You Can Be a Millionaire Defrauding Believers
When I was growing up my father once attacked a real estate investor named Donald Davenport in print for his post office scam, warning potential investors that it was likely to be fraudulent. He was sued for defamation and libel and the case was dropped a few weeks before Dr. Davenport declared bankruptcy.
But gullible in one thing, gullible in all. The lessons learned by those involved with Dr. Davenport obviously didn't fully attach themselves to the memory cells system of the SDA immune system. Once again we see gullible people who accept things on faith, coming to grips with the fact that faith doesn't work.
So while the believers were singing "Onward Christian Soldiers", Mr. Mangena was living like a rock star.
Money flooded in so swiftly that Mangena installed a cash-counting machine at the offices, while one witness saw "piles" of notes in his luxury apartment. Stephen Winberg, prosecuting, said £1m disappeared "supporting a wildly extravagant lifestyle ... to which the defendants had not, to put it mildly, been accustomed".
Just because someone tells you they are from God, does not mean they are from God. In most cases, it means they are trying to rip you off.
Some investors, believing God had blessed him, remortgaged, only to lose their homes and life savings. Others struggled to stave off repossession. Many had to forgo holidays, and large numbers were plunged into depression. One victim even gave up his job to join the company.
So to tally up the things faith can accomplish: It can bankrupt you. It can lead you to let your children die from treatable illness. On the plus side, you have something to do once or twice a week.