CNN:
The
boy was watching people sing at a sweaty Pentecostal tent service one
Sunday morning when a prophet onstage scanned the congregation and fixed
her eyes on him.
"You
need to come up here," the prophet told the wide-eyed 9-year-old, D.E.
Paulk. "The Lord has a word for you that you need to speak to the church
today."
As
he was led to the stage, D.E.'s heart raced and his legs went numb. He
grabbed the microphone with clammy hands and stammered the only words he
could find: "Uh.. God... uh... loves you."
From
that moment on, D.E. hid behind furniture in his family's church in
Atlanta whenever pastors prophesied. But someone would steer him to the
pulpit, and D.E.'s family would join the prophet in laying hands on him
while predicting mighty signs and wonders for the boy they called "The
Promised Seed."
No prophet, though, came close to predicting what really happened to D.E. in the years ahead.
No
one predicted that his family would build one of the most racially
groundbreaking megachurches in America only to see it collapse from a
series of bizarre sex scandals covered by "A Current Affair" and other
tabloid magazines and TV shows.
No
one predicted that D.E. would discover that the man he believed to be
his uncle, Archbishop Earl Paulk Jr., was really his biological father.
The bishop had slept with his brother's wife while sharing the pulpit
with both.
And
no one predicted that after years spent extricating his family from
assorted scandals, D.E. would do something in church that was, for many
of his parishioners, far more outrageous than anything his notorious
uncle did.
"And because it had nothing to do with sex or money," D.E. says, "I never saw it coming."
'Raised by wolves'
The
boy who was dragged onstage is now 42 and doesn't look like he can be
pushed easily in any direction. D.E. is 6-foot-1, with broad shoulders
and beefy "I've been working out" arms. He greets a visitor with a
boyish smile and a mellow voice that sounds more suited for a late-night
talk show than a pulpit.
He
is still in the church business, and so is his family. D.E. is
co-founder and senior pastor of the Spirit and Truth Sanctuary, a quaint
brick church in suburban Atlanta.
Glowing
portraits of D.E.'s wife, Brandi, and their two teenage kids, Esther
and Micah, ring his office. So do portraits of his parents, Don and
Clariece Paulk, and his sister, LaDonna Diaz. A gushing biography of
his uncle, Bishop Earl Paulk Jr., rests on a table. Glossy photos of the
church's glory days show the Paulks shaking hands with politicians,
gospel music stars and world-renowned preachers such as Joel Osteen,
Oral Roberts and Robert Schuller.
Today,
D.E. speaks before a racially mixed congregation of about 700. His
church grounds aren't crammed with worshippers, buses and police
officers directing traffic. The buzz of being the Hot New Thing is gone.
"It's
strange for us to be normal," he says, "to not have anything in the
news about us, to not be talked about or to not be the biggest church on
the planet. It's not part of my life anymore."
His
life before was so complicated that D.E. simply told curious church
visitors who said his name sounded familiar to "Google me."
Google
gives part of his story: How the Paulks built the Cathedral of the Holy
Spirit at Chapel Hill Harvester Church into one of the nation's first
and largest megachurches; how three American presidents honored their
church; how the place imploded after the revelation about D.E.'s
biological father. But the headlines don't say what happened to D.E.
afterward.
How
did the revelations affect his relationship with Don Paulk, the man who
raised him; the person he still calls dad. Did his uncle, Bishop Paulk,
ever apologize? How could D.E. even set foot in church again?
The
headlines also don't explain what happened to D.E.'s mother, Clariece.
How did she explain her actions to her son and husband? Did the
marriage survive? Clariece Paulk, 76, recently told me that she prayed
for over 20 years that no one would discover her secret. At times,
Bishop Paulk would apprise D.E. from a distance and say to her, "He kind
of looks like me in the shoulders."
"I'd
be so afraid that somebody would see a picture of him and Donnie Earl
at the same age, and I tried to hide the pictures," she said. "I lived
in fear, just misery."
D.E.'s
story is not just about a scandal. It's about fate. Are we all captive
to the arc of our family history, no matter what we do?
D.E.
tells people the scandal was not of his making. He is not the bishop.
Yet some things about D.E. remind others of Bishop Paulk. Is D.E. bound
to make some of the same mistakes?
"He
fights that," says his 76-year-old dad, Don Paulk. "He's made
statements like, "I don't want to do that. That's what my Uncle Earl
would do.'"
It's
a battle D.E. is already losing, says Jan Royston, a former Chapel Hill
member who knew the bishop. She is part of a community of ex-Chapel
Hill members who still feel betrayed by the Paulk family.
Royston
started an online support group for former Chapel Hill members wounded
by their experiences. She says D.E. isn't contrite; he's conniving.
The
bishop twisted scripture to prey on people for riches, glory and lust.
D.E., in Royston's view, is just another manipulative, pulpit predator.
"He was raised by wolves," she says. "Donnie Earl can't help who and what he is."
As tough as the critics are on D.E., no one was more so than the man who left him such a complicated legacy.
Before D.E. could find normalcy, he had to learn to deal with the strange. He had to take on the bishop.
Becoming the bishop's spiritual son
He
punctuated his sermons with "darling" and "honey," but there was little
tenderness in the bishop's public persona. He was the anti-Joel Osteen,
a stout, craggy-faced man who scowled more than he smiled and preached
with a raspy, hectoring voice.
Once,
the bishop drove away a church member who challenged his authority by
implying that she was a lesbian. He warned another critic that he might
come after him with his .38 revolver. He hid his television set in a
closet because he didn't want his congregation to discover he could
succumb to worldly temptations.
Some
leaders have Type A personalities. "He was Triple A," says Don Paulk,
who is 11 years younger than his brother. "He would rather preach than
eat when he was hungry."
The bishop's wrath could fall on his family as well as his congregation.
LaDonna Diaz, D.E.'s older sister, was the bishop's secretary.
"I would leave work some days crying," she says.
But D.E. was treated special from the start. Prophets began calling him "The Chosen One" when he was just a child. Boys, it seemed, were the only ones chosen by God in the patriarchal, Pentecostal culture that D.E. grew up in.
The
bishop had three daughters. D.E. was the only male offspring with the
Paulk surname. He was expected to become the family's fourth generation
preacher and succeed the bishop one day.
The bishop encouraged that dream. He became D.E.'s spiritual mentor.
"I
still have notebooks and notebooks from when he would preach," D.E.
says. "There would be moments of revelations. I almost couldn't keep up.
I was just writing as fast as I could."
The bishop returned D.E.'s devotion.
He
placed him front and center at church events. And when D.E. became a
standout high school basketball player -- good enough to land a college
scholarship as a point guard -- the bishop was a familiar figure in the
stands.
D.E.'s
wife, Brandi Paulk, says her husband and the bishop drew energy from
one another. Now 35, she grew up in Chapel Hill watching that
relationship evolve.
"It's
almost as if they fed off of each other," she says. "There was a
connection there spiritually. He considered him his spiritual father."
When he was in high school, D.E. saw something that made him wonder if that connection went deeper.
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