Showing posts with label Providence and Jesus Morning Star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Providence and Jesus Morning Star. Show all posts

May 11, 2024

Tour of secret JMS compound in South Korea


7News Spotlight
May 5, 2024

This is an exclusive tour inside the JMS compound. Portions of the tour were shown in 'The Cult Next Door', 7NEWS Spotlight’s global investigation into a dangerous ‘religious’ group. They were two young Aussie women, enticed by faith and friendship, welcomed into a community made to feel safe and loved. But things quickly changed.

This week, in a 7NEWS Spotlight global investigation, for the first time the chilling true stories of the women who escaped a dangerous cult.

Branded as a religious movement, Providence has been operating in Australia since 1997, and is accused of recruiting young women in local shopping centres and universities then brainwashing them to travel to South Korea to become spiritual brides of a criminal.

Spotlight has uncovered allegations of serious crimes and brainwashing by the outfit which is registered as a charitable organisation in Australia.

7NEWS Europe correspondent Sarah Greenhalgh this week joins the 7NEWS Spotlight team and, in a world first, travels deep inside the secretive cult compound in South Korea to confront the leaders.

“We’ve been investigating this cult for six months and it has led us across Australia, to the US and South Korea,” said Sarah. “When we started, we knew there were serious allegations of coercive control and various forms of abuse, but we had no idea just how sinister this organisation is. What we’ve uncovered now involves the Australian Federal Police.

“Providence was founded in 1978 by self-professed ‘messiah’ Jeong Meong-Seok (JMS). The group claims to be a Christian religious movement with more than 40,000 Korean members and a presence in more than 70 countries including Australia. The ‘churches’ we’ve visited in Melbourne and Sydney are just like those in South Korea – there’s no signage, no lists of services, certainly no standard, ‘open door’ church policy. Instead, the faithful meet behind frosted glass, using secret pin codes for access.

“Providence is a cult. And the impact it has had on so many young women’s lives is enormous.”

Tour of secret JMS compound in South Korea | Exclusive

https://youtu.be/HaKjCE5JCWQ?si=k0bUe3Mzxy_zxyNN


Mar 3, 2023

Cult Expose: Netflix Defeats Injunction, Airs 'In the Name of God: A Holy Betrayal' Documentary on Korean Religious Leaders

Patrick Frater
Variety
March 3, 2023

Netflix and Korean public broadcaster MBC on Thursday defeated a court application for an injunction to stop the airing of their documentary “In The Name of God: A Holy Betrayal.”

The 8-part series began airing from Friday (March 3). It is a Netflix Original, meaning that the streamer has global rights, including in Korea.

The show examines “the chilling true stories of four Korean leaders claiming to be prophets [and] exposes the dark side of unquestioning belief.”

Among its subjects is Christian Gospel Mission, also known as Providence, and also known as Jesus Morning Star, or JMS. It shares those initials with its controversial leader Jeong Myeong-seok (aka Jung Myung-seok) who is currently awaiting trial in Korea for sexually assaulting some of his female followers.

JMS sought an injunction to stop the docuseries from airing, claiming that the show is fictional, that it violates the principle of presumption of innocence and that it undermines religious freedom. However, the Seoul Western District Court said on Thursday that MBC and Netflix appeared to have made the program based on a “considerable amount” of objective and subjective materials.

The first episode pulls no punches. It starts with an audio track of a post-coital conversation in which the man compliments the woman on her wide hips and asks about her orgasm, before going on to boast of his own. It is not immediately clear whether this was a recording made at the time or is the re-enactment of actual events. It gains impact by being intercut with a to-camera interview with former JMS member Maple, who gives her full Korean name and describes her alleged sexual encounters with Jeong. “What he did was so perverted. If he actually loved me, he wouldn’t have done that,” Maple says. “I kept calling out to the Lord as I was being victimized.”

The narrative then cuts to footage of Jeong complete with pointer and tableau explaining the Biblical Adam and Eve story in overtly sexual terms. It is followed by footage of a messianic Jeong saying: “You say you can’t see God. Well, just look at me. Here’s God” and a clip of five naked women calling their “Lord” to join them in the bathtub.

“It is hard to judge that a major part of the program involving JMS is not true, simply based on the materials submitted by the group,” the court said, in reports from the Yonhap news agency.

Jeong previously served ten years in prison for raping three Korean female followers while on overseas trips between 2003 and 2006. He fled Korea when the rape charges were filed, but was deported from China to Korea in 2008. He was jailed in Korea that year and released in 2018, but was required to wear an electronic ankle bracelet.

