A Reckoning in the Pulpit: When Prosperity Preaching Faces Public Challenge
At 75 years old, Bishop Paul S. Morton has nothing left to prove.
A respected leader and founder of the Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship International, Morton has long been regarded as a steady voice of integrity within the Black church community.
Yet recently, he delivered one of the most direct and forceful rebukes of his career—aimed squarely at fellow megachurch pastor Creflo Dollar.
Standing before his congregation, Morton declared with unmistakable conviction: “You don’t sell the gospel. You don’t manipulate God’s people. This isn’t about jets and mansions. This is about souls. We are accountable to God.”

Though he did not immediately mention Dollar by name, the message was unmistakable.
Soon after, it became clear that Morton’s warning was directed at Dollar and the broader prosperity theology movement he helped popularize.
The timing was no coincidence.
Months earlier, Creflo Dollar stunned the Christian world by publicly renouncing decades of teaching on тιтhing.
For years, he had preached that giving ten percent of one’s income was not only biblical but essential to unlocking divine financial blessings.
Then, in a dramatic reversal, he told his congregation to discard every sermon and book he had produced on the subject, claiming тιтhing was rooted in Old Testament law and not binding under New Testament grace.
The reaction was immediate and polarized.

Some praised Dollar for humility and growth.
Others questioned whether the shift was genuine repentance or strategic repositioning.
To understand the magnitude of the controversy, one must revisit Dollar’s rise.
Beginning in 1986 with a small Bible study in an elementary school cafeteria in College Park, Georgia, Dollar built World Changers Church International into a global ministry with tens of thousands of members.
His sermons promised not only salvation but prosperity—financial breakthrough, wealth, and divine favor.

He became the face of a theology that resonated deeply in underserved communities where poverty and inequality were daily realities.
The message was simple and powerful: sow into God’s kingdom, and God will multiply your harvest.
But along with growth came scrutiny.
Dollar’s estimated net worth—reportedly between $27 million and $50 million—his $3 million home, luxury vehicles, and a $65 million Gulfstream jet fueled criticism.
In 2007, his ministry was among several investigated by a U.S. Senate inquiry into televangelists’ finances.
Though no formal charges resulted, questions about transparency lingered.

For many critics, the issue was never merely about wealth.
It was about whether spiritual authority had become entangled with personal gain.
When Dollar reversed his position on тιтhing in 2022, it did more than spark theological debate.
It ignited a credibility crisis.
Congregants who had sacrificed financially—sometimes at great personal cost—began asking painful questions.

If the doctrine was flawed, what did that mean for decades of sacrificial giving?
Some former members spoke publicly, describing how they gave rent money or went into debt believing they were acting in faith.
Others demanded accountability.
Across the country, pastors who had preached similar messages suddenly found themselves under scrutiny from their own congregations.
Behind closed doors, church leaders wrestled with difficult choices.

Should they adjust their teachings? Should they defend tradition? Or should they remain silent and hope the controversy would fade?
Bishop Morton chose confrontation.
His public statements went beyond criticizing a doctrinal shift.
He framed the issue as one of accountability and moral responsibility.

In a social media post that quickly circulated, he wrote, “The gospel is not for sale, and it never was. You don’t build an empire off people’s desperation and then pivot like it was just a misunderstanding.”
For many supporters, Morton articulated a long-simmering frustration.
They saw prosperity preaching as having drifted from spiritual encouragement into commercialization.
They feared that branding, platforms, and celebrity status had overshadowed pastoral care and theological depth.
Yet others viewed Morton’s rebuke as unnecessarily divisive.
They argued that leaders should resolve disputes privately rather than fueling public spectacle.
Some even defended Dollar’s change of heart as evidence that spiritual leaders, like anyone else, can mature and revise their understanding of Scripture.
Complicating matters further are ongoing whispers about financial restructuring within Dollar’s ministry.
Reports of administrative changes and heightened scrutiny from regulatory bodies have fueled speculation that legal and financial considerations may have influenced the timing of his doctrinal reversal.
While no definitive evidence has confirmed wrongdoing, the optics have intensified skepticism.

Whether strategic or sincere, Dollar’s pivot has reshaped the conversation around prosperity theology.
Churches are now confronting difficult questions about transparency, stewardship, and the line between faith and fundraising.
The broader impact may extend beyond one preacher or one doctrine.
Public trust in religious insтιтutions—already fragile—faces renewed strain.
Younger generations, in particular, are increasingly wary of insтιтutions perceived as prioritizing wealth over service.

In the end, this conflict is not merely about two prominent bishops.
It is about the future direction of modern ministry.
Will churches embrace deeper financial transparency? Will prosperity teaching evolve—or fade? And will leaders prioritize accountability over image?
Bishop Paul Morton’s warning has ensured that these questions cannot be ignored.
The reverberations from this moment may shape the church’s credibility for years to come.