sell some of your electronics.
You're going to take clothes to a resale shop
and you're going to give a portion of your savings to the church.
This went to a little kid.
And at the bottom, you're going to add it all up and tell this church what your total commitment is.
In writing.
In writing.
That went to a child.
That is wild.
Where is any of that scriptural?
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So what do the churches do with the money?
Well, they'll say they give some of it away, but statistically,
based off the financial, but the financial data about 70% just goes to buildings and salaries
and less than six cents of every dollar ever leaves the institutional walls now.
And so what we've built is just traditions.
Like it takes me back to the story of Christ in the temple.
You know, when he's whipping and he said, you've turned my father's house into a robber's den.
We've built institutions on top of the teachings of Christ.
And that institution now is so hungry financially that it,
it just pulls all resources in to the point where you're telling kids to sell their electronics
and give us the money. Hey, actually, no, take your clothes to a thrift store and then bring us that
money. Hey, you know, give a portion of your savings to us as well. Like you're, you're a middleman.
You're indoctrinating a child into this thinking. And none of that is in the New Testament.
Well, Jesus doesn't say sell everything you have and give it to the church. He says give it to the poor.
Poor.
Correct.
So what we've done is we've just built businesses,
unaccountable, non-transparent businesses on the top of Christ and on the top of the
scriptures.
And when you look at what the church was in America, the church was actually the institution that
pushed back against government encroachment.
It pushed back against human greed.
And it did, rightfully so.
It was the community.
It was like the community think tank, for lack of a bad.
better term. And this is, we'll go to this socialist comment, right? So I said last time,
Christianity is more socialist than capitalistic. America is, our economy is built on capitalism.
A great social concept, because it lifts people in, in nations out of poverty, but there is that
marginalized that's left behind. Christianity is in that marginalized. That's why we pool our
resources and give to the poor. And so Christianity is not about
ownership. Christianity is not about growth and profits at all costs. Christianity is the opposite.
And so Christianity is the hard line against power and against authority, but what's happened is
we've taken those structures, those capitalistic structures, and brought it into the church,
and brought it into an institution that is antithetical to that. And so now the institutional
Church has been co-opted by the very mechanisms it's supposed to push against.
All in the name of Christ.
So, hey, bring more money.
Hey, and it's been co-opted by the politic now, too.
And so the church, the beautiful body of Christ, is now an MLM, a multi-level marketing
scheme, for lack of a better term.
It's a franchise.
And you can see it play out.
You know, a lot of, as denominations die, evangelical, non-denominational churches are
flourishing. And so what's happening is now they're building satellite campuses. So it's like,
we're going to build as many campuses as possible. We're going to get you guys to turn and burn.
So you're going to come in, you have an hour and a half, grab a coffee, grab a donut. We're
going to sing some emotional songs. We're going to give you a couple scripture verses and then
get out. We've got to do it again. And so we've franchised faith. And we haven't franchised it
in a good way either, I feel. We franchised it in like a fast food way. Right. It's like the cheapest, fastest,
quickest way to turn and burn this thing.
And so what we've done is we've commoditized Christianity
when it wasn't supposed to be commoditized.
And now it's tribalism too.
Now we're either right or left.
So now you can see the politic grabbing onto it
and weaponizing it as well.
Are most churches pretty open about their politics now?
Oh, very. Yeah.
Really?
Yeah, very.
Well, the Johnson Amendment was supposed to like keep that at bay,
but Trump basically wiped the Johnson Amendment out.
What was the Johnson Amendment?
The Johnson Amendment was you couldn't, I don't have the exact language, but you couldn't
advocate for specific candidates from the pulpit.
Yes.
And so, and you'd get in trouble.
You could potentially lose your tax exempt status if you did that.
Well, Trump basically wiped that out.
So what's happened is you literally have pastors from the pulpit.
And I've been to these churches saying exactly who you should vote for because there's no fear
anymore about losing your tax exempt status.
So the church, not all churches, but many churches, whether right or left, are just champions for tribal party, political parties at this point.
And you'll be hard pressed to go to. Actually, I would love anybody to DM us if you go to a church that doesn't preach tithe and doesn't preach politics from the pulpit.
