Hi folks,
With permission from a good friend and fellow researcher, I want to share the following article with you regarding a tactic my friend and others have come to call "sheep stealing", and would like to get your comments.
Art
Sheep Stealing: How the Cults Infiltrate Christian Churches
By Kurt Van Gorden
Jesus set forth the imperatives for pastoral care by telling
Peter, "Tend My lambs," "Feed My sheep," and "Tend My
sheep" (John 21:15-17). In 33 years as a missionary, I have
encountered cult representatives who view the Christian
Church as their special place to proselytize for new converts.
Among these I have found the Unification Church, The Way
International, and a smattering of others, but few groups can
match the Mormons in entering Christian churches for
proselytizing purposes. When I became a minister, a wise
pastor once told me, "Notice that the cults are never the first
on any mission field. They wait for Christian missionaries to
spend their resources and then they follow us and steal our
sheep." That observation has proven true over and over.
At one time, the Unification Church, founded by Sun
Myung Moon, encouraged their members to join Christian
Churches incognito to gain new converts. Sitting in the back
of the church and making friends was the first step. Once this
recruiting method was initiated, they worked themselves into
voluntary positions and occasionally they became Sunday
school teachers. This I witnessed and wrote about in the late
1970s through the mid-1980s, to help pastors prevent a
potential problem. Although these members (called Moonies
or Unificationists) actively pursued Christians for Moon’s
new gospel, they were not actually missionaries. They were
rank and file members doing their duty for their leadership.
Another group I encountered was The Way International,
which tried this approach among young Church people in
Orange County, California. Their missionaries, the WOW
(Word Over the World) ambassadors, began showing up at
Christian concerts to invite concertgoers to their Twig Bible
studies. The church asked me to help them identify this
group and stop them from preying upon their youth. Part of a
shepherd’s work is to "guard what has been committed to
your trust" (2 Timothy 6:20), which in this case was to guard
the unaware youth from false doctrine and spiritual predators.
The Mormons have a history of aggressively infiltrating
Christian churches to convert Christians. When I was on a
Christian mission in Copenhagen, Denmark, I found that the
Danish Mormon church began in 1850 through this same
method. Mormon missionaries began attending a Baptist
Church without identifying themselves or their purpose. Yet
one member of the mission group was a Mormon Apostle
from Salt Lake City, Utah, Erastus Snow, who completely hid
his Mormon rank and affiliation from the Baptist pastor.
Snow had been commissioned at a Mormon Church
conference six months earlier to begin a Scandinavian
mission. The unsuspecting Baptist congregation became their
target. The Mormons sat in the back of the Baptist Church
and quietly befriended the members. Once they gained their
confidence, they gradually introduced Mormonism into their
discussions. Within three months of arriving, they swept all
but a handful of members into Mormonism, thus organizing
the first Danish Mormon church.
This is sheep stealing through dividing and conquering.
In response to this, a Danish Lutheran bishop, Reverend Peter
Kierkegaard (the brother of the famed philosopher Søren
Kierkegaard), published the first Scandinavian pamphlet to
warn other Christian Churches about the errors of
Mormonism (About and Against Mormonism, 1855).
Proselytizing happens to large and small churches.
Seldom do we get an insider’s glimpse of this like what I
have seen in letters from active Mormons.
A Mormon from Pomona, California, wrote to me boasting about baptizing
several Baptists and Calvary Chapel members into the
Mormon Church. He wrote this because he knew that I
taught at Calvary Chapel, Evangelical, and Baptist Churches.
Quite sadly, I found out that what he wrote was true. He
covertly entered Calvary Chapels and Baptist Churches to
befriend members and convert them.
One time I saw this same man sitting toward the back of
a large Calvary Chapel where I was preaching. I took that
opportunity to publicly warn the congregation that he was
roaming among them in search of his next convert.
Mormonism was my subject that day, so I quoted his letter
from the pulpit as one who targets Calvary Chapels. The
Bible urges us to "note those who cause divisions and
offenses, contrary to the doctrine which you learned, and
avoid them" (Romans 1:16). This we must do.
