World Mission Society Church of God

Coordinates: 37°23′02″N 127°06′31″E / 37.3839°N 127.1087°E / 37.3839; 127.1087
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

World Mission Society Church of God
하나님의교회 세계복음선교협회
A 2011 acquired church building in the USA at Capitol Hill, Washington, D.C.[1]
AbbreviationWMSCOG
ClassificationChristian new religious movement
OrientationRestorationist
TheologyNew Covenant
General PastorKim Joo-Cheol
God the MotherZahng Gil-jah
God the FatherAhn Sahng-hong
RegionWorldwide
Headquarters"WMC Building" (37°22′49″N 127°07′03″E / 37.3804°N 127.1175°E / 37.3804; 127.1175)[2] in Sunae, Bundang, 25 km southeast of Seoul center, Korea
FounderAhn Sahng-hong
OriginApril 28, 1964; 59 years ago (1964-04-28)
South Korea
Separated from"Church of God" on June 2, 1985[3]
Congregationsmore than 7,500[4][5]
Members3,300,000[4][better source needed]
Other name(s)"Church of God", "Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong Church of God"
Official websitewatv.org
SloganWe Love You[6]
Main church is the 2014 acquired "New Jerusalem Pangyo Temple" (37°23′02″N 127°06′31″E / 37.3839°N 127.1087°E / 37.3839; 127.1087),[2] also in Bundang, 25 km southeast of Seoul center

The World Mission Society Church of God is a new religious movement originated in South Korea in 1964.[7] The church believes that its founder Ahn Sahng-hong was the Second Coming of Jesus, and that his widow, Zahng Gil-jah, is a physical manifestation of God.[8] Some ex-members and experts have called it a cult.[9] Its headquarters as well as its main church are located Sungnam City, Kyunggi Province, near Seoul.[7]

History[edit]

Ahn Sahng-hong founded the Church of God in South Korea on 28 April 1964.[10][4] After Ahn Sahng-hong died in February 1985, a group of people in the Church of God Jesus Witnesses including the man Kim Joo-cheol and the woman Zahng Gil-jah wanted to re-introduce the concept of a "spiritual mother", and on 22 March 1985 moved from Busan to Seoul.[11][12][13] On a meeting in Seoul on 2 June 1985, they discussed how to call Zahng Gil-jah, and established a church called Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong Church of God which is led by Kim Joo-cheol and Zahng Gil-jah.[3][14] Two major new doctrines were codified:[8][15]

A change in religious practice, as reflected in the change of name from "Jesus Witnesses" to "Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong", was, that prayers were no longer conducted in the name of Jesus Christ but in the name of Christ Ahn Sahng-hong.[11]

Around 1997, Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong Church of God established a non-profit organization titled the World Mission Society Church of God for the purpose of registering and managing the organization's assets.[18][19]

Beliefs and practices[edit]

Idolatry[edit]

The Church replaced the stained glass windows of this Washington D.C. church with clear glass.[1]

According to the church's interpretation of Exodus 20:4, items such as crosses and statues are considered a form of idolatry and are not erected on or in their churches.[20] The Church also removes all stained glass windows from churches it uses, claiming that images made of light, like those cast from stained glass windows, are rooted in sun worship.[1]

Evangelism[edit]

Members travel from house to house, in shopping malls, and in college campuses to proselytize for the church.[9] Critics note that the group's recruiting efforts can be very aggressive, and target vulnerable people, especially those going through a major life transition or with a void in their lives. Some have alleged that the group targets those with greater access to money. College students and returning veterans have been particularly targeted.[21][22][23]

Some aggressive WMSCOG recruiters have created concern on college campuses, where young women seem to be their primary target, proselytized emphatically with the church's "Mother God" doctrine. Some of these recruiters have been banned from some college campuses in the U.S. for "trespassing" or proselytizing without permission.[24][25][26][27]

Criticism and controversy[edit]

The World Mission Society Church of God is one of many controversial grassroots religious movements that have rapidly emerged in South Korea during the latter half of the 20th century.[28] Other groups include the Good News Mission (also known as Guwonpa) and the Shincheonji Church.[28] These groups have been criticized for their recruitment strategies where women, university students, and ethnic minorities are targeted.[28]

The group has been publicly criticized, by some former members and cult researchers, as acting like a cult, exercising unusual control over its members, separating them from family and friends, and exploiting them excessively, while violating laws and avoiding transparency and accountability.[21][22][29][30]

1988 failed doomsday prophecy[edit]

Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong Church of God announced that "1988 is the end of the world" citing Matthew 24:32–34, as Ahn had done in his 1980 book The Mystery of God and the Spring of the Water of Life.[31][32][33][full citation needed] A few thousand members of Witnesses of Ahn Sahng-hong Church of God gathered on a mountain in Sojeong-myeon, Yeongi County, South Chungcheong Province awaiting the coming of Christ Ahn Sahng-hong, preparing for the rapture and the salvation of 144,000 souls. When Ahn failed to appear and nothing happened the church updated their apocalyptic forecast and scheduled it for the opening of the 1988 Olympics in Seoul later that year where the members gathered and preached the end of the world would come by the end of 1988 and that Ahn Sahng Hong would come again. The WMSCOG later claimed it was a fulfillment of the preaching of Jonah.[11][12]: 77 [13][18][34]: 342 [35]: 494 [36]

At least two former members in South Korea accused Zahng Gil-jah and Kim Joo-cheol who declared 1988, 1999 and 2012 as the end of the world in order to defraud members for more wealth.[37]

Change in Ahn Sahng-hong's book[edit]

The Mystery of God and the Spring of the Water of Life (1980) has 38 chapters in total. The WMSCOG removed three chapters from "The Mystery of God and the Spring of the Water of Life", namely Chapter 1: Restoration of Jerusalem and the Prophecy of 40 Years, Chapter 11: Let Us Reveal the Truth from the History Books About the Church, and Chapter 36: Elijah Will Be Sent.[38][39]

The "New Covenant Passover Church of God" (NCPCOG) which is the group that has split with the WMSCOG,[40] claimed that the WMSCOG had changed the first edition dates of "The Mystery of God and the Spring of the Water of Life",[39][41] "The Last Plagues and the Seal of God" and "Visitors from the Angelic World" to 1967 once upon a time.[42][unreliable source?][43][unreliable source?] The NCPCOG also refuted the claim by the WMSCOG that Ahn Sahng-hong had the book "The Law of Moses and the Law of Christ",[44] and said that Ahn Sahng-hong has never published this book, but it seems to have been compiled with reference to Ahn Sahng-hong's book "The New Testament and the Old Testament".[45]

People magazine inquiry[edit]

In December 2015, People magazine published an interview with former member Michele Colon, who had attended the WMSCOG church in Ridgewood, New Jersey for two years, and later sued the organization. Colon, who was generally contradicted by the church but generally corroborated in interviews with six other former WMSCOG members, described the WMSCOG as a "doomsday cult" that is "opportunistic." She said they try to recruit people who are going through a life transition period, or have a void in their lives "and they will fill it." She said WMSCOG manipulated members with "fear and guilt," and constant repetitions. She reported that the church "micromanaged" her life, and expected that all her time be spent there, controlling her music-listening and forbidding her from using the internet.[21][22]

Colon said church leaders do not tell members, until they seem fully committed, that their "God the Mother" is actually a living South Korean woman in her 70s, known by multiple names and various spiritual titles, who is apparently the widow of the deceased founder, Ahn Sahng-hong.[21][22]

At least one former member has sued them for urging her to have an abortion, and others have accused the church of discouraging pregnancy in anticipation that the world would end in 2012.[21][22]

Lawsuits[edit]

Court document on a lawsuit filed by a former member.

Michele Colon, a nurse from New Jersey, claimed, in a civil suit filed against WMSCOG in New Jersey, in 2013, that the group is a "profit-making" cult, and claimed it "uses a number of psychological control tactics … to prevent its members from exposing its criminal and tortious behaviour."[21][46]

However, Colon's lawsuit was almost entirely rejected by the district and appellate state courts. Colon's claims, the court ruled, depended upon her claim that the WMSCOG is a "cult", not a "church" — a determination that the courts ruled they were not allowed to make, by law. The courts, largely citing the "religious freedom" element of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, particularly the judicial church autonomy doctrine (forbidding courts to inquire into "the facts and circumstances which intrude into church doctrine, affairs, and management"), the appellate court ruled that:[47]

Each claim springs from Colón's contention that WMSCOG is a cult, not a church, and that she was essentially defrauded by this cult. The conflict arises from her disagreement about the manner in which the church implemented its doctrinal beliefs, managed its clergy and parishioners, and invested donations. Therefore Colón's complaint necessarily required the court to examine the interior workings and structure of the church, a constitutionally unacceptable process.

