"I got caught up in a
cult"
Seventeen
Magazine/September 1995
By Jeanette Batz
Donna Buckmeyer was a
college freshman, 2500 miles from home, hoping to find a few new friends.
Instead, they found her - and pulled her into a zealous religious group that
took over her life. In high school, Donna Buckmeyer, was totally into dance.
She had trained since she was 8, and she performed with a local company. She
was an honors student - math and physics were her favorite subjects - who also
knew how to have fun: seeing movies, going out with guys, hanging with her
friends.
But when she was 18, she
stopped dancing. She swore off boys, ditched her friends and gave away her
favorite dress - a cobalt-blue strapless - because she was convinced it would
"tempt men into sinful desires". She also gave away nearly $4,000 of
her hard-earned money.
What changed Donna? She
had found a new group of friends - or at least they seemed like friends.
Feeling lonely during her freshman year at college, she joined the New York
City Church of Christ.
"All of a sudden,
this group seemed to meet all the needs I had," Donna says. "It gave
me a purpose in life, a way to help the world and, most of all,
friendship."
The church, which met in
an old theater, is one of 193 International Churches of Christ around the
world. A fundamentalist, Bible-based rewrite of traditional Christianity, the
Church of Christ places a heavy emphasis on recruiting and
"discipling". After you join, as Donna found out, it all but takes
over your life. Former members have accused the Church of
Christ of "mind control" and "brainwashing" and two cult-awareness
groups - one secular, the other Christian - have called it a cult.
But it wasn't like the
cults that have been in the news lately. Donna encountered no power-mad guru
who tried to control every aspect of her life. No one like David Koresh, who
led the Branch Davidians' doomsday sect until April 1993, when their compound
in Waco, Texas, was raided by federal agents and more than 80 people died. She
found nothing about the Church of Christ that extreme or bizarre. No one ever
spoke of committing a crime like this year's fatal subway gassing in Tokyo, the
alleged act of a Japanese cult. And it wasn't as if anyone deliberately tried
to cut Donna off from the rest of the world. "At least, it didn't seem
that way to me at the time," she says. Enthusiastic friends, clear-cut
beliefs, a focus for her energy - the Church of Christ offered Donna all this,
and more: a direct link to God.
Experts say there are more
than 2,500 groups across the country making similar offers. They operate on
college campuses, in informal "churches" or on the street. They
present themselves as true Christians, political action groups, campus
ministries or self-help groups. They promise certainty, confidence, the group
high of shared beliefs.
The prospect is very
seductive - especially if you're depressed or lonely, or making a scary
transition, say, from high school to college, like Donna was. "Almost
anyone can be picked up by these groups at a vulnerable period in her
life," says Margaret Thaler Singer, a clinical psychologist who has
studied cults for almost 30 years. "They don't go out looking for crazies;
in fact, they screen against them. They want civilised people who look
presentable, who get along well in a group situation and who will obey."
Donna Buckmeyer was
"kid of a basic middle-class kid with a mom, a dad and a sister, growing
up in Portland, Oregon." In grade school she loved math and always tried
to beat boys at sports - but that didn't keep her out of her tutu. She started
ballet lessons at 8; added tap, jazz and modern dance at 12; and by her junior
year of high school, she was dancing with a preprofessional company.
"I loved music and
movement," she says. "I didn't really want to be a professional
dancer - I knew I wasn't the right type to be a superstar - but I decided to go
to college in New York so I could be around the dance world."
So there she was, a
freshman at Columbia University, 2500 miles from home. "It was kind of
overwhelming going to this place where I didn't know a soul," she recalls.
Her boyfriend was at school in Georgia, and at first they spent a lot of time
calling and writing. "Then I started to realize we were going our
different ways."
She had started to realize
she didn't want to major in math and computer science after all. The calculus
class was way over her head, and as she looked around at the math majors, it
dawned on her: "I didn't want to spend the rest of my life with these
people. I mean, they were nice, but..."
So Donna had no major, and
no clue. She was lonely and confused, and she hadn't been to church all
semester. "I grew up going to the little Methodist church a mile from
home, " she explains. "Religion wasn't talked about a whole lot, but
it was an important part of life - not just my own spirituality, but being part
of a faith community, seeing the same people at church every week."
One day in sociology
class, a pretty, extroverted Korean-American woman with dark shoulder-length
hair and a pleasant smile struck up a friendly conversation with Donna.
"As we left, she said, 'I have a Bible discussion group. Would you like to
come?'"
Donna didn't really want
to go, but she felt guilty because the woman had been so nice. "She seemed
genuinely interested in being friends," Donna says. "Plus, I had a
pretty stereotypical female upbringing - I was taught to always be nice and
polite. I didn't feel assertive enough to say no."
Filled with dread, Donna
walked to the woman's dorm room, where about a dozen young women were gathered.
They were of different races, had different majors, came from different places
- one was a blue-eyed, blond dancer from Kentucky, another a dark-haired,
streetwise New Yorker. "The most striking thing was that they were all
very friendly and outgoing," Donna recalls. At first their enthusiasm
startled her; then it captivated her. "It was the most exciting Bible
discussion I'd ever been to," she says. Afterward, several of the women
asked for her phone number, suggested lunch, wanted to study together.
A few days later, she
found herself studying the Bible with a few of the women. "The first
session was very general, about what standards you're going to live your life
by - society's, your parent's or the Bible's," Donna recalls. "The
message of a later session was, 'Well, now that you're going to live your life
by the Bible, this is what the Bible says the church is like, and the only
group that does this is our group.'" Yet another session was about sin and
repentance, which meant "confessioning everything you had ever done - and
that could be quite a lot!" By the time shy Donna had finished dregging up
her life's small shames - and a few of the bigger ones, too - she felt bonded
to her new friends, who had confessed just as freely.
Donna attended Church of
Christ services each week at on old theater just off Broadway. They were
incredibly lively, with everybody singing songs from memory, a cappella.
"The songs were church-related, but they weren't hymns - just simple,
spirited songs you could easily learn by heart," Donna says. The service
didn't differ much from what she had grown up with: prayers spoken in unison,
communion adn a man giving a sermon. "He was a little more forceful than
what I was used to; he made things a little more personal."
