Robert Tilton (born June 7,
1946) is an American
televangelist who achieved notoriety in the
1980s and early 1990s through his paid television program
Success-N-Life. At its peak it aired in all 235
American TV markets. At the time the first investigations into
Tilton's ministry occurred in 1991, his television ministry was
airing daily in many of those 235 markets and ABC's
Primetime Live described it as "the
fastest growing television ministry in America". However, within
two years after the investigations began, Tilton's program was no
longer being broadcast. Tilton later returned to television via his
new version of
Success-N-Life airing on
BET and
The Word Network. In 2008, Tilton stopped
broadcasting his program on television and is now utilising
internet media alone for his broadcasting.
Biography and the early years
According to Tilton's own autobiographical materials, Tilton had a
conversion experience to Christianity in 1969 and began his
ministry in 1974, taking his new family (including wife Martha
"Marte" Phillips, whom he married in 1968) on the road to, in his
own words, "preach this gospel of Jesus". Tilton preached to small
congregations and revivals throughout Texas and Oklahoma in the
form of a
Word-Faith ministry often
preached by ministers like
Kenneth
Hagin,
E.W. Kenyon, and
Joel
Osteen's father
John, a Texas
minister who was a contemporary of Tilton's and heavily influenced
Tilton's own preaching style.
Tilton and his family settled in Dallas, Texas
and built a small church in Farmers Branch,
Texas
called the "Word Of Faith Family Church" in
1976. The church was growing steadily, but Tilton's
many attempts to expand his televised ministry beyond local
stations in the Dallas
area were
stalling until the aspiring minister went to Hawaii--his own
self-described version of Jesus' forty days in the wilderness--and
spent time fishing, drinking, and watching an increasingly popular
new form of television programming; the late night infomercial.
Tilton was particularly influenced by the style of infomercials
made by real estate promoter
Dave Del
Dotto, who produced hour-long infomercials showing Del Dotto's
glamorous life in Hawaii--which Del Dotto constantly stressed
anyone could achieve just by following the principles set up in Del
Dotto's many "get rich quick" books--as well as "interviews" of
students who were brought out to Del Dotto's Hawaiian villa for
said interviews, specifically for their on-camera testimonials
about the success in life they were now enjoying thanks to Del
Dotto's teachings. Upon his return from Hawaii in 1981,
Tilton--with the help of a US$1.3M loan from Dallas banker Herman
Beebe--put together his new show, an hour-long religious
infomercial with the title
Success-N-Life.
Success-N-Life
In
Success-N-Life, Tilton regularly taught that all of
life's trials, especially poverty, were a result of
sin. Tilton's ministry revolved around the practice of
making "vows", financial commitments to Tilton's ministry. Tilton's
preferred vow, stressed frequently on his broadcasts, was $1,000.
Occasionally, Tilton would claim to have received a "word" for
someone to give a vow of $5,000 or even $10,000. When a person made
a vow to Tilton he preached that God would recognize the vow and
reward the donor with vast material riches. The show also ran
"testimonials" of viewers who gave to Tilton's ministry and
reportedly received miracles in return, a practice that would be
used as the basis for a later lawsuit from donors charging Tilton's
ministry with fraud. A
Dallas
Morning News story published in 1992 observed that Tilton
spent more than 84% of his show's airtime for fundraising and
promotions, a total higher than the 22% for an average commercial
television show; other sources put the total fundraising time
during episodes of
Success-N-Life closer to 68%. By
contrast, the televised ministry of
Billy
Graham spent an average of 5% of total airtime on fundraising
and promotions. Some of Tilton's fundraising letters were written
by
Gene Ewing, who heads a multi-million
dollar marketing empire, writing donation letters for other
evangelicals like
WV Grant and
Don Stewart.
As a result of Tilton's television success, the membership of the
Word of Faith Family Church (renamed "Word of Faith Family Church
and World Outreach Center") grew to become an 8,000 member
megachurch.
