Cult traits emerge as Hillsong call Royal Commission “extremely unfair”
29 Monday Feb 2016
Posted Associations, Hillsong Associations, Hillsong Scandal, Houston, News Headlines
in29 Monday Feb 2016
Posted Associations, Hillsong Associations, Hillsong Scandal, Houston, News Headlines
in04 Tuesday Aug 2015
Tags
Beiber, Brian Houston, Hillsong, houston, Joel Houston, Justin Beiber, media, New Age, occultism
While Hillsong are protesting too much to the world that they are a “church” and a “global movement,” media organisations are starting to call Hillsong for what it is: a New Age cult.
The fact is this: Hillsong is a dangerous New Age cult. And although the world would have difficulty understanding the difference between a church and a cult, they are starting to see that Hillsong is New Age. By doing this, media are doing Christianity a favor by isolating a counterfeit christian movement that is badly infecting Christianity.
It doesn’t take much to see other religions being integrated within the Hillsong movement. For instance.
While Christians worship Jesus, many people who claim to be Christian today worship what is coined as a ‘moralistic, therapeutic deity’. This ever-changing deity is whatever Hillsong wants this god to be at any given time. Slapping the word ‘Jesus’ on it and claiming to the world they are Christian does not make them Christian, nor a church. It is no wonder why people in their own movement cannot explain what Christianity is nor tell you what the gospel is.
It is not uncommon for people to encounter Hillsong members that cannot present their beliefs coherently. And as you will read below in one of these articles, they’re response to criticism is that you’re a hater, a poor attempt in contending for the Christian faith, “once and for all delivered to the saints.”
This article is a collection of media stories that label Hillsong as such:
The Daily Mail reports (images and captions removed),
Hillsong’s hottest couple: The tattooed pastor and his VERY glamorous wife who have become Justin Bieber’s spiritual guides – and the dark family secret plaguing the new-age Sydney church
They are a glamour couple at the top of a global empire who rub shoulders with celebrities like Justin Bieber, enjoy the New York high life and have tens of thousands of followers on social media.
They are also the face of the Hillsong Church, a Christian movement that has grown in the space of fewer than 20 years from humble beginnings in the suburbs of Sydney to a multimillion dollar global phenomenon whose services attract rock concert-sized crowds every week.
Esther Lima Houston is an exotic Brazilian model who loves designer labels and sharing photos of herself wearing and holding them with her thousands of social media followers.
She’s married to Joel Houston, Hillsong Australia’s guitar-playing global creative director who is in charge of running the international expansion of the church, which was founded by his father Brian Houston and is now a global operation with millions of followers.
Hillsong is in the spotlight this week as it holds its annual conference in Sydney with celebrity guests like pop idol Justin Bieber, who is reportedly a friend of Joel and Esther Houston.
Ms Houston is a long-legged beauty who posts dozens of photographs on her social media pages of herself draped in Hermes, Chanel and her other favourite designer label clothes.
In other photos she carries the kind of coveted brand handbags that can only be bought by buying onto a waiting list, and sports what appears to be a yellow diamond the size of a quail’s egg on her ring finger
Hillsong is a charismatic Pentecost ‘megachurch’ founded in 1982 that now has eight Australian churches and has set up in London, New York, Los Angeles, Stockholm, Amsterdam, Barcelona, Copenhagen, Argentina, Brazil. South Africa, Russia and France each have two Hillsong churches.
Hillsong has high profile supporters in Australia. They include several Parramatta Eels players, and former NRL turned American gridiron player Jarryd Hayne.
Esther Houston and baby Zion says on her blog that ‘giving is more satisfying than receiving’
Federal Social Services Minister Scott Morrison is a onetime parishioner, and former prime minister John Howard opened the church’s new centre in the Hills district in 2002.
Ms Houston’s father-in-law, who also favours designer clothes, such as Valentino suits, and flies around the world first class, is credited with the brilliant commercialisation of born-again Christianity.
Esther Houston’s designer image is a classy asset to the church where her mother-in-law Bobbie Houston encourages young female followers to be glamorous and have perfect hair and teeth.
As the former worship manager and the musical genius behind Hillsong’s lucrative Christian song business, Geoff Bullock told The Australian, ‘I came to think that the patron saint of Hillsong was Gianni Versace’
Mr Bullock, who is now estranged from the church said ‘Hillsong’s … got this feeling that God smiles a bit more when we’re singing our songs, and we’ve got good hairdressers, dentists, cosmetic surgeons.’