Jesus had little regard for sheep stealers. He called them
wolves in sheep’s clothing and hirelings, who pretend to be
real Christians when they are nothing of the sort (Matthew
7:15; John 12:10; Acts 20:29). We should view them through
Christ’s eyes and see their true nature. A wolf can be nothing
other than a wolf by nature and sheep are sheep. A wolf does
not become a lamb by wearing sheep’s clothing. His motive
and purpose does not change with a change of clothing.
In another example, a Mormon missionary admitted by
letter that he was recruiting for the Mormon church at a
Christian single’s group. When the pastor confronted him, he
outright lied to the pastor until the pastor showed him his own
letter. Caught in embarrassment, he then apologized, only to
turn around and repeat the same thing at a later time in the
same church! This is aggressive sheep stealing.
Dr. Steve Johnson, a pastor in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
wrote about this on a blog:
A number of years back our Singles Sunday School class had a visit from a
Mormon, who did not identify himself as such. He attended a class
taught by one of our singles.
After the class, the Mormon wrote a letter to the class teacher, seeking to
recruit him to Mormonism. The class teacher passed the letter on to me. Later, I
arranged a meeting with this Mormon. I asked him if he had been proselytizing
members of our church. He said, ‘Absolutely not.’ At that time I took his letter out
of my pocket and said, ‘Would you like me to read you your recent letter to the class teacher?’
He turned beet red and apologized.
I told him that he was welcome to propagate his views off our property and
outside our meetings, but if he thought we'd allow him to come to our meetings to
recruit people to Mormonism, he was sadly mistaken. He apologized. Three years
later the same guy attended a Bible Study sponsored by our class and tried to do a
similar thing.
The Mormon’s letter to the single’s teacher at Dr.
Johnson’s church, is quoted and reproduced below. It serves
as an example for how this operation works inside a Christian
congregation. It states:
Dear Xxxx,
I enjoyed your lesson last Sunday. You are an excellent teacher. That is a
great gift. I am a missionary for my Church—The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints (L.D.S. or Mormons) and so I wanted to share of the things which I have
learned to be true. There are many other things that I could send, but hopefully I
will be able to give them to you later. The book "Marvelous Work and a Wonder" is
an excellent book to explain about the Church. The second book also good
because prayer is important to knowing the thing which you read are true.
The men who wrote these essays on prayer are all apostles and prophets
which have been chosen for this dispensation by the Lord. But you don’t need to
take my word for it the Lord will tell you himself. As it says in the Book of Mormon,
Moroni 10:3 . . . [see text below] . . ..
So I would challenge you to pray for answers to these questions.
1. Has God restored his authority through the Holy Priesthood and
established a Prophet for us in this day? A prophet as surely as was Abraham,
Moses, and Isaiah.
2. Is the Book of Mormon the word of God as important to us in this day as
the Bible, both Old and New Testaments?
I know that these things are true as I have received personal revelation to
know this. I would like to make myself available to you for further explanation and
instruction. We have a set of discussions which take no less than 5 hours to
present. I feel that you might be uncomfortable about this because of your
experience with the group in Houston.
I am at your service in Jesus Christ’s name,
Sincerely.
Xxx Xxxxxxx
Running parallel with these infiltration programs, we
now see a new arena where Mormons are being openly
invited by Christian Churches under the guise of dialog.
I have attended these meetings (largely sponsored by the
Mormon-owned Brigham Young University), where Dr.
Robert Millet, of BYU, and Rev. Greg Johnson, of Utah, role-
play a rehearsed conversation designed to get Christians to
lay down their defenses.
What is the result? I have personally talked with Christians who have become baptized
members of the Mormon Church through these meetings.
Christian Churches, without knowing it, become hosts to
the sheep stealing by inviting Mormon speakers, like Dr.
Millet, to freely speak without refutation by Rev. Johnson.
Furthermore, the unique power of Christ’s gospel is left
undefended by Johnson. He quickly silences Christians if
they point out differences or defend historic Christianity.
This charade becomes sheep stealing with a welcome sign.
