Arise Church - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 08 Mar 2023 18:32:21 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg Arise Church - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Arise board members barred from recruiting migrant workers https://cathnews.co.nz/2023/03/09/arise-board-members-migrant-workers/ Thu, 09 Mar 2023 04:54:12 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=156334 Fallout at Pentecostal church Arise is continuing with multiple board members barred from recruiting migrant workers. The board was issued with an infringement notice by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) Labour Inspectorate in January relating to a request to supply information of specific employee records. Seven trustees have temporarily been stood down Read more

Arise board members barred from recruiting migrant workers... Read more]]>
Fallout at Pentecostal church Arise is continuing with multiple board members barred from recruiting migrant workers.

The board was issued with an infringement notice by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) Labour Inspectorate in January relating to a request to supply information of specific employee records.

Seven trustees have temporarily been stood down from their ability to recruit migrant workers. Read more

Arise board members barred from recruiting migrant workers]]>
156334
The media and the megachurch https://cathnews.co.nz/2022/05/23/the-media-and-the-megachurch/ Mon, 23 May 2022 08:12:38 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=147230 megachurch

It was early May and Pastor Peter Mortlock​ was preaching to the converted. There had been trials and tribulations, highs and lows, but Mortlock had much to be pleased about. He founded Bays Christian Fellowship on Auckland's North Shore in July 1982 and watched it grow and grow. In the early 2000s, the church, now Read more

The media and the megachurch... Read more]]>
It was early May and Pastor Peter Mortlock​ was preaching to the converted.

There had been trials and tribulations, highs and lows, but Mortlock had much to be pleased about. He founded Bays Christian Fellowship on Auckland's North Shore in July 1982 and watched it grow and grow.

In the early 2000s, the church, now known as City Impact, built a large facility complete with a state-of-the-art 2100-seat auditorium. Along with 10 campuses in New Zealand, there are 48 mission campuses in India, plus others in the Philippines, Mexico and Tonga.

On this particular Sunday, nearly 40 years after the start of the City Impact story, Mortlock had good news and bad news.

"Since we got back together [after Covid], which has only been a month, we've had just over 500 people decide for Jesus across the Auckland campuses," he said, proudly. "That's like a statistic, but it's people. The Devil doesn't like it when you're fruitful."

Then he segued into the bad news.

"The church in New Zealand is coming under attack like never before," he declared. "Things are being said and, to be honest, unless you are a little church on the corner and not a threat to anybody, churches who are fruitful are not very popular out there in society. Neither, of course, are committed Christians.

"Nobody has the authority to pull down the church," he stated. "It's easy to find fault. The Devil is a fault-finder."

Many of those in the room and watching online knew exactly what he meant. Or rather, who he meant.

A feeling of us against the world is a persistent theme of Pentecostal Christianity. There is a sense that the Devil is an active opponent. But this was different. Who was attacking the church in New Zealand like never before?

It turned out the enemy was an individual blogger and podcaster, living in California.

The floodgates opened

David Farrier​, a New Zealander based in Los Angeles, started his Webworm newsletter two years ago. As a TV journalist and documentary maker, Farrier has sought out the weird. He likes cults, conspiracy theories and odd belief systems.

And at this point in history, there is no shortage of weirdness.

Farrier says he started getting emails about Arise Church in late 2021. They came out of the blue. He also heard from former members of Life, a large Auckland-based church, "but for whatever reason, a few people from Arise wrote these really compelling, honest emails to me".

They were stories of damage and psychological abuse. They were stories about young people who felt burnt-out and manipulated by Arise, which was founded by charismatic senior pastor John Cameron​ in Wellington in 2002 and had, like City Impact and Life, grown quickly by following what some call "the megachurch playbook". It now has churches in 12 locations in New Zealand.

Cameron had a hipper affectation and was a generation younger than the likes of Mortlock, Destiny Church's Brian Tamaki​ and Life's Paul de Jong​. They were boomers but he was Gen-X. And Arise particularly appealed to university students, who became a reliable source of labour.

Cameron told US Christian magazine Outreach in 2016 that "outreach to the universities is our number one trait. Youth and young adults are a key driving force; the engine room behind the success of the church, with many Arise Church volunteers and interns being of this age group."

He told Outreach he "aggressively marketed" the church at Wellington universities when he started. The magazine was impressed and saw it as a pathway US churches could take.

Farrier heard about what happened to interns who worked hard for the church and sometimes paid for the privilege. By late May, he had published 16 blogs about Arise, which did its best to ignore him until it couldn't.

