Gospel artist and Bishop Marvin Sapp married Dr. La’Boris Cole on March 20 at The Chosen Vessel Church in Fort Worth, Texas. The ceremony itself passed quietly enough, but when wedding photos surfaced over Easter weekend, the internet had questions. A helicopter entrance, a ballet performance, and three wedding dresses later, speculation about how the celebration was funded began spreading fast across social media.
The central question being asked online was pointed: did church money pay for it?
Dr. La’Boris Cole-Sapp responds from the pulpit
Rather than let the rumors run unchecked, Cole-Sapp addressed them directly during Easter Sunday service at the church where her husband serves as senior pastor. Standing before the congregation on one of the most significant days in the Christian calendar, she pushed back against claims that church finances had anything to do with the wedding, defending Sapp’s character and insisting that both she and her husband have independent sources of income well outside their church roles. She specifically addressed the helicopter, making clear that she personally covered that cost.
The moment was captured and spread widely online, drawing a reaction as divided as the original controversy.
How the internet responded to the Easter address
Some viewers praised Cole-Sapp for confronting the rumors directly and standing publicly behind her husband. The defense was seen by many as sincere, particularly her emphasis on financial independence and her pointed rejection of what she characterized as bad-faith speculation.
Others took a different view. The core criticism was not about whether the couple used church funds, but about the setting and timing of the response. Addressing personal financial matters from the pulpit on Easter Sunday, and doing so as a first public appearance before a congregation she had only just joined as first lady, struck some observers as a significant misjudgment. The feeling among critics was that the moment called for a sermon, not a rebuttal.
A separate line of commentary focused on the tone of her remarks. Some felt that in defending herself and Sapp, Cole-Sapp’s language came across as dismissive toward members of the congregation, which only extended the controversy rather than closing it.
Who Marvin Sapp is and why this moment matters
Sapp has been a defining voice in gospel music for decades. His song “Never Would Have Made It” became one of the most recognizable tracks in the genre and earned him multiple Grammy nominations. He has served as senior pastor of The Chosen Vessel Church since 2019, building a congregation that extends his influence well beyond the recording studio.
His first wife, Dr. MaLinda Sapp, passed away in 2010. The marriage to Cole-Sapp represents his first since that loss, and the public nature of the ceremony reflected the significance of the occasion for both of them.
The broader conversation the wedding sparked
The controversy sits at a familiar intersection for Black public figures in the faith community. The scrutiny of how pastors and gospel artists spend money is not new, and neither is the tension between personal transparency and the expectations that come with leading a congregation. For Sapp, whose career has always connected his music to his ministry, the two are difficult to fully separate in the public eye.
Cole-Sapp’s decision to respond from the pulpit rather than through a statement or social media post was a deliberate choice. Whether it resolved the conversation or extended it likely depends on who in the congregation, and online, was already inclined to believe her.