Tilton is the author of several self-help books about financial
success, including
The Power to Create Wealth,
God's
Laws of Success,
How to Pay Your Bills
Supernaturally, and
How to be Rich and Have Everything You
Ever Wanted. Most of Tilton's books were published in the
1980s and distributed via promotion on
Success-N-Life and
through the many mailings Tilton's ministry sent his followers. The
books were republished in the late 1990s and were used as
centerpieces of his later infomercial series and are now promoted
on his new daily live internet broadcast.
Scandal
Even before the ABC News investigation into his ministry, Tilton
had controversy in his background. In a deposition video for a
lawsuit that was taped August 18, 1992, Tilton admitted to having
robbed a fruit stand as a teen and abusing
marijuana,
LSD, and
various
barbiturates as a young man
prior to his conversion to Christianity in 1969. Tilton also
admitted several times on
Success-N-Life that he used to
"drink lots of alcohol and use lots of drugs" before his
conversion.
Exploitation of vulnerable people
In 1991,
Diane Sawyer and
ABC News conducted an investigation of Tilton (as
well as two other Dallas-area televangelists,
W.V. Grant and
Larry Lea). The investigation, assisted by
Trinity Foundation
president
Ole Anthony and broadcast on
ABC's
Primetime Live on
November 21, 1991, found that Tilton's ministry threw away
prayer requests without reading them, keeping only
any money or valuables sent to them by viewers, garnering his
ministry an estimated
US$80 million a year. Ole
Anthony, a Dallas-based minister whose
Trinity Foundation church works
with the homeless and the poor on the East side of Dallas, took an
interest in Tilton's ministry after some of the people coming to
the Trinity Foundation for help told him they had lost all of their
money making donations to some of the higher profile
televangelists, especially fellow Dallas area minister Robert
Tilton. Curious about the pervasiveness of the problem, the Trinity
Foundation got on the mailing lists of several televangelists,
including Tilton, and started keeping records of the many types of
solicitations they received almost daily from various
ministries.
Former
Coca-Cola executive Harry Guetzlaff
came to the Trinity Foundation for help and told Anthony that
Guetzlaff had been turned away from Tilton's church when he found
himself on hard times following a divorce. He had been a longtime
high-dollar donor, and gave up his last $5,000 as a "vow of faith"
just weeks earlier. Guetzlaff's experience combined with the sheer
magnitude of mailings from Tilton's ministry spurred Anthony, a
former intelligence officer in the
United States Air Force and licensed
private investigator, to start a full investigation of Tilton's
ministry. Guetzlaff joined Anthony in the task of gathering details
on Tilton's operation, and would later do much of the legwork in
finding and following the paper trail for the ABC news
investigation.
Undercover investigation
ABC producers, who had started working on their own investigation
into a number of televangelists in early 1991, contacted the
Trinity Foundation for information on Tilton. After ABC and Trinity
Foundation compared notes, data, and details, the two groups
decided to pool their efforts and began planning the undercover
portion of the story. Anthony agreed to portray himself--a
Dallas-based minister with a small church looking into the ways
televangelist ministries were able to grow so quickly--and ABC
producers would pose as Anthony's "media consultants".
Together, the team got
behind the scenes with hidden cameras and microphones for a meeting
at Response Media, the Tulsa, Oklahoma
-based marketing firm handling Tilton's mass
mailings, to discuss a proposal sent by Anthony to Response Media
about fundraising for a religious-based TV talk show. The
director of Response Media, Jim Moore, described for Anthony and
the hidden cameras (concealed in the undercover
Primetime
Live producers' glasses and handbags) many of the techniques
used by Tilton to raise funds for his ministry. Moore also said
that Tilton was doing "far better than anyone knows" and described
the main strategy Tilton employed for such a high-return rate on
his mailings--that is, send the recipient a "gimmick" that would
compel the recipient to mail something back in return, and most
recipients who would be inclined to respond would include some
money along with it--but declined to disclose how much Response
Media was being paid for its services nor how much money the
mailings were generating for the Tilton ministry.
