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The Family International

The Family International (TFI) is a Christian New Religious Movement founded in Huntington Beach, California, USA, in 1968 by David Berg that has been criticized as an authoritarian cult.[1][2] Originally named Teens for Christ, it has gone under a number of different names. It gained notoriety as The Children of God (COG). It was later renamed and reorganized as The Family of Love (1978–1981), which was eventually shortened to The Family. As of 2004, it has gone by The Family International.

The Family International
AbbreviationTFI
TypeChristian cult
LeaderKaren Zerby (1994–present)
FounderDavid Berg
Branched fromThe Family
Other name(s)
  • Teens for Christ
  • The Children of God
  • The Family of Love
  • The Family
Official websitethefamilyinternational.org

Former members have accused the group of child sexual abuse, physical abuse, exploitation,[3] the targeting of vulnerable people,[4] and creating lasting trauma among children raised in the group.[5]

Overview

According to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, "at its height" the Family movement had "tens of thousands of members, including River and Joaquin Phoenix, Rose McGowan and Jeremy Spencer".[4] TFI initially spread a message of salvation, apocalypticism, spiritual "revolution and happiness" and distrust of the outside world, which the members called The System. Like some other fundamentalist groups, it "foretold the coming of a dictator called the anti-Christ, the rise of a brutal One World Government and its eventual overthrow by Jesus Christ, in the Second Coming".[6]

In 1976,[7] it began a method of evangelism called Flirty Fishing that used sex to "show God's love and mercy" and win converts, resulting in controversy.[8] TFI's founder and prophetic leader, David Berg (who was first called "Moses David" in the Texas press[citation needed], and was also referred to "Father David" by members),[6] gave himself the titles of "King", "The Last Endtime Prophet", "Moses", and "David".

Berg communicated with his followers via "Mo Letters"—letters of instruction and counsel on myriad spiritual and practical subjects—until his death in late 1994.[9] After his death, his widow Karen Zerby became the leader of TFI, taking the titles of "Queen" and "Prophetess". Zerby married Steve Kelly (also known as Peter Amsterdam), an assistant of Berg's whom Berg had handpicked as her "consort". Kelly took the title of "King Peter" and became the face of TFI, speaking in public more often than either Berg or Zerby. There have been multiple allegations of child sexual abuse made by past members.[10][11]

Berg preached a combination of traditional Christian evangelism, with elements popular with the Counterculture of the 1960s. There was much "end-of-the-world imagery" found in the Book of Revelation of the New Testament, preaching of impending doom for America and the ineffectiveness of established churches. Berg "urged a return to the early Christian community described in the Bible's Book of Acts, in which believers lived together and shared all",[6] resembling communal living of late 1960s hippies.

History

The Children of God (1968–1977)

The founder of the movement, David Brandt Berg (1919–1994), was a former Christian and Missionary Alliance pastor.[12] Berg started in 1968 as an evangelical preacher with a following of "born-again hippies" who gathered at a coffeehouse in Huntington Beach, in Orange County, California. In 1969, after having a revelation "that California would be hit by a major earthquake", he left Huntington Beach and "took his followers on the road".[6]

They would proselytize in the streets and distribute pamphlets. Leaders within COG were referred to as The Chain. Members of The Children of God (COG) founded communes, first called colonies (now referred to as homes), in various cities.

Berg communicated with his followers by writing letters. He published nearly 3,000 letters over a period of 24 years, referred to as the Mo Letters.[13] In a letter written in January 1972, Berg stated that he was God's prophet for the contemporary world, attempting to further solidify his spiritual authority within the group. Berg's letters also contained public acknowledgement of his own failings and weaknesses,[14][verification needed] (for example, he issued a Mo Letter entitled "My confession -- I was an alcoholic!" (ML #1406 Summer 1982) relating his depression after some of his closest supporters quit in 1978.[15]

In 1972, a Mo Letter reportedly entitled "Flee as a Bird to Your Mountain" was interpreted by some members (such as Ruth Gordon) as a warning to leave America. "God was going to destroy the U.S. ... and we had to get out." This, along with the pressure members felt that parents were trying to "rescue" children who had joined CoG, encouraged members to "[migrate] abroad -- first to Europe, eventually to Latin America and East Asia".[6]

By 1972, COG stated it had 130 communities around the world,[16] and by the mid-1970s, it had "colonies" in an estimated 70 countries.[6] BBC reported 10,000 full-time COG members in the 1970s.[3]

In 1976,[7] Berg had introduced a new proselytizing method called Flirty Fishing (or FFing), which encouraged female members to "show God's love" through sexual relationships with potential converts. Flirty Fishing was practiced by members of Berg's inner circle starting in 1973, and was introduced to the general membership in 1976.[17]

The Family of Love (1978–1981)

 
A form of love bombing, Flirty Fishing encouraged female members to enter sexual relationships with potential converts

The Children of God was abolished in February 1978, and Berg renamed his group "The Family of Love"[6] In what Berg called the "Re-organization Nationalization Revolution" (or RNR).[18] Berg reorganized the movement, dismissing "more than 300 leading members after hearing unspecified 'reports of serious misconduct and abuse of their positions."[6] Reportedly involved were The Chain's abuse of authority, and disagreements within it about the continued use of Flirty Fishing. The group was also accused of sexually abusing and raping minors within the organization, with considerable evidence to support this claim. One eighth of the total membership left the movement. Those who remained became part of a reorganized movement called the Family of Love, and later, The Family. The majority of the group's beliefs remained the same.[17]

The Family of Love era was characterized by international expansion.

