Seventh-Day Adventist Cornflakes

"Nurturing good health became central to Seventh-day Adventism's identity: a means not only of purifying believers, but of winning converts. The church began to publish journals such as the *Health Reformer* aimed at a general reader, and to establish sanatoriums and spas where patients of any religion might 'become acquainted with the chraacter and ways of our people, see a beauty in the religion of the Bible, and be led into the Lord's service.' One result of this was the long and fruitful, though eventually unhappy, partnership between [Ellen] White and John Harvey Kellogg, nutritionist, health reformer and the inventor of cornflakes. White, who did not particularly like cornflakes, turned down the opportunity for the church to own the Kellogg's brand. It was an expensive decision, but it might have saved the church's identity from being swallowed up in a commercial empire. After she had kept her church's soul pure throughout her long life – she finally died in 1915 – it would have been a shame to have sold it for breakfast cereal..." Alec Rylie, Protestants: The Faith That Made the Modern World, p. 224. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZWKaDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA224

POD: Ellen White https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ellen_G._White likes cornflakes better, and accepts Kellogg's offer...
 
Are there any occurrences of history where a church got swallowed up in a commercial empire (inb4 someone says megachurches) that we could look at as an example? This is super interesting.
 
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