But a child sexual assault scandal hangs over the church’s first family.
Joel Houston’s grandfather, Frank Houston, was an Assemblies of God pastor who co-founded Hillsong. He continued to preach and deliver televised sermons despite being suspended by his own church for molesting a seven-year-old boy.
A complaint about Frank Houston, who died while living in a church-owned home in 2004, was made in 1998, when Brian Houston was the national president of the Assemblies of God, now known as Australian Christian Churches.
Last October, Brian Houston was called before the Royal Commission on Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse which heard further claims that Frank Houston molested six young boys in New Zealand in the 1960s.
While Brian Houston told of how he cried the day he found out his father was a paedophile, he said ‘at no stage did I attempt to hide or cover up the allegations against my father’.
In the same month, The Saturday Paper reported, Hillsong Australia’s latest concert DVD sold out Madison Square Garden in New York City and the church band of Hillsong United NYC, led by Joel Houston, won five Dove Awards, the American gospel music equivalent of a Grammy.
Warner Bros made a feature film about the band, which Joel Houston promotes on his website as having sold more than 16 million albums.
He says on the site that his mission is to ‘travel the globe with Hillsong United who desire to see a generation across the earth awakened to real love, rise up with hearts as one and find value in the broken, hurting and lost’.
He says the proceeds from the albums are used for ‘feeding and educating children in the slums of India, holistic community development in Africa, rescuing and rehabilitating victims of human trafficking and sponsoring children living in poverty around the world’.
Joel and his wife, Esther have a young son named Zion – a Biblical name meaning ‘promised land’ – and live in a Manhattan apartment.
Esther Lima has enjoyed a mid-range modelling career, although nowhere nearly as successful as her fellow Brazilian and namesake, the Victoria’s Secret model, Adriana Lima.
The couple married in 2012, when Joel was more of a bare-footed guitar playing surfie from Australia who had launched the youth worship brand at Hillsong and had been working as co-pastor at Hillsong NYC since 2010.
On her Facebook, Instagram and lifestyle blog ‘eswhooisstunning’, Esther Houston describes herself as ‘stunning’.
On her page Miss Whoo.com, which she says is ‘an unfiltered lifestyle platform for the modern woman’ is a statement about her business acumen.
‘Esther Houston is a classic woman with a modern approach,’ the blog says, ‘She is an entrepreneur and business owner with an incredible creative eye, business mind and impressive network.’
The young couple is friends with a list of celebrities and high profile evangelists. The list includes former Disney star turned stage performer, Vanessa Hudgens, ‘Pretty Little Liars’ actress, Ashley Benson and the preacher who married Kim Kardashian and Kanye West, Pastor Rich Wilkinson Jnr.
TMZ reported that Justin Bieber was spotted this month with Joel Houston leaving the Hyde nightclub in Hollywood together.
Joel and co-pastor Carl Lentz, who baptised Bieber at Hillsong NYC last December, are reportedly spiritual advisers to a number of celebrities.
Joel and Esther and baby Zion jet around the world from New York to Los Angeles and Sydney. Ms Houston’s says on her blog that ‘giving is more satisfying than receiving’.
She says ‘I am no feminist, I don’t believe that men and women should be equal. Simply because we aren’t. Men and women are different, physically and mentally, so that we can fulfill different roles and carry different responsibilities in life’
Ms Houston also says ‘I’m not willing to forever sacrifice passions, work and career just to fit into the mold of what the “perfect woman” should be. I’m ambitious. I’m passionate. I want to grow in all areas of my life.
But she also talks on her Facebook page about people knocking her on Instagram or others who are ‘haters’.
In one Facebook post she says, ‘While people are busy judging on Instagram I’m busy living life and having a great time with friends. YOLO.’
In another she writes ‘Good day haters’ to which a friend responds, ‘When you’re in the spotlight unfortunately that’s what happens.You attract judgment. The saddest part of all is the haters are usually from people who believe they’re doing the hating for God.’
Ms Houston also posts messages which appear to be about religious faith, along with photographs of her with her parents-in-law Bobbie and Brian Houston.
It is unclear whether she is a Catholic who converted to the Hillsong born-again style of Christianity, but affectionate posts from friends about her son Zion ‘inheriting the Hillsong empire’ suggest there will be a fourth generation of Houston men as church pastors.
The empire Joel is due to inherit, is based on the millions of dollars gathered from the church’s system of ‘tithing’ its congregation, the ancient custom of taxing worshippers a fee of ten per cent of their income.