After 1978 Flirty Fishing "increased drastically"[15] and became common practice within the group. A Mo Letter from 1980 (ML #999 May 1980) for example was headlined "The Devil Hates Sex! --- But God Loves It!".[19] In some areas flirty fishers used escort agencies to meet potential converts. According to TFI "over 100,000 received God's gift of salvation through Jesus, and some chose to live the life of a disciple and missionary" as a result of Flirty Fishing.[17] Researcher Bill Bainbridge obtained data from TFI suggesting that, from 1974 until 1987, members had sexual contact with 223,989 people while practicing Flirty Fishing.[20]

The Family (1982–1994)

According to the Family's official history, the group had "far fewer common standards of conduct" during The Family of Love stage than it had previously. In the late 1980s the group "tightened its standards" "to ensure that all member communities provide a very wholesome environment for all, particularly the children", and changed its name to "The Family".[6] In March 1989, TF issued a statement that, in "early 1985", an urgent memorandum had been sent to all members "reminding them that any such activities [adult–child sexual contact] are strictly forbidden within our group" (emphasis in original), and such activities were grounds for immediate excommunication from the group.[21] In January 2005, Claire Borowik, a spokesperson for TFI, stated:

Due to the fact that our current zero-tolerance policy regarding sexual interaction between adults and underage minors was not in our literature published before 1986, we came to the realization that during a transitional stage of our movement, from 1978 until 1986, there were cases when some minors were subject to sexually inappropriate advances ... This was corrected officially in 1986, when any contact between an adult and minor (any person under 21 years of age) was declared an excommunicable offense.[22]

In the early 1990s, the group broke "years of virtual silence" and began "inviting reporters and religious scholars" to visit its commune in La Habra, California, where at least a Washington Post journalist (Gustav Niebuhr) found its members to be "a clean-cut bunch, friendly and courteous". At that time The Family claimed to have "about 9,000 members worldwide, with about 750 scattered across the United States".[6] The group emphasized its mainstream Christian opposition to abortion, homosexuality, drugs and drunkenness and its respect for Rev. Billy Graham.[6]

The Family (1995–2003)

After Berg's death in October 1994, Karen Zerby (known in the group as Mama Maria, Queen Maria, Maria David, or Maria Fontaine) assumed leadership of the group.

In February 1995, the group introduced the Love Charter,[23] which defined the rights and responsibilities of Charter Members and Homes. The Charter also included the Fundamental Family Rules, a summary of rules and guidelines from past TF publications which were still in effect.

In the 1994–95 British court case, the Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Alan Ward ruled that the group, including some of its top leaders, had in the past engaged in abusive sexual practices involving minors and had also used severe corporal punishment and sequestration of minors.[24] He found that by 1995 TF had abandoned these practices and concluded that they were a safe environment for children. Nevertheless, he did require that the group cease all corporal punishment of children in the United Kingdom and denounce any of Berg's writings that were "responsible for children in TF having been subjected to sexually inappropriate behaviour".[25]

The Family International (2004–present)

The Love Charter is The Family's set governing document that entails each member's rights, responsibilities and requirements, while the Missionary Member Statutes and Fellow Member Statutes were written for the governance of TFI's Missionary member and Fellow Member circles, respectively. FD Homes were reviewed every six months against a published set of criteria. The Love Charter increased the number of single family homes as well as homes that relied on jobs such as self-employment.[26]

Recent teachings

TFI's recent teachings are based on beliefs which they term the "new [spiritual] weapons". TFI members believe that they are soldiers in the spiritual war of good versus evil for the souls and hearts of men.

Spirit Helpers

"Spirit Helpers" include angels, other religious and mythical figures, and departed humans, including celebrities; for example the goddess Aphrodite, the Snowman, Merlin, the Sphinx, Elvis,[27] Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn,[28] Richard Nixon, and Winston Churchill.

The Keys of the Kingdom

TFI believes that the Biblical passage "I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatsoever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven", (Matthew 16:19) refers to an increasing amount of spiritual authority that was given to Peter and the early disciples. According to TFI beliefs, this passage refers to keys that were hidden and unused in the centuries that followed, but were again revealed through Karen Zerby as more power to pray and obtain miracles. TFI members call on the various Keys of the Kingdom for extra effect during prayer. The Keys, like most TFI beliefs, were published in magazines that looked like comic-books in order to make them teachable to children.[29] These beliefs are still generally held and practiced, even after the "reboot" documents of 2010.[citation needed]

Loving Jesus

"Loving Jesus" is a term TFI members use to describe their intimate, sexual relationship with Jesus. TFI describes its "Loving Jesus" teaching as a radical form of bridal theology.[30] They believe the church of followers is Christ's bride, called to love and serve him with wifely fervor; however, this bridal theology is taken further, encouraging members to imagine Jesus is joining them during sexual intercourse and masturbation. Male members are cautioned to visualize themselves as women, in order to avoid a homosexual relationship with Jesus. Many TFI publications, and spirit messages claimed to be from Jesus himself, elaborate this intimate, sexual relation they believe Jesus desires and needs. TFI imagines itself as his special "bride" in graphic poetry, guided visualizations, artwork,[31] and songs.[32] Some TFI literature is not brought into conservative countries for fear it may be classified at customs as pornography.[33] The literature outlining this view of Jesus and his desire for a sexual relationship with believers was edited for younger teens,[34] then further edited for children.[35]

Controversy

Second-generation adults (known as "SGAs") are adults born or reared in TFI.

Anti-TFI sentiment has been publicly expressed by some who have left the group; examples include sisters Celeste Jones, Kristina Jones, and Juliana Buhring, who wrote a book[36] on their lives in TFI.[37]

TFI members are expected to respect legal and civil authorities where they live. Members have typically cooperated with appointed authorities, even during the police and social-service raids of their communities in the early 1990s.[38]

Criticism

The Family has been criticized by the press and the anti-cult movement. Ex-members have accused the Family's leadership of following "a policy of lying to outsiders," being "steeped in a history of sexual deviance" and even meddling "in Third World politics". The Family replies that it is a victim of "persecution."[6]

In 1971, an organization called FREECOG was founded by concerned parents and others, including deprogrammer Ted Patrick to "free" members of the COG from their involvement in the group.