His current charges include the “quasi-rape” of a woman from Hong Kong and another from Australia. Korea defines “quasi-rape” as sexual intercourse that takes advantage of a person’s unconsciousness or inability to resist. Upon conviction, a prison sentence of at least three years is mandatory.

The alleged rapes are said to have happened between 2018 and 2021 at JMS’s Wolmyeongdong Sanctuary in Geumsan.

JMS has denied the charges and threatened libel action against media which reported unverified facts.

Hong Kong media have quoted activist and anti-JMS campaigner Kim Do-hyeong as saying that the organization has recruited followers in Korea, Japan and Taiwan, and that other women are preparing sexual assault suits against Jeong.

https://variety.com/2023/tv/news/korea-religious-cult-netflix-in-the-name-of-god-a-holy-betrayal-documentary-1235541909/

Mar 30, 2022

Mysterious secret hidden behind ordinary door in Sydney’s CBD

It looks like an ordinary door, tucked off one of Sydney’s busiest CBD streets – but what lies behind it is causing controversy.

Alex Turner-Cohen
News Australia
March 30, 2022

A South Korean religious group that was founded by a convicted rapist has opened up a church in the heart of Sydney.

News.com.au can reveal that the sect forked out $1.54 million to buy a commercial property in the city centre.

Property records show that in August last year, The Lord’s Hope Church Incorporated settled on an office suite at 4/173-179 Broadway, in Ultimo.

News.com.au understands renovations finished earlier this year and the “temple” is now open for business.

It’s a stone’s throw away from several major universities, including Sydney University and the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). A former member told news.com.au the religious group has already started dance classes and student societies at both universities.

A church spokesperson confirmed the purchase and renovation of the property, but has denied its purpose is to recruit young members from nearby university campuses.

The Lord’s Hope Church Sydney is a faction of Providence, a South Korean religious fringe sect also known as Jesus Morning Star, Christian Gospel Mission, The Bright Moon Church, the Global Association of Culture and Peace and Setsuri.

A now 77-year-old Korean man, Jeong Myeong-seok, founded Providence in 1978, proclaiming that he was Jesus’ second coming. Since then, the religious group has spread to more than 50 nations, with 200,000 members and 400 churches worldwide.

Jeong was sentenced to 10 years in prison for sexually assaulting several female followers. He left jail in 2018.

Earlier this month, on March 16, two more women came forward calling for local authorities to reopen investigations, including one Australian who alleges the religious leader indecently assaulted her during visits to South Korea. The other woman, from Hong Kong, claimed Jeong had raped her dozens of times since his release.

The church is along Broadway, a bustling Sydney street, opposite an Anglican church, St Barnabas Broadway.

A former Australian Providence member Samantha*, who is in her early 20s, told news.com.au that the new Sydney church was largely funded through member contributions.

The uni student gave about $10,000 to the church during her stint in the sect. She has only recently managed to cut ties with the group.

Members were expected to donate a minimum of 10 per cent of their pay packet to the church as a tithe, she says.

According to her, donations were tracked in an Excel spreadsheet where the church’s finance department could ensure members paid their dues.

A church spokesperson denied that financial contributions were compulsory.

“Tithing is not compulsory and it is rarely spoken of in our sermons or teachings,” they said. “Members are free to give offerings as they please.

News.com.au understands this is Providence’s first property in NSW but they also bought another building five years ago in Melbourne, at 7 Rakaia Way, Docklands.

A spokesperson said of the Sydney purchase: “We purchased this property because many members of our church wanted to have a permanent place that belongs to the church, to use as a home for their faith.

“It is a place for families, children, and members of all ages could [sic] gather and share their faith as a community. Also, subject to council approval, the place would be used as a place of worship. So the church congregation agreed to purchase a property for these reasons.”

Samantha’s nightmare at the sect began when she was recruited to attend a one-on-one bible study group.

From there, she says she was sucked into the world of Providence

EXCLUSIVE

A South Korean religious group that was founded by a convicted rapist has opened up a church in the heart of Sydney.

News.com.au can reveal that the sect forked out $1.54 million to buy a commercial property in the city centre.

Property records show that in August last year, The Lord’s Hope Church Incorporated settled on an office suite at 4/173-179 Broadway, in Ultimo.

News.com.au understands renovations finished earlier this year and the “temple” is now open for business.

It’s a stone’s throw away from several major universities, including Sydney University and the University of Technology Sydney (UTS). A former member told news.com.au the religious group has already started dance classes and student societies at both universities.

A church spokesperson confirmed the purchase and renovation of the property, but has denied its purpose is to recruit young members from nearby university campuses.

The Lord’s Hope Church Sydney is a faction of Providence, a South Korean religious fringe sect also known as Jesus Morning Star, Christian Gospel Mission, The Bright Moon Church, the Global Association of Culture and Peace and Setsuri.