Under every seat in its churches it places an envelope and credit card form for believers to donate their pre-tax 10 per cent salary, which Hillsong then banks as tax free money under its charity status as a religion.
Esther Lima Houston is an exotic Brazilian model who loves designer labels and sharing photos of herself wearing and holding them with her thousands of social media followers.
She’s married to Joel Houston, Hillsong Australia’s guitar-playing global creative director who is in charge of running the international expansion of the church, which was founded by his father Brian Houston and is now a global operation with millions of followers.
Hillsong is in the spotlight this week as it holds its annual conference in Sydney with celebrity guests like pop idol Justin Bieber, who is reportedly a friend of Joel and Esther Houston.
Ms Houston also says ‘I’m not willing to forever sacrifice passions, work and career just to fit into the mold of what the “perfect woman” should be. I’m ambitious. I’m passionate. I want to grow in all areas of my life.
But she also talks on her Facebook page about people knocking her on Instagram or others who are ‘haters’.
In one Facebook post she says, ‘While people are busy judging on Instagram I’m busy living life and having a great time with friends. YOLO.’
In another she writes ‘Good day haters’ to which a friend responds, ‘When you’re in the spotlight unfortunately that’s what happens.You attract judgment. The saddest part of all is the haters are usually from people who believe they’re doing the hating for God.’
Ms Houston also posts messages which appear to be about religious faith, along with photographs of her with her parents-in-law Bobbie and Brian Houston.
It is unclear whether she is a Catholic who converted to the Hillsong born-again style of Christianity, but affectionate posts from friends about her son Zion ‘inheriting the Hillsong empire’ suggest there will be a fourth generation of Houston men as church pastors.
The empire Joel is due to inherit, is based on the millions of dollars gathered from the church’s system of ‘tithing’ its congregation, the ancient custom of taxing worshippers a fee of ten per cent of their income.
Under every seat in its churches it places an envelope and credit card form for believers to donate their pre-tax 10 per cent salary, which Hillsong then banks as tax free money under its charity status as a religion.
Source: By Candice Sutton & Penelope Kilby, Hillsong’s hottest couple: The tattooed pastor and his VERY glamorous wife who have become Justin Bieber’s spiritual guides – and the dark family secret plaguing the new-age Sydney church, Daily Mail / Australia, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3143901/Hillsong-s-hottest-couple-tattooed-Australian-pastor-glamorous-wife-Justin-Bieber-s-spiritual-guides-dark-family-secret-plaguing-new-age-church.html, Published 01/07/2015, Updated 02/07/2015. (Accessed 15/07/2015.)
TMZ reports,
Justin Bieber
I Play Second Banana to My Pastor!!!
Justin Bieber awesomely took second seat to the pastor of his new-age church … and it’s so fun.
The Biebs and Pastor Joel Houston were leaving Hyde nightclub in Hollywood Friday night when our photog tried jawboning with Justin. But when J.B. wanted the pastor of Hillsong Church to get some face time, our photog obliged and the convo turned to surfing.
Houston — who also fronts the band Hillsong United — along with his co-pastor, Carl Lentz, are the spiritual advisers to lots of celebs. Lentz Baptized Biebs back in December.
Source: By TMZ Staff, Justin Bieber I Play Second Banana to My Pastor!!!, TMZ, http://www.tmz.com/2015/06/27/justin-bieber-pastor-joel-houston-hillsong-church-carl-lentz-video?adid=TMZ_Search_Results, Published 27/06/2015. (Accessed 15/07/2015.)
ShowBiz411 reports,
Justin Bieber Says He’s Even Deeper in with Cult-Like Australian Church
Justin Bieber just spent 5 days in Australia with Hillsong church. He took Stephen Baldwin’s daughter Hailey with him, and sang the church’s praises. Bieber is short several cards of a full deck and not exactly a member of Mensa. Maybe he’ll join this cult in the making and be their Tom Cruise or John Travolta. It just goes on and on.
I wrote about all this last fall. Scooter Braun should pay attention. These people want Bieb’s money.
From November 11, 2014
You cannot make this up. Justin Bieber, not exactly the brightest bulb in any lamp, is a follower of a sketchy Virginia man who calls himself a pastor and runs a church every Sunday at the Manhattan Center on West 34th St. Carl Lentz portrays himself as the Punk Pastor, and says he’s Pentacostal. His latest iteration is called Hillsong NYC church. But what his American, Canadian followers– and Bieber– may not know is Hillsong NYC is a branch of Hillsong Australia. That organization is considered by many in that country to be a cult.