After a few weeks, Donna
firmly believed her new "friends" were the only people on the planet
who were going to Haeven. "That meant my family wasn't - not even my
step-dad, a Presbyterian minister," she says. "I felt this burden. I
had to save them."
Donna soon learned how to
direct Bible studies herself and recruit new members. Discussion leaders used
only the New International Version of the Bible, whose passages they could use
to "prove" that theirs was the only true church, Donna notes.
"It all seemed to make so much sense. They had figured out the best way to
present their information and had fine-tuned it, so the verses were very direct
and to the point. It was all or nothing: You were going to either Heaven or
Hell; either you were in the group or you were out. You knew their expectations
very clearly. There was only one right way to live."
Donna found comfort in
this way of thinking - it left no room for uncertainty, which she had felt a
lot of recently - so she decided to formally join the church. The woman who had
recruited her became her "discipling partner," her "big sister
in the faith." To this woman Donna confessed a long list of
"sins" - including "impure thoughts" - and the woman
offered advice about improving her character and recruiting new people.
Discipling partners
learned how to elicit the "right" behavior, Donna says,
"sometimes by being gentle and sometimes by saying, 'How dare you do this.
That's like spitting in Jesus' face!'" Choices were described carefully:
"'You can do A or you can do B, but of course you'll do B because that's
the only way'" "Doing B" made life a lot easier. "The
longer you were in the group, the more you became like everybody else,"
she observes. "Once I learned the mind-set, I didn't have to think."
Given how hard she had to
study to keep up with her coursework, not having to think was bliss.
Rercruiting, on the other hand, was incredibly stressful. Donna, whose heart
pounded just from meeting someone new, was expected to approach strangers on
the street and win them over. "It was not easy for me at all," she
says. "But I would get advice from this discipling partner; she would go
out with me. And there was this sin on omission: If I was shy, I wasn't helping
people." Gradually she learned to be bolder. "There were days when
we'd go blitzing. A whole bunch of us would just go out, get on a subway car
and invite people to church in a really loud voice," she says. "If
people thought we were weird, we knew we were doing something right -
persecution was good."
The pressure built
steadily. "You needed to be excellent at everything," Donna recalls,
her voice tight. "If you were a student, you needed to be an excellent
student to set a good example, so when people looked at you, they would think,
I want to be in your group." As a freshman, Donna had taken a dance class
five days a week, but at the beginning of her sophomore year she gave up
dancing altogether. She switches her major her junior year to pscyhology and
arranged to room with another church member.
Worried about the drastic
changes they'd seen in Donna, two friends she'd met during freshman orientation
decided to talk to her dorm counselor. When the counselor asked about the
Church of Christ, Donna smiled and said it was a Christian church. She had no
idea why people might be concerned. "Well, yeah, I'm giving them
money," she said, "but only what I want to, it isn't a big
deal." Later she added up the checks she'd written; they totalled nearly
$4000.
During the school year,
Donna asked for a work-study job in the library so she could meet more people
to recruit. She only dated within the group: "Why
would you want to date somebody who was going to Hell?" She tried to lure
friends into the group, and if they weren't interested, she stopped seeing
them. "I just put everything on hold and did church stuff," she explains.
"If I wasn't in class, I was at a church service or recruiting, and if I
had free time, I was reading the Bible and praying."
Several times she went to
Boston to hear the church's leader, Kip McKean, speak about God. McKean wasn't
what you'd call attractive - he was short and had a pock-marked face, as well
as a wife and kids - but Donna was captivated by him. "He was so intense
when he preached, you'd think the veins were just going to pop out of his
neck," she recalls. "He would never take any credit for himself, and
he was always talking about giving up his life for God. He spoke so
authoritatively. He was held up as this incredible example of a man of God - so
willing to give up his time and money for the church."
After nearly three years
in the Church of Christ, Donna returned home her senior year for Christmas
vacation and traveled with her family on their annual winter trip back to a
beach house on Oregon's northern coast. One day her mother said out of the
blue: "You know how we've been having a hard time talking to you about all
this church stuff? Well, we brought someone - a few people, actually. Would you
talk?"
Instantly Donna thought,
Oh, no - deprogrammers. "We were taught that these people were awful and
terrible and if we listened to them, we'd go to Hell." Before Donna could
say no, though, her mom started to cry. Donna had never wanted to hurt her
parents, so she decided, "I'll just listen to this garbage, and then I'll
go back to New York, and everything will be the same."
Donna, two high school
friends, three counselors, her mom and stepdad, her dad her sister and a former
Church of Christ member spent the next three days together. "I did feel
kind of scared," she admits, "but I also thought, Gee, if I get
through these three days, I'll go back to New York a hero, because I'll have
survived this intense persecution."
First they watched a
videotape about the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church, whose members are
known as Moonies, and Donna thought with relief, Oh, my gosh, this is not at
all like my group - of course the Moonies are part of a cult. More general
information about cults followed, equally uninteresting. Then, halfway into the
second day, they readsome newsletters from the Boston Church of Christ. "One article said that death was the result of
unresolved sin, and that this man's aunt had died because of his unresolved
sin," Donna recalls. "I thought, Whoa, that's not right."
Until then she'd been
listening with only one ear. Now she paid full attention. "Things the
counselors had been talking about started coming back," she recalls.
"We looked at different translations of the Bible, and I saw how different
words had different meanings. That's when I realized the Church of Christ
people had been choosing and interpreting texts just to make their own
points."
By the end of the third
day, she didn't want to go backward or forward. "I'd built up my whole
life around this group," she explains. "I felt overwhelmed, really
stupid and confused: If this wasn't true, then what was?"
Life in the church hadn't
been all bad, after all. By then all her friends were members, and they'd had
fun together: staying up late talking about their past or dreams, playing
Vivalidi with rock dubbed in, going on double dates (with men in the group, of
course), dyeing T-shirts in park (to raise money for the group, of course). The
church had become her entire world.
From Oregon, Donna called
her roommate, also a church member, and left a halting message saying she would
be staying home a few extra days. "That evening, everyone from my Bible
group called and left messages on my answering machine," she says.