At least one individual growing up in the family (Verity Carter) during the Children of God era described being sexually abused "from the age of four by members of the... cult, including her own father". She blames the philosophy of David Berg, who told members that "God was love and love was sex", so that sex should not be limited by age or relationship. Carter also complains of being "repeatedly beaten and whipped for the smallest of transgressions", being denied "music or television or culture," or other "contact with the outside world," so that she had "no idea how the world worked" other than how to manipulate the "systemites" (outsiders), like social workers.[3]

Author Don Lattin interviewed numerous members of the Family for his book Jesus Freaks. In a review of his book, Paul Burgarino describes Berg as "drawing from the remnants of hippie life—people with nothing to lose, nowhere to go, and no Christian background" to alert them to deviations in Berg's preaching.[5] One ex-Children of God member, Jerry Golland, describes himself at the time of joining the group as penniless and so depressed that the Children of God scraped him "off the street".[4] Members would "learn to spot, you know... a vulnerable person. We called them sheep", Golland told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.[4]

Pressure to raise money could also be intense. Ex-member Golland says that members who were good at raising money and distributing the pamphlets were called "Shiners". Those with poor sales were called "Shamers". "If you missed your quota you could not come home for dinner", he said.[4]

Notable members (past and present)

Joined in adulthood

Raised in the COG and later left

  • Christopher Owens: musician, of US indie band Girls, was brought up in TFI by his parents.[40][41]
  • Celeste Jones and Kristina Jones: co-authors, along with Juliana Buhring, of Not Without My Sister, an autobiography detailing extensive abuse they suffered in COG.[42] This book is used by the organization RAINN as a reference for child sexual abuse victims.
  • Juliana Buhring: first woman to bicycle around the world[43] and co-author of Not Without My Sister.
  • Rose McGowan: film actress, described her TFI childhood in interviews with Howard Stern,[44] People magazine[45] and later in her book Brave.
  • River Phoenix, Joaquin Phoenix, Rain Phoenix, and Summer Phoenix: actors, were members of the group (with their sister Liberty Phoenix) from 1972 to 1978. River Phoenix, who died of a drug overdose in 1993, told Details magazine in November 1991 that "they're ruining people's lives."[46]
  • Susan Justice: American pop rock singer-songwriter and guitarist, known best for her debut self-recorded album, The Subway Recordings.
  • Tina Dupuy: American journalist and syndicated columnist.
  • Ricky Rodriguez: subject of the suppressed manual advocating adult-child sexual contact, committed a murder-suicide in 2005, killing one of the women who raised and allegedly sexually abused him, then himself.[10]
  • Lauren Hough: author of Leaving is Not the Hardest Thing ,[47] brought up in TFI.
  • Flor Edwards, author,[48] who was raised inside the cult before her parents moved out.
  • Dawn Watson: Brazilian, victim of sexual abuse while living in a TFI community.[11]
  • Taylor Stevens, author,[49] brought up in the cult from age 12 until she left in her twenties with her two children.
  • Bexy Cameron, British child member who left aged 15 and later wrote a book about her experiences.[50]
  • Faith Jones, a lawyer, was raised in the group in Macau before leaving. She wrote about her life in the book Sex Cult Nun.[51]

Autobiographical accounts

  • Davis, Deborah (Linda Berg) (1984). THE CHILDREN OF GOD: The Inside Story. Zondervan Books, Grand Rapids, Michigan. ISBN 0-310-27840-6. Expose by the founder's eldest daughter who left the cult.
  • Connolly, Ray (2011). Something Somebody Stole. ISBN 978-1460922545.. Expose by a senior member who left after 20+ years.
  • Young, Daniella Mestyanek (2022). Uncultured: A Memior. ISBN 978-1250280114. Behind the tall, foreboding gates of a commune in Brazil, Daniella Mestyanek Young was raised in the religious cult The Children of God, also known as The Family, as the daughter of high-ranking members.

Media featuring the group

  • The Jesus Trip (1971), a documentary by Denis Tuohy that has interviews with Children of God members.
  • Children of God (1994), a 63-minute Channel 4 documentary by John Smithson; detailing the Padilla family and the abuse of their three underage daughters and the death of another.
  • Children of God: Lost and Found, a 75-minute documentary by Noah Thomson, featured at the 2007 Slamdance Film Festival.[52]
  • Cult Killer: The Rick Rodriguez Story (53-minute UK documentary with transcript).[53]
  • In the first episode of Louis Theroux's Weird Weekends, "Born Again Christians", Louis visits a Texas TFI family.
  • Buzzcocks mentions the group (as "Children Of God") in their song, "Orgasm Addict".
  • RedLetterMedia featured the Family International video "S.O.S." on an episode of "Best of the Worst."[54]
  • Mentioned in Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru documentary at 52 minutes of the film as an organization where children are forced to have sex from the age of six.[55]
  • The Parcast Podcast Cults: Episodes 11 and 12.[56]
  • Citizen Rose: A five part documentary series shown on the E! Channel. The first episode premiered on January 30, 2018. The series follows actress Rose McGowan who was born into the cult.
  • The Last Podcast on the Left did a four part series on the cult: Episodes 248-251[57]
  • The Dan Cummins podcast Timesuck covered the cult in episode 104, "The Children of God Sex Cult."
  • AJJ released a song entitled "Children of God" on their 2014 album Christmas Island.
  • A&E's Cults and Extreme Belief, episode 3 (2018) is about the Children of God.[58]

See also

  • Comet Kohoutek was viewed by David Berg as a prophetic sign of imminent disaster.
  • Jim Palosaari co-formed the Jesus People Army, left it before the group joined the Children of God, and tried to convince Linda Meissner not to join it.
  • Love bombing describes a manipulative style of recruiting.
  • Panton Hill, Victoria is the location of one of the communes, where a large government raid occurred and many children were removed by social services.