Hillsong’s founder, Frank Houston, had to resign in 2000 after confessing to having molesting a 7 year old boy in 1969. He was never prosecuted, and the case haunts Hillsong and the Houstons, and now Lentz to this day. Even though Frank Houston is now dead. the story isn’t over. A recent hearing in Australia revealed that Frank’s son Brian, who now runs Hillsong. trivialized the incident and let his father continue to preach as part of their church, albeit surreptitiously. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=11339319 He is also accused of trying to bribe the victim.
Bieber’s pastor, Carl Lentz, only became involved with Hillsong four years ago. In the video above, he explains how he hooked up with the Houstons– that’s Frank Houston’s grandson Joel with Lentz in the video, looking like Jay from “Silent Bob and Jay.” These two are supposed to be religious leaders; they are Justin Bieber’s spiritual guides. Joel has been running Hillsong NYC with Lentz since 2010.
Before he hooked up with the Houstons, Lentz operated Cal Lentz Ministries out of Washington state. The IRS recently revoked the 501 c 3 status of that outfit after Carl Lentz Ministries failed to file tax returns for three years. Lentz runs Hillsong in New York as a straight ahead business with no tax free standing. He’s registered Hillsong out of his father’s law office in Virginia, but hasn’t filed any paperwork. There is no transparency at all.
The connection between Lentz and the Houstons, and the history of Houston’s father, finally came to a boiling point in October in New York at a Madison Square Garden conference of Hillsong followers. Not only was Frank Houston’s molestation case examined, but also multiple scandals about finances at Hillsong and the cult’s attitude toward homosexuality. Brian Houston’s sidestepping has caused a lot of controversy among the followers.
I spoke to Carl Lentz’s father, Stephen Lentz, an attorney in Virginia Beach. He couldn’t have been nicer. Mr. Lentz explained that churches don’t have to file Form 990s, so nothing is amiss. He said he knew nothing about Hillsong Australia, and very graciously invited me to the Manhattan Center. Entrance to the services, which run all day long every Sunday, he says, is free. You donate what you want. But the Manhattan Center isn’t free. They charge $17,000 a day for the Grand Ballroom where the Hillsong services take place. Someone is paying for that, most likely Hillsong Australia.
Watch this video about Hillsong Australia:
Source: By Roger Friedman, Justin Bieber Says He’s Even Deeper in with Cult-Like Australian Church, ShowBiz 411, http://www.showbiz411.com/2015/06/30/justin-bieber-says-hes-even-deeper-in-with-cult-like-australian-church, Published 30/06/2015. (Accessed 20/09/2015.)
13 Monday Jan 2014
Posted News Headlines
inTags
Before reading the article by Steve West, it is important to understand who Steve West is.
Steve studied for his Diploma in Christian Ministry at Hillsong International Leadership College in 2001 and 2002.
During that time he served in most ministry areas – kids, youth, carpark, sound, new Christians, offering collection and ushering. He worked closely with many leaders and gave virtually all his available time and money to the church, volunteering at all conferences in that time and spending an average of six to seven days a week at Hillsong Church. He progressed to an effective pastor position at an affiliated church and ran a local young adults ministry effectively for several years.
Read his earlier articles here to see where he is coming from in the below article:
The Steve West & Hillsong Saga (Part 1)
The Steve West & Hillsong Saga (Part 2)
The Steve West & Hillsong Saga (Part 3)
The Steve West & Hillsong Saga (Part 4)
Steve West writes the following. (Warning: rude language is used below in his article.) Observe how people treated him and his criticisms.
Post Article Discussion (FULL ARTICLE IN COMMENT LINK)
by Steve West on Monday, 26 July 2010 at 12:49 ·
So, the Telegraph article from Adam Shand (thanks mate, you did a great job and you were a pleasure to interact with) has been published.
And life goes on.
The online version is short, and hopefully the full version can be uploaded soon. For those who know me personally, I do have some copies of the paper if you’re bold enough to ask me for one.
In the printed version, there are two seperate two page spreads (4 pages in total). The first spread is similar in content to the online article. The second goes into more discussion and is the one that references me.
So let me describe me reaction from two perspectives; 1) emotionally and 2) rationally.