A now 77-year-old Korean man, Jeong Myeong-seok, founded Providence in 1978, proclaiming that he was Jesus’ second coming. Since then, the religious group has spread to more than 50 nations, with 200,000 members and 400 churches worldwide.

Jeong was sentenced to 10 years in prison for sexually assaulting several female followers. He left jail in 2018.

Earlier this month, on March 16, two more women came forward calling for local authorities to reopen investigations, including one Australian who alleges the religious leader indecently assaulted her during visits to South Korea. The other woman, from Hong Kong, claimed Jeong had raped her dozens of times since his release.

A former Australian Providence member Samantha*, who is in her early 20s, told news.com.au that the new Sydney church was largely funded through member contributions.

The uni student gave about $10,000 to the church during her stint in the sect. She has only recently managed to cut ties with the group.

Members were expected to donate a minimum of 10 per cent of their pay packet to the church as a tithe, she says.

According to her, donations were tracked in an Excel spreadsheet where the church’s finance department could ensure members paid their dues.

A church spokesperson denied that financial contributions were compulsory.

“Tithing is not compulsory and it is rarely spoken of in our sermons or teachings,” they said. “Members are free to give offerings as they please.”

News.com.au understands this is Providence’s first property in NSW but they also bought another building five years ago in Melbourne, at 7 Rakaia Way, Docklands.

A spokesperson said of the Sydney purchase: “We purchased this property because many members of our church wanted to have a permanent place that belongs to the church, to use as a home for their faith.

“It is a place for families, children, and members of all ages could [sic] gather and share their faith as a community. Also, subject to council approval, the place would be used as a place of worship. So the church congregation agreed to purchase a property for these reasons.”

Samantha’s nightmare at the sect began when she was recruited to attend a one-on-one bible study group.

From there, she says she was sucked into the world of Providence.

Young Australians recruited

Once she was inside Providence, Samantha tried to bring people into the fold.

“I worked really hard in recruiting people, I was good at it,” she said.

“They actually ideally want local people, JMS [another name for the religious group] loves non-Asian, it gives you real merit if you recruit someone who is a local [because] they’re harder to get.”

Some friends she introduced to Providence are still currently involved in it.

During her time there, she claims Providence used activities with universities to convince more young people to join.

“They have a society at Sydney University, which is a front group,” she claimed.

A PowerPoint slide she obtained during her time at the sect showed the society being listed as an “evangelism method” for Providence.

This society has more than 1000 followers on social media and in its description, says it only wants women to join.











A leaked PowerPoint slide describing Providence's evangelism methods, including listing the name of the university society on one of the dot points.


Providence admitted some members had created the Sydney University society but rejected claims it was used to bring non-religious people to their cause.

The church “does not have any ‘front’ groups that operate in universities or elsewhere,” a spokesperson said.

When contacted, the club said no religious activities ever took place.

The society “was initiated by a few health science students who also happen to be church friends within CGM [another name for Providence],” they said.

“It was born from a mutual passion for health and wellbeing by a group of young women, and to motivate other young women to be healthy and fit.”

The uni society closed down in 2020 because of Covid-19 and they have no plans to re-register it.

“If any of our students have any concerns we urge them to get in touch so we can look into the matter properly,” a Sydney University spokesperson said.

“Support is also available for any of our students who might need it.”

UTS also hosted dance classes in 2018 reportedly run by Providence members.

Samantha knows of other members who recruited people through modelling agencies or by asking them to fill out surveys.

“A new tactic they developed while I was there was recruiting people who do photo shoots,” she added. “They would say they’re studying a project. That’s another tactic, pretending you have some uni assignment.”

Sect experts contacted by news.com.au were concerned about the new location of the Providence temple in Sydney. [...]

NSW-based Tore Klevjer, President of Cult Information and Family Support Inc, was alarmed when he heard of the location of the new “temple”.

“Providence does target uni-aged girls especially,” he told news.com.au.

“Having a property that they can invite people to and is easy for people to get to, it’s got to be a huge advantage for recruiting people, it’s really concerning.”

‘Red flags’

Every morning, Australian pastors hold a pre-dawn service for Providence believers at 4.45am. On Wednesdays, Jeong tunes into the session remotely from South Korea.

Samantha says she was expected to attend every day but struggled to meet this quota.

“I’ve got insomnia now, my sleep has been so messed up since I left,” she said.

She moved out with other members of the sect and cut off friends and family soon after.

“They discourage you listening to Christian music but wanted you to listen to Providence music … same with TV shows and movies, which is such a red flag [in hindsight],” she said.

