<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Crook or Thug<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->He's a typical Christo.
The ancient Romans (of the Old Religion) wrote a lot about Christos, mocking Christo ways; they even wrote fictional novels about mercenary Christos making fortunes out of the gullible sheep. It's the same today.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Actually, he had not even changed his name, His official name is still Hindu. You never know he is true Siva bhakta.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->He's not a Shiva bhakta but the usual Christo: Christos often keep their Hindu names on purpose. It attracts less enmity and suspicion.
Of course, he's raking in the cash and is probably in the ministry business for the money. Many missionaries are (Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Benny Hinn, apologetics ministries, ...) but that doesn't make them less christian.
Christianity itself is a big fraud, so it only inspires the same behaviour in its followers.
And of course they want to make converts: more foolish converts means more moolah. Praise gawd!
The greatest christians in history were also the greatest fraudsters. For example, 6th century Pope Gregory became one of the richest men in his time thanks to the personal profits he made off the relic industry:
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->GREGORY I 590-604 He was the first pope to enter the relic industry. He convinced the nobleman Dynamius that the cross he sold him (for lots of money) contained the 'filings' from chains worn by the blessed Apostle, St Peter himself, and that it would therefore free Dynamius forever from sins. After this first marketing success, the Pope embarked on duping more gullible Christians by selling them the "keys of St Peter 'wherein are found the precious filings and which by the same token also remit sins'" [<i>Holy Horrors</i> by James A. Haught].
<!--QuoteBegin--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->...he [Gregory] laid the foundation of the temporal power and wealth of the Papacy through this fortunate belief of his that the end of the world was really approaching at last. A man with possessions, the Bible said, had as much hope of getting through the eye of a needle as of getting through the narrow gate of heaven. So the men who had large estates in Italy passed them over to the Papacy and looked for the heavens to open.
...
Pope Gregory ... was the greatest slave-owner in the world in the sixth century. Announcing that the end of the world was to come in 600 A.D., he kindly allowed land-owners and slave-owners to hand over their property to the Church -- God would not damn the Church for its wealth -- and enter monasteries. The Papacy soon had an income from land, of about two million dollars a year; a stupendous sum in those impoverished days. Enormous numbers of slaves tilled the eighteen hundred square miles of the Church's property. Gregory freed them occasionally: when they got money. He never condemned slavery. He would not allow any slave to become a cleric, and he expressly reaffirmed (Epp. vii, 1) that no slave could marry a free Christian.
-- The Story Of Religious Controversy, by Joseph McCabe, historian and former Franciscan monk<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--><!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->And then there was <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->JOHN XXII 1316-1334 This Avignon Pope was described as the world's richest man upon his death. The Catholic Encyclopedia justified his wealth by stating that he "had need of large revenues, not only for the maintenance of his court, but particularly for the wars in Italy". Pope John tried to convince the church's followers, including the clergy, that Christ did not live in poverty as depicted in the New Testament and put to death at least 114 Franciscan monks who disagreed with him. In his bull, Cum inter nonnullos, he declared it was heresy to suggest Jesus and his apostles owned no property. The notorious cullagium, the sex-tax that Urban II had made applicable to priests who had mistresses, John now extended to include celibate clergymen too. Any priest that did not pay up was immediately excommunicated.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->( http://freetruth.50webs.org/C2b.htm )
Christianity is a meme that lets those in power fleece the willing sheep until the duped flock have no more wool to keep themselves warm.
The ancient Romans (of the Old Religion) wrote a lot about Christos, mocking Christo ways; they even wrote fictional novels about mercenary Christos making fortunes out of the gullible sheep. It's the same today.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Actually, he had not even changed his name, His official name is still Hindu. You never know he is true Siva bhakta.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->He's not a Shiva bhakta but the usual Christo: Christos often keep their Hindu names on purpose. It attracts less enmity and suspicion.
Of course, he's raking in the cash and is probably in the ministry business for the money. Many missionaries are (Pat Robertson, Jerry Falwell, Benny Hinn, apologetics ministries, ...) but that doesn't make them less christian.
Christianity itself is a big fraud, so it only inspires the same behaviour in its followers.
And of course they want to make converts: more foolish converts means more moolah. Praise gawd!
The greatest christians in history were also the greatest fraudsters. For example, 6th century Pope Gregory became one of the richest men in his time thanks to the personal profits he made off the relic industry:
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->GREGORY I 590-604 He was the first pope to enter the relic industry. He convinced the nobleman Dynamius that the cross he sold him (for lots of money) contained the 'filings' from chains worn by the blessed Apostle, St Peter himself, and that it would therefore free Dynamius forever from sins. After this first marketing success, the Pope embarked on duping more gullible Christians by selling them the "keys of St Peter 'wherein are found the precious filings and which by the same token also remit sins'" [<i>Holy Horrors</i> by James A. Haught].
<!--QuoteBegin--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->...he [Gregory] laid the foundation of the temporal power and wealth of the Papacy through this fortunate belief of his that the end of the world was really approaching at last. A man with possessions, the Bible said, had as much hope of getting through the eye of a needle as of getting through the narrow gate of heaven. So the men who had large estates in Italy passed them over to the Papacy and looked for the heavens to open.
...
Pope Gregory ... was the greatest slave-owner in the world in the sixth century. Announcing that the end of the world was to come in 600 A.D., he kindly allowed land-owners and slave-owners to hand over their property to the Church -- God would not damn the Church for its wealth -- and enter monasteries. The Papacy soon had an income from land, of about two million dollars a year; a stupendous sum in those impoverished days. Enormous numbers of slaves tilled the eighteen hundred square miles of the Church's property. Gregory freed them occasionally: when they got money. He never condemned slavery. He would not allow any slave to become a cleric, and he expressly reaffirmed (Epp. vii, 1) that no slave could marry a free Christian.
-- The Story Of Religious Controversy, by Joseph McCabe, historian and former Franciscan monk<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd--><!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->And then there was <!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->JOHN XXII 1316-1334 This Avignon Pope was described as the world's richest man upon his death. The Catholic Encyclopedia justified his wealth by stating that he "had need of large revenues, not only for the maintenance of his court, but particularly for the wars in Italy". Pope John tried to convince the church's followers, including the clergy, that Christ did not live in poverty as depicted in the New Testament and put to death at least 114 Franciscan monks who disagreed with him. In his bull, Cum inter nonnullos, he declared it was heresy to suggest Jesus and his apostles owned no property. The notorious cullagium, the sex-tax that Urban II had made applicable to priests who had mistresses, John now extended to include celibate clergymen too. Any priest that did not pay up was immediately excommunicated.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->( http://freetruth.50webs.org/C2b.htm )
Christianity is a meme that lets those in power fleece the willing sheep until the duped flock have no more wool to keep themselves warm.