"Friendly, casual messages - but I knew what had happened. They'd all gone
to service, and my roommate had told them something might be wrong." The
following week, Donna returned to her campus to pack her things and withdraw
from classes. "They sent one of the Bible-study leaders to talk to
me," she says, wincing. "It was a woman I'd always liked, but she
kept trying to get me to talk to one of the church leaders. She said, 'See how
hard your heart is?'"
"Whenever someone
leaves the group, it's implicit that there's something wrong with that
person," Donna adds. "Either your heart is too hard, or you're too
worldly and you want to make money." Shaking, she made her voice as firm
as she could - "I'm leaving" - and finally the woman left. Donna
returned home and, with the help of her family, slowly rebuilt her life, her
worldview, her self-confidence.
Life outside the church
has been tougher in many ways, but Donna says she'll "take freedom over
ease any day." She's 27 now, working as an executive secretary to a
Catholic priest, and she's getting married this summer.
Donna is convinced that if
she'd known more about groups like the Church of Christ before she got
involved, she would have seen through the enthusiasm to the the techniques:
McKean's fiery preaching and total devotion to the cause, the emotional highs,
the black-and-white certainty, the strict rules, the confessions and shame and
vulnerability, the repetition of simple "truths," the guilt and
social pressure...
"They seemed like
such wonderful people. I never suspected anything could be wrong," Donna
says with a sigh. "I was on the lookout for people who could physically
hurt me, mug me or steal my purse. But not for people who would befriend
me."
What is the "New
Song" and why does "The Word" want YOU to learn to sing it and
to Live and sing it on The Rock?
For the answer we have to
turn from the Old Covenant Book of the Prophet Isaiah to the New Covenant Book
of the Revelation/Apocalypse given to John the Apostle by his Master, "The
Word", who had previously, temporarily, been made flesh (incarnated), as it
is written in the Gospel of John chapter 1 verse 14:-
"And the Word was
made flesh (incarnated), and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the
glory as of the only incarnated of the Father) full of Grace and Truth."
Why on The Rock? (Read my
"Close Encounters of the Gibraltar Kind" and "DUNE -
Gibraltar" and "Message for Gibraltar from God" Booklets, to
find the answer).
In Revelation/Apocalypse
it is written in chapter 14:3 & 5:9 that only the people who are able to
learn to sing the "New Song" were to be redeemed (released) from
Planet Earth (and ALL the rest will be cast into The Lake of Fire - Revelation
21:7-8).
It is therefore CRITICALLY
important for YOUR survival that YOU learn to sing the "New Song" -
NOW.
So what IS the "NEW
SONG"?
For the answer, again we
must turn to Revelation/Apocalypse, where in chapter 15:3 it is written that
the "New Song" is (a harmonious synthesis of) the "Song of
Moses" and the "Song of The Lamb".
What IS the "SONG of
MOSES"?
For the answer we must
turn to the Old Covenant/Testament, to the Fifth Book of Moses, in The Torah
(Torah is the collective terminology for the five Books of Moses), called
DEUTERONOMY, chapter 31 verse 19:-
"Now therefore write
ye this "Song" for you, and teach it the children of Israel: put it in
their mouths, that this "Song" (The Covenant) may be a witness for Me
against the children of Israel." (If they do not "learn it off by
heart" so that they can, and do, "sing" it; and no-one can sing
any song unless they "know it off by heart"). That is why God called
it a "Song" to let you know that you must learn it off by heart.
The Sabbath (Saturday) was
to be used to teach your children to sing this "Song", not hymns or
rock and roll etc. but THIS "Song", without which you can NOT survive
or live in peace and HARMONY with your fellow man.
At this point it is
extremely important, and I have to point it out to all followers of
Mohammedanism (peace be upon him), that, all the way through the Holy Koran,
God (not Mohammed) makes reference to and commands the reader to read the Bible
and to study carefully, learn and fulfill The Covenant of God, or they will be
"Companions of The Fire", shortly after Christ's second coming.
Unfortunately they, like
everyone else, do not do as God has told them to do and have been misled by
their priests (imams) into not reading the Bible and so have absolutely no idea
what The Covenant is and what its terms are. Their priests have all lied to
them and have told them that the True Bible no longer exists.
God has told the reader of
the Koran, and it is written in the Koran, in Sura 32:23, that the Book of
Moses (which includes The Covenant), will definitely reach them.* So, unless
they stop listening to their priests (imams), who are all calling God a liar,
and DO exactly as God has told them to do, as it is written in His Holy Koran,
they will definitely not survive The Fire, and that would be a great shame. God
has even told them and it is written, more than once, in the Koran, that they
must invite the christians and jews to unite with them to keep The Covenant,
together, as one united brotherhood. The Koran is known as The Gospel of Unity.
Nobody ever does as God
has told them even though their/your very lives depend upon doing so. Perhaps
you all WANT to be misled and to burn. I HOPE YOU DON'T.
* Koran Sura 32:22. And
who does more wrong than one to whom are recited the Signs of his Lord, and who
then turns away therefrom? Verily from those who transgress We shall exact
(due) Retribution.
32:23. We did indeed
aforetime give the Book (Torah) to Moses: be then NOT IN DOUBT of its (The
Torah) reaching (THEE): and We made it a Guide to the Children of Israel. . .
Sydney
Church of Christ investigated
Parramatta
Advertiser/April 16, 1997
Three months after joining
the International Church of Christ, Charles was ready to sell his Parramatta
business and his North Rocks home to help recruit new church members in
Lebanon. Charles, 28, claims one-on-one discipling, where his church discipler
told him where to live, who to date and how to spend his money, left him unable
to make clear decisions. "They control every aspect of your life, "
He said. "I know people who have been completely indoctrinated after just
six weeks."
Charles left the church's
western Sydney Zone last Sept after seven months of living in "a
Psychological prison". He and other former members are concerned that a
recruiting drive in Parramatta last month attracted new members.
The International Church
Of Christ began in Boston in 1979 as a breakaway group from the mainline church
of Christ, From which it is now disavowed. Also known as the Boston Movement,
its hierarchical structure, high pressure recruitment techniques and control
over members' lives have drawn widespread claims it is a cult not a church. The
International Church of Christ western Sydney Zone leader Dean Haustead
declined to comment.