“They discourage you from having fun outside of the group, you’d be judged if you went to the movies [with other friends].”

Joining the group also changed the way Samantha dressed — she purged all the black clothes from her wardrobe.

“They said there’s no black in heaven, it is the colour of Satan, it makes the Messiah upset if he sees you in black,” she explained.

“A lot of people who joined felt the pressure to buy new clothes. You had to dress really nice for the Sunday service and dawn service, so like nice blazers and dresses.”

Other media outlets have reported that Providence recruiters sought to indoctrinate tall and pretty young women.

Indeed, Samantha estimates 80 per cent of the members were female.

Women in the group are taught that they are brides of God and by extension, the brides of Jeong.

Looking good, keeping themselves slim and dressing well is emphasised to women in the group.

‘I lied so much’

Knowing it would be hard to explain her actions to the outside world, Samantha lied to her family, telling them she had moved out of home with uni friends.

“I lied so much,” she said.

When Samantha finally decided to leave, a senior church member got wind of her plans and she was “love-bombed”, where religious members tried to guilt her into staying through an outpouring of love and affection.

When she finally left, she was convinced something terrible would happen, as punishment.

“The first few weeks you’re living with so much fear, waiting for something bad to happen, waiting for my family to get sick, because that’s the teaching,” she said.

“Then nothing did, good things started to happen instead.”

ussie alleges she was indecently assaulted by leader

On March 16, lawyers held a press conference at the Seoul Lawyer’s Hall in Jongno-gutwo alleging Jeong had reoffended since being released from prison in February 2018.

The lawyers represented two women from Australia and Hong Kong who claimed they had been molested or sexually assaulted by the Providence leader, according to local reports.

The 30-year-old Australian said she was indoctrinated into the sect’s Australian branch in 2014 when she was 22.

She alleged she had been subjected to sexual touching five times since July 2018, when she visited South Korea on a church-funded trip.

Providence is “not some righteous religion, they’re an organisation that supports an actual criminal, a rapist and that is not OK, that can’t go on”, the unnamed Aussie woman stated during the broadcast.

After the alleged molestation, the woman recalled: “The first thing I did in the morning was contact one of the main pastors and I was like ‘this thing happened last night. Is there any chance we can meet and get some clarification?’.

“I think she knew what was going on. And she just said ‘I’m sorry, I’m busy, can you talk to so-and-so’s other pastor’. So she didn’t want to deal with it.

“So I talked to this other pastor and she spilled all this stuff into my brain like ‘you know you really are the bride and in a normal relationship can’t the husband have that kind of relationship with the bride?’ and all this stuff.”

At the media announcement, a woman from Hong Kong, Maple Ying Tung Huen, claimed Jeong had raped her multiple times.

“I think the task that Heaven gave me before I die is to reveal the truth so that there are no more victims. Jung Myeong-seok is absolutely not the Messiah,” she said, according to a translation.

The lawyer representing both women has filed a complaint about Jeong with the National Police Agency on charges of ordinary quasi-rape and ordinary quasi-forced molestation.

Since the press conference a fortnight ago, Providence’s Australian branches appear to have tightened their security.

YouTube livestreams, which were already only accessed through private links, are now Zoom calls where attendees must provide their full name to get in.

Daily proverbs are also deleted three days after being posted to their secure portal and inactive members are unable to access daily live broadcasts.

The history of Providence

In 1999, rape allegations about Jeong first came to light, prompting him to leave South Korea.

He was charged over raping or violently molesting five Korean believers and was arrested in 2007.

A year later he was found guilty on three counts of rape.

When he tried to appeal the decision in 2009, another four years was added to his original six-year bid. He finally left jail in February 2018.

A former Canberra member of the religious sect called Liz appeared on SBS in 2014 claiming she had been encouraged to write intimate letters to Jeong while he was imprisoned.

She said he regularly replied with explicit content, such as “your white skin arouses me” and “your vagina would look pretty”.

A Providence spokesperson denied this at the time.

In 2016, Australian publication Crikey reported that a Providence member employed at the Australian Taxation Office used their work computer to water down the Wikipedia article on the sect.

They admitted to removing references to Jeong’s sexual assaults as well as mentions of the term “cult”.

Providence has been known to be vindictive to those who speak out.

In 1999, when the national Korean broadcaster was going to air an explosive news package, Providence threatened legal action by calling the organisation up to 60,000 times a day over two months.

In 2008 when Jeong was found guilty of rape, his followers broke into a South Korean newspaper office that had published negative articles about him and damaged the place.

Providence responds

Providence has strongly rejected the new sexual assault claims.

When the 30-year-old Australian initially alleged she had been molested, Providence released a video that was shared in the press conference.