Paralyzing the telephone of Wonju municipal government[edit]

The WMSCOG originally planned to purchase an LH office building in the city of Wonju in Gangwon, Korea planning to make it a religious place. Upon learning of this, the local residents formed the "Church of God residents emergency response committee" to oppose the church's actions. After that, the Wonju municipal government refused to allow the building to be used as a religious institution.[48] As a result, from May 30 to June 1, 2016, the Wonju municipal government received more than 30,000 calls which CBS claimed to be from members of the WMSCOG, which led to interference in the work of the municipal government.[49] Following this, the Wonju municipal government issued a press release on June 2 stating: "This will be a phone paralysis operation of a religious organization."[50] Finally, two administrative proceedings were initiated by the WMSCOG, but all the appeals were rejected. "The reason why the administrative court refused the WMSCOG's request is because of traffic congestion and residents' complaints," said Wonju municipal government official. Church of God residents emergency response committee said: "It is normal for the plaintiff to be rejected. We will never stop unless the true face of the WMSCOG is revealed."[51][52]

Rick Ross critique[edit]

Rick Alan Ross, cult researcher and deprogrammer[23][30] describes the WMSCOG as "a very intense group... similar to the Unification Church [of] Sun Myung Moon — the Moonies", comparing WMSCOG indoctrination methods to those of the Unification Church.[23]

Ross claims that the WMSCOG has driven members into bankruptcies due to excessive donations, and claims that some have lost their jobs to excessive demands by the group and associated sleep deprivation. Ross says that members often are sent to group housing and shared apartments, becoming isolated and alienated from family and friends, even spouses and adult children. Ross notes the group, which recruits members on university campuses, at malls and other shopping sites, has no meaningful accountability for leadership — a "dictatorship in Korea" — nor for the millions in revenue it receives.[23]

Vietnam[edit]

In Vietnam, the Committee for Religious Affairs urged vigilance about the group and cautioned that it should not be equated with other Protestant groups using similar names. Claiming the organization as cult-like, the government cited the group as engaging in deceptive recruitment, with questionable and manipulative indoctrination, doomsday predictions, and urging the donation of cash and members' abandonment of their own families.[53]

In May 2018, Vietnamese authorities seized the Church's assets in Hanoi, Saigon and other provinces, and interrogated hundreds of its members. The Church leaders were accused of brainwashing its members and micromanaging their lives by urging students to abandon their studies and their workers to abandon their jobs in order to recruit more followers.[54]

Recruitment and human trafficking rumours[edit]

WMSCOG has been investigated for — and subsequently cleared of — human trafficking on multiple American university campuses. Police investigations into possible human sex trafficking connections ensued in January 2018 at the University of Mississippi,[55] in September 2019 at the University of South Carolina,[56] and in March 2020 at the University of Utah.[57] Similar reports also occurred at the University of Louisville, Vanderbilt University, the University of Georgia,[55] Oberlin College,[58] Texas State University,[59] and Arizona State University,[60] among others. All investigations were closed after failing to find a link between the church and illicit activity.

Many students, across multiple campuses, reported unknown persons asking if they knew about "God the Mother."[55][56][57] Recruiters have been known to approach female students and ask if they believe in a female god, which often will lead to invitations to study groups.[57] Recruiters will also approach students and ask if they would like to join a Bible study group.[57]

This style of recruitment has come under fire from former church members, who have said that the church tends to target those who appear "psychologically vulnerable" and specifically young white people who appear wealthy.[21]

New Zealand[edit]

In August 2017, the Otago University Students' Association in Dunedin disaffiliated from the Elohim World Academy following complaints from students about deceptive and coercive recruitment methods. The University of Otago's Proctor Dave Scott had considered trespassing members of the group but ruled it out since that would have violated the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990's provisions on religious freedom and freedom of expression.[61][62] In 2020, the University of Auckland student magazine Craccum reported that members of the Elohim Academy had targeted students at the University of Auckland and the University of Waikato in Hamilton.[63][64]

In September 2021, Craccum reported that the Elohim Academy was also conducting door-knocking evangelism campaigns in Wellington and Auckland, with an emphasis on recruiting young women. Members were expected to follow strict rules separating themselves from social media and non-church friends, attend masses and recruitment sessions, tithing ten percent of their income, avoid wearing jeans, reject music and masturbation, and lose weight to fit Korean beauty standards. Former members alleged that members including minors were shamed for not meeting the church's rules and standards and that members were ranked based on their recruitment rates. Church members were also reportedly shown graphic videos of Hell. In addition, pastors also arranged marriages between congregants.[65]

Other churches[edit]

The deification of Ahn Sahng-hong and Zahng Gil-jah has been "harshly criticized,"[19] and has led to the church being officially condemned by the National Council of Churches in Korea as an interdenominationally combatted, blasphemous, heretical cult.[66][67] The Christian Council of Korea, which represents Protestant churches in South Korea, has denounced the WMSCOG as "heretical."[7][25]

Size in 2013[edit]

A media outlet owned by the Church of God reports to have more than 7,500 churches, and 3.3 million registered members in the world's 175 countries.[4]

An external account mentions that the number of church members is estimated to have only been around 100,000 in 2013, contrary to Kim Joo-cheol's claims.[8]

Awards[edit]

UK ZION, a World Mission Society Church of God chapter, was awarded The Queen's Award for Voluntary Service in 2016.[68][69][70][71]

References[edit]

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External links[edit]