a
Note:    

     TO ALL,I ASK FORGIVENESS OF YOU ALL FOR MY ERROR COMMITTED LAST MONTH IN HAVING A CHECK RETURNED FOR NSF. HOWEVER GOD HAD ME USE THAT MONEY FOR GOOD,TO FEED A MOTHER AND HER CHILDREN THAT IS ANNOINTED AND PART OF THE MINISTRY HERE. FOR WHAT GOOD IS A MAN IF HE IS TO SHUT UP HIS BOWELS OF COMPASSION TO THE BRETHREN IN NEED,"NOT JUST A HEARER OF THE WORD, BUT A DOER.."...JAMES 2:5-8 ; ACTS 2:45 ;1JN 3:17-19.
 
     I PRAY DEAR FRIENDS, THAT WE AS A MINISTRY NEVER NEGLECT, NOR OMIT THE WEIGHTIER MATTERS OF THE LAW JUDGEMENT, MERCY, AND FAITH. WE KNOW THAT HE WHO SHOWS JUDGEMENT WITHOUT MERCY WILL NOT BE GIVEN MERCY.MT5:7.
 
     WE AS A MINISTRY HAVE NEGLECTED TRUE LOVE, WITH AN UNHEALTHY/ UNGODLY IMBALANCE OF LOVE.LET US REMEMBER OUR LORD, FOR WE DO BLESS AND NEVER CURSE. REMEMBER TO FULFILL THE LAW IN THIS ONE WORD "THOU SHALT LOVE THY NEIGHBOR AS THYSELF." 1COR 13: (please say not in your hearts "i know what this says" BUT "NOT AS THOUGH I KNOW ANYTHING"- MAT6:33 FOR GOD IS LOVE.
 
SINCERELY,    DALE HEAVNER

 
 
 
CCCInc. Comments
 
GOD had us write to Dale when he used $601 of CCCInc. funds for
personal use in April '99, pointing out that auto + schooling costs
are not to the school account, but borne privately, always.
 
Note: Dale attended a church conference for schooling.
 
GOD, in July, had us write to Dale, to exhort + correct his stewardship
for wanting CCCInc. to pay for housing costs when 2 current
directors are homeless and receive nothing for food + clothing even.
 
Note: Bristow gives every penny back to GOD for His work only.
 
GOD insists we continue to share the word until He establishes service
ministries thru CCCInc. 7 companies, since current revenue - $2000 a mth
cannot support gifts of + $500 when huge $ multi-million ministries exist.
 
Note: Denver food pantries were ignored.
 
CCCInc. logo

Christian Community Churches Inc.


Christian Community Churches Inc.

 
Dear Dale,
Sep 22 '99 b
 
GOD has shown me your unrepentant heart concerning strict
obedience to His plan thru CCCInc., 100% Bible based only.
 
GOD has shown me that you cannot be trusted to receive
His resources in accordance with CCCInc. Articles + By-laws.
 
GOD has shown me your failure to apply His hard love to all
will jeopardize His control thru authorized officers + His directors.
 
GOD has shown me that strict compliance with His way only will
separate CCCInc. from the current Judas, wordly church.
 
...consequently
 
GOD insists we cut all ties and refuse tithing from you,
that we stand according to His kingdom principles only.
 
GOD is leaving your past due account open till fully paid,
as proof of your future repentance before all in CCCInc.
 
GOD insists we love + pray that you return to obey Him and
His kingdom principles quickly, lest satan fool + destroy you.
 
love,             
Robert
 
 
P.S. GOD insists CCCInc. operate in the law to be above reproach.
 
 
 
 
 
 
CCCInc. logo

Christian Community Companies Inc.

Christian Community Companies Inc.

 
Heavner Ministries
Colorado Springs, Co.
Sep 22 '99 c
 
GOD refuses to bless, build ministries during this final church period
that refuse to submit to His rule as outlined in CCCInc. WWW material.
 
GOD's work thru HM will rehabilitate individuals + families, truly qualified by
His dictated Bible tests thru CCCInc-FG Int'l that He alone is in control.
 
GOD's work thru HM will develop work ethics consistent with His law + truth,
or His kingdom principles, or His love requirements, all 100% Bible based, only.
 
GOD's work thru HM will demand obedient faith far greater than exists in
the current humanistic church of free service to all, a false compassion.
 
GOD's work thru HM will free true Bible believers of sinful bondage thru
applying His hard love requirements, rarely done in the Judas church.
 
GOD's work thru HM will change lives, spiritually + materially, thru true
trust in His grace, love, power, and not man's giving which binds to satan.
 
