NZ cult preparing to move into compound

by Black Sheep 5 Replies latest social current

  • Black Sheep
    Black Sheep

    http://www.stuff.co.nz/4743327a11.html

    Church wants to set up 'Destiny City'

    Wednesday, 29 October 2008

    The leader of Destiny Church says plans are underway to create a self-contained "Destiny City" for its followers in the middle of South Auckland.

    Self-styled Bishop Brian Tamaki made the announcement at the church's 10th birthday conference, held over the weekend.

    Mr Tamaki said donations of more than $2.4 million had already been collected for the creation of the city.

    The church was three weeks away from securing an eight-hectare plot "in the heart" of South Auckland, TV3 News reported.

    Plans for the city include a 5000-seat church, maraes, medical centres and schools - eliminating the need for residents to ever leave.

    "Every child of every member of this church will never go to a state school again," Mr Tamaki said.

    He urged the church's 7000-plus members to sell their homes and move to his city "for the purpose of God".

    TV3 News said it had been contacted by a man whose mother planned to sell up six properties in order to donate the money to the church and secure a spot in Destiny City.

    The church could not be contacted for comment tonight.

    NZPA

  • cameo-d
    cameo-d

    Lake City Church started with a membership of 20 people which within two years had grown to 300, and adopted the name "Destiny Church". Destiny Church now has a network of 19 churches located throughout New Zealand, and in Brisbane, Australia, with a total membership in excess of 10,000. The church provides not only religious guidance but also a range of social services including budget advice, support for drug addicts and provision of food and housing. The church also operates a primary school [2] .

    The church culture appears Pentecostal, and adheres to a literal application of Biblical practices

    The church's leadership demand strict obedience to its teachings [5] and its rhetoric has alienated other churches that have different approaches to Christianity. Observers have been concerned by Tamaki's outspoken autocratic style, the church's frequent appeals for tithe contributions, and its insular culture [6] . Some observers have also commented on Tamaki's visible wealth and personal luxury, questioning its consistency with the church's tithing system

    On his website "New Zealand: A Nation Under Siege" Tamaki has declared the government of New Zealand to be "inherently evil" [8] , pointing out that some members of Parliament chose not to swear on the Bible, and one (Ashraf Choudhary) swore on the Qur'an, when being sworn in to government. In a later interview [9] , Tamaki said Destiny was ready to wage war on "secular humanism, liberalism, relativism, pluralism", on "a Government gone evil", on the "modern-day witchcraft" of the media, and on the "radical homosexual agenda".

    On October 29, 2008 3 News reported that Destiny Church was planning on building a 'holy city' in South Auckland. The report was based on comments made by Brian Tamaki at the church's 10th birthday celebration, and released on DVD, where he talks about a 10 acre site the church had procured, with a budget of $2.4m. He said the community would have its own maraes and medical facilities and that "every child of every member of this church will never go to a state school again". [12]

    The church subsequently denied the report, a spokesperson saying they only intended to build a new headquarters and supply "social help" programmes, despite Rotorua's Daily Post quoting Tamaki as saying Destiny planned to create a "city within a city" in 2006. [13]

  • Black Sheep
  • Black Sheep
    Black Sheep

    Bishop urges his flock to leave homes and jobs

    Bishop Brian Tamaki has raised the stakes with his Destiny Church followers, exhorting them to leave behind houses, jobs – even family members – to join him at a "City of God" he is building in South Auckland.

    At the church's annual conference in Rotorua on Friday night, Tamaki spent his entire two-hour sermon talking about how God had told him to build the city and why his followers had to lose their "parochialism" towards their home areas, even if it meant leaving behind loved ones.

    Cult expert Mark Vrankovich said the speech was designed to "soften up" Tamaki's followers and the real pressure to move to South Auckland would come with one-on-one sessions with local pastors.

    "Saying that the church family is more important than your physical family, that you must go with the spiritual family, is a classic cult idea. This will put great pressure on families and break up families."

    http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/7036203/Bishop-urges-his-flock-to-leave-homes-and-jobs

  • WinstonSmith
    WinstonSmith

    Hello Black Sheep,

    Thanks for the info, great post. Man these guys have really stepped things up since when we were in NZ. Around the time we left NZ, Tamaki had appointed himself bishop and they had the march on parliament all dressed in black chanting the slogan of "enough's enough!"

    It always made me sick how he has filled his pockets with the money of his followers, lives the rich life while many of his followers are left to struggle day to day.

    If they want land in South Auckland, I hear there is another cult with land and buildings for sale in Mangere.....

  • dropoffyourkeylee
    dropoffyourkeylee

    Observation: the first post say the site is 8 hectare (which is abt 20 acres), a later post says 10 acres. What strikes me as odd is that neither figure is near big enough to create a 'compound'. It sounds more in line with a convention center

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