Former member Rachel, of
Telopea, said she lost her late teens by letting the church control her life
for three years. "The bible says the truth will set you free, but you
don't feel a sense of freedom within this Church", Ms Rachel, 21, said.
"I lost my confidence. I couldn't make decisions and I found it very hard
to trust people outside the church." She was "gullible, subservient
and stupid".
Rachel and other members
were pressured to recruit friends, relatives and strangers using techniques
called "love-bombing". "You're looking for truth and friendship
and they will offer so much love and support it's hard to say no," She said.
"You think that you've never met more sincere, beautiful, encouraging
people."
Charles agreed: "you
get loved straightaway, but when you try to leave you realize that love is
entirely conditional. You're in a psychological prison because they tell you if
you ever leave you will go straight to hell."
Charles - apart from
running a key-cutting business in Parramatta - spends most of his time helping
disgruntled members extricate themselves from the church. It is difficult and
expensive, sometimes requiring professional exit-counseling. "Some of the
members have been programmed for years, so you have to prove every point by
going over the scriptures and showing them documentation about inconsistencies
in the church's teaching." he said.
What
do the Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormons, Catholics, and the Church of Christ
denomination all have in common? They each claim to have THE Way; THE Truth;
and THE Life, and that no one gets to heaven without being a part of their
organization! Certainly they can't all be right since their individual
doctrinal beliefs are diametrically opposed to one another. On this web site we
will endeavor to examine the claim of the Church of Christ to be God's sole
representative on the earth today, and answer the question, "Is the Church
of Christ Denomination A Cult?
We will break this study
into three main concerns:
1. Who Is The Church of
Christ?
A) Are They a Denomination?
2. What Do They Believe?
A) Baptismal Regeneration
B) No Musical Instruments In Worship
C)
Rejection of the Holy Spirit
3. Conclusions
A) Their Tactics
B) Are They a Cult?
C) Closing Comments
The meat of this study
will be contained in segment two where we will examine their beliefs in the
Light of Scripture. Our goal is not to proclaim them to be outside of the Body
of Christ, but to simply show the errors in their claim to be the only
"True Body of Christ." And though most branches of this denomination
are not considered to be an actual cult, much of the organization is
"cultic," and this web site will attempt to show you why.
TO MEMBERS OF THE CHURCH
OF CHRIST:
Please remember, this is
not an attack, it's a defense. Your
denomination has said all other denominations are either carnal or demonic and
all their members have a one way ticket to hell. In that egocentric theology your leaders have
replaced Jesus with their denomination.
In their eyes, they are the Way, the Truth and the Life and that's why
they are not a denomination (part of the church) because they ARE the church.
Bottom line? If you can serve the Lord with all your heart
in the Church of Christ denomination and stay strong in Him until the day you
die, then stay in the Church of Christ denomination. The web site is not for you,
then. It is for people who are in the Church of Christ denomination that are
looking for more of Jesus. They are tired of a religion, and want a true, deep,
sincere relationship with God. So if you have been wondering, “Is this all
there is?” The answer is, no. Jesus has a lot more for you than just a
"religion." He wants to have a real, vital, genuine relationship with
you, and it is just a prayer away!!
Hi!
My name is Brian
Cooper. I am the director of Freedom
Quest Ministries and the author of this site.
We normally don't go out of our way to identify the authors of our sites
because we don't want to take credit for the Lord's work and/or point anything
to us. All evangelical outreaches should
point the reader to Jesus, not any person or organization. But we have been chastized so often by
members of the Church of Christ denomination for being too
"anonymous" that we thought we would make an exception in their case.
Our
three biggest concerns about the church of Christ denomination is their claim
to be the only true Christians, their rejection of the present day ministry of
the Holy Spirit and their hyper-legalism. I can relate to and attest to
the burden of that legalism, for it was while I was a preacher in the Church of
Christ that I committed suicide. The
Lord miraculously saved me and set my feet on the path of true salvation by
Grace through Faith.
I had been a member of the
CoC for several years before I started preaching. One of the Elders had been tutoring me and
asked for me to fill in for him one day and things just took off from
there. The problem was that I studied
the Scriptures with an opened mind rather than through CoC stained lenses. So I began to ask questions:
"How did the thief on
the cross get to heaven without being baptized?"
"How did Cornelius
get saved before he was water baptized?"
"Why did Paul say
that the Lord did not send him to baptise but to preach the Gospel?"
"Why do we forbid to
speak in tongues?"
"Why do we reject
musical instruments if God never said to?"
"Why do we teach that
we are the only true Christians?"
"Why
do we never talk about the Holy Spirit when he is mentioned on virtually every
page of the New Testament?"
The list goes on and
on. The problem was that I wasn't
getting any answers. Sure, they gave me
the typical CoC answers, but they were not Biblical or even logical.
And then the storms
came. I suppose the enemy knew I was
getting close to the Truth so he brought a severe trial my way and I found out
the hard way that I had built my house on sand (legalism) instead of the Rock
(Jesus).
A near-death experience
has a way of getting your attention. The
Lord opened my eyes to many things and has deepened my relationship to Him on
so many levels. I never really
understood Grace while in the CoC because I never experienced it. When the Lord "graciously"
intervenes in your life and shows you Mercy and Compassion, you have no choice
but to surrender and serve Him with your whole heart.
We love our brothers and
sisters in the Church of Christ, and our hearts break for them, knowing that so
many are shackled by the chains of legalism. But the winds of change are
blowing. There are those in the Church of Christ denomination that have heard
the voice of the Spirit and are laying down their traditions and simply seeking
God with their whole heart. And in the process, they have found their Heavenly
Father. Not just a list of do's and don'ts, but a living, vital relationship
with their Creator, through His only begotten Son, Jesus.
Our prayer is that the
members of the Church of Christ denomination will open their hearts and eyes
and see that their condemnation of their brothers in sisters in Christ is
unbiblical, unfair and unwarranted in most cases. We are supposed to be known by our love, not
our legalism. Paul pleaded with the
Ephesians to, "Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with
one another in love. Make every effort
to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace."
