Hello, Hillsong. It’s us again.
We would like to get something straight from the start. We see on page 20 of the statement of claim lodged on behalf of whistleblower Natalie Moses in the Federal Court last week that you asked if she might be talking to the media. And apparently, according to Moses, you also said Hillsong had to be “extra vigilant” because of the attention it was getting from the media. There was a concern about leaks.
We would like to say that Moses was not talking to us. However, many others have, as you know.
Hillsong is facing a right pickle at the moment. For decades it has controlled the message, but in the past six to nine months it’s been mayhem. From founder Brian Houston’s decision to step aside from all board positions to the entire audio recording of the staff meeting that ended Houston’s reign, the big news has appeared in the media first (and yes, often Crikey), with Hillsong playing catch-up.
No wonder a bunker mentality has taken hold at the Till on the Hill, as it is (not entirely affectionately) known.
Natalie Moses was employed at Hillsong from March 2020 to mid-June this year, at which point it all went pear-shaped. In that time she worked at the very heart of the Hillsong enterprise: the getting of money. Moses was involved in raising donation revenues, increasing “donor engagement”, making grant applications, and managing income reporting. Critically she had access to board papers, minutes of meetings, and resolutions for several Hillsong entities stretching back around 10 years.
Documents, documents, documents. By the time her employment was suspended and her email access was cut, Moses had downloaded some 40,000 confidential files, according to Federal Court records.
By the end of June, Hillsong’s most sensitive secrets had passed into enemy hands, as it were (if that is what we call someone driven to do the right thing). This was a position Hillsong has not before encountered, where over decades loyal staff have trusted the whole Hillsong project and gone along with a culture where you don’t rock the boat.
Crikey doesn’t know Natalie Moses. But those who do tell us this.
“She is incredibly smart. Highly experienced, very intelligent and analytical and 100% ethical.”
“She was probably the only person who was ever going to be able to work it all out and speak up because she is the only staff member who has worked in-depth across both the finance and governance areas. This would have been necessary to pull together all the pieces of the puzzle.”
Finding a public trace of Natalie Moses is not so easy now, but a source tells us she has had substantial experience in the charity and corporate sectors and appeared to have “quickly identified when something was not right”.
Above all, Natalie Moses has brought an outsider’s eye to an organisation that has been run by a small clique of Houston family and friends.
And like others who have recently spoken up, she appears fundamentally to be disillusioned by her experience. A common story among Crikey’s Hillsong sources and publicly known objectors is that they feel their Christian faith and early belief in the vision of Brian Houston have been betrayed. Another common link is that they have tried to make their concerns known inside the organisation but have felt thwarted by a senior group of older men loyal to the enterprise.
So what’s been going on then?
Natalie Moses’ statement of claim outlines irregularities in the transfer of funds from Hillsong’s Australian entities.
It started with a concern about how $10,000 was to be passed to people seeking to establish a Hillsong church in Romania. Moses warned her boss that overseas transfers of this ilk could not happen under legislation governing not-for-profits in Australia. The funds were eventually paid via a United States-based Hillsong entity, thereby avoiding Australian regulations.
From there Moses, according to the statement of claim, briefed Hillsong directors on the need for better compliance of Hillsong’s 18 not-for-profit entities in Australia. This included creating agreements for third-party transfers, including to its international operations, and creating a formal system to manage conflicts of interest.
Moses escalated this via a presentation to departmental heads and detailed the changes that needed to be made, including meeting “external standards” on sending money overseas.
It’s worth pausing at this point to remind readers of the kind of multinational juggernaut Hillsong has become. You don’t need a degree in divinity to understand Hillsong. You need to be a forensic accountant.
Hillsong might have been born in Australia, but its centre of gravity shifted to the United States a decade ago. It registered well over a dozen entities in US jurisdictions like Texas and Virginia where there is comparatively less demand for transparency. The church also has corporate registration in the UK and European countries.
At the same time, Hillsong entities have been involved in a huge range of money-making activities, from education to property to music.
Moses overtly identified the risks involved with mingling money from different pots. She warned that it might be fraudulent to offer tax deductions on donations to building a Hillsong facility at Festival Hall in Melbourne.
She warned that it was unethical and illegal for the Hillsong board to use tax-deductible donations made to the Hillsong Foundation to cover the church’s $9 million deficit. This warning in particular will resonate with Hillsong followers who donate to the foundation to support humanitarian work in Africa and elsewhere.
As one former Hillsong insider put it to Crikey: “Whole families make sacrifices and choose to go without things in a sort of way to ‘fast’ to give, thinking they are helping those with far less. Also, Hillsong frames it as a ‘holy weekend’ consecrating these sacrifices to God.”
The worst of seasons
If Hillsong ever fully unravels, then mark down March 2022 as the turning point.