You're going to be hard pressed to find a successful church doing that today. Yeah.
I've never seen that.
Really?
No.
Oh, do you go to many big churches, many like mega churches?
No.
Well, that's a problem.
Yeah.
So that's the problem.
Yeah, I go to a lot of them.
That's what I visit.
And they're open about this or that candidate.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
They can't just say give to Caesar what Caesars.
They have to like.
Well, that's a funny one.
Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars and render to God the things that are gods,
because that's an inflection point for the church too, right?
Your congregation pays taxes.
But why do, why does the church have this interesting carve out where
they don't pay tax.
I don't know.
Well, it's, it goes back to 1913.
And yeah, the, I said, we talked last, I talked about kind of the weaponization or the,
the box that churches climbed into, religious organizations climbed into, which is the 14-point
checklist.
I think tax exemption was the carrot for them to climb in.
It's, hey, Tucker, we're going to give your church tax exempt status.
You don't have to pay taxes, but you're going to have to play by these rules.
And so you climbed into the box.
And now this box can be weaponized right or left.
Now foreign agents can come in and just sell concepts to the box, if that makes sense.
And hey, if I do anything wrong, if I don't live inside these 14 points, I might get kicked out of this box.
Which what is getting kicked out?
Lose your tax exempt status.
Great. Who cares?
Lose it.
Are there churches that don't claim tax exempt status?
There's a couple.
Yeah.
very it's there's a i would there's there's a new model that um you know like i called us kind of auditors
on systems we don't get anything perfect but we we we're just trying to get things right more
christ-like yeah and so i i don't only want to be an auditor i want to be um a reformer i want us to
help usher in change that's more christ-like and so as we look at the system there are legal structures
that hedge against man's evil hearts, for lack of a better term.
We corrupt things.
There's no better term.
Thank you.
And so I think it'd be really brilliant if we were honest enough with ourselves as Christians
and as leaders to be like, hey, let's build a system.
And our founding fathers did this brilliantly.
They're like, let's build a system that keeps it safe from ourselves.
Exactly.
And so I think there's going to be a new wave of pastors and a new wave of Christian leaders
that say, how do we build a system?
because we do need a system that is protected from ourselves.
And I think it starts with open source accounting.
So everybody can see where the money goes.
And then there's legal architecture that you can play in, too,
that's not tax exemption.
That doesn't have to do a tax exemption
that builds a better ecosystem for a transparent church.
And that's what we're working on.
We have some really cool stuff happening over the next few months because of that.
God gave me a Ferrari.
He gave his son, and you want to argue about 10%.
Millions of Christians donate to their church every week.
It's generous and it goes to a nonprofit.
I get another amen.
Well, it turns out the nonprofit designation is one of the most powerful legal and financial protections in all American law.
$53 billion is stolen every year.
Mine, your own business.
In fact, some of the most powerful financial institutions in America are not banks, they are churches.
In the for-profit world, if you went out and raised money for something like this and didn't build it,
That would be called broad.
But in the religious world, we call it faith.
Filmmaker Nathan Abfeld set out to find out what is happening here.
You've been warned for criminal trust.
You are being detained.
This is not a series that attacks faith.
This is a series that attacks people who are using faith to get rich.
At what point do we call this not only a business, but a straight-up scam?
We have a new multi-part series called The Religion Business, and it covers it all.
It's now available at Tucker Carlson.com.
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I would assume all churches would have transparent accounting.
No, very.
as denominations, denominational structure,
you had to be transparent with the denomination, which is good.
But as denominations die and non-denominationalism is rising,
non-denominational churches are accountable to no other church,
most usually.
Some people will say, oh, no, this church, this pastor sits on my board.
It's affiliated with.
Yeah, but it's like there's no handing over of P&L statements or budgets.
So what's happened is a lot of churches,
is like there's a church in Florida.
Their budget is $91 million a year.
Their congregation gets a single sheet of paper
with three pie charts on
and says, here's where your $91 million went.
Where does it actually go, do you think?
Like, there's just buckets.
