Mike Warnke
Mike Warnke rose to fame in the mid-1970s as a Gospel-oriented comedian
and lecturer, claiming to have been a former Satanic high priest. Both
his albums and his autobiography "The Satan Seller" sold in the
millions, and Warnke became both a favorite among Contemporary
Christian performers, and a preferred lecturer of anti-occult
movements, who considered him an expert on Satanism and the
"international Satanic conspiracy".
In 1992, two investigative journalists from Cornerstone magazine belatedly researched Warnke's background and interviewed people from his past; what had begun as a friendly biography turned instead into a full-blown exposé of lies and deceptions, dating back some twenty years. Old friends and acquaintances (who hadn't spoken out up to the time, thinking either nobody would listen, or that his ministry had been helping others) told a very different story from Warnke's, while proceeds from his records and performances (including donations made on behalf of a troubled-youth center he was supposedly developing) had gone to build a church in a remote location where services were never held, to pay off persons who'd left his ministry (including two ex-wives) to keep them from publically denouncing him - or into Warnke's own pocket. (Even the stories related in "The Satan Seller" were shown to be inconsistent and unreliable, both with modern Satanism and with the calendar; nobody could have done all the things he'd described doing in the time-frame allowed, even with the Devil's help.)
Warnke defended his actions and statements, explaining "I am a comedian
In 1992, two investigative journalists from Cornerstone magazine belatedly researched Warnke's background and interviewed people from his past; what had begun as a friendly biography turned instead into a full-blown exposé of lies and deceptions, dating back some twenty years. Old friends and acquaintances (who hadn't spoken out up to the time, thinking either nobody would listen, or that his ministry had been helping others) told a very different story from Warnke's, while proceeds from his records and performances (including donations made on behalf of a troubled-youth center he was supposedly developing) had gone to build a church in a remote location where services were never held, to pay off persons who'd left his ministry (including two ex-wives) to keep them from publically denouncing him - or into Warnke's own pocket. (Even the stories related in "The Satan Seller" were shown to be inconsistent and unreliable, both with modern Satanism and with the calendar; nobody could have done all the things he'd described doing in the time-frame allowed, even with the Devil's help.)
Warnke defended his actions and statements, explaining "I am a comedian
- I tell stories (to entertain and to make a point)", but he couldn't