Sex Scandal Hits Atlanta-Area Megachurch

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DECATUR — The 80-year-old leader of a suburban Atlanta megachurch is at the center of a sex scandal of biblical dimensions: He slept with his brother's wife and fathered a child by her.

Members of Archbishop Earl Paulk's family stood at the pulpit of the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit at Chapel Hill Harvester Church a few Sundays ago and revealed the secret exposed by a recent court-ordered paternity test.

In truth, this is not the first — or even the second — sex scandal to engulf Paulk and the independent, charismatic church. But this time, he could be in trouble with the law for lying under oath about the affair.

The living proof of that lie is 34-year-old D.E. Paulk, who for years was known publicly as Earl Paulk's nephew.

"I am so very sorry for the collateral damage it's caused our family and the families hurt by the removing of the veil that hid our humanity and our sinfulness," said D.E. Paulk, who received the mantle of head pastor a year and a half ago.

D.E. Paulk said he did not learn the secret of his parentage until the paternity test. "I was disappointed, and I was surprised," he said.

Earl Paulk, his brother, Don, and his sister-in-law, Clariece, did not return calls for comment.

A judge ordered the test at the request of the Cobb County district attorney's office and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, which are investigating Earl Paulk for possible perjury and false-swearing charges stemming from a lawsuit.

The archbishop, his brother and the church are being sued by former church employee Mona Brewer, who says Earl Paulk manipulated her into an affair from 1989 to 2003 by telling her it was her only path to salvation. Earl Paulk admitted to the affair in front of the church last January.

In a 2006 deposition stemming from the lawsuit, the archbishop said under oath that the only woman he had ever had sex with outside of his marriage was Brewer. But the paternity test said otherwise.

So far no charges have been filed against Earl Paulk. District Attorney Pat Head and GBI spokesman John Bankhead would not comment.

The shocking results of the paternity test are speeding up a transformation already under way in the church after more than a decade of sex scandals and lawsuits involving the Paulks, D.E. Paulk said.

"It was a necessary evil to bring us back to a God-consciousness," said the younger Paulk, explaining that the church had become too personality-driven and prone to pastor worship.

The flashy megachurch began in 1960 with just a few dozen members in the Little Five Points neighborhood of Atlanta. Now, it is in the suburbs on a 100-acre expanse, a collection of buildings surrounding a neo-Gothic cathedral.

For years the church was at the forefront of many social movements — admitting black members in the 1960s, ordaining women and opening its doors to gays.

At its peak in the early 1990s, it claimed about 10,000 members and 24 pastors and was a media powerhouse. By soliciting tithes of 10 percent from each member's income, the church was able to build a Bible college, two schools, a worldwide TV ministry and a $12 million sanctuary the size of a fortress.

Today, though, membership is down to about 1,500, the church has 18 pastors, most of them volunteers, and the Bible college and TV ministry have shuttered — a downturn blamed largely on complaints about the alleged sexual transgressions of the elder Paulks.

In 1992, a church member claimed she was pressured into a sexual relationship with Don Paulk. Other women also claimed they had been coerced into sex with Earl Paulk and other members of the church's administration.

The church countered with a $24 million libel suit against seven former church members. The lawsuit was later dropped.

Jan Royston, who left the church in 1992, started an online support group for former members to discuss their crushed faith and hurt feelings.

"This is a cult. And you escape from a cult," she said. "We all escaped."

These days, Earl Paulk has a much-reduced role at the cathedral, giving 10-minute lectures as part of Sunday morning worship each week.

"My uncle is 100 percent guilty, but his accusers are guilty as well," D.E. Paulk said, declining to talk further about the lawsuits.

___

On the Net:

http://www.mycathedral.org

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{"commentId":1199798,"authorDomain":"Wheel"}

I love to see these 'holier than thou' types get their comeupance.

{"commentId":1199798,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"Wheel"}
  • 8 votes
Reply#1 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:22 PM EST
{"commentId":1199824,"authorDomain":"damiankd"}
I love to see these 'holier than thou' types get their comeupance.

I can totally understand why folks love hearing about these kinds of stories, but really, it makes me sad. Sad that people who are trusted to hold a position of authority abuse that trust. Sad that it hurts so many people. Sad that the folks who abuse their position of authority are allowed to continue to hold any sort of authority. Sad that it just confirms a terrible stereotype about people of faith.