However, Moore did disclose, as part of his sales pitch to Anthony,
that the response letters generated by the fundraising mailings
Response Media sends out for its clients would never actually be
delivered to the client; instead, they would be sent, unopened, to
the client's financial institution or institutions of choice. "You
never have to touch it," Moore added in response to a clarification
question from Ole Anthony about dealing with the gimmick objects
sent to the potential donors in the mailers. One of the ABC
producers asked for clarification as to whether this was a standard
practice--"So, the mail goes straight to the bank?"--and Moore
asserted that it was: "The mail goes to the bank, and they put the
money in your account. We just get the paper with the person's name
and how much they gave."
The Apple of God's Eye
Trinity
Foundation members, acting on this information, started digging
through garbage dumpsters outside Tilton's many banks in the
Tulsa,
Oklahoma
area as well
as dumpsters outside the office of Tilton's lawyer, J.C.
Joyce (who was also based in Tulsa). Over the next 30 days,
Trinity's "garbologists", as Anthony dubbed them, found tens of
thousands of discarded prayer requests, bank statements, computer
printouts containing the coding for how Tilton's "personalized"
letters were generated, and more, all of which were shown in detail
on the
Primetime Live documentary, now titled "The Apple
of God's Eye". In a follow-up broadcast on November 28, 1991,
Primetime Live host
Diane
Sawyer said that the Trinity Foundation and
Primetime
Live assistants found prayer requests in bank dumpsters on 14
separate occasions in a 30-day period.
Denial
Tilton vehemently denied the allegations and took to the airwaves
on November 22, 1991 on a special episode of
Success-N-Life entitled "Primetime Lies" to air his side
of the story. Tilton also asserted that the prayer requests found
in garbage bags shown on the
Primetime Live investigation
were stolen from the ministry and placed in the dumpster for a
sensational camera shot, and that he prayed over every prayer
request received, to the point that he "laid on top of those prayer
requests so much that 'the chemicals' actually got into my
bloodstream, and...I had two small strokes in my brain."
Further revelations
After Trinity Foundation members spent weeks poring through the
details of the documents they and ABC had uncovered, sorting and
scrutinizing each prayer request, bank statement, and computer
printouts dealing with the codes Tilton's banks and legal staff
used when categorizing the returned items, Ole Anthony called a
press conference in December 1991 to present what he described as
Tilton's "Wheel of Fortune", using a large display covered in
actual prayer requests, copies of receipts for document
disposition, and other damaging information that demonstrated what
happened to money and prayer requests that the average Tilton TV
follower sent Tilton. When both Tilton and his lawyer, J.C. Joyce,
reacted to the news by claiming that the items Anthony was
displaying had somehow been stolen by "an insider", Anthony
responded in a subsequent interview that "Joyce was our mole--a lot
of this stuff came from the dumpster outside his office."
Primetime Live's original investigation and subsequent
updates included interviews with several former Tilton employees
and acquaintances. In the original investigation, one of Tilton's
former prayer hotline operators claimed that the ministry cared
little for desperate followers who called for prayer, saying that
Tilton had a computer installed in July 1989 to make sure the phone
operators were off the line by seven minutes. Also in the original
report, a former friend of Tilton's from college (who remained
anonymous and was shown in silhouette) claimed that both he and
Tilton would go to tent revival meetings as a sport and would claim
to be anointed and healed at the meetings, adding that the two had
often discussed the notion that after graduation, they would set up
their own roving revival ministry "and drive around the country and
get rich." In a July 1992 update to the investigation,
Primetime Live interviewed Tilton's former maid, who
claimed that prayer requests that were sent to Tilton's house by
the ministry were routinely ignored until he told her to move them
out of the house and into the garage; according to the maid, "they
stacked up and stacked up" in Tilton's garage until he had them
thrown away. In the same interview, Tilton's former secretary came
forward and claimed that Tilton lifted excerpts from "get rich
quick" books and used them in his sermons, and that she never saw
him perform normal pastoral duties such as visiting with the sick
and praying with members.