You know, there's just massive buckets.
I don't have the pie charts in front of me,
but 27% goes to salary.
Okay, well, what does the head pastor make?
You don't need to know, Tucker.
They don't tell you what the pastor makes?
No.
You don't know what the pastor makes?
This is the crazy part is you don't know
their retirement packages, and I've heard about this individual's retirement package.
This church in particular, we did a series of videos on because they took a PPP loan, a $1.7 million
PPP loan in 2020. A few months later, they bought a $12.7 million hunting ranch. And then a few
months after that, the PPP loan got forgiven and it was dumped on the American taxpayer.
No. They forgave those loans?
And my question, my only, my question was, hey, is this Christ like to claim financial hardship,
take a $1.7 million PPP loan as you're buying an almost $13 million property for the church that's not essential?
And then you dump $1.7 million worth of debt onto the American taxpayer.
That doesn't sound very Christlike.
And I got eaten alive for that comment.
What was Jesus's real estate portfolio?
Huge.
The world.
The son of man has no place to lay his head, I think he said.
It's zero real estate portfolio.
You got a negative reaction to that?
Horrible.
How?
Yeah, because it goes back to Israel.
This is a good correlation, actually.
They said, Nathan, look at how many baptisms they're doing.
Look at how many salvations they're doing.
And they go, how dare you quite?
And then one individual even put the percentage of the total PPP loan forgiveness debt in a comment.
And he goes, Nathan, this is all it is to.
to the American public.
He tried to rationalize it.
He's like, it's 0.000, 0.2% or whatever
of the total PPP loan debt.
So why do you care?
And that is, that is the biggest issue I have with all of this.
I mean, that reasoning justifies like,
I don't know, shoplifting from a grocery store.
They got tons of food.
Exactly.
What percentage, if I steal this candy bar,
what percentage of the total candy bar inventory is that?
It's just 0. point, point, point.
That sounds pretty Christlike, right?
Yeah.
Oh, man, it's, it's, so the, but here's the thing as an auditor, and I'm going to use this term, it's exhausting because there's just so much corruption in the system.
And so I'm really excited for the next six months because it's okay, how do we become the leaders in the change, you know, and how do we show different models and say, hey, here's how we can do it differently.
Here's how we can build systems to protect it against ourselves.
So if you don't mind, will you describe the ideal model for an American church?
I don't like we're or what would be a massive improvement?
Transparent accounting is is base level step one.
Like your congregation, your donors should know where every dollar goes and they should be able to ask.
Your pastor's salary should be public knowledge.
Just like if I invest in a for-profit publicly traded company, I know those executive salaries.
Of course.
I know where the money goes.
So why should that, I invest in that company.
if I donate and fund this organization, I should know where the money goes as well.
But they don't disclose that.
They don't disclose that.
No.
Many churches do not.
So there's great, I have a lot of friends and denominations, Methodist, Baptist,
and their salaries are known for the most part.
And so I love it because it checks them at the door.
There is that check, if that makes sense.
And my Methodist friends in Florida, you guys know who you are.
Like, they're hilarious because they're bivocational.
And they're like, Nathan, half our pews are filled with drug addicts and homeless.
You know, but we're on the front lines.
And their program is so awesome.
And they basically turn their church into a co-op where all these community nonprofits can thrive
and encourage each other.
And they've just given parts of the building to the nonprofits.
And it's become this community hub.
And I'm like, oh, Jesus is right here.
I feel, you know, I feel him.
You got homeless people coming and getting meals.
You have handicapped children in the little school there.
It's beautiful.
You know, and then you have people in the community packaging up food.
And I'm like, oh, I feel it.
I feel the work, you know.
And then I walk into a church where I don't know the pastor's salary where he just acquired a $12.75 million hunting ranch.
And I'm like, okay, I'll grab a donut and a cup of coffee and see the performance.
And usually the performance is on the projector screen.
I don't even see him in person.
Really?
Yeah.
And no one knows what his salary or retirement packages.
Well, I'm sure a few people on the elder board do.
But yeah, it's...
What would happen if a church just declined nonprofit status?