An Australian Providence pastor said, addressing the Australian victim: “We have a lot of big people so we will have a press conference against you and we will reveal every unfortunate, unethical and amoral thing that you have done.

“We don’t want to do this but again we need to do this to protect myself and other beloved ones that will be affected by your attacks.

“We don’t want to do this because it will detrimentally affect your life and definitely your future career.”

In a statement shared on their website, Providence said although they wanted “to express our regret for this situation”, they denied all wrongdoing and called the claims untrue.

https://www.news.com.au/finance/real-estate/sydney-nsw/mysterious-secret-hidden-behind-ordinary-door-in-sydneys-cbd/news-story/14760ca957f181ba2b185b1445c13e49










https://www.news.com.au/finance/real-estate/sydney-nsw/mysterious-secret-hidden-behind-ordinary-door-in-sydneys-cbd/news-story/14760ca957f181ba2b185b1445c13e49

Jul 15, 2018

The cult that's infiltrated NZ schools, campuses and churches

Former “Moonie” Jeong Myeong-seok was paroled from South Korea’s Daejeon prison in February this year, having served nine years for raping and molesting his followers.
Former “Moonie” Jeong Myeong-seok was paroled
 from South Korea’s Daejeon prison in February
 this year, having served nine years for raping and
molesting his followers.
Rosel Labone
Noted
July 15, 2018

A religious sect based on the teachings of a South Korean “messiah” and convicted sex offender has quietly infiltrated university campuses, schools and mainstream churches in New Zealand. Rosel Labone investigates.

Mark* was in his second year of a psychology degree at Victoria University in Wellington when he met Crystal in 2007. She was vivacious and outgoing; the kind of person who seemed to know everyone. Crystal was class representative, and made herself available for study-related questions. So Mark plucked up the courage to say hello. They started corresponding by email. Crystal invited him to dinner, then asked him to join her Bible study group.

Two years later, Mark was deeply involved in a religious movement with its origins in Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. Reflecting on how he was drawn into the sect, he talks first about the friendships he made, the sense of camaraderie. And, as the first New Zealander evangelised, he had status in the group. When Mark was asked to move to Auckland to help recruit new members, he had to move from accommodation he shared with other sect members to stay with “secular relatives”.

“I woke up one Sunday morning at my relatives’ and just felt burnt out. I decided not to go to church that day. Then I skipped the next service. I think if I’d gone back to Wellington, I might still be involved because I’d have been surrounded by members and would have been indoctrinated every day,” he says.

“Looking back, I feel I was spiritually violated. I lost all trust in religion and I’ve never been able to go back to church – any church – since.”

Couples take part in a mass wedding ceremony in South Korea in February, 2013 – six months after the death of Unification Church founder Sun Myung Moon. Providence church (also known as Jesus Morning Star) is an offshoot of Moon’s “messianic” movement that has surfaced in New Zealand. Led by Jeong Myeong-seok, its beliefs – among them, that sexual intercourse with the Messiah (Jeong) allegedly cleanses Original Sin – can be traced back to Moon.

Sam* was a professional athlete when his best friend died in a car accident. In 2009, he was looking for something to fill the void after losing a couple of years “cruising through life”. Like Mark, he was first invited to dinner by a woman. She then asked him to join her at a church service in Wellington’s Cuba St.

For both young men, these innocent-sounding gatherings were the start of recruitment into Providence – also known as Jesus Morning Star and Christian Gospel Mission – led by former “Moonie” Jeong Myeong-seok.

Providence was founded in 1978 by Korean-born Jeong, now 73, known by members as “Joshua”. South Korea remains its stronghold, where it claims to have more than 100,000 followers. It also boasts of having more than 10,000 followers worldwide, including small but growing memberships in both New Zealand and Australia.

In 1999, following an investigation by South Korea broadcaster SBS that included allegations of rape, Jeong fled the country. A string of accusations followed and rape charges were filed against him in 2001. Alleged victims in Japan claimed he would initiate contact with women under the guise of performing “health checks”, then sexually assault them. In Taiwan, former Providence members told police they were ordered to have sex with Jeong to “wipe away their sins”.

In May 2007, after eight years on the run, Jeong was arrested in Beijing by Chinese police. He was extradited to Korea and sentenced to six years’ imprisonment after being found guilty of raping four female members of the sect. The sentence was extended on appeal to 10 years. Jeong was paroled from Daejeon prison on February 18 this year; he will be monitored via an electronic ankle bracelet for seven years.

Former “Moonie” Jeong Myeong-seok was paroled from South Korea’s Daejeon prison in February this year, having served nine years for raping and molesting his followers.