I hope someday soon this
site will no longer be needed because we all found a way to walk in His Spirit
of unity on the essentials and show grace in the nonessentials. As Paul said in
Romans 14:1, "Accept the one whose faith is weak, without quarreling over
disputable matters."
God bless you as you
continue to seek Him and serve Him with every fiber of your being!
In Jesus,
Brian
NEWS FLASH: Kip McKean
Resigns!
The very foundations of
the International Church of Christ have been rocked by the resignation of its
founder and leader Kip McKean. McKean has resigned as supreme ICC leader
because “my leadership in recent years has damaged both the Kingdom [ICC] and
my family”, and “I take full responsibility for how my sins have spiritually
weakened and embittered many in our churches”. Many suspect, of course, that
the reasons given are probably a smoke screen designed to hide the primary
shortcoming which has forced McKean to resign.
Kip McKean was the person
on which the ICC was modelled on. Everybody wanted to be like Kip (see quotes
below). He is the originator of many of the foundation ICC practices and
doctrines. Therefore it is difficult to see how any ICC member can avoid asking
himself or herself the hard question; if Kip was flawed all this time, and the
ICC was based on Kip McKean, then doesn’t it follow that the ICC must be
seriously flawed too?
“You can tell the spirit
of a church the moment you walk in. I walk into a church, I know all I need to
know about that minister. I walk into that church, and I know this is either a
total reflection of this man’s life, or he has lived such an atrocious life
before the Lord, that this is a rejection of his life. Let me tell you
something, your church is going to be just like you. ” —Kip McKean, August,
1992: BOSTON LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE, “THE SUPER CHURCH”
Current
ICC members need to realize that the ICC is NOT the “Kingdom of God” as the ICC
claims. ICC members can leave the ICC and still be saved. Current members
need to seriously revaluate their involvement in the man made edifice that is
called the International Church of Christ. They should not be fooled by the
cosmetic damage controlling reorganizing of ICC leadership, the ICC in essence
has not changed.
At Cultwatch we recommend
that ICC members take a couple of months holiday from the ICC. During their
time away they should diligently research the other side of the story, the side
the ICC leadership do not want you to know. The links at the bottom of this
page are a great place to start your research. Also you should read
www.HowCultsWork.com
Leaving the ICC means you
are no longer guilty of being a partner in it’s destructive practices. It means
you can follow God instead of men. It means coming to understand that your
salvation is not based on membership of a church, but rather on your status
before God.
Don’t
let yourself be fooled, the ICC is not a reflection of God’s character, rather
it is the reflection of a flawed man. Follow God, not man!
Overview
Founded in 1979 in Boston, Mass., U.S.A.
Founded and currently led (in Los Angeles)
by Kip McKean.
Recognised worldwide for its harmful
discipling practices and mind control techniques.
Leaders in Auckland have included John
Hancell and Dean Carlton (past leaders).
The
International Church of Christ (ICC) is a Christian based mind control cult. It
has all the traits necessary to classify it as a mind control cult, including
the teaching that it is the one true church, love bombing, deceptive
recruiting, time control, relationship control, and the rest.
It was founded in Boston
in the United States in 1979 by the cult’s present day leader Kip McKean.
McKean is, according to the cult, the “greatest living treasure that God has
given the Kingdom on the face of the earth today”.
Wanting to get a branch in
every major city (with more than 100,000 people) by the year 2000, the group is
very evangelistic, using church plantings to start new branches. As an example
of how this works, the original Boston branch planted the London, England
branch, who started the Sydney, Australia branch, who planted the Auckland, New
Zealand branch (which resulted in Cultwatch being started). The Central
Auckland Church of Christ then planted the Christchurch branch. However this
rapid expansion leads to members burning out – sometimes after just a few
months.
Back to top
Discipling
One-over-one discipling, rather than
one-on-one discipling.
The discipler has the right to tell the
disciple to do anything, including what to wear, where to work, and who to
marry.
Kip McKean (pictured) is at the top of the cult’s pyramid
control structure called “discipling”. Each person has a discipler – someone
who has authority over them, who has the right to
tell his or her disciple what to do. Ultimately
everyone is being discipled by McKean, and hence following him. Here’s what one
of the cult leaders said about McKean:
“And again to those who
believe that I, like countless others in a ‘manmade movement’ am blindly
following Kip McKean, then know this. With eyes wide open I’m following Kip
McKean: Consciously, intentionally, thankfully. I guess I’m just not as strong
as some folks and I need help in following Jesus. And so far, I’ve found no
better help, no better leader, no more righteous a man – no better friend than
Kip.”
Those in the cult are
instructed to imitate their discipler who is above them – which they do, even
in voice inflection and facial hair. (At one stage almost all of the men in the
Central Auckland Church of Christ were wearing goatees because the then leader
of that branch had a goatee.) Of course, this means that ultimately they are
imitating Kip McKean. This is especially noticeable in preaching style. This is
what two other ICC leaders said on this subject:
“The person who discipled
me in the Lord is Kip McKean, the evangelist of the Boston Church. I want to be
just like him. When he tells me things to do, you better believe I listen. And
as I think back on the course of my relationships with Kip, I can tell you
honestly, there are few times that I bucked Kip. And I can tell you honestly
that I did wrong every time. It was not right to be arrogant, to be proud, to
be rebellious… I want the guys who I am discipling to want to be like me.”
“It would suit me just
fine if I could leave this place and say you know – I just want to be exactly
like Kip. I just want to be exactly like Kip. That would be enough.”
“I want to be able to
imitate Kip McKean. I want to preach like him. I want to think like him. I want
to talk like him.”
Scary
stuff. The average ICC member is convinced they are trying to follow Jesus, but
the reality is that they are following McKean. The
ICC also claims to be the only church really following the Bible, however its
practices such as ICC discipling and their method of taking “contribution” are
not found in the Bible. There are also many other areas where its practices and
beliefs violate scripture.
Back to top
Branch Names
Central Auckland Church of Christ lead by
Rob Ferry.
Christchurch Church of Christ lead by Angus
McFarlane.
Branches of the ICC exist
in many cities around the world. They often take the name of the city for the
local ICC branches name. For example, in New Zealand they are called the
“Central Auckland Church of Christ” and the “Christchurch Church of Christ”.