I think that's the most brilliant option out there.
Because what it does is it holds you liable to the Fed and the state.
You're rendering the Caesar, the things that are Caesars.
And then you're not liable to get in that box.
I think it'd be a really fun experiment.
All of this is an experiment, right?
America is an experiment, a governing experiment.
Yes.
Our institutions that we've built on top of Christ, those are just experiments. Those are
traditions of men. And when we can see it for that, and that's not doctrine, then we can audit
the experiments and say, where are we failing? And I think a really cool experiment would be to start
a church as a for-profit vehicle. And here's a great example. If the religion business takes off,
and we're doing season three and four, and we keep going as we reform the system, we'll need a space
eventually to build our sets out because our sets are sitting in storage right now. And we're
talking about internally, okay, how does our for-profit business help the community? Well, all of a sudden,
we have warehouse space. Let's hold a church. Let's hold a gathering. I hold two a week right now. One's in my
house. And I'm like, well, we could make it a little bigger. And we don't even need to ask people for
money because God's blessed us with this space. You know, we could start a church organically like that
to where a for-profit vehicle funds the ability to hold church to hold the gathering, if that makes
sense. So why don't people do it? I think it's just non-profits status is a really easy thing to grab.
You know, in 1913, when the nonprofits sector was carved out, there was 12,000 organizations.
Today there's 1.9 million nonprofits. So you say, okay, Tucker, well, you know, population expansion.
Well, the population only expanded 4.3% in the last 110 years. So you do the math. That would put us
around 65,000 organizations. So you have to ask, why is there a gap?
from 65,000 organizations to 1.9 million.
The sector just exploded,
and it's because there's less accountability
in the legal architecture.
And then religious exemptions are just completely dark.
And what I mean by that is they file no 990 with the IRS.
They file very few documents with the state.
And so the church, the institution,
which is supposed to be the beacon of light,
plays in the darkest legal architecture
there is in the U.S.
And it's just become status quo.
Now it's like, hey, let's start a church.
And now what's cool is not what's cool.
I shouldn't say that.
It's very pathetic is certain denominations have lobbied the government over the last 50 years
to add vocabulary in front of the word church.
So now if I have a church that's not a nonprofit that has religious exemption so I don't file a 990,
I can start acquiring for-profit companies and pulling them under my church banner as a church.
So I can have an investment fund registered as a church.
I can have a TV network registered as a church.
I can have a radio station registered as a church.
I can take almost any vehicle, any legal for-profit business and bring it under my church,
and it gets to reclassify as a church.
You have organizations like Compassion International, Robbie Zacharias Ministries.
These organizations used to file 990s because they were regular nonprofits and they reclassified as a church.
So it means they no longer had to file 990s.
You can do it with any business?
If you have a church, you can.
you can bring it under your fold as what's called an auxiliary, a convention, or association.
There's different classifications. And you can basically build a conglomerant as a church.
So a thrift store, that same church in Florida has a thrift store. A thrift store is registered as a church.
It files no 990s. You're selling clothes. Well, let me rephrase that. You're taking clothes for free,
washing them and then selling them, as opposed to just giving them away to people who need clothes.
But you're making a profit off of that. But why would a thrift store,
or be registered as a church.
So you can start building these businesses,
these conglomerates,
and all under the banner of one church.
And none of them pay taxes.
None of them, no, they do not pay taxes.
And what's crazy is that same church,
they have a new business, relatively new.
It's basically a consulting firm to build your church.
So Tucker, you can hire my consulting firm,
and I'm going to teach you how to build your church.
I'm going to lay it out for you,
talk about the screens and everything.
That's registered as a church.
church as well. So a consulting firm to teach you how to build a building is registered as a church.
So that means it files no 990s. No one knows what people are making at the executive level.
It's just like religion is the organized, organized nonprofit religious exemptions are the
perfect vehicle to just abuse the system. And I'm not saying everybody's doing that,
but I'm saying the legal architecture is the perfect vehicle for abuse.
The Mormon, the LDS Church, Mormon Church, is one of the biggest land.
owners in the United States.
Yeah, they were the second largest private landowner.