{"commentId":1199824,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"damiankd"}
  • 9 votes
#1.1 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:32 PM EST
{"commentId":1199904,"authorDomain":"belarius"}
I can totally understand why folks love hearing about these kinds of stories, but really, it makes me sad.

It's a shame that it happened, but honestly, why are people even surprised anymore? People make mistakes, do stupid (even reprehensible) things, and sometimes get away with it for a long time. I can understand why someone might gravitate towards a seemingly pure individual, but past a certain point that trust becomes credulity. When you place your trust in someone you don't know personally (and no, the megachurch format doesn't let you "get to know" your pastor), people shouldn't be so shocked when they discover these folks aren't necessarily the types them made themselves out to be.

Anyone making themselves out to be pure, or saintly, or even "a man of God" should be viewed with the same suspicion that a used car salesman should be. This isn't to say that religion can't be a noble calling - it's to say that religion is also a great set of clothes for a liar.

{"commentId":1199904,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"belarius"}
  • 10 votes
#1.2 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:09 PM EST
Reply
{"commentId":1199813,"authorDomain":"caroaber"}

I never heard of a megachurch with only 1,500 members. Sounds like the whole operation might be shuttered before long.

{"commentId":1199813,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"caroaber"}
  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:28 PM EST
{"commentId":1199852,"authorDomain":"adambecker"}
a sex scandal of biblical dimensions

That seems a bit hyperbolic.

{"commentId":1199852,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"adambecker"}
  • 5 votes
Reply#3 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:43 PM EST
{"commentId":1200083,"authorDomain":"gwenny"}

Nope, it's just the sort of activities described in the OT. Two chapters in you got a guy with two wives bragging because he committed murder. You got men telling their wives to lie to kings and claim they are sisters not wives. You got fathers tricking men into marrying a different woman than they want and wives sharing their women servant with their husbands because they can't have babies and girls getting their fathers drunk and getting pregnant by them. This is right in line with that.

{"commentId":1200083,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"gwenny"}
  • 5 votes
#3.1 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 7:27 PM EST
{"commentId":1200505,"authorDomain":"adambecker"}

OK, people eat fruit in the Bible. When I take a bit out of an apple (especially given my first name), is it an act of biblical proportions? Of course not. That is not what is meant with the phrase "biblical dimensions."

{"commentId":1200505,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"adambecker"}
  • 5 votes
#3.2 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 9:31 PM EST
{"commentId":1200934,"authorDomain":"gwenny"}

It's a play on words. Occasionally a newspaper has an editor who has a sense of humor. Not only is the "criminal" a preacher, it's like something that could happen in the Bible AND it uses the sarcastic connotation of "biblical"--something blown out of proportion. I think it was the perfect lead in.

{"commentId":1200934,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"gwenny"}
  • 2 votes
#3.3 - Tue Nov 20, 2007 12:41 AM EST
Reply
{"commentId":1199884,"authorDomain":"partisanhack"}

When we say that the church is a hospital for sinners you kind of hope that the doctors aren't in the ICU...

{"commentId":1199884,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"partisanhack"}
  • 14 votes
Reply#4 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:57 PM EST
{"commentId":1199937,"authorDomain":"vikibabbles"}

Bwahahaha.

Damn, PH, that's a good one.

{"commentId":1199937,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"vikibabbles"}
  • 6 votes
#4.1 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:26 PM EST
Reply
{"commentId":1199885,"authorDomain":"Missy2"}

A few years ago I decided to write off organized religion. There are many good people involved with churches but to me the bad outweighed the good. When I want religion, I look out the window at the beautiful (or not) landscape and say my prayers. There is no cult of church personality in this house.

{"commentId":1199885,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"Missy2"}
  • 10 votes
Reply#5 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 5:57 PM EST
{"commentId":1199901,"authorDomain":"josh-of-arc"}
The 80-year-old leader of a suburban Atlanta megachurch is at the center of a sex scandal of biblical dimensions: He slept with his brother's wife and fathered a child by her.

Well, at least he was being true to the 10th Commandment — it wasn't his neighbor's wife (cue rim shot).

In a 2006 deposition stemming from the lawsuit, the archbishop said under oath that the only woman he had ever had sex with outside of his marriage was Brewer. But the paternity test said otherwise.

...Not so sure this qualifies as abiding the 9th Commandment, though; that thar's some pretty no nonsense false witnessin' if'n ya ask me.

