Marvin Sapp Says He Received Death Threats After Viral $40K Donation Demand
Speaking on The Rickey Smiley Morning Show on Monday (March 31), the Gospel musician asserted that he has received death threats in reaction to a clip where he demanded church attendees donate a total of $40,000.
Within the conversation, the 58-year-old reflected on the moment — which originally occurred in August 2023 — and admitted that he might share a little blame for the negative response to the video. The event was held at a national church conference in Baltimore — not his local church — and he claims that the funds were directed toward the conference budget.
'People took issue with my tone, and looking at the video, maybe I was a little more assertive than I should have been, and I can apologize for that,' the Bishop explained, denying claims that the church doors were locked.
He continued to detail how the entire ordeal has impacted his life, his church, and his children.
'People have called my church and cussed me out. My staff are afraid because I've received death threats,' Sapp elaborated. 'People have come to our campus. They have come to my church to try to cause problems, issues, (and) challenges.'
The 'Praise Him In Advance Singer' also elaborated, 'Why run with the truth when a lie is way more entertaining?' as he is convinced the entire controversy is a misunderstanding.
Last month, the video of Sapp requesting online and in-person attendees at the aforementioned conference sparked conversation across social media regarding the integrity of the Gospel musician's ministry. The video was shared with claims that the congregation was locked in the church as $40,000 was demanded in offerings.
'The truth is, when finances are being received in any worship gathering, it is one of the most vulnerable and exposed times for both the finance and security teams,' explained Sapp in a statement. 'Movement during this sacred exchange can be distracting and, at times, even risky. My directive was not about control it was about creating a safe, focused, and reverent environment for those choosing to give and for those handling the resources.'
More from VIBE.com
Marvin Sapp Responds To Viral Video Demanding $40K From Congregation
Marvin Sapp Instructs Ushers To Close Church Doors Until Congregation Ponies Up $40K
Marvin Sapp Takes NPR 'Tiny Desk' To Church With Gospel Medley
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
2 days ago
- The Hill
Former NPR CEO: ‘This has not been a great week for free speech'
Former NPR CEO Vivian Schiller criticized CBS's canceling of Stephen Colbert's show in a Saturday interview amidst pushback of a decision that the network said was made due to financial constraints. 'This has not been a great week for free speech and speaking truth to power, without a doubt,' Schiller said on MSNBC. CBS has garnered criticism for the move, which many took in the context of its decision earlier this month to settle a lawsuit brought by President Trump for $16 million. CBS's parent company, Paramount, is currently seeking federal approval for a merger deal with entertainment conglomerate Skydance. Colbert panned CBS's move afterwards, calling the settlement a 'big fat bribe' in his monologue and pointing out Paramount's merger effort. Paramount's lawyers had previously characterized the lawsuit, which took issue with CBS's editing of an interview with former Vice President Harris, as 'without basis in law or fact.' Schiller acknowledged Saturday that the evidence around the cancellation of 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' was 'circumstantial,' but still called the move 'curious.' The network has maintained that the decision was motivated by financial concerns. 'We have to also make note that Stephen Colbert is unafraid to, again, speak truth to power,' the former NPR executive said. 'He does it in a very bipartisan way over the years, and comedy and parody is an important part of a democratic ecosystem.' Schiller's comments come after a difficult week for NPR, the media organization she helmed for three years. Republicans voted to zero out funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a nonprofit that provides a small slice of money to NPR's national headquarters and a significant portion of revenue for the broadcaster's member stations. Schiller told NPR's media reporter this week that she thought the loss of federal funds was inevitable, and that the network should have better prepared itself ahead of the vote by Congress. 'Any evidence-based news organization that reports critically is going to be accused of left-wing bias,' she said. 'Journalism and government funding in the United States — those two things are incompatible.' Schiller exited NPR in 2011 over her own controversy surrounding federal funding. Republicans at the time were threatening to cut the broadcaster's funding when video surfaced of a prominent NPR fundraiser attacking Tea Party activists.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
The long road to tragedy at the Texas girls camp where floods claimed 27 lives