They might be the first now.
Wow.
Yeah.
So what, like how big is the enterprise and what's its purpose?
The LDS Church.
Yeah.
The LDS Churches, their net assets are about $350 billion, billion with a B.
They have over $300 billion in the market, just invested through a hedge fund called
Enzyme Peak Advisors.
They'll hit a trillion dollars if they continue the growth rate.
They'll hold a trillion dollars in net assets in the next 15 years.
And the crazy part about the LDS Church is they make so much profit in the market.
They made $25 billion last year in interest alone in the market.
The entire global LDS Church costs around $7 billion to run.
So that means they could fund the church in perpetuity just off a percentage of the interest they make in the market.
but they still demand that their congregants give them 10% a year.
And they'll push Mormon, my Mormon friends are going to push back and say, Nathan, like,
hey, you know, we don't have, it's not a demand.
Yes, it is, because you don't get to get into your celestial kingdom unless you pay your tithe per,
your 10%, your tithe.
And so they could cut off, they could say, hey, guys, stop giving to us right now.
Give to the community.
Give to people in need.
Take that 10% and give to people in need.
But they don't.
They say give it to us.
still. And they could fund the church in perpetuity just off a percentage of the interest.
What's the point of all this?
I'll argue for them. They're going to say, Nathan, you know, Joseph in Egypt, he stockpiled for
seven years for the seven-year famine. That's what we're doing. Well, you've stockpiled indefinitely.
Like, you could fund the church indefinitely just off the interest. So I don't know what they're doing.
That would be their only rationale. But I see it is, it's like the Lord of the Rings, right? There's the
any ring. Like their hedge fund is their ring and they just can't give it up. And so it's just,
it's just growing. Do pastors actually get rich doing the job? Are there some who do?
Oh yeah, for sure. Yeah. Kenneth Copeland, I've seen estimates, no one knows what their,
no one knows the exact number because it's not, the salaries aren't known. But some estimates,
Kenneth Copeland is worth 700 million, around 700 million. Yeah. Is that, I mean, that's, I mean,
since Jesus does say it's harder for rich man in heaven than a camel through the eye of a needle,
but possible.
Yeah.
That seems like very obviously the wrong path for a Christian church.
100%.
Well, there's a beautiful part of the New Testament where Paul defines leadership qualifications.
Yes.
And lover of money is one of them.
You cannot be a lover of money.
You need to live modestly, right?
And it's painted in there.
And there are amazing pastors and shepherds out there that live by the,
that standard. But there's this growing number. And again, it goes back to that socialist comment,
when we see Christianity as a capitalistic venture and we build businesses on top of Christ
with capitalism in mind, that's what happens. It does, I mean, this is, as someone who loves America
and is very pro-America, it pains me to say this. But I do think that Christianity as
a religious faith as the, you know, the key to eternal life is something bigger than any nation state, even your own.
And so you probably want to keep your religion from becoming infected by cultural assumptions that are just by definition bound to a time and place.
Like this is about eternity, right?
Yeah.
And to what extent do you think?
So that's my preface just to what does not an anti-American statement at all.
I love America.
But I don't want Christianity to reflect America.
I want Christianity to change America.
Amen. And again, Christianity was the hard line against corruption. Like the church was supposed to be the antithicists of corruption. And instead, the system. And this is, I really want people to ask, why has it corrupted is the institutional model has corrupted to mirror our corruption in government. They run simultaneously now. The government says, we're going to collect taxes, you know, and you're going to give it to us. And with these, with these, with these math,
massive bills, you're never going to know where the spending goes. You just got to give us more money.
The churches are doing the same thing. They're saying, hey, you're going to give us your money.
We're going to build the system. You've got to trust us. And now we're going to start petitioning
your kids to go sell their electronics to give us, you know. To give it to us. In the name of Jesus,
you know, it's just, it's such a sad spot to be right now to look at the body of Christ that I love.
And it's just, I always use the analogy. We've built a tradition. We've built an institution.
an expensive machine, a consumerist machine that entertains us and keeps us fed,
but that institution has chained us to the pews financially.
Because if we leave, if you actually preached this whole book in its entirety,
a lot of people would get up and leave because they'd be called to go out.
They'd say, hey, God's calling me to do this other thing.
But with that goes my money and my time and my attention.
And so the model we've built is actually antithetical to the calling in the Gospels.
So the theology that these churches preach serves the church, not the kingdom of God?
Yes. And I've said one statement that people have hung before.
I've said anybody who plays in this system for a full career gets eaten by the system.
And you've nailed that.
When you play for the institution, when you are on stage and you have this seven,
million a year operating cost. Your message, your theology, everything you preach from giving
kids sheets on how to give you more money shifts to build and calcify the machine we've built on top of
Christ. Now that makes total sense. And I've talked to amazing pastors who've just been eaten by the
machine. And then the good ones, here's the sad part. As the big ones grow, they drain resources
from the small churches that are actually still embedded in the community doing the good work.
and a lot of those small ones shut down.
Statistically right now, church closure is outpacing church expansion,
and the churches that are closing are the small ones.
And those small churches are the backbone of their local communities.
And so when I say all pastors who play by the system died by the system,
even the good ones get eaten by the system,
because the big church gobbles up their congregation
and gobbles up the resources that funded this beautiful small community church.
Is anyone pointing any of this out?
Do you feel like a voice in the wilderness?
I did for a couple years,
but I think our message is starting to resonate,
and there's other watchmen on the wall, so to speak.
That's an Ezekiel, I think Ezekiel 3.
So there's clearly a religious revival going on in the United States,
a Christian revival.
Where are people going?
That's a really good question.
I think people are searching.
They don't know.
There's some go to the megachurch.
some hopefully go to scripture and just sit quietly and read scripture and pray.
My encouragement would be to go find a small church in your area.
Yeah.
Like that church needs your help.
Those smaller pastors that are often bivocational because even their congregation can't fund
a full-time salary, go support them with your time, with your talent, with your resource,
like those small ones.
And ironically, with the small ones need your help.
It's like they need you to help with the kids.
So bivocational means that the pastor is a carpenter or roofer.
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah.
And that's with the beautiful pastors that I've sat with,
because I've sat with probably a thousand plus pastors around the US
at this point over the last five years is the bivocational ones
are usually the ones preaching the most biblical theology.
I've noticed that.
Yes, I've noticed that.
Because their salary, their livelihood,
the food that sits in front of their kids,
is not dependent on this book.
Well, that was Paul's model.
You know, the first great evangelist was making tense.
Yeah.
Well, and there's a, you know, it's the Bible speaks about,
hey, if you make your living from the gospel,
you have your reward.
You've been paid your reward.
And I want my reward to be upstairs, you know.
How do you, the big denominations you think are less corrupt?
No.
The big den, I wouldn't say that.
The big denominations just have hierarchies.
oversight on the financials. And so it used to, it, it does bring some accountability to the
system, but it's not, it's not quality accountability, but there is some structure. Like Methodists,
for example, you know what your Methodist pastor makes. It's a baseline. And so you're not joining
the Methodist church to get rich. Let's just say, no. But like Baptists have slipped a bit. You know, I know
Baptist pastors that are very well off, you know, and how?
Just because they've kind of taken the non-denominational model.
A great example is there's a massive church.
And here's another example to the capitalist mindset.
Remember when we talked about franchises, like Christianity's almost becoming franchises.
So when you bring really smart businessmen and women into leadership at these churches,
they bring their capitalist business mindset into the machine.
and it's corrupting the machine.
And what I mean by that is,
I'm going to give two examples.
There's a very large church in Houston.
Or your family goes, Second Baptist, right?
So that's a billion dollar enterprise
that's been funded by Houstonians for almost 100 years.
So local Houston Christians generously gave to build this tradition,
this awesome tradition.
It's a school, it's a church, it's a lot of things.
But now it's all that power has been consolidated
into six people's hands.
and they can decide what to do with that billion in assets.
They can move it out of state.
They can sell off parts of it.
And so what I mean by that is when we franchise out Christianity,
the resources don't stay in the town that funded it.
And a great example is there's a small church in Sarasota that I visited,
and it was acquired by a church in Dallas.
And so these individuals in Sarasota funded this building for years,
and now the church in Dallas can just sell it off whenever it wants,
and all that resource heads to Dallas.
And so the people in Sarasota,
the Christians in Sarasota gave generously,
and that's what I mean is all money and resource
ends up siloing at the top now.
Why would a church in Dallas want a church in Sarasota?
I've got my opinion.
I think it's to justify the beachfront home in Florida.
Wow.
Yeah.
But so what I'm seeing in what we're seeing
is money siloing at a national level.
And then what does that mean?
It means you can all of a sudden,
these national groups and these these big conglomerates become what like become political apparatus
basically it's just a surprising but i guess not really surprising to learn that what's happening
to every other part of our society is happening to churches where your vet is now owned by
some private equity concern out of new york and your stores in your town are gone because of
amazon and walmart and like it just the big things get bigger the small things disappear
We call it the Walmart effect in the religion business.
When a megachurch moves into a town, it has to find consumers somewhere.
Yes.
So it looks, so it attracts, you know, everybody's not Christian.
There's only so many Christians in your town.
So what happens is the megachurch draws Christians and consumers from the small churches,
entertains them and bedazzles them and gives them a good sprinkled donut.
And then the small church is close.
And what happens is usually the Walmart moves on, the megachurch corrupts,
It's usually a sex scandal or a financial scandal.
That shuts down.
And then there's no small churches anymore, which were the backbone of the community.
And so the Walmart effect is in full effect.
And again, I don't want to just be an auditor.
There's beautiful reform on the horizon because I'm seeing home churches spring up all over the U.S.
I'm seeing people actually go back to the small churches in their community because they're looking for authenticity.
the non-denominational kid, me, who ran around on stage and did every, you know, goofy thing
my church would put on and I had a great time is I love exploring Catholicism and orthodoxy in,
I call it the kaleidoscope of Christianity because I want to see where every denomination
thrives and then where I think theological pinch points are, because then I can build my own
perspective on this book, and now my faith is my own, if that makes sense. And so I love,
going to small churches now. It's kind of like my jam. Well, they're great. Yeah. They're great.
I've been to, yeah, regularly been to a church with three other people. And I'll tell you this.
I get arrested at big churches. I get kicked out of big churches, even when I'm just going to visit
without cameras, if I just want to go sit, but I have never had a bad experience ever at a small church.
I totally agree. I usually have people come up and they're like, oh, you're the religiousist guy.
And they like hug me or want to, you know, want to sit with us. And it's awesome. And they're
like, oh, you're great. Cool. Awesome. That's, yeah. So last question, which is like a big question,
well, it's a small topic, but I think it's a metaphor. And it's about the treatment of Palestinian Christians,
which is how I get into all this drama in the first place, because I just noticed that Christians
in the United States, some of whom loved Israel, and that didn't bother me at all, but were going
out of their way to ignore what was happening to their brothers in Christ in the Middle East. And
I was offended by that, and so began all of this. But is that just that,
changing? Are you seeing greater concern from Christian churches about what's happening to Christians
in the Middle East, the Holy Land? I wouldn't say it's changing at the institutional level.
It's changing at the individual level. Is it? I think it is. Yeah, I have so many healthy
conversations with my Christian brothers and sisters about this topic in particular. And
people are just, Christians are waking up. They don't really know where to go.
Right.
You know, it's when the scales fall off for the first time, you're looking around and you're like, whoa, this is far more beautiful and far more complex than I realized.
Yes, exactly.
But it's, we as Christians can just look to the scripture and look to the Bible and say, this is our roadmap.
And that's it.
And God will walk us out.
And so I do think at the institutional level, I haven't seen change, but at the individual level, I've seen massive, massive theological change over the last couple years.
Really?
And who's leading that?
or people just independently coming to
I'm going to say watchmen on the wall
like there's there's a lot of people out there
that are digging and then they'll put their
research online they'll put it on social media
they'll reach out to us I'm I'm just one of many
we're just one of many that are starting to
pick up the Bible and say let's read this cover to cover
it used to be that the critics of
Christian churches in the United States of their corruption
of their scandals were all anti-Christian
so it's a way to understand
mind. You know, the Boston Globe with its spotlight series. You really got the sense like
they just hate the Catholic Church for other reasons, which I think is true. But now you're
seeing criticism of this kind of behavior of church behavior from people who are mad because
they're really sincere Christians. And I even have massive, like, there's a pastor who's been
on your show, a great guy. He's a good friend of mine. And we're developing a relationship.
and he works at a very large church,
one of the biggest in the U.S.
And none of what I say scares him.
He's like, I agree with everything.
Really?
Yeah.
And I'm like, awesome.
So even at the pastoral level,
they're starting to be a shift
where they're like,
we should be the beacon of truth
and the beacon of light and transparency.
Yes.
And so I think there's going to become a tipping,
there's going to be a tipping point
in the next six to 12 months
where the whole machine,
the apparatus starts steering away.
Also, to me,
off is defensiveness. We're all defensive when called out on what we're doing wrong. I certainly am.
But we're not supposed to be. Yeah. And we're number one called a humility. That's like the ticket
price for admission, I think, is, you know, we're screwed up and need help. That's why we're here.
Yeah. So to hear that people are willing to acknowledge what they're doing wrong without being
defensive seems like the best sign ever. I'm really excited. And I think, could you and I both agree
that we sit here as men who are evil, like at our core.
And Christ gave us the example to chase after.
And I think if we can get more people around the table with that is the baseline,
then we can look at the institutions, my own institutions.
The corporation that we built on top of the religion business, we're looking at
because we're like, is this the best vehicle, like, to do what we need to do.
We don't think it is, right?
We want to be the beacon of transparency.
So how do you ever go to an AA meeting?
No.
You got to go to an AA meeting.
You don't need to be an alcoholic to enjoy the beauty of an AA meeting.
I don't want to drink, but I still like, I love A.A. meetings because the price of being able to speak is admitting in public how screwed up you are.
And it just changes the vibe completely.
Like there's no hierarchy at all.
The one thing that unites every person in the room is their common flaw.
Yeah.
And that's the basis of like truth and love.
So what happens if the church?
took that model and said, okay, let's all gather around this table. We're all POSs. Let's just admit that.
Okay, how do we fix this? Right? How do we fix what we've built? I think it would be the most
collaborative, fulfilling experience for small pastors, big pastors alike. I totally agree. So let's get that
together. You should go to an A meeting and I don't go often enough, but occasionally I go and there's like,
there's always the guy who's like still shaking, you know, he's just got off it. And then there's the guy who's, you know,
but off for 40 years and he's like got his life together,
he's maybe rich,
and they're exactly the same.
Yeah.
As people,
as we all are,
every person is united and their force.
Well,
and that's why Christ crushed hierarchies.
Exactly.
He's like,
all of you guys are the same.
There's no hierarchy,
except the father.
We got one good teacher,
you know,
and it's,
but we've built hierarchies again on top of Christ.
I say,
you know, prior to the Reformation,
there was one church,
this monarchical Roman Catholic church,
and the Reformation, Calvin's Vingley, you know, Luther, they came in and they, the leaders of the, the, the leaders of the Reformation really shook the church.
And all we did, though, they didn't shake, they shook everything except one thing.
They didn't shake the institutional structure.
And so what happened was the Reformation came through.
They broke the stained glass.
They burned cathedrals down.
You know, they're like, we're going to do it differently, which was awesome, good intention.
But as they came over to America, we just built the same structure again.
we built a non-transparent, unaccountable, financially hungry machine with usually one person at the head.
So I always tell people, we have 400,000 mini-Vaticans in America now.
There's estimated 400,000 churches.
We've just built 400,000 mini-Vaticans, right?
And so we just built hierarchy again.
And it's like, no, we got to crush all of them.
I agree with that.
I agree with that absolutely vehemently.
Thank you for this film and for all the work that you've done on it.
Thank you for having me, Tucker.
on this topic, despite the abuse you've taken.
Yeah, thank you.