Government involvement
Despite
Tilton's repeated denials of misconduct, the state of Texas
and the
Federal government got involved in subsequent investigations,
finding more causes for concern about Tilton's financial status
with each new revelation. After nearly 10,000 pounds of
prayer requests and letters to the Tilton ministry were found in a
disposal bin at a Tulsa-area recycling firm in February 1992 along
with itemized receipts of their delivery from Tilton's main mail
handling service in Tulsa rather than from the church offices in
Farmers Branch, Tilton admitted in a deposition given to the Texas
Attorney General's office that he often prayed over computerized
lists of prayer requests instead of the actual prayer requests
themselves, and that prayer requests were in fact routinely thrown
away after categorization.
As each revelation became increasingly more damaging, viewership
and donations declined dramatically, prompting Tilton to stop
paying for television airtime for
Success-N-Life in 1993,
and the last episode aired nationally on October 30, 1993.
Failed libel action
In 1992, Tilton sued ABC for libel because of its investigation and
report, but the case was dismissed in 1993. Federal Judge Thomas
Brett, in his July 16, 1993 dismissal of the case, stated that
information in the Trinity Foundation's logs on prayer requests
reportedly found in dumpsters on September 11, 1991 "could not have
been found then because the postmark date was after September 11,
1991", but also noted that Ole Anthony had recanted the erroneous
entries in a subsequent affidavit. Tilton appealed the decision in
1993; although the findings of the original court were upheld in
1995, Federal Judge
B.
Michael Burrage's opinion criticized ABC
and the Primetime Live producers for the editing of the
story and noted that ABC had been warned by their own Religion
Editor Peggy Wehmeyer (who knew Ole Anthony from her work as a
religion reporter at WFAA-TV in Dallas, Texas
) that "Mr. Anthony could not be trusted and was
obsessed with his crusade against [Tilton].". Tilton once more
appealed the decision, this time to the U.S.
Supreme Court
in 1996, but the court refused to hear the
case.
Tilton sued for fraud
Several donors to Tilton's television ministry sued Tilton himself
in 1992 and 1993 charging various forms of fraud. One of the
parties suing won $1.5M (US) in 1994 when it was discovered that a
family crisis center for which they had made donations (and
recorded an endorsement testimonial) was never built nor was ever
intended to be built. The judgment was later reversed on
appeal.
The decline of
Success-N-Life also led to the end of
Tilton's 25-year marriage to wife Marte, who had served as the
administrative head of the Word of Faith Family Church and World
Outreach Center, in 1993. Dallas lawyer Gary Richardson, who
represented many of the parties suing Tilton for fraud, attempted
to intervene in the Tiltons' divorce, citing the potential for the
divorce settlement to be used to hide financial assets that were
currently part of the many fraud cases; Richardson's petition to
have the divorce action put on hold until after the fraud cases
were settled was denied.
Transitional ministry
Tilton returned to television in 1994 with a new show called
Pastor Tilton, a show with an emphasis on "
demon-blasting" practices, usually involving Tilton
shouting as loud as possible at
demons
supposedly possessing people suffering from pain and illness. His
show was typical of other charismatic pastors such as Sam and Jane
Whaley, whom Tilton credited for "casting out (his) own demons" in
1993. Tilton was introduced to the Whaleys by his new wife,
televangelist
Leigh Valentine, a
former beauty queen. She was Miss Missouri in 1977 but had to
resign her title after a car accident left her almost lame and
unable to perform her duties.
Tilton and Valentine were married in the
Dominican
Republic
on February 10, 1994. Tilton installed Leigh
as an associate pastor at Word of Faith Family Church and World
Outreach Center and brought demon blasting to the church, a
significant change from the Word-Faith prosperity doctrine that had
defined the church since its founding.
