Related
Translate
Get RNB via RSS
|
|
RNB's RSS feed What is this? |
Get RNB via Email
![]() |
![]() Subscribe by Email What is this? |
Follow: Twitter
Most Popular
This Week:
- Guyana’s Jonestown suicide site gets plaque
- Gaddafi preaches Islam to Rome beauties
- Scientology practices ‘putting people at risk’
- Recession: Muslim schools in UK under threat of closure
- Muslim terrorist: Psychiatrist’s lap-dancing outings before massacre
- Australian senator tells Parliament of widespread criminal conduct within the Church of Scientology
- When a child dies, faith is no defense
- Muslim terrorists smuggle fatwas promoting Jihad out of secure UK prisons
- Techie Holy water and geeky bishops
- Israel Charges Extremist With Attempted Murder Of Messianic Family
The Fellowship: Cult’s teachings deemed heretical
Cult’s teachings deemed heretical
The Presbyterian Church of Australia has declared heretical six principal teachings of a cult inside a Melbourne Presbyterian church, and ordered that the church’s findings against the cult be read at every Presbyterian congregation in Australia.
The declaration, to be released today, vindicates the church in its decade-long battle to expel the cult, headed by stockbroker Bruce Teele, that dominates Trinity Presbyterian Church, Camberwell.
In 2006, the Victorian assembly excommunicated all the elders, but last year a special commission of the Australian Assembly Commission reinstated them on appeal and set up its own investigation.
Yesterday’s ruling says the six teachings are contrary to the Bible, the Westminster Confession (the Presbyterian statement of faith) and the belief of the Presbyterian Church of Australia.
The six teachings the commission rejected are accepting “feelings” as revelation from God equal to the Bible, that contact with non-Fellowship members leads to defilement, that the Fellowship claims higher loyalty than members’ families, that Christians can be controlled by “generational curses” or evil spirits, and that God’s forgiveness depends on confessing to other people or on personal holiness.
The commission instructs that these beliefs must not be taught in any congregation or by any Presbyterian office bearer, and its declaration must be read in every Presbyterian Church of Australia congregation by October 31.
The clerk of the General Assembly of Australia, Dr Paul Logan, said: “If those heretical beliefs continue to be taught, then people can take disciplinary action through the courts of the church.”
Victorian moderator Douglas Robertson said the findings vindicated the Fellowship’s victims and the Victorian church, but did not provide closure. “It gives us a clarified benchmark against which to hold the elders at Trinity accountable, but it doesn’t say the Trinity session is culpable. There’s still the suspicion that these people are continuing this teaching secretly, but there is no church procedure for taking action against the elders of Trinity as a group, only individuals,” he said.
The Fellowship has a reputation for instructing members to shun family who do not belong — a practice that the Fellowship has said no longer occurs. Its leaders have “suggested” whom members should marry, where they should work, how they should raise their children and whom they should avoid.
What You Can Do From Here
|
Read More Articles On These Topics
Share, Blog About, Bookmark, or Email This Article
Subscribe
Read Another Article
Find Related Information
Find Related Books
|
Share This Article
To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:





