‘We are sorry’: Hillsong apologises for Brian Houston conduct breach

Discussion in 'Religion and Spirituality' started by themickey, Mar 20, 2022.

  1. M.W.

    M.W.

    It's not just christian organizations which are tax exempt. All charitable organizations whether religious or not that prove they are indeed charitable are tax exempt. And that for good reasons. You got this completely wrong.

    Furthermore I am not a believer in man made religion, I believe scripture and in my creator God. Humans are fallable and imperfect. Sad those failures are always used against Christians overall when people like you give a lot others a free pass. You don't seem to equally scream when books that instruct how to give blowjobs to gay men are read to elementary or middle school children. Those failures by individuals and organizations conveniently get a pass unless they are Christian affiliated.

    If you stood up against wrongdoing by anyone and everyone equally then I would join you without hesitation. But you seem to have it especially out for Christians.

     
    #181     Mar 9, 2023
  2. M.W.

    M.W.

    By the way what happened to our friend @stu, did he get banned or had a name change request, can't find him in the user directory.
     
    #182     Mar 9, 2023
  3. themickey

    themickey

    Yes because the underlying message of Jesus saving you is a scam.
    The message that humans for the most part are off to eternal hell is a scam.
     
    #183     Mar 9, 2023
  4. M.W.

    M.W.

    And what lends you any credibility? How does your life look like that we should espire to your mere opinions and feelings about something?

     
    #184     Mar 9, 2023
  5. themickey

    themickey

    Ask yourself the same question about your religous beliefs.
    I know already the answer: "The bible says so, my elders guided me, I was young and stupid when taught, I believe everything told me, I lack a brain to think for myself, we're all fucked but Jesus will save me".

    There is good and bad, there's God and there's the devil, everything is black and white.
    Not! There is no black and white.
     
    #185     Mar 9, 2023
  6. M.W.

    M.W.

    Why not just believe what you want to believe but not attack and denigrate others for their beliefs. I mean, you can say whatever you want, but debating religion usually goes nowhere. I equally don't try to convince you of my belief. Live and let live


     
    #186     Mar 9, 2023
  7. themickey

    themickey

    Yeah right, so corrupt do gooders can keep on keeping on and sheeple can continue being sheeple, yep I understand.
     
    #187     Mar 9, 2023
  8. M.W.

    M.W.

    Exactly, you got it.

     
    #188     Mar 10, 2023
  9. themickey

    themickey

    Religion
    Opinion
    The Hillsong experiment is over. Christianity was never meant to be cool

    Cherie Gilmour Freelance writer May 30, 2023

    There is a version of the Bible called The Message by Eugene Peterson. It translates ye olde King James verses like “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest” into “Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me, and you’ll recover your life.” Growing up Christian, I loved this modern adaptation because it revived words I knew so well and made them fresh.

    Hillsong is a church famous for its contemporary take on Christianity – for turning a 2000-year-old religion into something relevant to hipsters in skinny-leg jeans who tell you that God is “so into you”.

    [​IMG]
    Carl Lentz tarnished the Hillsong brand following a series of sexual indiscretions.Credit: AP

    On May 19, four-part documentary The Secrets of Hillsong premiered on Hulu, featuring fallen Hillsong pastor Carl Lentz. It expands on Vanity Fair’s 2021 investigative article, which did a deep-dive into Lentz’s abrupt firing from Hillsong following his extramarital affairs and the depth of dysfunction within the church including Brian Houston’s alleged cover-up of his father’s paedophilia, which returns to court in June and which Houston denies. Australian dates for The Secrets of Hillsong have not yet been released.

    When I was a teenager, I joined Christian City Church or C3, and eventually joined the arts and theology school that was attached to it. C3 was on par with Hillsong, or so we liked to think. I fell headfirst; it was exciting and shiny, and everyone was so cool. Jesus was cool! The concert-bright lights were worlds away from those old, stuffy Anglican or Catholic churches.