Sam became friends with Mark when they were living at the Nikau Church premises on Wellington’s Cuba St (Nikau was a front for Providence). They were both 19 when they met; both are of European descent. The young woman who introduced Sam to the church later became his wife. “One minute you’re in a Bible study group – 30 lessons later, you’re part of a church,” he says.

Providence members are expected to tithe 10% of their earnings. Full-time workers often give more as their “service to God”, says Sam. Mark adds that students are expected to spend a lot of time scouting for converts – evangelising at campuses and shopping malls, and infiltrating mainstream Christian church congregations. The sect also operates behind groups such as dance classes, sports groups and modelling agencies.

Mark’s rise through the ranks resulted in him travelling to Korea and Japan in late 2009, helping evangelise English speakers in those countries.

Mark had been raised in an open Brethren family. As he progressed in his Providence studies, the contrast between the Korean sect’s beliefs and those he’d grown up with began to widen. Providence’s teachings are based on the so-called 30 lessons, or 30 principles, which state that only a Messiah – Jeong – can lead people to heaven. Female believers are taught they are brides of God and by inference, brides of Jeong.

Providence’s entry-level doctrine was “deliberately vague”, says Mark, and it was only after a number of lessons that the group started exposing him to their core beliefs. “Ten to 15 Bible studies in, you learn how Jeong was persecuted and jailed. At that point your mentality is that this guy could do no wrong... You’re encouraged not to Google. You’re told everything online is posted by people who are against [the church]… You go on what they tell you as gospel.”

Mark says that Jeong’s personal backstory – poor, disowned by his family, wrongfully accused – was used to further the teaching and make him appear more Christ-like. “They’d say, ‘Look, Jesus brought the truth and they didn’t believe him: they beat him, put him in prison. Jeong went through what Jesus went through. Can you see this is the truth?’”

Sam was raised an Anglican. Leaving a mainstream Christian faith to follow Providence meant not only “worshipping” Jeong, but also adhering to strict guidelines around study and social behaviour. There were restrictions around dating within the church, he says. Sam and the woman he was attracted to were not allowed to be together because of the group’s belief in arranged marriage. “You can only get married within the group, and it has to be approved.”
Indeed, Sam was expected to devote every waking moment to Providence, which affected his relationship with his partner. “She was in the cult from the age of 16 to 20. She now feels the church took away her youth.” In mid-2011, the couple left Providence, but the marriage unravelled in early 2017. Sam blames the stress of emerging from the sect.

Mark says the church preached no sex before marriage. “There was a Christian girl I was seeing; nothing had happened but I would sneak out to meet her. I felt so guilty; I told them about it and had to fast for a few days.” His two-hour prayer sessions moved from a 5am start to 3am. “I had to meet special conditions to get forgiveness for spending time with this girl, because in my heart I’d sinned.”

Mark was also asked to give up playing rugby, which he loved. One day, he chose to play sport rather than attend a Providence activity. He was injured, and church leaders told him it was God’s judgment for his actions.
Sam says the group systematically took control of his daily routine: “I didn’t even realise it was happening. I’d wake up at five, phone into the morning prayer sessions... work all day as an automotive technician, have an hour to myself, before going to the gym for two hours, then to sleep. Wake up and repeat.”

At university, Mark says it was common to see Providence members in class struggling to stay awake. “It was all about your mental toughness, conquering your body. People were living on very little. Some started going a bit mental, not being themselves.”

Sleep deprivation is a classic indoctrination tool because of its power to impair critical thinking, says Australian-born man, who teaches English at a women’s university in Seoul and launched his cult-watch website JMSCult.com 13 years ago. “Providence members are pressured to get up earlier and earlier,” he told North & South.

Some parents report finding their children in trance-like states. One family interviewed by North & South said their child became psychotic due to sleep deprivation. Having been taught the phrase “Say no to food and sleep”, he went into psychosis and was twice admitted to a psychiatric ward.

Worldwide, Providence targets attractive young women, especially those already with a Christian faith. The strict dating and no sex before marriage rules don’t apply to the sect’s “spiritual brides” chosen to meet the prophet; the ultimate experience for female members is to be “purified” by having sex with Jeong.


 
A Providence modelling show at an American university in 2005.
A Providence modelling show at an American university in 2005.

Daley has seen sexually suggestive, Korean videos of near-naked cult members, and a video titled “cult education” where a Wellington-based member discloses her romantic love for Jeong. He says a Korean video about heaven and hell produced by the group portrays a “fascination with warped female sexuality. There are violent, graphic sexual images of what awaits women in hell [if they disobey the tenets of Providence]. In contrast, the trip to heaven is like a child’s vision... full of department stores, shoes, gold and diamonds.”

