PUBLISHED TUESDAY NOVEMBER 18, 1997
Copyright 1997 The Pensacola News Journal. All rights
reserved
Money for missions fails to add up
By John W. Allman and J. Lowe Davis
News Journal staff writers
PENSACOLA - Evangelist Steve Hill says he has poured
money into a multitude of foreign missions and charities.
His attorney, Walter Chandler, specifically mentioned
three, including an orphanage in San Nicolas, Argentina.
But when the News Journal called the orphanage for details,
staff members said they have not heard from Hill in 10 years.
They asked the News Journal for Hill's address so they
could write him and ask for a donation.
Many missions that Hill mentions cannot be reached to
confirm his giving because he does not provide addresses, phone numbers
or other forms of contact. The News Journal reached the orphanage by contacting
the U.S. Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, which found contacts and phone
numbers that eventually led to the orphanage.
Hill is fondly remembered at the orphanage he was in a
mission group that built it in the 1980s, said Betina Fernandez, executive
secretary to orphanage director Pastor Omar de Felipe.
Fernandez, who said she has never met Hill, spoke highly
of him for helping create the orphanage, the Asociacion Civil Hogar Evangelico
El Amanecer. It provides beds, food, counseling, medical treatment and
schooling for 70 children. It relies on government funds, Fernandez said.
Hill's stories about his ministry's benevolence help inspire
the Friday night Brownsville Revival crowds to give generously $100 apiece
is the amount the revival leaders ask.
Asked for specifics about his giving through his ministry,
Together in the Harvest, Hill and his attorney gave the News Journal two
different financial statements showing three different totals for his giving
to missions. None of those three totals match the list and total on the
ministry's IRS return.
The different figures are:
-
$900,000 - On his ministry's financial statement,
Hill noted: "75 percent of Friday night offerings are allocated for foreign
and home missions." Hill's ministry receives the entire collection every
Friday night at the Brownsville Revival. That amounted to "about $1.2 million"
for the ministry from August 1996 to August 1997, so 75 percent would be
$900,000.
-
$789,689 - Elsewhere on the financial statement, Hill
provided Hill said that 31 percent, or $789,689, of the ministry's total
budget of $2.2 million went to foreign and domestic missions. It did not
list the missions.
-
$639,383 - Hill's attorney provided a missions list
for the same time period. It said $639,384 went to missions and Teen Challenge
centers in 17 foreign countries and two American states. Some missions
were named, most were not and were identified only as a country. Some were
designated as "Ministerial giving" and "Pastoral."
The list identified three Teen Challenge centers in Florida
as receiving $18,260. Officials in the Teen Challenge Florida headquarters,
however, said only that Hill has contributed to several Florida centers.
They declined to say how much Hill has contributed or where the money went.
-
$102,212 The IRS return states that Together in the Harvest
gave $102,212 about 9 percent of its revenue of $1,187,519 to "ministry/outreach."
By comparison, $421,438, or 35 percent, was the year-end unused balance.
Hill and his attorney both said they did not know whether
the IRS return was for the 1996 calendar year or for the same August to
August fiscal year as the two other financial statements. The return does
not specify the time period, but it was dated Aug. 12 and received Aug.
19.
Hill has emphatically reassured revival audiences that
their donation to Together in the Harvest will be well-spent. He has often
said to the audience, "our books are open" and "there is nothing to hide."
"Don't get blown out of the saddle when someone asks you
for a missions offering, Hill said to the crowd at the Friday night revival
Sept 26. "You should get blown out of the saddle you should and you'd have
every right to if the money is being squandered."
In a recent interview with the News Journal, Hill said
that in 1984 he asked the Assemblies of God headquarters in Springfield,
Mo., to send him into the mission field. In 1985, Hill and his wife went
to Costa Rica to learn Spanish. In 1986, they moved to Buenos Aires.
While in Argentina, Hill said, he watched and learned
from revival leaders like Carlos Anaconda, credited with inspiring the
Great Argentine Revival.
Hill said he traveled back to the United States periodically
to raise money, then returned to Argentina to use that money to build churches.
"I was the one. I would go to a city. I would pray over
the city. Someone's got to be leading this thing, and so I was the one
doing that," Hill said.
One of his crowning achievements, he said, is the Evangelistic
Center in Neuquen, Argentina.
Hill and Pastor Hector Ferreyra started the church 10
years ago in Ferreyra's garage, according to The Sheaf Report, a newsletter
mailed out by Together in the Harvest.
The church now has a multi-use building with a gymnasium,
a 3,500-seat sanctuary and eight dining rooms, according to Pastor Oscar
Revelino, who said he and Ferreyra are members of an Assemblies of God
union in Argentina.
Revelino said the church feeds 800 children per week in
its dining rooms and ministers to about 10,000 children on the street.
Revelino said Hill has "helped with money," but said he
did not have figures. Revelino said the News Journal needed to speak to
the church's accountant, but he did not identify the accountant.
Hill's financial statement shows his ministry sent $137,084
to Argentina between Aug. 1, 1996, and Aug. 1, 1997.
On a videotape of the Sept. 26 revival, Hill said he has
sent $45,000 to Ferreyra to buy an abandoned movie theater in Cipoletti,
Argentina; $30,000 to a Bible school in Argentina; and, he said, he has
been sending $3,000 a month to Colombia to help establish a Teen Challenge
center.
The ministry's IRS return, however, does not list any
of these places as receiving money.