Pastor Tilton was off the airwaves due to low ratings by
the end of 1994. Tilton filed for divorce from Leigh in 1996 after
a brief separation and reconciliation in November 1995 and fired
several Word of Faith Family Church employees brought in by Leigh.
The Tiltons' divorce, marked by mutual acrimonious statements to
each other through the media, a motion by Leigh Valentine's lawyer
that the Word of Faith Family Church should be included in the list
of Tilton's personal financial assets (the judge rejected the
motion), and courtroom claims by Leigh that she was verbally
assaulted and physically abused by an often-drunk Tilton (along
with alleged bizarre behavior by Tilton, such as proclaiming
himself
Pope and claiming that "rats were
eating his brain"), was finalized in 1997.
Prior to their marriage, Leigh Valentine had her own demon-blasting
evangelical ministry. Valentine claimed during her divorce action
that Tilton confiscated her evangelism ministry materials (books,
tapes) for sale through his own ministry, but she was not granted
them as part of the divorce disposition and was unable to
successfully restart her own ministry after divorcing Tilton. After
their divorce, she moved to North Carolina and began her own
cosmetics line. She declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy in June
2006.
Reviving Success 'N' Life
After
moving to Fort Lauderdale, Florida
in 1996, Tilton returned to the airwaves in 1997
with a new version of Success-N-Life, buying airtime on
independent television stations primarily serving inner city
areas. Gone were the demon-blasting sessions; back again
were the Word-Faith messages and calls for "vows". In 1998, the
program began airing on cable channel
BET as part of the two hour
late-night
umbrella rotation block
of religious programming entitled
BET Inspiration. As of
2008,
Success-N-Life is still a part of
BET
Inspiration, usually occupying the first hour of the
programming block, as well as running on cable religious
programming channel
The Word
Network. Most of the episodes of
Success-N-Life shown
on
BET Inspiration were taped in the late 1990s--with
testimonials from 1980s-era episodes interspersed throughout the
episodes--but Tilton also recorded infomercials for his books at
least once a year from 2003 to 2007, often appearing with his third
wife, Maria Rodriguez, and their four
French
poodles. These infomercials also appeared under the title of
Success-N-Life on
BET Inspiration.
The Word of Faith Family Church and World Outreach Center, whose
membership had declined to fewer than 300 by 1996, was finally
formally dissolved by Tilton.
Though Tilton was still listed as the
church's senior pastor, he had not preached at the church since
March 16, 1996, when he named Chattanooga, Tennessee
minister Bob Wright as senior associate
pastor. The church building was purchased by the
city of Farmers
Branch
in 1999 for use as a future civic center; however,
the economy suffered a downturn and the plans were scrapped, and
the building was finally demolished in 2003 to make room for a new
youth hockey center.
In March
2005, Tilton started a new church in Hallandale, Florida
, not far from his home in Miami
Beach
. The church had already existed for some
time under the pastorship of controversial former
televangelist David
Epley. Tilton's new church, now called "Christ The Good
Shepherd Worldwide Church", has approximately 200 members as of
2007. On Sunday May 13, 2007, the church moved into a new location
at 16601 NW 8th Avenue in Miami, and was officially renamed "Word
of Faith Church", much like his original church in Dallas. The new,
larger location was purchased from another church and is now
pastored by Tiffany Thorne. Tilton also started a church in Las
Vegas, Nevada in 2005, also originally named Christ The Good
Shepherd Worldwide Church. It has also been officially renamed
"Word of Faith Church." The Las Vegas church's resident pastor is
Natalie Vafai and holds its services at the Henderson Convention
Center.
Current ministry
When
Tilton returned to television in 1997, he established his
ministry's headquarters in Tulsa, Oklahoma
, where his lawyer J.C. Joyce's offices were
located, and set up a Post Office box as its mailing address. A
woman employed by Mail Services, Inc., a Tulsa-area clearinghouse
handling mail sent to Tilton's ministry, said that when she worked
for Mail Services, Inc. in 2001, prayer requests were still
routinely thrown away after donations, pledges, etc. were removed.