References

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  5. ^ a b BURGARINO, PAUL (November 1, 2007). "Book explores what becomes of offspring of '60s 'Jesus Freaks'". East Bay Times. from the original on September 30, 2021. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
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  8. ^ Niebuhr, Gustav (June 2, 1993). "'The Family' and Final Harvest". The Washington Post. p. A01. from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved April 27, 2008.
  9. ^ "Index". The xFamily.org Publications Database. February 20, 2012. from the original on January 26, 2019. Retrieved July 24, 2016.
  10. ^ a b "Young man's suicide blamed on mother's cult". CNN. December 5, 2007. from the original on June 1, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2009.
  11. ^ a b "Sexo, mentiras e videotape". UOL notícias (in Brazilian Portuguese). from the original on December 3, 2017. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
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  13. ^ "The Man – Mission". DavidBerg.org. from the original on February 20, 2014. Retrieved August 13, 2016.
  14. ^ Chancellor, James (2000). Life in The Family: An Oral History of the Children of God. Syracuse, NY: University of Syracuse Press. pp. 64–67.
  15. ^ a b Chancellor, James D. (2000). Life in The Family: An Oral History of the Children of God. Syracuse University Press. p. 11. ISBN 9780815606451. from the original on September 6, 2022. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
  16. ^ "Our History". The Family International. from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved August 13, 2016.
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  20. ^ Bainbridge, William Sims (1996). The Sociology of Religious Movements. Routledge. p. 223. ISBN 978-0-415-91202-0.
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  55. ^ Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru at IMDb
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  57. ^ "Episode 248: Children of God Part I - Mother's Peanut Butter". Spotify. November 28, 2016. from the original on January 19, 2022. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
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Further reading

Academic

  • Chancellor, James (2000). Life in The Family: An Oral History of the Children of God. University of Syracuse Press, Syracuse, NY.
  • Bainbridge, William Sims (2002). The Endtime Family: Children of God. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-5264-6.
  • Bainbridge, William Sims (1996). The Sociology of Religious Movements. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-91202-4.
  • Barker, Eileen. (1989). New Religious Movements, A Practical Introduction. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. ISBN 0-11-340927-3.
  • Barker, Eileen. (2021). "Children of God/The Family International Armageddon" April 26, 2021, at the Wayback Machine. In James Crossley and Alastair Lockhart (eds.) Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements.
  • Barrett, DV (1996). Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions. Blandford A. Cassell. ISBN 0-7137-2567-2.
  • Boeri, Miriam Williams (2002). "Women After the Utopia: The Gendered Lives of Former Cult Members". Journal of Contemporary Ethnography. 31 (3): 323–360. doi:10.1177/0891241602031003003. S2CID 145652798.
  • Kent, Stephen A. (1994). "Lustful prophet: A psycho-sexual historical study of the children of god's leader, David Berg". Cultic Studies Journal. 11 (2): 135–188. from the original on February 28, 2005. Retrieved August 11, 2004.
  • Kent, Stephen A. (1994). "Misattribution and social control in the Children of God". Journal of Religion and Health. 33 (1): 29–43. doi:10.1007/BF02354497. PMID 24263783. S2CID 24012781. from the original on June 28, 2005. Retrieved July 6, 2005.
  • Kent, Stephen A. (2000). "Brainwashing and re-indoctrination programs in the Children of God/The Family". Cultic Studies Journal. 17: 56–78. from the original on February 28, 2005. Retrieved August 11, 2004.
  • Lewis, James R, and Melton, J. Gordon (eds). (1994). Sex, Slander, and Salvation: Investigating The Family/Children of God. Center for Academic Press, Stanford, CA.
  • Lynch, Dalva, and Paul Carden (1990). "Inside the 'Heavenly Elite': The Children of God Today." August 3, 2004, at the Wayback Machine. Christian Research Journal, pp 16.
  • McFarland, Robert (1994). The Journal of Psychohistory 4(21).
  • Melton, J. Gordon (2004). The Children of God, "The Family" (Studies in Contemporary Religion vol. 7). Signature Books. ISBN 1-56085-180-5.
  • Melton, J. Gordon (2004). The Family International Britannica Article April 24, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Melton, J. Gordon and Robert L. Moore (1982). The Cult Experience: Responding to the New Religious Pluralism. The Pilgrim Press, New York, USA.
  • Palmer, Susan J. (1994). "Heaven's Children: The Children of God's Second Generation" in Sex, Slander, and Salvation, op. cit.
  • Palmer, Susan J., and Charlotte Hardman eds. (1999). Children in New Religions (3rd ed.). Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2620-5.
  • Shepherd, Gary, and Lawrence Lilliston (1994). "Field Observations of Young People's Experience and Role in The Family" in Sex, Slander, and Salvation, op. cit.
  • Shepherd, Gary, and Shepherd, Gordon (August 2005). "Accommodation and Reformation in The Family/Children of God" March 11, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Nova Religio (Journal of the University of California)
  • Shepherd, Gary and Shepherd, Gordon (Spring 2000). The Oakland Journal.
  • Wilson, Bryan and Jamie Cresswell, eds. (1999). New Religious Movements: Challenge and Response. Routledge, London, UK.
  • Wright, Stuart (1987). Leaving Cults: The Dynamics of Defection. Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. Washington, D.C., USA. ISBN 0-932566-06-5 (Contains interviews with ex-members of three groups, among others the Children of God)
  • Van Zandt, David (1991). Living in the Children of God. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
  • Young, Shawn David, Hippies, Jesus Freaks, and Music (Ann Arbor: Xanedu/Copley Original Works, 2005). ISBN 1-59399-201-7.