1. Emotionally, I must say it’s a cathartic release to be given something of a voice. I have spent years in a system where the pressure not to criticise is intense. It really staggers my mind that where there are reasons to have serious questions, hordes of people smother it over with “nowhere is perfect move on”. If there was childhood slavery in the suburb next to yours, would you shrug and say “nowhere is perfect, I don’t want to be a critic”. The example is extreme but the point remains. The irrationality of people telling me for years “shut up” takes its toll. My favourite messages are still those who said I am a tool of Satan, and another that said “I know for a fact you cannot worship the Christian God”. There were plenty more along these lines.
So it is therapeutic to have my voice heard at a higher level. It gives a sense that I am affirmed as not being a crazy person – that my perspective isn’t that of a fringe and lunatic ‘cynic’ with a ‘bitter spirit’. I’m just a normal guy who calls Bullshit on big organisations when I see it. I was given reason to call bullshit. I’m still waiting for any Hillsonger, be it a pastor I’ve met up with or a member, actually address my points. They still love playing the man and not the ball. It’s all up for people to see now.
2. The article demonstrates certain aspects of my case quite well. As I suspected, there is nothing illegal, but there are aspects that most decent folk would consider unethical.
Brian earns 300k, plus a slush fund for personal expenses from LMI of close to a million a year, plus use of LMI cars and properties. Someone might object to a preacher having all this – but the injustice that the article drives at is that all this is tax free. Brian is using laws designed to accomodate small religious congregations to live an essentially CEO lifestyle. If you cannot see why that is wrong, then I seriously question your understanding of how taxation works. You would object if the extremely wealthy paid no tax but the middle class paid almost 40% of their income. So here is a clergyman, his income derived from tithes and gifts of people seeking help in their life, living tax free.
It’s not illegal, but rather unethical.
Of course, I will never really be able to get over the simple fact that I was told the books were open, and they were not.
If you support Hillsong, you have to do some interesting mental gymnastics to explain to yourself how that is not Bullshit.
Why not just admit to yourself that Hillsong might not be all that you think it is? And then, look at church culture and practices. The culture that doesnt permit questions. The emphasis on giving that is far higher than other churches, and reached abusive heights of teaching that you are under a curse if you don’t tithe. Then you do the math.
As for me, the public has vindicated my voice. I spoke out for the sake of the public, I have been listened to. Now I can rest my case, and leave it to those more capable than I, and let the public be aware and informed.
PS. Joel a’bell did show some interest in meeting up, but remained tentative. I also had an offer to meet up with Chrishan, that I wasn’t able to follow up as I got overwhelmed. Chrishan had offered to meet up with me many years ago as well, but to be honest, I forgot about that. I’ve already met up with Hillsong pastors in the past, and to be honest, it doesn’t achieve much. They listen, but then are unable to confirm or deny my case about the money, and in the past never pursued it any further. So it becomes a fairly pointless exercise.
PPS. I’ve had an offer from Today Tonight. Not sure about that.
Source: Steve West, Post Article Discussion (FULL ARTICLE IN COMMENT LINK), http://www.facebook.com/notes/steve-west/post-article-discussion-full-article-in-comment-link/451266326927, 26/07/2010. (Accessed 18/11/2012.)
(Disclaimer: The views of Steve West do not necessarily represent our own personal views. We have decided to publish his articles so people may witness his journey out of Hillsong.)
NOTE: SCREEN GRAB WAS TAKEN ON THE 18/11/2012.
04 Thursday Oct 2012
Posted Associations
inTags
Darlene & Mark Zschech, Darlene and Mark Zschech, Darlene Zschech, geisha, hooker, kong hee, Mark Zschech, media, prostitute, scandal, sex, skank, skanky, sun ho, sun ho media, whore
Why would Hillsong’s Darlene and Mark Zschech associate themselves and work with Kong Hee and Sun Ho? Why would they endorse Sun Ho media?
Here is Sun Ho in her music video ‘China Wine’. Why would Hillsong endorse this skanky-like video?
(Warning! If this image next to you is offensive, you will not want to watch this video!)
Sun Ho is called a ‘Geisha’ in the video. While we get the idea of a geisha being an 18th Century asian female entertainer, the word has changed in context in contemporary asian culture. This is why Kong Hee informed Christians that “pastors … wrote me angry emails calling Sun a “whore,” “hooker”.” They were right – Sun Ho was a geisha in the film clip.
So why do Hillsong leaders endorse this sexually foul video clip? What message are they sending to young Christians, children and non-believers?