However, Tilton has dropped the Tulsa address as of late 2007 and
now uses a Miami Post Office box address to receive responses to
his fundraising mailings.
In 1998, the Washington Post reported, Tilton's following
disappeared after the investigations, but he has "joined dozens of
other preachers to become fixtures on BET." Consequently, Tilton,
along with
Don Stewart and
Peter Popoff received "criticism from
those who say that preachers with a long trail of disillusioned
followers have no place on a network that holds itself out as a
model of entrepreneurship for the black community."
Steve Lumbley, who worked for Tilton's ministry in 1991 when the
original
Primetime Live investigation took place, told a
reporter for the
Dallas Observer in 2006 that reports of
prayer request disposal that were the centerpiece of the 1991
Primetime Live exposé were highly exaggerated. In an
article for the dallasobserver.com blog "Unfair Park", Lumbley
asserted that "[t]he mailings all had some kind of gimmick. They
weren't godly at all. But the primary allegation that came out of
that--that prayer requests were thrown away--was categorically
untrue, and I can guarantee you that was not a normal practice."
However, Lumbley, who now runs a Christian watchdog website called
ApostasyWatch.com, does credit ABC and the Trinity Foundation for
exposing Tilton's unethical fundraising tactics, noting that "God
was using Ole and ABC to chastise Tilton and bring him down."
The Trinity Foundation still monitors Tilton's television ministry
as part of Trinity's ongoing televangelist watchdog efforts. In a
2003 interview published in
Tulsa World, Ole Anthony
estimated that with none of the Word of Faith Family Church
overhead and with television production costs at a fraction of the
original
Success-N-Life program, Tilton's current ministry
was likely grossing more than US$24M per year tax-free.
Satire
In 1985, two American men began distributing a video they compiled
lampooning Tilton and his ostensible conversations with God. The
video exploits Tilton's facial expressions and preaching style.
Entitled
Pastor Gas, the video featured a medley of
footage from
Success-N-Life, overdubbed with well-timed
sound effects of
flatulence. Unofficial
VHS copies of the video circulated in the United States through the
late 1980s, under such titles as
Heaven Only Knows,
The Joyful Noise, and
The Farting Preacher.
After the
hosts of The Mark and Brian Show, a radio program in
Los
Angeles
, mentioned the video on the air, the video's
authors saw the market potential and began selling official copies
of their creation. Similar videos have since been made in
more recent times using more recent footage of Tilton and are
distributed throughout the internet, all under the
Farting
Preacher name. The video distribution (including digital
bootlegs distributed online) expanded public awareness of Robert
Tilton and his controversial television ministry.
The
stand-up comedy material of
Ron White also includes mention of Robert
Tilton. In the opening to White's act in the first
Blue Collar Comedy Tour movie,
Ron claims that "while sitting in a beanbag chair naked eating
Cheetos," he finds Tilton on TV and believes Tilton is talking
specifically to him: "Are you lonely?" "Yeah." "Have you spent half
your life in bars pursuing sins of the flesh?" "Man, this guy's
good..." "Are you sitting in a beanbag chair naked eating Cheetos?"
Ron gapes in horror before squeaking, "...Yes sir!" "Are you going
to get up and send me a thousand dollars?" (pause for effect)
"Close! Thought he was talking about me for a second. Apparently, I
ain't the only cat on the block (who) digs Cheetos!"
In the early 2000s, the
Trinity Foundation put together
a number of news broadcasts, including the initial
Primetime
Live piece, from the years surrounding the investigations into
Tilton's ministry on a DVD entitled
The Prophet of Prosperity:
Robert Tilton and the Gospel of Greed. The DVD also includes
segments from
The Daily
Show's "God Stuff" (hosted by
Trinity Foundation member
John Bloom, a.k.a.