Journalistic and popular

  • McManus, Una (1980). Not for a Million Dollars. Impact Books. ISBN 0-914850-54-7.
  • Williams, Miriam (1999). Heaven's Harlots: My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult. Quill. ISBN 0-688-17012-9.
  • "30 Members of Children of God arrested" December 14, 2017, at the Wayback Machine (September 2, 1993). Washington Post, pp. A05
  • "The Family" and Final Harvest" March 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine (June 2, 1993). Washington Post, pp. A01
  • Goodstein, Laurie (2005), "Murder and Suicide Reviving Claims of Child Abuse in Cult May 3, 2015, at the Wayback Machine", The New York Times, January 15, 2005, pg. A-1
  • Don Lattin: Jesus Freaks: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge. HarperOne. ISBN 0-06-111804-4.
  • Mahoney, Mary (2020). Abnormal Normal: My Life in the Children of God ISBN 979-8-6317-4606-0

External links

Official

  • Official website
  • DavidBerg.org – Official website explaining David Brandt Berg's mission, vision and message.
  • KarenZerby.org – Karen Zerby's official site.
  • – Official Governing Documents of The Family International.
  • Children of God.com – Official history of the COG (pre-TFI).

Other

  • xFamily – Wiki detailing TFI; includes large collections of multimedia, press coverage, and internal TFI publications.
  • xFamily PubsDB – a near-complete database of all writings by David Berg and Karen Zerby.
  • exfamily.org – information, forums, links, etc. about TFI by former first-generation members.

