Family to donate $70 million to ORU if reforms made
November 29, 2007 by John
Oral Roberts University — whose namesake founder told believers to “Expect a Miracle” — received an offer of a $70 million bailout Tuesday if the school will reform its practices.
The money would be enough to wipe out a massive debt troubling the school, but the offer by a Yukon businessman came only after Oral Roberts’ son, Richard Roberts, had to leave the ORU presidency.
Mart Green, whose family founded the Hobby Lobby chain of craft stores, promised the gift provided the university shows “good governance” of its finances.
Green said at an ORU press conference that his family already gave the university $8 million to address immediate financial needs.
After a 90-day review process the remaining $62 million will be donated, provided that the review’s findings are “mutually satisfactory to both parties,” he said.
Green has no previous connection to ORU, but he called the school “God’s college.”
Green said he met Richard Roberts and Oral Roberts for the first time this week and that both were “very supportive” of the changes he believes are needed at ORU.
The changes, which were also noted by a recent accreditation review, involve improvements in leadership, finances and governance, Green said.
“ORU must restore its broken trust, its battered reputation and its beaten spirit,” he said.
Richard Roberts resigned Friday as ORU’s president following allegations in a lawsuit that he and his family misspent university and ministry money.
The resignation apparently was the key to Green’s donation decision, which he said he made recently after following news coverage of ORU’s troubles.
“When we saw Richard Roberts resign on Friday, that was the door that we said, ‘All right, that was the leadership issue that has been taken care of,’ ” he said.
As part of the review, “we will be looking at the financial things, the legal things, the lawsuits and all that. We will do a complete business review,” he said.
“The assets of this organization are its students, its faculty and its alumni, and we said we do not want to see this organization going down, and we are going to answer the call.”
Green said he would expect “greater transparency” at ORU.
Significant changes in the school’s board of regents may also be warranted, he said.
“As a board, they were at the helm when some of this happened,” Green said.
If ORU accepts the money, Green and his family would hold two seats on its board of regents, he said.
The funds would be used to address immediate needs and help the university pay off its $52 million debt, he said.
Other items, such as a new student center, could also be considered, he said.
“But with that money there have to be changes, and that is what we have to work through together, to find out if we can come to agreement on that,” he said.

John,
In business circles when someone offers to invest large sums of money into a company and in return, they want 2 seats on the board, this type of move is called “green mail”. Mr. Green(nice name!) has said he believes business is a “ministry”, so this must be a business decision. One merchant buys another merchant after a 40 day juice fast and they both claim it is God’s will?