    There were celebrities, at least within Christian circles. We knew all the names of the televangelists with their gold watches. Darlene Zschech, the worship pastor of Hillsong, once came into the coffee shop where I worked. It was like Mariah Carey had just walked in – except that I was the only one who knew who she was. We were young, affluent and #blessed. Every girl (and maybe a few guys) wanted to marry Joel Houston, the son of Hillsong founder Brian Houston.



    In 2008, one morning during class at C3, we were called out for a special meeting. Mike Guglielmucci, the worship pastor for a similar pentecostal church called Planetshakers, had just revealed that his recent cancer diagnosis – about which he wrote the song Healer – was, in fact, fake.

    These spectacular falls from grace from people in prominent positions seemed to be happening with alarming regularity. Was it reflective of human nature, or was it indicative of a larger culture that promoted image over integrity?

    Journalist Katelyn Beaty writes about how the cult of celebrity has gradually warped well-meaning evangelical preachers. In her book Christians for Jesus, she talks of how Billy Graham, the iconic evangelist famous for his crusades,was one of the first preachers to latch on to radio and television to “spread the word”. “Even as he resisted celebrity, his approach to ministry helped fuel the dynamics of celebrity that now pervade evangelicalism,” she writes.


    Cut to 2010, when pastors like Hillsong’s Carl Lentz jumped on Instagram to promote their ministries to hundreds of thousands of followers. There he is posing with his mate Justin Bieber, sprinkling in Bible verses and “shout-outs” to his wife (who he later cheated on). He was a man on a mission, in designer shoes. The line became blurred about exactly what he was promoting – was it Hillsong’s ministry or himself?

    Hillsong has done many good things in the world, among them a long-term partnership with World Vision to provide international aid, although that story isn’t being told in the current media frenzy about Brian Houston’s moral failings. But many of us are no longer swayed by charismatic preachers in skinny jeans or inspired by their lifestyles drenched in material excess and pseudo-celebrity. “Reaching as many people as possible” does not justify churning people through a church that due to its size and world-conquering mission acts like a corporate machine, richly rewarding those at the top while the underlings do the unpaid volunteer work.

    I used to do this thought experiment: I’d imagine that Hillsong had secured Jesus as their guest speaker for an upcoming conference. The buzz would be off the charts, with slickly produced ads every week during church services for the upcoming event, a full security detail, and a green room packed with good food and people lucky enough to mingle with the special guests. In this scenario Hillsong would be living its belief of “honouring” leaders, a stance that helps it account for inordinate spending on lavish things such as first-class flights from Jerusalem.

    I think Jesus would look at the hype and say, “No thanks.” He’d head to the streets and hang out with the lonely and unloved. He’d go to soup kitchens and women’s shelters and catch up with the embattled LGBTIQ community. Jesus was deeply counter-cultural when it came to power and literally cracked the whip at religious leaders who thought they were God’s gift to mankind. “If you puff yourself up, you’ll get the wind knocked out of you,” The Message translation of the Bible says.

    Perhaps now that Hillsong has been cast out of the Garden of Eden, the hundreds and thousands of people who are and have been members can find their way forward. The future of the church will depend on its next move. But for all saints and sinners alike who need grace, it’s worth remembering there was only one man who said, “Follow me”. And he wasn’t on Instagram.

    Cherie Gilmour is a freelance writer.
     
    #189     May 31, 2023
  10. themickey

    themickey

    The reason Churches with their cultist leaders fail so frequently, why there is so much hypocrisy with christians, is because of the root of christianity's message.

    The living Jesus is just pure bullshit!
    There is no living Jesus, its pure myth, fantasy, made up nonsense by religous cultists.
    There may have been Jesus 2000 years ago, but when he died, he died just like every one else does on the planet.

    Christians attempt to live a life which is unrealistic, unattainable, pure and simple.

    As for prayer and laying on of hands etc, you may as well practice magic, same thing, mumbo jumbo bs.

    Is there a God? There might be, but it aint Jesus and it aint Christianity.

    Is there demons and Satan? Dunno, there is evil, but it may just be the opposite side of God, yin and yang, things are created, things are destroyed.
     
    Last edited: May 31, 2023
    #190     May 31, 2023
    Darc likes this.