In 2013, Daley helped a female member of the Australian branch of the sect escape via an intervention. He says the experience was extremely stressful for him, the young woman and her family. “I was nervous. An intervention attempt, if unsuccessful, typically drives members deeper into the cult and further from family and friends outside the group. [Providence] usually moves members into group housing under the direction of a senior member. Once they’re in cult-controlled housing, opportunities to conduct interventions vanish.”

So far, no New Zealand members have come forward as victims of sexual abuse, but a number have travelled to Wolmyeong dong in South Korea – the cult’s base and Jeong’s birthplace. Daley says young people can be damaged by the group – with or without sexual abuse – and there are real threats of violence for some members who try to leave.

“Liz [a former member of Providence who spoke to Australian broadcasting network SBS] says she had suicidal thoughts over the stress of indoctrination and leaving. My own roommate, an Australian in Korea, suffered post-traumatic stress. She was told God would kill someone in her family if she left. I’ve had death threats and legal threats from American members: ‘You’re on a sure path to death...’ with a picture of a skull and crossbones next to a sentence, ‘This is what awaits [the critic]’”

Reverend Dr Carolyn Kelly works as a chaplain at the University of Auckland, where she says Providence was “recruiting under my nose”. She describes the sect’s modus operandi as “an entire faith fabric and intense friendships built on manipulation and misrepresentation of Christianity”.

Kelly became aware of Providence in 2014 after a young woman turned up at the university chapel, asking to borrow a guitar. “I got to know her a bit, and asked her about her faith. After hearing her speak about the ‘leader-pastor’ and visits to his birthplace in Korea, I remember saying to her, ‘That to me sounds like a cult.’

“In mid-2016, a student came to me and said she’d been involved in a strange Bible study via a bogus modelling school, and had noticed the same people active on the Auckland University campus. She confirmed [the young woman] was involved. I discovered she was running a ‘Thank God it’s Friday’ lunchtime group and was employed in a campus-related service, so I alerted the appropriate channels. The next time she came into the chapel, I spoke to her directly about my concerns. She didn’t deny her involvement.”
Kelly began following Providence through social media; she talked to ministers at local Presbyterian and other mainstream churches and discovered they were having a problem with Providence “recruiters” operating in their congregations.

She describes the Providence member she met as a “personable young woman” who was ostensibly studying at the university, “but I have no evidence she was studying seriously. I warned a couple of students off friendship with her. I found out later this intense friendship approach is called ‘love-bombing’. I also noticed a couple of the student women were dressing differently – behaving out of character when they were with her. The connection was with this modelling thing… I realised [Providence members] were particularly keen to befriend tall, beautiful young women.”

Kelly says the university followed up her concerns and the young woman was asked to leave. The university also issued a written warning to its student clubs saying the Providence/Morning Star/Nikau Church group used modelling schools as a front. Providence-run Kotuku Models operated in New Zealand for several years, but is now defunct. The modelling was mostly for shows put on by Providence on university campuses and other venues.

A former Providence member from Canada, Barbara, who recruited young women to be “models”, told North & South her task was “to find women who are beautiful on the outside and help them be beautiful on the inside as well”. However, she was actively discouraged from persuading less physically attractive women, including some with disabilities, to join the dance and modelling groups. She said chosen “models” from Providence’s international offshoots would visit Jeong in Korea.

Providence members have also infiltrated a Wellington high school and Victoria and Massey Universities, by presenting to assemblies and setting up dance, sports and modelling groups. In Auckland, the sect ran a dance group called Make Wings Dance for children as young as three. Social media associated with the group was used for recruitment, with special language for young members; it refers to teenagers as “shining stars” and younger children as “milky ways”. This language is consistent across Providence’s child-friendly front groups – and in their sermons – around the world. Daley says while young children are not usually being directly recruited, they are being introduced to the sect’s terminology and doctrines.

Massey University religious studies specialist Professor Peter Lineham says the “sexual element mixed with religion” is the aspect of Providence that particularly worries him. “It’s a dangerous combination. The potential for damage, especially in minors, is huge.” He notes the sect appears to be associated with sexual exploitation of vulnerable young women worldwide.

Fringe religious groups are fearful of the outside world, Lineham says, and know people will try to use the law or “strong-arm tactics” to get members out. He believes it’s highly likely Jeong was operating from behind bars – and poses a threat to the community now he’s released. He adds there may be a power struggle within the upper echelons of the sect. “Groups like this have power structures with tensions we don’t understand. I think it will be an important moment for [Providence], like Gloriavale’s Neville Cooper [Hopeful Christian] leaving prison.”
Over the months of my investigation into Providence’s New Zealand activities, I put questions to the church leadership several times. Providence declined to answer specific questions about their operations in New Zealand, their recruiting methods and leader Jeong Myeong-seok.