Publicly Brian Houston was being brought to book for his behaviour towards two women. His transgressions had been covered up for 10 years in one case and three years in another. The revelations ended his official connection with the mighty empire he had built.
At the same time, a US documentary appeared that lacerated Hillsong and the Houstons, primarily over the scandals that engulfed the church’s New York operations.
Behind the scenes, though, the Australian Charities and Not-for-profit Commission (ACNC) had begun an investigation into Hillsong charities.
Hillsong assigned Moses to investigate 10 Hillsong charities for their compliance with the law. What she uncovered has now found its way into her claim of mistreatment as a whistleblower.
In her claim, Moses alleges that a number of directors of Hillsong Church were pastors being paid full-time salaries, as well as receiving substantial sums of money in cash as honorariums for speaking engagements conducted in their roles as pastors for Hillsong. Significant gifts were also made to directors of Hillsong companies and their families and friends.
It painted a picture of favouritism and cronyism, with those clustered around Brian Houston potentially receiving large sums of money and “designer gifts” with little or no transparency.
Moses alleges in her statement of claim that as she revealed her findings to Hillsong’s senior ranks, she was told to “come up with a story” that would be acceptable to the ACNC.
So what now?
If what Moses says in her statement of claim is true, then it is hard to see how Hillsong can go unpunished for what appears to be breaches of the law. Her statement lays direct responsibility at the door of Hillsong’s directors, who have included Brian Houston and a more or less constant group of up to 10 close colleagues.
At another level, though, Moses’ statement implies that the ACNC and Australia’s charity laws have failed to hold Hillsong to account for many years. This begs the question as to whether Australia’s laws are fit for purpose regarding regulating a wealthy multinational entity such as Hillsong, which can take advantage of weaker disclosure laws in other jurisdictions to get around national laws and accountability.
These questions are particularly vexing for Hillsong, the business model of which relies on the tax-exempt status of many of its entities. It’s little wonder then that Hillsong has called on the services of Australia’s foremost charity law expert, Murray Baird, to help sort out the mess.
Baird is uniquely placed to do the job. He helped set up and lead the ACNC as its inaugural assistant commissioner and general counsel in 2012, finishing up in 2019. Baird is an office holder in half a dozen charities linked to the Newhope Baptist Church in Melbourne. Most potently Baird provided the legal firepower in a landmark charities case decided by the High Court in 2008.
Baird also acted for Word Investments, the business arm of a missionary organisation called Wycliffe Bible Translation. The High Court ruled four to one that the profits from Word Investments, which were used to fund Wycliffe’s activities, should be exempt from tax.
“It has implications for the Salvation Army running furniture businesses, the YMCA running swimming pools and fitness centres, Hillsong selling CDs, the Seventh Day Adventist Church running Sanitarium, making breakfast foods, and the Diabetes Foundation selling used clothing,” Baird said at the time, displaying an uncanny 2022 vision.
The dissenting judge, Justice Michael Kirby, had wondered aloud if there was any prospect that Word’s profits could be used for a “high lifestyle” such as that enjoyed by US television evangelists.
Fancy that.
Full disclosure now needed
In early June this year — as tensions were rising between Natalie Moses and her employer — Hillsong aired an interview on its video channel with the church’s long-serving chief financial officer director Peter Ridley. Ridley, who is named several times in Moses’ statement of claim, betrayed little of the drama that was occurring behind the scenes.
Ridley said Hillsong had always valued good governance and strong stewardship. “It’s always been a value of pastors Brian and Bobbie, our board and our management,” he told his audience.
Hillsong has also said it will defend the action that has been brought against it.
But beyond any official action, Natalie Moses has raised the one issue that continues to eat away at Hillsong as it seeks to chart a course beyond the Houston years: how to trust the church. Without naming it, this is likely a reference to what really happened on a July night in 2019 when a drunk Brian Houston entered the hotel room of a woman who was a financial supporter of Hillsong.
As noted in her statement of claim: “Ms Moses said that the problem that will continue to affect trust amongst staff is that the board and executive covered up the conduct of (Brian) Houston and never took full accountability for the cover-up.”
Moses added that there was a need for “key people” to “openly apologise and repent” for staff to trust them.
In Hillsong’s version of what happened that night, Houston had lost his own room key and gone to the woman’s room where he stayed for 40 minutes. Hillsong’s version had it that both Houston and the woman were drunk and have no coherent memory of the night, though nothing of a sexual nature had happened. The woman has never given her side of the story.
Hillsong’s version might stretch credulity but it has been convenient for Brian Houston. Its “investigation” of the event was carried out by a small group of co-religionists. As far as Crikey is aware, the church has never referred the matter to police.
But the truth does need to be known to restore faith in the church and its mission. For many, it is one cover-up too many.
Hillsong has been contacted for comment.
If you wish to provide information on this story please contact David Hardaker securely via dhardaker@protonmail.com.