One of the cult’s aims is
to get a branch in every city of over 100,000 people by the end of the
millenium.
This former leader of the Central Auckland Church of
Christ (with supporter in background) in the process of making an ad-hominim
attack on a reporter on national television news instead of answering a
question about the group’s practices. Update: This former leader has left and rejected
the teachings of the International Churches of Christ, and is now following
Jesus directly.
It should be noted that
not all churches that use the words “Church of Christ” in their names are part
of the ICC.
Back to top
What Do I Do If I Know Someone
Involved?
First of all, Don't Panic!
Second, don’t tell them
that they are in a cult. The ICC warns them early on in the recruitment process
that Satan will use people around them to attack their conversion into the ICC
by telling them that the ICC is a cult. By telling them that you are walking
into the ICC’s trap.
Third, research mind
control and the ICC. The links on this page will help you do that. While you
are doing that, put effort into keeping strong the relationship you have with
the ICC member.
Fourth, see if you can
arrange an exit counselling session with the ICC member. Often ICC members can
be very open to talking about their involvement and examining the other side of
the story, but beware – if the ICC leaders find out they will try to stop any
intervention. Cultwatch has an ICC expert who can help exit counsel an ICC
member. Also, there are many ex-members and other people around the world who
are able to do this sort of thing. If you cannot arrange something like this
then search the Internet and make up a package of material which shows the
other side of the story. Give it to the member and encourage them to read it,
but warn them that their leaders will not be too happy about it!
Please note that exit
counselling is a voluntary action. We at Cultwatch will have nothing to do with
kidnapping and deprogramming, so don’t ask, because a referral to the police
often offends.
The most important thing
to remember is that we want the ICC member to have a time when they can examine
their involvement and be presented with the other side of the story – the side
the ICC would rather not have them hear. Your average ICC member is a person
who wants, more than anything else, to follow God. When they realise how the
ICC disobeys scripture and how their practices damage people they will
seriously reconsider their involvement. It is important to note that it is the
practices of the ICC which are wrong, not Christianity itself.
There is no point “throwing the baby out with the bath water”. Contrary to what
the ICC will tell its members, they can leave the ICC and still be a Christian.
international Church of
Christ
GENERAL THINGS TO LOOK FOR
I was personally
"sucked" into the International Church of Christ movement without
knowing it for
about two months. A
student at my university came up to me and asked, "Would you
like to study
the Bible with me?"
After asking what church he attended, I agreed. But two months later, with time
to reflect on it, I was
forced to leave as I discovered it was a cult. That student was their campus
evangelist, even taking
classes at my uni
versity. These are
characteristics of that organization I
witnessed:
1.
Withholding information
about their organization
. They only tell you the
name of their
church, which is
"(name of city) Church of Christ." You would scarcely know anything
about a
lar
ger organization. They
just say they're non
-
denominational. They may
even deny association with
Boston. (If you visit
their church, the preface page of their hymn book has "Boston Church of
Christ" as the
publisher. That's a pretty good indicator. Plus, yo
u may look for a
leadership structure
of campus evangelists,
bible
-
talk leaders, zone
evangelists, and church evangelists. Either that, or
match them to the
characteristics of any counter
-
cult publication about
them.)
2.
Taking verses about
Christian livi
ng and using them as
entrance requirements for salvation.
They'll bring up a verse
about discipleship and suggest you must be that way, work up to it, or
continue that way without
faltering in order to be saved. If they were talking about _living out_ a
Ch
ristian life or about
spiritual growth it would be okay, as opposed to _entering_ or _remaining_ in
a Christian status. The
most severe passage they use is I John 2:3
-
6. They even use Acts 11
about the
disciples being called
"Christians" in Antioch. They s
ay only disciples (those
who evangelize and
teach) can be Christians
based on that verse.
[NOTE: The evangelist said
he usually doesn't go that far on the first visit. He started out with
scattered verses about
discipleship from Matthew, Mark, and Luke. T
his whole point wasn't
obvious
to me at my first few
Bible studies.]
3.
They assume the Bible has
a different salvation message to Jews than to Gentiles.
In other
words, they believe the
Jews only had to believe in Jesus to be saved, with verses like John
3:16 and
Romans 10:9. The ICofC
believes that the Jews were already obedient to God in the Old Law, were
already spreading their
faith, and were already baptized. (The baptism part is the easiest to disprove,
by the way.) All they had
to do was believe in
Jesus, whom they had
rejected. In contrast, the ICofC
teaches that Gentiles have
to obey God's commands, spread their faith, and be baptized in order to be
saved
--
above and beyond merely
believing in Jesus. According to the ICofC, Gentiles weren't doing
t
he necessary requirements
the Jews were already doing. Whenever you point out a verse about
simply believing in Jesus
for salvation, they will immediately say, "That was for the Jews."
Strangely, this is their
first reaction to any verse
--
even ones about G
entiles, until I show them
that
it's about Gentiles.
4.
Disarming the Book of
Romans, saying it was written only to the Jews.
You can read Romans
1 and get a different
picture. They also believe that verses like John 3:16 were written only to Jews,
where believing is the only requirement for receiving salvation or eternal
life. An argument about the nature of the word 'whoever' could easily be made.
They also think believing
is a work, as Jesus said in John 6:26
-
29 and then ridicule you
for quoting
Eph. 2:
8,9. To defeat that, you
need to see that 'works' is defined differently in both those passages.
Anyhow, Romans is a very
powerful book, so they first try to stop you from using it. Don't let them!
International Church of
Christ
5
5.
A theology that belief in
Jesus is not enough, even be
ing a disciple is not
enough, unless you
then get baptized in order
to get saved
. They would wait a while
to present baptism. They
progress from the
"believe in Jesus" stage to the "discipleship" stage to the
"baptism" stage, starting
from historic Christi
anity and slowly moving to
their cultic beliefs. They hide the "higher" points
from you until they feel
you're ready. (Who knows what I would have learned if I had continued!)
6.
They have a very good
method of combining social events with Bible studies f
or new people.
One thing to look for is
this: social events are only with _their_ people. They mingle only within
their sphere, their
church. Exclusivity and elitism is not mentioned
--
or even denied
--
but is practiced,
which leads me to my
seventh point.