GOD's work thru HM will directly relate to the obedient faith of Dale + Pam,
as He alone can turn curses into blessings Mal3:11,12 if we Deut11:27 forever.
 
love,
 
 Robert Bristow
 
 
 
 
 
 
Club Treasuries ripe for raiding, say authorities
fleecing of Non-profit groups linked to lax financial controls
 
By Darlene Gavron Stevens
Chicago Tribune
Friday, Nov 29, 1998
 

    Parents in the popular grade school athletic conference knew something was fiscally amiss this season when the referees abruptly stopped getting paid.
 
    After a long-overdue check of bank records, they discovered in recent weeks that the Southwest Catholic Conference treasury had been fleeced of more than $50,000 in team fees -- allegedly siphoned off by Joseph Sebek, a former officer, since 1990.
 
    "Because it was a religious organization, everyone was very trusting," said Tom McGreal, a Chicago parent and certified public accountant who is helping the 30-year-old club reorganize its 20-parish membership under stricter rules. "We were embarrassed to find out that no financial statements were being prepared, and no accountant was reviewing the records."
 
    From Little Leagues and Boy Scout troops to committees raising money for class trips and band uniforms, apparently no club treasury is too small to be the target of an interest-free "loan" or other type of in-house scams.
 
    The alleged thefts are increasing as an estimated 41,000 religious and charitable groups are formed a year nationwide, according to Internal Revenue Service statistics. In Illinois, which sees about 3,000 groups form a year, 480 allegations of fraud are investigated a year by the attorney general's office, which registers the state's 20,000 incorporated charities and charitable trusts.
 
    Floyd Perkins, charitable trust division chief, said that the majority of community groups are run honestly. But in his 20 years' experience, he has never seen so many alleged rip-offs -- or so many mortified parents whose $2 to $200 donations were allegedly so easily pilfered when no one was looking.
 
    "It's more common than people realize," said Ellen Dick, president of the Illinois Association of Non-Profit Organizations. "A lot of the thefts aren't even reported because people don't want the bad publicity to affect future fundraising."
 
    According to state statistics compiled at the request of the Tribune, the number of charitable fraud cases prosecuted by the attorney general's office has increased by 64 percent over the past decade, from 81 in 1988 to 133 last year.
 
    The department does not break down the number of investigations and prosecutions by type of charity. But Perkins said community groups seem particularly vulnerable, and for these three reasons:
 
    More groups are being formed by people with little or no experience directing non-profit activities; fewer members have time to look over the books; and clubs that rely on the same board members year after year can be lulled into a false sense of security.
 
    "In the old days, these groups were more established, and everyone in the group knew each other," said Perkins. "Today, people belong to a whole lot of organizations but they rely on the same core group of people to run them."

 
 

    He added, "The members think 'Bill's been treasurer for 12 years. Thank goodness, he'll do it again.' Little do they know that Bill lost his job and needed some money to tide him over. ... The members are shocked to find out that there are poor accounting records.
 
    Some of the newly-formed religious and charitable groups fill gaps left by dwindling federal programs; others accommodate parents' insatiable demand for student activities well into their children's teen years; and still others simply rally around a good cause.
 
    Members' concern is usually focused on the cause, not how every penny is spent or the wording of the group's bylaws, Perkins said.
 
    Community-based groups must be vigilant, according to the Society for Non-profit Organizations, a Madison, Wis.-based organization.
 
    "Some of the most ethical people in the world have become seduced by the access to money," said Katie Burnham, society president. "It might start at the post office, when someone goes to buy stamps for the group and ends up buying $5 worth of stamps for himself. Little by little, it all adds up."
 
    Paul Bervid, an assistant Cook County state's attorney who handles white-collar crimes, said he has prosecuted on behalf of visiting nurses associations, parade committees, boys basketball groups and bingo halls, to name a few.
 
    Sometimes an officer of a group will take money as a revenge against members who don't agree with the way he is running the organization.
 
    Club treasury theft is a felony if the amount stolen reaches $300, and the penalty can be anywhere from probation to 15 years in prison, depending on the amount taken and the offender's record, Bervid said.
 
    The attorney general's office also may file charges or civil lawsuits seeking damages against former officers, Perkins said.
 
    But he noted that only about a third of the investigations end up as full-fledged cases, and even those are difficult to prove because records may have been destroyed. Such matters are often resolved out of court, with the state asking the officer under suspicion to repay the money or requesting a change in the group's board of directors.
 
    In the case of Southwest Catholic Conference, parents decided to form immediately another group so the conference's 1,200 student members could continue to play volleyball and basketball.
 
    The new organization, South-side Catholic Conference, is starting out $28,000 in the red, according to Hank Lenzen, a parent who is helping coordinate fundraisers to cover the loss.
 
    "We're going to come back stronger than ever," Lenzen said, noting that the new board will meet regularly and review regular audits of financial records.