• Earl Paulk

    Culture Buzz The Archbishop of an Atlanta megachurch is at the center of another sex scandal. A paternity test revealed that Paulk’s nephew is actually his son, meaning he slept with his brother’s wife. Creepy, right? Paulk’s been accused of worse.

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  •  www.donpaulk.com Public scandal survivor warns high-profile men: It can happen to you! The brother of the late Earl Paulk, an infamous Bishop accused of sexual misconduct with several women, speaks out for the first time since his brother’s death. Decatur, Georgia [July 1, 2009]— Don Paulk breaks his silence to warn other high-profile men, after a series of sex scandals involving his brother, Earl Paulk, a famous tele-evangelist (recently deceased)- proliferated media stations across the country. In his newly released novel A Night in Gaza, Paulk propels readers into the mind of a morally-conflicted pastor named Dan Hayden, who like most high-profile men succumbs to temptation and has an affair with a secretary. A tale as old as time, except that A Night in Gaza delivers a bone-chilling cautionary tale to men and reasons to avoid the same fate.  Apparently, Don Paulk’s advice cannot surface at a more appropriate time, as the sex scandals involving high-ranking officials seem to be on the rise. It seems that these men cannot keep themselves out of trouble. Before the country has even had a chance to digest a career-shattering scandal involving the Nevada governor, Ensign; a South Carolina Governor, Mark Sanford delivers another shocking confession of an affair with an Argentinean woman, a mere 8 days later. MSNBC reports 23 sex scandals from the high-ranking government officials since the Clinton-Lewinsky debacle in 1998, a total of more than 2 per year, 6 in 2008 alone. Ironically, both senators had mercilessly slammed other officials’ indiscretions. Could we be expecting too much from our leaders? “What people need to understand is we live in a real world and that they [high-profile men] are human just like everybody else. They are not some paragon sitting on a pedestal unable to make mistakes”, asserts Don Paulk in defense of the fallen men. Some people are not as understanding.
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    Frederick J. Streets, a writer and former chaplain of Yale University, said in a letter to the New York Times editor “We know that public figures are human beings, but they lose our trust when they lie, steal or cheat others. We look to public figures to reassure us by their behavior and what they say. We judge them by their words and actions and decide whether or not we feel we can trust them.” The answer is neither black nor white; A Night in Gaza brings to attention the greatest man’s condition: Temptation.
    A voice from experience, Don Paulk’s own world crumbled, when tales of lurid sexual scandals that plagued his family for half a decade surfaced and dwindled a mega-church of approximately 20,000 into a mere thousand. It is a must-read for any high-profile man,” Paulk said. Interview with Mr. Paulk on Youtube; http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooipY-hbQeE For more information:

    Jd B.
    7 months ago
  • Jd B.
    7 months ago

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