7
.
Contradictions! They will
say one thing and do exactly the opposite.
It takes a little time to
notice things like this.
For instance, they deny preaching "saved by works." Yet, they clearly
teach
that a "disciple's
life is full of works," and only discip
les can be baptized, and
baptism a necessity for
salvation. You just need
to put two and two together. They also say that independent Bible research
and skepticism is okay,
but then rebuke and expel you if you disagree with them even if based
squarely on t
he Bible. At one point, I
could list out 30 contradictions. (I wish I had written them
down back then!)
8.
Demanding a new person
submit a "sin list."
A sin list is a written
list of all your sins. They get
personal information very
early in their relatio
nship with new people.
They say it will help you
measure your improvements.
However, what they don't tell you is that the list is not kept
confidential. They use
personal information to brainwash! Anything you do, even things outside the
list, are not kept
confidential. (One time a
girl I didn't even know asked, "How did your talk go with
your pastor?" To me,
that was a personal thing and I was shocked she knew about it. If you're really
hesitant to give a list
--
like I was
--
they wait a few Bible
studies and
keep reminding you and
then if
you don't, they have you
say it out loud while someone else writes it down. (Even after submitting a
list, they still wanted to
know personal things I hadn't told them.)
9.
They study a list of sins
in Galatians 5:19
-
21 and
then repeat the last
sentence of verse 21
over and over again:
"I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not
inherit
the kingdom of God."
They mean that even though
you believe in Jesus (already past the believing
stage) and commit
a sin, you won't go to
heaven. In other words, if you don't successfully stop
sinning altogether, you
won't enter heaven. This is their theology of repentance. At least, that's what
they preach to you.
(Pretty strict. Looks like salvation by works because
they include sins of
omission. I later saw contradictions
in this by their actions.) They believe you have to confess to
church leaders to receive
forgiveness.
10.
Strict obedience to
leaders at all cost.
Without question. They
even give orders that have
no
spiritual significance.
11.
They tell you which school
to enroll in, what classes to attend, what to major in, what job to
take, whom to date, and
whom to marry, etc.
12.
They believe your sins are
"covered" by your leader if they order you to perform
a sinful act, as long as
you were obedient.
To them, it wasn't sin as
long as you were obedient. This is called _covering_.
13.
Use of scare tactics to
provoke obedience, telling them they're going to hell, etc, if they
don't obey.
Personal information from
my sin list, for example, was used against me when I
disagreed over a biblical
point. After I won the point biblically and they knew it. (That is, telling
meI'm not over such and such a sin. And if I don't stay and agree with them,
I'll never get overit.)
International Church of
Christ
6
14.
Use of social attachment
to keep the person in the church
. (This is a corollary to
point #6.) As
mentioned earlier, they do
a good job of creating a social and emotional attachment. They are very loving.
If the person wants to leave, they say so
mething like, "Has
any other group shown you so much love? How can you leave us?" They also
use this to get obedience. A leader may even boast about fasting three days for
you. Social forces are also used, if needed, to get you to write a "sin
list" or to
move you forward on their
agenda if you become hesitant.
15.
They believe you have to
do the "works of a disciple" in order to be a disciple.
That includes witnessing
to someone. Naturally, this means evangelizing before you get saved. (This
corresponds
t
o point #2.)
16.
They believe that if you
sin, you weren't serious about God and thus not saved in the first
place.
(This is a corollary to
point #9.) This includes not obeying every commandment. They say,
"How can you be
serious and not obey God?" In ano
ther form: "How can
you be serious and commit
sin?"
17.
Light and darkness
illustration.
They do a Bible study on
light and darkness to illustrate that
you're not in the light
and thus not saved. They base their notion of a totally successful repentance
n
eeded for salvation on I
Peter 2:9
-
11, but like to emphasize
I John 1:6,7. They use a few other
passages that have the
words "light" and "darkness" in them. (At first, they allow
you to say that
you're in the light. They
do this very early, in just the sec
ond Bible study. They even
go along with
you, to keep you from
suspecting something. Later on, they come back to this illustration and would
strongly convince you
otherwise. This illustration relies heavily on binary logic.)
18.
No musical instruments in
praise and worship
. Just scapula.
19.
They meet in rented church
buildings and often move from time to time.
They're also
extremely proud of their
church. (Most people I met used to attend Christian churches, which they
negatively call
"religious." Their
evangelism plan is to get
Christians because it's easier, and they
sometimes get non
-
Christians. Almost
everyone ranged in the college and career age and I noticed
no complete families.)
After all that, here's
some positive aspects to look for:
1. They'r
e right about the Bible
--
and they use the NIV.
2. They're right about
Creation, the Fall of Man, sin, and the nature and power of God. (Unknown
about Trinity, but I'm
guessing that's okay.)
3. They're right about the
eternal existence of heaven and hell, e
xcept about exactly who's
going
there.
4. They're right about the
Atonement, Jesus' suffering and death on the Cross and His physical,
bodily resurrection. In
fact, they do a lengthy and detailed Bible study just on this. A good job, but
only done to trick
you into thinking they're
Christian. (They knew I already knew this about Jesus,
but continued to cover all
the basics. That was in the belief stage.)
5. They're right about
Jesus' identity. (Well, I'm guessing they're right about it. They say He's the
"s
on of God" in their
notes; I could tell it was lowercased. I asked them about what the term
"Son of
God" means and they
always managed to change the subject. They never told me what 'Son of God'
means in the Bible
studies, just that it's Jesus. They used t
he term quite often.)
6. Their attitude about
sin is excellent. It's just how they extend it to matters of salvation that's
wrong.
International Church of
Christ
7
7. Their attitude about
evangelism is also most excellent. It's just too bad they incorporate it into
their salvation theolog
y.
8. They're right about
Revelations 3:20, that it's context is repentance to a backsliding church. The
verse should not be used
for salvation. (However, just "opening the door and letting Him in"
appears
to contradict their harsh
teaching on repentance.)
[This whole point is still
in debate, but avoiding
this one verse shouldn't
matter.]