What does the future of the Hillsong Church hold? Let us know by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
religions need to lose their tax-exempt status – irrespective of your beliefs, or lack there of, it’s just too much of a temptation for the shysters out there
and no, this won’t affect their charity work, the charities can remain tax exempt … but they obviously will need to be under stronger scrutiny going forward
Roberto, unfortunately charity work is now more akin to charity from the taxpayers to manipulators of so called charities. Yes there is a definition but it appears to be very broad and easily manipulated.
Made so by the very people who administer the body with oversight!!! Appalling.
Absolutely agree! With approaching 50 percent of Australians having no religious affiliation, it’s time to remove charity status from religious organisations just for being religious organisations! It’s ridiculous.
‘It is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God’
Is this now redundant….do some church leaders believe only selective sections of the text they so fervently peddle?
Oh, that’s all that Jesus stuff. We don’t mention that any more. <wink wink>
Why would a rich man want a camel that could sew?
That has always been such with most of these cultish offspring of the so called Christian Church.
Just look at the US and the ratbags that scam money from their “faithful”.
Church leaders have always believed the text selectively.
It’s STANDARD bible interpretation in mainstream Christianity rather than cultish, even if someone a thousand years or so ago changed the text / translation to suit their own ends. It’s no wonder Morrison’s views on women are so opposite to the community. There’s a power thing in the biblical words about women “Wives, obey your husbands as you obey the Lord. The husband is the head of the wife, just as Christ is the head of the church people.” They even use the word “submit”. I can see a progression for Morrison from this power trip women thing to power trip 5 ministries thing. Even so, piling on religion because of Hillsong’s transgressions is more than a bit unfair.
In fact the NT was compiled/redacted to fit early Church needs a, c.180 CE Irenaeus basing choice of the 4 canonical gospels on Geography, Meteorology & Symmetry as much as Theology.
In Against the Heresies, “…It is not possible that the gospels can be either more or fewer in number than they are. For, since there are four zones of the world in which we live, and four principal winds, while the church is scattered throughout all the world, and the pillar and ground of the church is the gospel and the spirit of life; it is fitting that she should have four pillars, breathing out immortality on every side, and vivifying men afresh…”
Eusebius the Mendacious* by the time of the First Council of Nicea, placed those 4 Gospels and most of what is now the NT in the canon. However he excluded other Acts, Apocalypses, Epistles.
However other writings placed in the canon include those of Paul, of which only 10 can be accurately attributed. Some had other authors and others were compiled/redacted from various sources.
NT is not eyewitness, historical evidenced writing but mostly conjecture, hearsay, very selective “truth”, in fact often lies.
*Early Fathers of the Church, Clement , Eusebius, Jerome, John Chrysostom all adept at justifying deceit/lies for the good of the poor sinner.
…For great is the value of deceit, provided it be not introduced with a mischievous intention. In fact action of this kind ought not to be called deceit, but rather a kind of good management, cleverness and skill, capable of finding out ways where resources fail, and making up for the defects of the mind …
…And often it is necessary to deceive, and to do the greatest benefits by means of this device, whereas he who has gone by a straight course has done great mischief to the person whom he has not deceived…
Chrysostom, Treatise On The Priesthood, Book 1.
They were possibly the first Spin Doctors?
Just a point of order, you (unfairly) mention YMCA by name in your article along with a bunch of actual churches. YMCA is not and has never been a Church. Whilst it has a Christian heritage, In most, if not all cases across Australia it is now run as a secular, not for profit charity and community and other services provider and is not involved in evangelistic or other activities that could even remotely be tabled as religious.
YMCA was mentioned as a charity that runs non-charity operations, not as a church.
While “traditional” religions wither, faith is on a rampage. Faith can conquer the awkwardness of contrary evidence and unleash the suspicions of the not very powerful. For adherents of modern faiths, the idea of a “god” is optional but an expensively maintained clergy is essential.
These “churches” would crucify Christ immediately, should he ever set foot back on Earth.
Would they even recognise him?
And Christ would cast the moneychangers from the temple AGAIN…
So, an investigation into Hellsong has been commenced by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profit Commission (ACNC) and Hellsong has called up an expert lawyer in charities law to represent or advise Hellsong.
Does anyone else find it a conundrum that, according to the article, the very lawyer, Murray Baird, Hellsong has called on to assist them, is one of the people who helped set up and lead the ACNC, and who was appointed it’s inaugural assistant commissioner and general counsel back in 2012, not leaving the ACNC until 2019? And that he is also an office holder of a number of charities linked to a church?
I’m with the wonderful, and only dissenting judge in the Wycliffe case, Justice Michael Kirby, in his comments after the case was won by Baird in 2009. I also wonder just where all that tax exempt cash ends up!
Some gods move in more mysterious ways…. but if you follow the money you can track them.