-J

{"commentId":1199901,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"josh-of-arc"}
  • 8 votes
Reply#6 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:07 PM EST
{"commentId":1199988,"authorDomain":"davis4000-2000"}
davis4000-2000Deleted
Reply
{"commentId":1199913,"authorDomain":"hypnos"}
The archbishop, his brother and the church are being sued by former church employee Mona Brewer, who says Earl Paulk manipulated her into an affair from 1989 to 2003 by telling her it was her only path to salvation.

Does that line actually work on women. I need to become a priest.

{"commentId":1199913,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"hypnos"}
  • 5 votes
Reply#7 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:14 PM EST
{"commentId":1202950,"authorDomain":"Missy2"}

That's how the fundamentalist Mormons get young girls to marry old goats. The 's' word. No, not that 's' word. Salvation!

{"commentId":1202950,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"Missy2"}
  • 1 vote
#7.1 - Tue Nov 20, 2007 4:41 PM EST
Reply
{"commentId":1199956,"authorDomain":"rel3vant"}

Megachurch sex scandal? Is is that time of the week already?

{"commentId":1199956,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"rel3vant"}
  • 11 votes
Reply#8 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:33 PM EST
{"commentId":1199959,"authorDomain":"adamkemp"}

If his brother was dead then this would actually be required by OT law. That's what the story of Onan is actually about. If your married brother dies before he has a (male?) child, then you are required to impregnate his wife. It's all about inheritance rules. Modern Christians twist the story to be about masturbation, but the story has nothing at all to do with that.

{"commentId":1199959,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"adamkemp"}
  • 5 votes
Reply#9 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 6:35 PM EST
{"commentId":1200100,"authorDomain":"gwenny"}
"My uncle is 100 percent guilty, but his accusers are guilty as well," D.E. Paulk said, declining to talk further about the lawsuits.

Excuse me? ::rolls eyes:: Yeah, those damned Jezebels tempting him so. How dare they.

{"commentId":1200100,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"gwenny"}
  • 5 votes
Reply#10 - Mon Nov 19, 2007 7:30 PM EST
{"commentId":1201776,"authorDomain":"jdl-28"}

A good preacher is a great sales person, who will play on some one weak point. Years ago preachers was and wanted to preach the word of God, the TV, and large church is just another business and that preacher is acting just to take your money.

Churches now a day also try to tell the people who to vote for and what laws should be pass, they feel we can not think for ours selves. At one time churches was good for us, but now I feel they do more harm than good.

{"commentId":1201776,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"jdl-28"}
  • 1 vote
Reply#11 - Tue Nov 20, 2007 10:54 AM EST
{"commentId":1201819,"authorDomain":"damiankd"}
large church is just another business and that preacher is acting just to take your money.

Embezzling money is against the law, even if you're a church.

Churches now a day also try to tell the people who to vote for and what laws should be pass

Churches who do that, and get caught, lose their tax exempt status.

they feel we can not think for ours selves

I think you're over-generalizing here. There are many churches that really do all that they can to reach out to community and help people from all walks of life.

{"commentId":1201819,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"damiankd"}
    #11.1 - Tue Nov 20, 2007 11:02 AM EST
    Reply
    {"commentId":1202957,"authorDomain":"Missy2"}

    You'd think that instead of covering their posteriors, the church powers would be praising the mother for not having an abortion. I mean, these are Christians we're talking about where such a thing is a 'sin'. Had the mother gone away and quietly had one, no one would have been the wiser and the minister could continue to sow his seeds of ... well, to preach in church.

    {"commentId":1202957,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"Missy2"}
    • 1 vote
    Reply#12 - Tue Nov 20, 2007 4:43 PM EST
    {"commentId":1205935,"authorDomain":"ronco104"}

    it wasn't the apple in the tree that caused all the problems, yall, it was the pair underneath....

    luv, and often

    ron

    {"commentId":1205935,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"ronco104"}
      Reply#13 - Wed Nov 21, 2007 4:49 PM EST
      {"commentId":1206003,"authorDomain":"ronco104"}

      it was not the apple in the tree that caused all problems, it was the pair underneath.

      luv everyone, and often,

      ron

      {"commentId":1206003,"threadId":"178344","contentId":"1108606","authorDomain":"ronco104"}
        Reply#14 - Wed Nov 21, 2007 5:14 PM EST
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