Their
Tactics
The
Church of Christ denomination uses four main tactics in debating their pet
doctrines. These tactics are generally used by all cultic groups. They are:
1. Change the subject
2. Take scripture out of
context
3. Straw man arguments
4. Ad hominem attacks
(attacking you instead of the issue)
The way to counter these
tactics is very simple: Stay on the subject until you are allowed to make your
point! And remember, your opinion is no better than their opinion. Base all of
your conclusions on the Final Authority… God's Word!
Are They A Cult?
Years
ago the Lord gave us (FQM) an acronym for cults:
C.
Claim to be The Only True Christians
U.
Unorthodox Extra-biblical Revelation
L.
Lying Leaders (History/Doctrine)
T.
THE Way (Salvation is found only in their organization)
S.
Salvation By Works (obedience to ordinances such as baptism)
As you can see the only
area that the Church of Christ denomination doesn't qualify for the title is
that they don't have any unorthodox extra-biblical revelation that they would
put on par with God's Word. But, they do:
1. Claim to be the Only
True Christians
2. Lie about their
history, by claiming that they can trace their roots to the day of Pentecost in
the second chapter of Acts. They also mislead people about some of their
doctrines, by not telling prospective members what they really believe up front
(Billy Graham is a deceiver and they are the only "true" Christians
so everyone else is going to hell?).
3. They are the one and
only true "Body of Christ." No one goes to the Father outside of
their denomination!
4. Their salvation occurs
the moment they "DO" their part and get baptized. And you must
recognize that it is the baptism that remits your sins, or it is of no effect!
Closing Comments
So are they a cult? No.
Are they as close as you can get to the edge of that perilous pit without
falling in? Based on the Word of God, I would say an emphatic "YES!"
If you are a member of the Church of Christ denomination, please seek the
Lord's help in attaining true freedom in Christ. You might start by reading the
book of Galatians.
If you have a loved one in
the Church of Christ denomination (especially the International CHOC), please
do all that is within your realm of influence to reach them.
My personal relationship
with Jesus Christ has been one of great sorrows but even greater joys.
Ironically, when I became a member of the Church of Christ denomination, my
father's side of the family basically disowned me because they were mostly
atheists. But then when I left the Church of Christ denomination, I became the "black
sheep of the family" on my mother's side, because they were all from the
Church of Christ denomination! But I have never regretted the decision, and I
never will. The love, joy and peace that I have found in a personal intimate
relationship with Jesus, far surpasses what any list of "DOs and
DON'Ts" could ever offer!
Our biggest concern for
our brothers and sisters in the Church of Christ denomination is the snare of
legalism. The Church of Christ denomination seems to be more concerned with the
length of your hair than they are the condition of your heart. They tend to
strain gnats and swallow camels. They seem to be more concerned with peripheral
things and miss the weightier matters. I have seen Church of Christ
denominations that knew some members were molesting members of the church and
nothing was done about it, but GOD FORBID if anyone puts up a Christmas tree!
There just doesn't seem to be any balance.
The Church of Christ
denomination claims to be an exact duplicate of the original New Testament
church. When you point out how radically different they really are from the
original NT church, they blow it off and say, “That was then, this is now.”
Well, then don’t claim to be a duplicate of the early church. Facsimile? Maybe.
Duplicate? No way.
If the Church of Christ
denomination is a duplicate of the original church (and they “speak where the
Bible speaks, and they are silent where the Bible is silent") then why
don't they:
Greet one another with a
Holy Kiss?
Romans 16:16 says, “Salute
one another with an holy kiss.”
Why don't they have signs
following them?
Jesus said in Mark
16:17-20, “And these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall
they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; (18) They shall take
up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they
shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.”
Why don’t they sell all of
their belongings and share everything with each other?
Like in Acts 2:45, “And
sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all men, as every man had
need.”
Why do they forbid to
speak in tongues?
I Corinthians 14:39 says,
“Brethren, covet to prophesy, and forbid not to speak with tongues.
When someone is sick in
your congregation, do the Elders come over and anoint the sick with oil and
pray for healing?
James 5:14 asks, “Is any
sick among you? Let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray
over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord.”
Why don’t you meet
together, everyday like the early church did?
Acts 2:46, “Every day they
continued to meet together in the temple courts.”
The fact is the Church of
Christ denomination sometimes speaks where the Bible speaks and sometimes they
are silent when the Bible is silent. The problem is that they are inconsistent.
When you ask them if they “Greet one another with a holy kiss,” they will say,
“that was just a mid-eastern custom.” But if you ask them if “it is a shame for
a woman to cut her hair,” then that is a COMMANDMENT!
The bottom line is that we
are saved by grace through faith in Christ. It's all about what JESUS did on
the cross, not what somebody does in some puddle of water. It's the blood that
remits sin, for without the shedding of blood there is no remission of sin.
Even if baptism was essential, 99% of the protestant church is baptized, so
like Hebrews 6 says, let's move on! We baptize every single new believer, just
like the Lord told us to. But after the baptism, we teach the new convert to
move on to maturity. Why keep looking back at your baptism, when you should be
looking forward to Jesus.
Too many churches
concentrate on the Body of Christ (the church) instead of its Head. It's all
about JESUS!
Questions?
TO MEMBERS OF THE CHURCH
OF CHRIST:
Please remember, this is
not an attack, it's a defense. Your denomination has said all other
denominations are either carnal or demonic and all their members have a one way
ticket to hell. In that egocentric theology your leaders have replaced Jesus
with their denomination. In their eyes, they are the Way, the Truth and the
Life and that's why they are not a denomination (part of the church) because
they ARE the church.
Bottom line? If you can
serve the Lord with all your heart in the Church of Christ denomination and
stay strong in Him until the day you die, then stay in the Church of Christ
denomination. The web site is not for you, then. It is for people who are in
the Church of Christ denomination that are looking for more of Jesus. They are
tired of a religion, and want a true, deep, sincere relationship with God. So
if you have been wondering, “Is this all there is?” The answer is, no. Jesus
has a lot more for you than just a "religion." He wants to have a
real, vital, genuine relationship with you, and it is just a prayer away!!
On The Way to
Emmaus Again
(Scripture explained again
at the end of the 20th
Century)
by JAH
No comments:
Post a Comment