Investigators of the catastrophic Hill Country flooding in Texas may never be able to pinpoint a precise moment that sealed the fate of 27 young girls, teenage counselors and staff who perished after a wall of water surged through Camp Mystic on the banks of the Guadalupe River. But perhaps no bigger clue can be found than the account of an otherwise unremarkable and sparsely attended meeting of Kerr county commissioners in March 2018. Members waited with anticipation for news of an application they submitted the previous year for a grant from the state of Texas to help pay for a comprehensive new flood warning system along the Guadalupe. The county's unreliable old network of gauges and sensors, installed following flooding in 1987 that killed 10 children trying to flee a waterside church camp, had been inactive since 1999. Commissioners were chasing a $1m slice of federal funding made newly available to the state after a succession of flood disasters, including Hurricane Harvey in August 2017. Now-retired commissioner Tom Moser brought bad news, noting 'about eight different counties' were selected, but 'they didn't select us,' according to minutes of the meeting still viewable online. Tom Pollard, the county judge at the time, was incredulous. 'They prioritized us lower?' he asked, the county's many low-lying and therefore vulnerable youth summer camps immediately adjacent to the Guadalupe uppermost in his mind. 'They did,' Moser replied solemnly. Without that funding from the state, the project foundered. No widespread gauge system was ever set up that would have given early warning of a life-threatening torrent of water further up the river; no sirens ever installed that would have warned Camp Mystic residents that their lives were in peril and they needed to get out immediately. The investigation will look at other missteps and lost opportunities along the way that might have brought a different outcome at the 99-year-old Christian-themed, all-girls camp that served as a joyous rite of passage for generations of young Texans. Prominent among them will be this week's revelation that the camp owner and director Dick Eastland, who lost his own life trying to ferry a group of his youngest campers to safety as the river rose towards a peak height of 37.5ft, waited more than an hour to issue an evacuation order after receiving a severe flood warning on his phone at 1.14am on 4 July. Yet it is to the eternal regret of Moser, a former senior Nasa engineer who had studied flood monitoring and alert systems installed in other nearby counties, that money was never found or spent, either then or later, to replace or upgrade a broken mechanism born from a near-identical tragedy for the sole purpose of saving lives in the future. 'Not having the funds to accomplish it was not very satisfying to me but we tried,' Moser told NPR. 'That's all we could do. We didn't have the resources in the county operating budget to do that.' Moser, who did not return a message from the Guardian seeking further comment, had advocated for sirens, a proposal dropped from the state grant application when it became clear some residents and commissioners opposed them. 'If sirens were there, clearly people would have known about it. Would it have saved everybody? I don't think so. This was an event that's probably one chance in a million,' he told the radio network. At Camp Mystic, like elsewhere in the county, residents were reliant on an outdated and patchwork early warning system of alerts. Some were from the National Weather Service (NWS), which Eastland's family concedes he did receive. Other messages came from local authorities, some sent only after an inexplicable delay, which others along the Guadalupe's banks say they did not see in any case. Inside the camp, with water rising fast, especially around dormitories closest to the river where the youngest campers, mostly aged eight and nine, were sleeping, there was chaos. Many of the teenage counselors left in charge of the dormitories were left to make instant life-or-death decisions on their own, having lost contact with adult supervisors. According to two counselors interviewed in the days following the disaster, campers were not allowed to bring mobile phones, and the counselors were made to surrender theirs, leaving them cut off from any emergency alerts. Eastland, who had run the camp with his family since the 1980s and was a past director of the Upper Guadalupe River Authority that pressed for the original warning and alert system, was familiar with the danger of flash flooding from heavy rain. 'I'm sure there will be other drownings,' Eastland told the Austin American-Statesman in 1990, reported by CNN. 'People don't heed the warnings.' In a Washington Post report that contained harrowing first-hand testimony from girls who were there, parents of some who were rescued from Camp Mystic said it was Eastland and his staff who ignored warnings on the morning of the disaster. Also under scrutiny will be why Eastland made, and was granted, repeated applications to remove dozens of Camp Mystic buildings from the Federal Emergency Management Agency's 100-year flood map, which allowed the camp to operate and expand in a known risk area. A review by the Associated Press found that 15 of at least 30 exempted buildings were at the Camp Mystic Guadalupe site where most, if not all of the campers and counselors lost their lives. Jeremy Porter, head of climate implications at First Street, a climate risk assessment and modelling company, said the dormitories were in a known flood zone, which records show had been swamped numerous times in the camp's near century of existence. 