False Churches, False Brethren, False Gospels
The wife of televangelist Benny Hinn has filed for divorce in Southern
California.
GILLIAN FLACCUS Associated Press Writer
February 18, 2010 | 4:14 p.m.
ORANGE, Calif. (AP) — The wife of televangelist Benny Hinn has filed
for divorce in Southern California.
Suzanne Hinn filed the papers in Orange County Superior Court on Feb.
1, citing irreconcilable differences, after more than 30 years of
marriage. The papers note the two separated on Jan. 26 and that Hinn
has been living in Dana Point, a wealthy coastal community in southern
Orange County.
Hinn is one of the best known advocates of the prosperity gospel, which
teaches that Christians who are right with God will be rewarded with
wealth and health in this lifetime.
His TV broadcasts on the Trinity Broadcast Network, a Pentecostal
broadcasting juggernaut, and other TV networks are seen by millions of
people around the world nearly every day. He travels the globe in his
ministry's plane, named Dove One, holding events he calls "Miracle
Crusades" that include spiritual healings.
Hinn has never fully publicly disclosed how he spends the money he
raises, but his vast ministry is believed to be a multimillion-dollar
operation. There was no mention of finances in the court filing, which
listed three recent Southern California addresses for the family.
Over the years, Hinn has been the target of intense criticism from
fellow Christians and watchdog groups who call his teachings false and
accuse him of raising money only to enrich himself.
He is one of six televangelists under investigation by Sen. Charles
Grassley, the Iowa Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, over
whether he complied with IRS rules for nonprofits. Hinn has said on his
Web site that external auditors ensure his compliance with IRS
regulations and that in 2008, 88 percent of the money he collected was
spent on ministry.
Benny Hinn Ministries is based in Grapevine, Texas, and operates a
church and television studio in Aliso Viejo in California's Orange
County, according to its Web site.
Sorrell Trope, the attorney representing Suzanne Hinn, did not
immediately return a call for comment. A woman at his office said the
firm does not comment on divorce filings without the client's approval.
J. Lee Grady, contributing editor of Charisma, a news magazine on the
Pentecostal community, said Hinn's divorce is the latest in a string of
high-profile ministry divorces and moral failures among the Pentecostal
leaders, beginning with Ted Haggard's fall from grace in 2006.
Haggard, who is married and has five children, admitted to receiving a
massage from a male prostitute and buying drugs from him, but denied
allegations he paid the man for sex.
Grady said in an e-mail Thursday that Hinn's followers will want an
explanation for the divorce because of the high profile the couple had.
"It will be devastating to the people who have supported Benny Hinn's
evangelistic work around the world," Grady said.
"Obviously because their ministry has been very public, they will need
to issue a statement to their supporters to explain how this happened,"
he said.
____
Associated Press Religion Writer Rachel Zoll in New York contributed to
this report.