| Just 
                      about everyone knows about the problems facing Bishop Eddie Long, senior pastor of New Birth Missionary 
                      Baptist Church.  Specifically, there are the four young men who allege that the prominent Atlanta-area pastor coerced them into a sexual 
                      relationship, and possibly more waiting in the wings.  They 
                      claim that Long used his status to seduce them with money, clothes, bling, cars, foreign trips, access to celebrities, and 
                      the like.  The men allege that they called Long “dad” or 
                      “daddy,” which sounds awfully cultish.  One of the plaintiffs 
                      even claims that he was 14 when his relationship with Long 
                      started, which brings up issues of child abuse and statutory 
                      rape.     These accusations will be addressed in court, and who knows, 
                      maybe there will be a quiet out-of-court settlement.  To 
                      be sure, this is not the first religious leader to face 
                      accusations of sexual and professional misconduct and abuse 
                      of authority, nor the last.  Similarly, the Bishop is not 
                      the first homophobic preacher to be outed as a gay man.         But Bishop Long’s sexual orientation ultimately is not the 
                      subject of this commentary, although it provides some valuable 
                      context.  Now, if these accusations are true, then Bishop 
                      Long is at least guilty of hypocrisy and self-hatred.  And 
                      if the charges are not true, he is still an anti-gay minister 
                      who has damaged many people.  Either way, he is a prosperity 
                      preacher who preys on the black community, and shames the 
                      legacy of the civil rights movement.  And that’s most of 
                      what we need to know. When the Southern Poverty Law Center decides to write an intelligence report about you, you know you’ve 
                      done something wrong.  SPLC calls Bishop Long “one of the 
                      most virulently homophobic black leaders in the religiously 
                      based anti-gay movement.”  In one sermon, he says of gays 
                      and lesbians, “God says you deserve death!”  The message 
                      of “hate the sin and the sinner” are strong words in a religion 
                      that is supposed to teach love, healing and redemption. Long believes that homosexuality is a spiritual abortion, 
                      “a manifestation of a fallen man.”  He believes that if 
                      black gays and lesbians feel alienated and abandoned by 
                      the black church, the problem is not intolerance against 
                      them, but their own sins.  But before these people go to 
                      Hell as he contends they are, Long is trying to cure gays 
                      and lesbians (except himself, we can assume).  And his church 
                      bookstore sells the works of authors such as the homophobic 
                      James Dobson of Focus on the Family—no friend of the black 
                      community. And Long’s misappropriation of the King legacy is shameful.  
                      Coretta Scott King’s funeral was held at New Birth in 2006 
                      rather than Ebenezer Baptist Church, the King family’s church.  
                      Civil rights giants Harry Belafonte and then-NAACP chair 
                      Julian Bond were so mortified by this fact that they boycotted 
                      the funeral.  After all, Mrs. King was a supporter of gay marriage, and she called it a civil rights issue.  The late Yolanda King, the 
                      oldest child, took after her mother in that regard.  Bernice 
                      King, the youngest child in the King family, called Long 
                      her “new father,” and symbolically passed a torch to him. 
 To add to the insult, Bernice King and Long participated 
                      in a march to Dr. King’s gravesite to support a national 
                      constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.  In 2004, 
                      Long and others successfully pushed for a similar amendment 
                      to the Georgia state constitution.  And it should be noted 
                      that Alveda King, Dr. King’s niece, is herself a homophobic 
                      minister who exploited her uncle’s name at Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally, an event replete with aggrieved 
                      white supremacists, Obama haters and gun enthusiasts.  “Homosexuality 
                      cannot be elevated to the civil rights issue,” Alveda King 
                      said in a 1998 speech. “The civil rights movement was born from the Bible. God hates homosexuality.” Bishop Eddie Long is a prosperity-oriented minister, adhering 
                      to a theology that essentially says God will financially 
                      hook up the believers.  Some would call it a false gospel, 
                      given Jesus’ targeting of the money changers, and his proclamation 
                      that it is easier for a camel to enter the eye of a needle 
                      than it is for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.  
                      Others would call it pimping. Long’s New Birth megachurch has a membership of about 25,000, 
                      and sits on 240 acres in the Atlanta suburb of Lithonia, 
                      Georgia.  The nonprofit religious “charity” he started in 1997 has served him well—a $1.4 million, 20-acre home 
                      with 9 bathrooms, a $350,000 Bentley, and a $3 million salary over three years, not to mention all of the expensive jewelry.  Senator Chuck 
                      Grassley (R-Iowa) launched an investigation into the finances 
                      and tax-exempt status of six megachurches, including New Birth, and Creflo Dollar’s World Changers 
                      International Church.  Due to the recession, New Birth had 
                      to cut back on its $250,000 Easter Sunday service last year, and that is not a misprint.  Tithes and membership 
                      dropped 20 percent, given that it is hard to be about prosperity 
                      when you are poor and hurting, and black folks have been 
                      hit harder than most in this recession.            And as Wall Street bankers, megachurch preachers and other 
                      prosperity pimps live like lottery winners, people in America 
                      are suffering.  The Census Bureau recently reported that poverty 
                      is higher than it was 10 years ago, with nearly 15 percent 
                      of Americans in poverty.  The gap between rich and poor 
                      has tripled in three decades, and is the highest it has been 
                      since the 1920s.  Meanwhile, unemployment is entrenched 
                      and not going anywhere anytime soon.        
 Surely, Bishop Long and his supporters would maintain that 
                      his reputation is being dragged through the mud.  But his 
                      reputation was already muddied via his homophobia and corrupt 
                      bling theology.  Rather, Long should worry far more about 
                      what Dr. King would say about him.    Although 
                      King fought against and even disobeyed unjust laws, Long 
                      supports them.  Dr. King decried the triple evils of racism, 
                      materialism and militarism, and called for a radical revolution 
                      of values, from a “thing-oriented” society to a ‘person-oriented” 
                      society.  Figures such as King and Malcolm X walked the 
                      talk by fighting for the people—and for causes greater than 
                      their personal bank account— through great personal sacrifice 
                      and a modest existence.  Remember that Dr. King donated 
                      all of his $54,000 Nobel Peace Prize money to the civil 
                      rights movement.  I dare say it would be hard to find many 
                      leaders today—black or otherwise— who would follow in the 
                      footsteps of this great man.  How many of them would lift 
                      a finger to help the downtrodden?
 Meanwhile, Bishop Eddie Long just wants to get paid, and 
                      beat the case. BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights 
                      advocate based in Philadelphia, and a contributor to The Huffington Post, theGrio, The Progressive Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times and Philadelphia Independent Media Center. He 
                      also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here to contact Mr. Love.  |