family, international, ohioan, parachurch, organization, teens, christ, confused, with, family, fellowship, christian, organization, family, australian, group, christian, religious, movement, founded, huntington, beach, california, 1968, david, berg, that, bee. For Ohioan parachurch organization see Teens for Christ Not to be confused with Family The Fellowship Christian organization or The Family Australian New Age group The Family International TFI is a Christian New Religious Movement founded in Huntington Beach California USA in 1968 by David Berg that has been criticized as an authoritarian cult 1 2 Originally named Teens for Christ it has gone under a number of different names It gained notoriety as The Children of God COG It was later renamed and reorganized as The Family of Love 1978 1981 which was eventually shortened to The Family As of 2004 it has gone by The Family International The Family InternationalAbbreviationTFITypeChristian cultLeaderKaren Zerby 1994 present FounderDavid BergBranched fromThe FamilyOther name s Teens for Christ The Children of God The Family of Love The FamilyOfficial websitethefamilyinternational wbr orgFormer members have accused the group of child sexual abuse physical abuse exploitation 3 the targeting of vulnerable people 4 and creating lasting trauma among children raised in the group 5 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 2 1 The Children of God 1968 1977 2 2 The Family of Love 1978 1981 2 3 The Family 1982 1994 2 4 The Family 1995 2003 2 5 The Family International 2004 present 2 6 Recent teachings 2 6 1 Spirit Helpers 2 6 2 The Keys of the Kingdom 2 6 3 Loving Jesus 3 Controversy 4 Criticism 5 Notable members past and present 5 1 Joined in adulthood 5 2 Raised in the COG and later left 6 Autobiographical accounts 7 Media featuring the group 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 Academic 10 2 Journalistic and popular 11 External links 11 1 Official 11 2 OtherOverview EditAccording to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation at its height the Family movement had tens of thousands of members including River and Joaquin Phoenix Rose McGowan and Jeremy Spencer 4 TFI initially spread a message of salvation apocalypticism spiritual revolution and happiness and distrust of the outside world which the members called The System Like some other fundamentalist groups it foretold the coming of a dictator called the anti Christ the rise of a brutal One World Government and its eventual overthrow by Jesus Christ in the Second Coming 6 In 1976 7 it began a method of evangelism called Flirty Fishing that used sex to show God s love and mercy and win converts resulting in controversy 8 TFI s founder and prophetic leader David Berg who was first called Moses David in the Texas press citation needed and was also referred to Father David by members 6 gave himself the titles of King The Last Endtime Prophet Moses and David Berg communicated with his followers via Mo Letters letters of instruction and counsel on myriad spiritual and practical subjects until his death in late 1994 9 After his death his widow Karen Zerby became the leader of TFI taking the titles of Queen and Prophetess Zerby married Steve Kelly also known as Peter Amsterdam an assistant of Berg s whom Berg had handpicked as her consort Kelly took the title of King Peter and became the face of TFI speaking in public more often than either Berg or Zerby There have been multiple allegations of child sexual abuse made by past members 10 11 Berg preached a combination of traditional Christian evangelism with elements popular with the Counterculture of the 1960s There was much end of the world imagery found in the Book of Revelation of the New Testament preaching of impending doom for America and the ineffectiveness of established churches Berg urged a return to the early Christian community described in the Bible s Book of Acts in which believers lived together and shared all 6 resembling communal living of late 1960s hippies History EditThe Children of God 1968 1977 Edit The founder of the movement David Brandt Berg 1919 1994 was a former Christian and Missionary Alliance pastor 12 Berg started in 1968 as an evangelical preacher with a following of born again hippies who gathered at a coffeehouse in Huntington Beach in Orange County California In 1969 after having a revelation that California would be hit by a major earthquake he left Huntington Beach and took his followers on the road 6 They would proselytize in the streets and distribute pamphlets Leaders within COG were referred to as The Chain Members of The Children of God COG founded communes first called colonies now referred to as homes in various cities Berg communicated with his followers by writing letters He published nearly 3 000 letters over a period of 24 years referred to as the Mo Letters 13 In a letter written in January 1972 Berg stated that he was God s prophet for the contemporary world attempting to further solidify his spiritual authority within the group Berg s letters also contained public acknowledgement of his own failings and weaknesses 14 verification needed for example he issued a Mo Letter entitled My confession I was an alcoholic ML 1406 Summer 1982 relating his depression after some of his closest supporters quit in 1978 15 In 1972 a Mo Letter reportedly entitled Flee as a Bird to Your Mountain was interpreted by some members such as Ruth Gordon as a warning to leave America God was going to destroy the U S and we had to get out This along with the pressure members felt that parents were trying to rescue children who had joined CoG encouraged members to migrate abroad first to Europe eventually to Latin America and East Asia 6 By 1972 COG stated it had 130 communities around the world 16 and by the mid 1970s it had colonies in an estimated 70 countries 6 BBC reported 10 000 full time COG members in the 1970s 3 In 1976 7 Berg had introduced a new proselytizing method called Flirty Fishing or FFing which encouraged female members to show God s love through sexual relationships with potential converts Flirty Fishing was practiced by members of Berg s inner circle starting in 1973 and was introduced to the general membership in 1976 17 The Family of Love 1978 1981 Edit A form of love bombing Flirty Fishing encouraged female members to enter sexual relationships with potential converts The Children of God was abolished in February 1978 and Berg renamed his group The Family of Love 6 In what Berg called the Re organization Nationalization Revolution or RNR 18 Berg reorganized the movement dismissing more than 300 leading members after hearing unspecified reports of serious misconduct and abuse of their positions 6 Reportedly involved were The Chain s abuse of authority and disagreements within it about the continued use of Flirty Fishing The group was also accused of sexually abusing and raping minors within the organization with considerable evidence to support this claim One eighth of the total membership left the movement Those who remained became part of a reorganized movement called the Family of Love and later The Family The majority of the group s beliefs remained the same 17 The Family of Love era was characterized by international expansion After 1978 Flirty Fishing increased drastically 15 and became common practice within the group A Mo Letter from 1980 ML 999 May 1980 for example was headlined The Devil Hates Sex But God Loves It 19 In some areas flirty fishers used escort agencies to meet potential converts According to TFI over 100 000 received God s gift of salvation through Jesus and some chose to live the life of a disciple and missionary as a result of Flirty Fishing 17 Researcher Bill Bainbridge obtained data from TFI suggesting that from 1974 until 1987 members had sexual contact with 223 989 people while practicing Flirty Fishing 20 The Family 1982 1994 Edit According to the Family s official history the group had far fewer common standards of conduct during The Family of Love stage than it had previously In the late 1980s the group tightened its standards to ensure that all member communities provide a very wholesome environment for all particularly the children and changed its name to The Family 6 In March 1989 TF issued a statement that in early 1985 an urgent memorandum had been sent to