False teachers send their workers forth to steal sheep
from Christian churches and they often hide their motive and
purpose from Church leadership. This article serves to warn
pastors about wolves in sheep’s clothing who seek to convert
the weak and unaware Christians from their congregations.
Pastors are charged with the duty of feeding and tending the
sheep, which includes their protection and sound apologetics.
Utah Gospel Mission P.O. Box 780 Victorville, CA 92393
www.UtahGospelMission.org
Kurt Van Gorden is a contributing writer to several books on cults, world religions, and
the occult with Drs. Walter R. Martin, Ronald Enroth, Norman Geisler, Josh McDowell,
Ravi Zacharias, and Alan Gomes, in addition to writing Mormonism (Zondervan, 1995).
He directs two missions to the cults, Jude 3 Missions and the Utah Gospel Mission,
which was founded in 1898. www.UtahGospelMission.org missioneditor@homail.com
© 2009—Utah Gospel Mission. Permission is granted to reproduce without changing.
[The Mormon Church has also targeted Christian ministers as converts through a
"fellowshipping" program (c.f., Ensign, June 1976, 52). The story of fourteen ministers who I dealt with this at length in my chapter, "Mormonism," in Geisler and Mieister, Reasons for
converted to Mormonism is found in Gibson’s From Clergy to Convert (Bookcraft, 1983). Faith: Making a Case for the Christian Faith (Wheaton: Crossway Books, 2007).]
Friday, October 23, 2009
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Hi Art,
ReplyDeleteOf course, this sort of conduct will continue unless and until there is an effort to educate Christians about it. But as long as it remains the case, I think it can work both ways and produce an opportunity:
Example: If a Mormon would come to my church and take me aside, I'd smile and talk to him gladly, and I suspect you would as well. No problem. Why? Because we already know what they believe and what to say to them. If they want to talk, we just make sure it works both ways, and it turns into our opportunity to reach out to them in return. And that's a microcosm of the solution.
Kurt's article is really excellent. What if it became a mini-book that churches could put in their foyer? Then maybe a second mini-book would explain what the Mormons believe and how the church would answer them. This would be especially effective if it mirrored their 'discussions' with Christian responses.
If these two simple tools existed, I think Mormon missionaries who got inside the door would make it their priority to look for those mini-books in the foyer, and in seeing them, immediately leave (Sheep protected). Or if they encountered Christians somewhere else, like a singles group, those Christian would remember seeing the mini-books at their church and know they had to make it a priority to go get them in order to educate themselves (Sheep protected).
Since pastors can't always know what's happening in the life of every church member, there has to be some mechanism where the sheep themselves can trip the alarm. And when we come right down to it, is there any better defense than awareness and education?
I might be able to get a publisher I know interested in a project like this. What are your thoughts?
Loren
Hi Loren,
ReplyDeleteExcellent thoughts indeed. Knowledge is power, as is awareness. Just like many insects and animal pests will flee at night when light is shined on them, I believe that the same will happen with LDS and other types of sheep-stealers when/if a "light" exposes their activities.
It simply amazes me how bold some of these people have become. For instance, I have been told that in some areas, LDS missionaries will actually station themselves right outside a church on Sunday morning and wait for the parishioners to come out of Sunday morning service so that they can prosylytize them! This is unbelieveable, yet when Christians have attempted to do the same thing at Temple Square in Salt Lake City, they have been subjected to threats of jail and/or fines.
Getting back to your suggestion about a possible series to help churches combat sheep-stealing, how about a series of DVD's as well? The Ex-Mormon Foundation has a terrific DVD entitled "Line Upon Line", which tells the stories of some folks who left the LDS church and what that decision has cost them. It is indeed something that every Christian should see, to dispel the notion that Mormons are just slightly quirky versions of Christians and that there really aren't any serious differences between them. The DVD's can either be purchased from the Ex-Mormon Foundation website or from me, as I am a sort of distributor for them. They also have a new DVD, a documentary called "In the Shadow of the Temple", which is also very powerful, and may also be purchased from their website, I believe. In my opinion they are equally powerful in their own ways.
In any case, your ideas are very good and only good could come from them.
Keep them coming!
Art