'People that ran the camp had the ability to understand that the risk was close by, the risk was in the area, and maybe adapt the buildings. And there was no action there,' he said. 'In fact there were letters of map amendments that were submitted instead.' But Porter said it was hard to place blame on any single person or entity: 'A lot of that is just our overall risk psyche and understanding of what risk looks like, our expectation that these really rare events aren't going to affect us and they're not going to be as bad as we think they're going to be. 'The way we treat climate risk and flood risk in the country is really that, you know, if it happens, it'll be something we'll be able to rebuild, recover, and then it won't happen again for 100 years.' The Guardian was unable to reach anybody at Camp Mystic for comment. Donna Gable Hatch, a writer and former staff editor at the Kerrville Daily Times, said she believed lives would have been saved at Camp Mystic with an early warning system, but city and county officials were not responsible for its absence. 'If the funds had been made available in a timely and adequate manner, this catastrophe might have unfolded differently. But too often, those at the helm of small towns must wait for permission, wait for funding, wait for bureaucracy to catch up to reality,' she wrote in a guest editorial for her former employer. 'To accuse local leaders of negligence is to completely misunderstand who they are and what this place means. In Kerr county, heartbreak isn't abstract. It has a name. A face. It's a neighbor, a classmate, a church member or a childhood friend. 'The truth will come out. In time, we'll trace the chain of failure back to where it truly began – not in Kerrville, but in the halls of distant agencies who failed to act with the urgency that rural lives deserved.' Solve the daily Crossword


New York Post
2 days ago
- New York Post
Dimon's delusional Powell support and more: Letters to the Editor — July 20, 2025
Dimon's downer Gee, what a surprise: A big-time banking CEO like Jamie Dimon of JP Morgan is supporting the under-siege Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell in keeping interest rates high for Americans ('Dimon: Get off Fed boss' back,' July 16). The American people just came off four torturous years of an administration that made every decision against our best interests. The only way we survived this was with the hope of President Trump getting back in the White House to restore peace and prosperity. But Dimon says: Hold your horses, people. Despite surviving the worst administration of all time, you still can't get prosperous terms because it would hurt my bottom line. How does he sleep at night? Dimon clearly benefits from Americans continuing to suffer from high interest rates, claiming, 'Playing around with the Fed can often have adverse consequences.' Eugene Dunn, Medford PBS' public good PBS and NPR are not about politics or handouts ('Big Bird's Big Bucks,' Rich Lowry, July 15). They are trusted public services that reach millions of Americans with high-quality educational programming, fact-based journalism and cultural content. In rural areas, including much of upstate New York, local public media stations are often the only consistent sources of news and learning. That is not a luxury — it's a civic need. Lowry's article claims public media should survive like any other private business. But PBS and NPR are not built to maximize profit — they are designed to serve the public interest. Federal support — though modest, with around 15% for PBS and 1% for NPR — is essential for keeping these services accessible. Ask any parent or teacher what PBS means to childhood education; ask any listener in a news desert what NPR means to staying informed. Bo Hershey, Watertown A dud of a ruling I cannot understand how a judge could overturn Michael Bossett's conviction for throwing a grenade at the police officers who were arresting him for his role in the murder of Gabriel Vitale ('Judge's helping 'hand' to killer,' July 14). The most ironic thing about this affair is that Bossett's lawyer, Ron Kuby, called the conviction 'wrongful.' However, Bossett really did throw a grenade at the officers. When the grenade fortunately did not go off, he later pretended that he thought it was a 'dud.' There is nothing false about that. John Francis Fox, Sunnyside Halt bird-hawking A new local bill would ban pet stores from hawking birds ('NYC pet shops squawk,' July 15). Thank you to Voters for Animal Rights and Councilwoman Diana Ayala for attempting to right society's wrongs. Over 200 years ago, William Blake nailed it when he wrote, 'A robin redbreast in a cage puts all heaven in a rage.' For far too long, humanity has ignored that wisdom. Karen Dawn, Santa Barbara Calif. Defend ICE agents Left-wing radicals claim they are protesting ICE raids, but throwing rocks at agents is anarchy — not protest ('Begging for Civil War,' Editorial, July 14). These acts endanger officers' lives and can cause death. The head of ICE should issue a shoot-to-kill order when attacked by radicals whose acts constitute deadly physical force against law officers in the lawful performance of their duties. The rights of these people end when public safety is endangered. Gary Acerra, Staten Island Want to weigh in on today's stories? Send your thoughts (along with your full name and city of residence) to letters@ Letters are subject to editing for clarity, length, accuracy, and style.