Joe Bob Briggs), excerpts from the
Pastor
Gas videos, and a number of mocking music videos, as well as
moments from
Success-N-Life showing Tilton's more
outrageous claims of "visions from God".
A comedian on BET's ComicView once made fun of
Success-N-Life, mainly because BET usually aired it
immediately following their explicit music video show
Uncut.
See also
Bibliography
- How to Be Rich & Have Everything You Ever
Wanted
- How to Pay Your Bills Supernaturally
- Strike It Rich
- How To Receive & Keep Your Healing
- God's Miracle Plan For Man
- Oh Lord I Pray, Send Now Prosperity
- Fear No Evil
- How to Kick The Devil Out Of Your Life
- God's Million-Heirs
Notes
- "The Apple of God's Eye", produced by Robbie Gordon,
Primetime Live, first broadcast November 21, 1991.
- "Robert
Tilton -- The Story", Robert-Tilton.com, retrieved June 11,
2006.
- "Prosperity and Healing: Is it Promised to the
Believer?, Ken L. Sarles, retrieved June 11, 2006.
- "Robert Tilton's Heart of Darkness", Scott Baradell, first
published in the Dallas Observer on February 6, 1992, p.
18; quoted in Christianity In Crisis by Hank Hanegraaff,
Harvest House Publishers, 1993, p. 347.
- "The Apple of God's Eye", ABC News, Primetime
Live, 1991.
- "Second Coming: A Jet-Settin', Scotch-Sippin'
Robert Tilton Washes up in South Florida and He Still Wants Your
Money", Sean Rowe, Dallas Observer, quoted by Cephas
Ministries, retrieved June 11, 2006.
- CBS Nightly News with Connie Chung, CBS, first
broadcast April 22, 1994; as compiled on The Prophet of
Prosperity: Robert Tilton and the Gospel of Greed, DVD
produced by The Trinity Foundation, publication date not
specified.
- "TV Preachers Seen as 'Beggars': Public Dislikes Evangelists'
Onscreen Methods", Dallas Morning News, first published on
November 21, 1992; quoted in Christianity In Crisis by
Hank Hanegraaff, Harvest House Publishers, 1993, p. 348.
- A Myth Shattered: New Report Shows Christian TV
Ministries Not Focused on Money
- Success-N-Life home page, retrieved March 03,
2009.
- KTUL Nightly News, KTUL-TV, Tulsa, Oklahoma,
first broadcast November 16, 1992; as compiled on The Prophet
of Prosperity: Robert Tilton and the Gospel of Greed, DVD
produced by The Trinity Foundation, publication date not
specified.
- "The Antichrist of East Dallas", Burkhard Bilger,
The New
Yorker, first published on December 6, 2004; retrieved
June 11, 2006.
- Followup segment to "The Apple of God's Eye", Primetime
Live, first broadcast November 28, 1991.
- The Prophet of Prosperity: Robert Tilton and the Gospel of
Greed, DVD produced by The Trinity Foundation, publication
date not specified.
- " The Robert Tilton Files", Glenna Whitley, Dallas Observer
"Unfair Park" online blog, dated August 6, 2006; retrieved
October 4, 2006.
- "Tilton Returns to Airwaves", Personal Freedom
Outreach, retrieved June 17, 2006.
- "Robert Tilton: From Downfall to Windfall",
Ziva Branstetter, Tulsa World, first published May 4,
2003; quoted by The Trinity Foundation, retrieved June 17,
2006.
- Miss Missouri USA Hall Of Fame database.
- "State Briefs", The Houston Chronicle,
first published February 6, 1995, retrieved September 25,
2006.
- Bankruptcy Filing Reveals Ties To Word Of Faith
Fellowship
- The Word Network program listing page,
retrieved January 8, 2007.
- "Bob's Back, and More Entertaining than Ever",
Steve Blow, Dallas Morning News, published September 25,
2004, retrieved June 18, 2006.
External links
Articles