Other media, including Stuff, RNZ and TVNZ, followed up his stories.

RNZ repeated lurid allegations that John Cameron's brother, Brent, also a pastor, would get naked in front of interns, call them derogatory names and boast to colleagues about it.

Stuff ran a story about Darshini, whose mental health deteriorated after she worked 70 hours a week while paying to be an Arise intern. She was told she was choosing to be depressed and, after suffering a psychotic episode, was told she could no longer attend church or contact pastors and staff.

An Arise Church spokesperson said her claims were "inaccurate".

It was not just Arise. A TVNZ story about C3, a global church with campuses in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and other centres, said interns were driven so hard they were "on the brink of a mental breakdown".

After staying quiet, Cameron finally admitted he was "broken and devastated by these stories" and launched a review of the experiences of interns. Christchurch counsellor Charlotte Cummings​, who is leading the review, says more than 500 people made submissions.

Cameron temporarily stepped down from his pastoral duties and both he and Brent resigned from the board. The law firm Duncan Cotterill was called in to review management and employment matters, and Cameron and his wife Gillian​, who is also a pastor, went on extended leave.

City Impact was not the only church paying attention to the case of the media and the megachurch. Continue reading

The media and the megachurch]]>
147230
Should motivational speaker who is also a Christian preacher be allowed in schools? https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/08/23/christian-preacher-gives-motivational-speeches-schools/ Mon, 22 Aug 2016 17:02:58 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=86022

Tony Kane, the principal of Kapiti College north of Wellington is defending the school's decision to allow a motivation a speaker, who happens to be Christian preacher, to give a presentation in his school. He was speaking after some parents had expressed concern that an American Christian preacher Reggie Dabbs gave a motivational speech at Kapiti College. Read more

Should motivational speaker who is also a Christian preacher be allowed in schools?... Read more]]>
Tony Kane, the principal of Kapiti College north of Wellington is defending the school's decision to allow a motivation a speaker, who happens to be Christian preacher, to give a presentation in his school.

He was speaking after some parents had expressed concern that an American Christian preacher Reggie Dabbs gave a motivational speech at Kapiti College.

Kane said the speech was motivational, and he was given "absolute restrictions" not to preach.

Dabbs spoke to about 280 year 9 and 10 pupils on Thursday as part of a New Zealand tour.

He also spoke at Wellington College and Rongotai College.

At the end of his speech, flyers advertising Arise Church's Impact convention at Wellington's Opera House on Friday night were made available.

Kane said he was "not uncomfortable" with the flyers.

"I understand that people could see it as stealth evangelism, and I think if the words Arise Church were not on the flyer, that would be completely fair comment."

Lisa Rodgers, Ministry of Education head of early learning and student achievement, said Kane had done the right thing putting restrictions on Dabbs.

"It's unfortunate if the speaker took advantage of the situation by distributing flyers for his Church," she said.

Teaching in state schools was required to be secular but Boards of Trustees can close a class or the school for up to 20 hours a year to offer religious instruction for students to participate in on a voluntary basis.

In May, Dabbs was criticised for delivering motivational speeches at Victorian state schools, incensing parents who said his presentation was deceptive and went against the ideals of a secular education.

Image:

Should motivational speaker who is also a Christian preacher be allowed in schools?]]>
86022
Trump advisor to speak at Wellington church conference https://cathnews.co.nz/2016/07/01/trump-advisor-speak-wellington-church-conference/ Thu, 30 Jun 2016 16:52:27 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=84278 A preacher with links to US presidential hopeful Donald Trump, is going to be speaking at a church conference in Wellington. Jentezen Franklin, was last week announced as a member of Trump's Evangelical Advisory Board, which is expected to lead a larger Faith and Cultural Advisory Committee to be announced later this month. Trump stated Read more

Trump advisor to speak at Wellington church conference... Read more]]>
A preacher with links to US presidential hopeful Donald Trump, is going to be speaking at a church conference in Wellington.

Jentezen Franklin, was last week announced as a member of Trump's Evangelical Advisory Board, which is expected to lead a larger Faith and Cultural Advisory Committee to be announced later this month.

Trump stated on his website: "I have such tremendous respect and admiration for this group and I look forward to continuing to talk about the issues important to evangelicals, and all Americans, and the common sense solutions I will implement when I am President."

Franklin leads a 16,000-member congregation in Georgia, USA, and an international television ministry that reaches millions of people. Read more

Trump advisor to speak at Wellington church conference]]>
84278