all members reminding them that any such activities adult child sexual contact are strictly forbidden within our group emphasis in original and such activities were grounds for immediate excommunication from the group 21 In January 2005 Claire Borowik a spokesperson for TFI stated Due to the fact that our current zero tolerance policy regarding sexual interaction between adults and underage minors was not in our literature published before 1986 we came to the realization that during a transitional stage of our movement from 1978 until 1986 there were cases when some minors were subject to sexually inappropriate advances This was corrected officially in 1986 when any contact between an adult and minor any person under 21 years of age was declared an excommunicable offense 22 In the early 1990s the group broke years of virtual silence and began inviting reporters and religious scholars to visit its commune in La Habra California where at least a Washington Post journalist Gustav Niebuhr found its members to be a clean cut bunch friendly and courteous At that time The Family claimed to have about 9 000 members worldwide with about 750 scattered across the United States 6 The group emphasized its mainstream Christian opposition to abortion homosexuality drugs and drunkenness and its respect for Rev Billy Graham 6 The Family 1995 2003 Edit After Berg s death in October 1994 Karen Zerby known in the group as Mama Maria Queen Maria Maria David or Maria Fontaine assumed leadership of the group In February 1995 the group introduced the Love Charter 23 which defined the rights and responsibilities of Charter Members and Homes The Charter also included the Fundamental Family Rules a summary of rules and guidelines from past TF publications which were still in effect In the 1994 95 British court case the Rt Hon Lord Justice Alan Ward ruled that the group including some of its top leaders had in the past engaged in abusive sexual practices involving minors and had also used severe corporal punishment and sequestration of minors 24 He found that by 1995 TF had abandoned these practices and concluded that they were a safe environment for children Nevertheless he did require that the group cease all corporal punishment of children in the United Kingdom and denounce any of Berg s writings that were responsible for children in TF having been subjected to sexually inappropriate behaviour 25 The Family International 2004 present Edit The Love Charter is The Family s set governing document that entails each member s rights responsibilities and requirements while the Missionary Member Statutes and Fellow Member Statutes were written for the governance of TFI s Missionary member and Fellow Member circles respectively FD Homes were reviewed every six months against a published set of criteria The Love Charter increased the number of single family homes as well as homes that relied on jobs such as self employment 26 Recent teachings Edit TFI s recent teachings are based on beliefs which they term the new spiritual weapons TFI members believe that they are soldiers in the spiritual war of good versus evil for the souls and hearts of men Spirit Helpers Edit Spirit Helpers include angels other religious and mythical figures and departed humans including celebrities for example the goddess Aphrodite the Snowman Merlin the Sphinx Elvis 27 Marilyn Monroe Audrey Hepburn 28 Richard Nixon and Winston Churchill The Keys of the Kingdom Edit TFI believes that the Biblical passage I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven and whatsoever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven and whatsoever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven Matthew 16 19 refers to an increasing amount of spiritual authority that was given to Peter and the early disciples According to TFI beliefs this passage refers to keys that were hidden and unused in the centuries that followed but were again revealed through Karen Zerby as more power to pray and obtain miracles TFI members call on the various Keys of the Kingdom for extra effect during prayer The Keys like most TFI beliefs were published in magazines that looked like comic books in order to make them teachable to children 29 These beliefs are still generally held and practiced even after the reboot documents of 2010 citation needed Loving Jesus Edit Loving Jesus is a term TFI members use to describe their intimate sexual relationship with Jesus TFI describes its Loving Jesus teaching as a radical form of bridal theology 30 They believe the church of followers is Christ s bride called to love and serve him with wifely fervor however this bridal theology is taken further encouraging members to imagine Jesus is joining them during sexual intercourse and masturbation Male members are cautioned to visualize themselves as women in order to avoid a homosexual relationship with Jesus Many TFI publications and spirit messages claimed to be from Jesus himself elaborate this intimate sexual relation they believe Jesus desires and needs TFI imagines itself as his special bride in graphic poetry guided visualizations artwork 31 and songs 32 Some TFI literature is not brought into conservative countries for fear it may be classified at customs as pornography 33 The literature outlining this view of Jesus and his desire for a sexual relationship with believers was edited for younger teens 34 then further edited for children 35 Controversy EditSecond generation adults known as SGAs are adults born or reared in TFI Anti TFI sentiment has been publicly expressed by some who have left the group examples include sisters Celeste Jones Kristina Jones and Juliana Buhring who wrote a book 36 on their lives in TFI 37 TFI members are expected to respect legal and civil authorities where they live Members have typically cooperated with appointed authorities even during the police and social service raids of their communities in the early 1990s 38 Criticism EditThe Family has been criticized by the press and the anti cult movement Ex members have accused the Family s leadership of following a policy of lying to outsiders being steeped in a history of sexual deviance and even meddling in Third World politics The Family replies that it is a victim of persecution 6 In 1971 an organization called FREECOG was founded by concerned parents and others including deprogrammer Ted Patrick to free members of the COG from their involvement in the group At least one individual growing up in the family Verity Carter during the Children of God era described being sexually abused from the age of four by members of the cult including her own father She blames the philosophy of David Berg who told members that God was love and love was sex so that sex should not be limited by age or relationship Carter also complains of being repeatedly beaten and whipped for the smallest of transgressions being denied music or television or culture or other contact with the outside world so that she had no idea how the world worked other than how to manipulate the systemites outsiders like social workers 3 Author Don Lattin interviewed numerous members of the Family for his book Jesus Freaks In a review of his book Paul Burgarino describes Berg as drawing from the remnants of hippie life people with nothing to lose nowhere to go and no Christian background to alert them to deviations in Berg s preaching 5 One ex Children of God member Jerry Golland describes himself at the time of joining the group as penniless and so depressed that the Children of God scraped him off the street 4 Members would learn to spot you know a vulnerable person We called them sheep Golland told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 4 Pressure to raise money could also be intense Ex member Golland says that members who were good at raising money and distributing the pamphlets were called Shiners Those with poor sales were called Shamers If you missed your quota you could not come home for dinner he said 4 Notable members past and present EditJoined in adulthood Edit Jeremy Spencer blues slide guitarist and a founding member of Fleetwood Mac which he left in 1971 when he joined TFI 39 Raised in the COG and later left Edit Christopher Owens musician of US indie band Girls was brought up in TFI by his parents 40 41 Celeste Jones and Kristina Jones co authors