I approached Taiwanese-born Nikau Church leader Crystal several times for answers. In response, she sent translated material from four Korean publications and websites, questioning the testimony of Jeong’s alleged victims and claiming evidence showed the women had not been sexually assaulted. I sent Crystal’s letter and references to Dr Ji-il Tark, a professor of theology at South Korea’s Busan Presbyterian University; he’s also an expert on Korean cults. He was not familiar with any of the publications, questioned the reliability of the sources and the English translations, and said, in his view, the magazines were “promotional advertising rather than reporting”.

Sometimes, those asking questions about Providence’s activities internationally have found themselves on the receiving end of threats. I got a sense of this when I received the following email from Providence. By then, Crystal had stopped communicating with me, and news of my investigation had reached head office:

Dear Rosel, Good morning. I am Andrew Choi who is now working at CGM HQ [Christian Gospel Mission, another name for Providence]. It came to our attention that you are writing an article about Providence, with plans to have it published by a New Zealand news outlet.
It has been our experience so far that the media is not interested in reporting on truths about Providence. News were [sic] produced with the agenda to ridicule and defame the organisation, by relying on unverifiable, sensationalist claims. Journalists deliberately chose to not investigate the accuracy of these claims...and turned a blind eye to the truth…

We are very concerned that the article you are writing falls into the same category. We strongly ask that you do not write such an article and submit it for publication. The list of claims you produced to Crystal in a set of questions are extremely unfair, distorted/untruthful and they misrepresent Providence... Where the reputation of Providence is unfairly damaged, we will pursue all necessary courses of action to ensure reparations for that damage, as we have done in the past against other major media companies and journalists. This case would be no exception.

We wish you all the best.

Today, Mark works for a government agency in Auckland. Sam is a successful businessman who splits his time between New Zealand and Russia. While neither received threats of violence after leaving the sect, they asked to remain anonymous for this interview as they fear the impact on their livelihoods if their identities are revealed.

“It’s not so much a fear of being attacked or threatened legally by these guys,” Sam says via email. “I have armed guards in my business in Russia and an in-house lawyer to deal with their nonsense if needed. It’s more that I don’t want to shake people’s confidence in my ability to make sound decisions.”

Both Sam and Mark “lost their faith” as a result of their Providence experience. Their trust in people was rattled. Mark says the year that followed his 2011 departure from Providence was “the hardest time of my life. When I joined, I thought I’d found the truth, 100%. I truly believed Jesus had returned through the Providence leader. I had extreme feelings of guilt when I left. I felt like Judas, Jesus’ betrayer. And Providence teaches that people who leave the church are going to hell.

“Evangelism in Providence is very much about ‘making friends’, making people feel loved, by cooking for them – they’re excellent cooks – or giving massages to newcomers, for instance. While members may genuinely care for people, the only reason they go out of their way to be so nice is to evangelise them. As soon as they decide a person is not worth recruiting – mentally weak, too much baggage, etc – they cut them off.

“I needed Providence members around to keep me believing. When I didn’t have those members around me, I slowly came back to reality. Time heals and, although I’ve not returned to any faith, I feel I have greater empathy for people who have come through mentally traumatic situations.

“I never witnessed anything in the church that made me think the pastor was a sexual predator, and I get why members stay with the church. But I now see many different cults around the world, where the followers believe Jesus has returned in spirit and is working through their pastor... 99% are cults.”

Mark says that while he misses the “euphoric spiritual moments” of Providence, he’s found happiness in a secular life. “I’m at peace; I’ve moved on.”

Sam describes falling into a “state of depression” after leaving Providence. “The world’s a mixed-up place after something like that. I didn’t know what was real anymore. Young, vulnerable people can become dependent on [groups like Providence]. It’s not always easy to get your life back on track. I see the damage Providence caused everyone I know – mentally, in terms of their spirituality.”

For those who leave the cult, the road home is a long one. [A critic] says the stigma of victim-blaming stops people coming forward, allowing the group to continue to operate and to manipulate people. The only remedy, he says, is to keep talking about it. “I don’t want to say some people are immune from this kind of exploitation. So many psychological tricks just work. What a lot of people are looking for are the things sects like Providence present to newcomers; they’re appealing to everyone.

“I would be wary of unsolicited invites and sudden friendships or groups that look too good to be true. These groups cast their net as widely as possible. And they’re out there: in your community, even next door.”

This was published in the June 2018 issue of North & South.

https://www.noted.co.nz/currently/social-issues/cults-nz-providence-infiltrate-nz/