Sometimes the most uncomfortable family financial drama plays out not in the inheritance conversation, but in watching someone you love make terrible money decisions in real time. A woman on Reddit recently shared exactly that kind of story, and it struck a nerve.
Her mother keeps telling the family they're broke, that money is tight. But then the daughter discovered something: Mom has been sending thousands of dollars every month to a megachurch. The post on r/mildlyinfuriating included a photo of one month's donation receipt to Bill Winston Ministries. The amount? $600. The reaction? Over 142,000 upvotes and more than 7,600 comments.
Breaking Down the Donation Receipt
The receipt itself tells the story. There was $300 in tithes, $100 earmarked for missions, and then—this is where things got spicy—a $30 donation to something called an "Airplane Fund." Yes, an airplane fund. Because apparently the pastor needs help covering his private jet expenses.
That line item became the lightning rod for the entire thread. "Gotta have that airplane fund so Pastor Fancy Pants can soar with the eagles and not have to be sitting next to some poor sinner on a United flight," one commenter wrote. Another noted, "Airplane fund on the receipt is very bold." You have to appreciate the audacity of listing it right there on the donation form.
Some commenters referenced televangelist Kenneth Copeland's infamous explanation for needing a private jet—something about commercial planes being "metal tubes full of demons." When church leaders are that explicit about their lifestyle expectations, it's hard to call it anything but what it is.
A Pattern Emerges
What made the post resonate wasn't just one family's dysfunction. The comments section turned into a support group for people who've watched loved ones get caught in similar financial traps. One person described their grandmother living in a roach-infested apartment while sending most of her fixed income to her church. Another wrote: "We didn't have enough money for me to go to the doctor or the dentist, but we sure had enough to give her church $100 a week."
These prosperity gospel churches promise financial blessings to donors, creating a vicious cycle. Give more, get blessed more. Struggling? You're probably not giving enough. It's a perfect trap for people already in financial distress, and as one commenter put it: "This isn't mildly infuriating. It's enraging!"
The Legal Question
Plenty of people in the thread wondered how this whole system is legal. These organizations enjoy tax-exempt status while raking in millions, sometimes billions. "How is this even legal? I think an IRS audit is overdue. Televangelists are vultures," one person said. Another comment got straight to the point: "These people are nothing more than con artists with tax exemption."
The suggestions ranged from practical to absurd. Block the church website at the router level. Set up a dummy donation site that actually goes into a savings account. But most people acknowledged the harder truth—confronting a loved one about this is nearly impossible when their belief system is wrapped up in fear, shame, and hope for divine intervention.
Even some Christians in the thread condemned the megachurch model. "You should only give what you can afford. Tithing is bullsh*t," one person wrote. "If that tenth of your income is what you need to eat... you shouldn't give that much."
It's a tough situation with no easy answers. When religious belief meets financial manipulation, families end up stuck between respecting someone's faith and watching them drain their bank account for a pastor's airplane fund.