along with Juliana Buhring of Not Without My Sister an autobiography detailing extensive abuse they suffered in COG 42 This book is used by the organization RAINN as a reference for child sexual abuse victims Juliana Buhring first woman to bicycle around the world 43 and co author of Not Without My Sister Rose McGowan film actress described her TFI childhood in interviews with Howard Stern 44 People magazine 45 and later in her book Brave River Phoenix Joaquin Phoenix Rain Phoenix and Summer Phoenix actors were members of the group with their sister Liberty Phoenix from 1972 to 1978 River Phoenix who died of a drug overdose in 1993 told Details magazine in November 1991 that they re ruining people s lives 46 Susan Justice American pop rock singer songwriter and guitarist known best for her debut self recorded album The Subway Recordings Tina Dupuy American journalist and syndicated columnist Ricky Rodriguez subject of the suppressed manual advocating adult child sexual contact committed a murder suicide in 2005 killing one of the women who raised and allegedly sexually abused him then himself 10 Lauren Hough author of Leaving is Not the Hardest Thing 47 brought up in TFI Flor Edwards author 48 who was raised inside the cult before her parents moved out Dawn Watson Brazilian victim of sexual abuse while living in a TFI community 11 Taylor Stevens author 49 brought up in the cult from age 12 until she left in her twenties with her two children Bexy Cameron British child member who left aged 15 and later wrote a book about her experiences 50 Faith Jones a lawyer was raised in the group in Macau before leaving She wrote about her life in the book Sex Cult Nun 51 Autobiographical accounts EditDavis Deborah Linda Berg 1984 THE CHILDREN OF GOD The Inside Story Zondervan Books Grand Rapids Michigan ISBN 0 310 27840 6 Expose by the founder s eldest daughter who left the cult Connolly Ray 2011 Something Somebody Stole ISBN 978 1460922545 Expose by a senior member who left after 20 years Young Daniella Mestyanek 2022 Uncultured A Memior ISBN 978 1250280114 Behind the tall foreboding gates of a commune in Brazil Daniella Mestyanek Young was raised in the religious cult The Children of God also known as The Family as the daughter of high ranking members Media featuring the group EditThe Jesus Trip 1971 a documentary by Denis Tuohy that has interviews with Children of God members Children of God 1994 a 63 minute Channel 4 documentary by John Smithson detailing the Padilla family and the abuse of their three underage daughters and the death of another Children of God Lost and Found a 75 minute documentary by Noah Thomson featured at the 2007 Slamdance Film Festival 52 Cult Killer The Rick Rodriguez Story 53 minute UK documentary with transcript 53 In the first episode of Louis Theroux s Weird Weekends Born Again Christians Louis visits a Texas TFI family Buzzcocks mentions the group as Children Of God in their song Orgasm Addict RedLetterMedia featured the Family International video S O S on an episode of Best of the Worst 54 Mentioned in Tony Robbins I Am Not Your Guru documentary at 52 minutes of the film as an organization where children are forced to have sex from the age of six 55 The Parcast Podcast Cults Episodes 11 and 12 56 Citizen Rose A five part documentary series shown on the E Channel The first episode premiered on January 30 2018 The series follows actress Rose McGowan who was born into the cult The Last Podcast on the Left did a four part series on the cult Episodes 248 251 57 The Dan Cummins podcast Timesuck covered the cult in episode 104 The Children of God Sex Cult AJJ released a song entitled Children of God on their 2014 album Christmas Island A amp E s Cults and Extreme Belief episode 3 2018 is about the Children of God 58 See also EditComet Kohoutek was viewed by David Berg as a prophetic sign of imminent disaster Jim Palosaari co formed the Jesus People Army left it before the group joined the Children of God and tried to convince Linda Meissner not to join it Love bombing describes a manipulative style of recruiting Panton Hill Victoria is the location of one of the communes where a large government raid occurred and many children were removed by social services References Edit The Children of God The Family International Cultic Studies Association ICSA Archived from the original on April 20 2020 Retrieved December 23 2017 Group Information Archives Cult Education Institute Archived from the original on October 8 2016 Retrieved December 23 2017 a b c Brocklehurst Steven June 27 2018 Children of God cult was hell on earth BBC Scotland News Archived from the original on August 26 2021 Retrieved September 25 2021 a b c d e Gardner Simon March 13 2016 Children of God sex cult survivors come out of the shadows CBC News Archived from the original on September 30 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 a b BURGARINO PAUL November 1 2007 Book explores what becomes of offspring of 60s Jesus Freaks East Bay Times Archived from the original on September 30 2021 Retrieved September 30 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l Niebuhr Gustav June 2 993 The Family and Final Harvest Washington Post Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Retrieved October 1 2021 a b Flirty fishing DavidBerg org Archived from the original on August 9 2014 Retrieved March 2 2014 Niebuhr Gustav June 2 1993 The Family and Final Harvest The Washington Post p A01 Archived from the original on March 25 2012 Retrieved April 27 2008 Index The xFamily org Publications Database February 20 2012 Archived from the original on January 26 2019 Retrieved July 24 2016 a b Young man s suicide blamed on mother s cult CNN December 5 2007 Archived from the original on June 1 2010 Retrieved September 3 2009 a b Sexo mentiras e videotape UOL noticias in Brazilian Portuguese Archived from the original on December 3 2017 Retrieved December 2 2017 History Mission DavidBerg org Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved August 13 2016 The Man Mission DavidBerg org Archived from the original on February 20 2014 Retrieved August 13 2016 Chancellor James 2000 Life in The Family An Oral History of the Children of God Syracuse NY University of Syracuse Press pp 64 67 a b Chancellor James D 2000 Life in The Family An Oral History of the Children of God Syracuse University Press p 11 ISBN 9780815606451 Archived from the original on September 6 2022 Retrieved October 2 2021 Our History The Family International Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved August 13 2016 a b c Origins The Family International Archived from the original on April 29 2009 Retrieved July 24 2016 Chancellor James D 2000 Life in The Family An Oral History of the Children of God Syracuse University Press p 10 ISBN 9780815606451 Archived from the original on September 6 2022 Retrieved October 2 2021 Chancellor James D 2000 Life in The Family An Oral History of the Children of God Syracuse University Press p 17 ISBN 9780815606451 Archived from the original on September 6 2022 Retrieved October 2 2021 Bainbridge William Sims 1996 The Sociology of Religious Movements Routledge p 223 ISBN 978 0 415 91202 0 Child Abuse XFamily January 24 2008 Archived from the original on September 9 2005 Retrieved July 24 2016 Borowik Claire Statement From Family International NewDayNews com Archived from the original on September 14 2005 Retrieved June 30 2005 Charter of the Family International Governing Documents TheFamily org Archived from the original on August 25 2010 Retrieved July 24 2016 The Judgement of Lord Justice Ward 1995 Ex Family org Archived from the original on March 6 2016 Retrieved August 13 2016 Judgement of Lord Justice Ward www exfamily org Archived from the original on October 25 2021 Retrieved November 24 2020 Shepherd Gary Shepherd Gordon August 2005 Accommodation and Reformation in the Family Children of God Nova Religio 9 1 67 92 doi 10 1525 nr 2005 9 1 067 Pre Release of Who Said They re Dead Part 1 The xFamily org Publications Database April 3 2003 Archived from the original on January 6 2014 Retrieved July 24 2016 Pre Release of Who Said They re Dead Part 2 The xFamily org Publications Database April 3 2003 Archived from the original on January 6 2014 Retrieved July 24 2016 Using The Keys Part 1 PDF archive xfamily org Archived PDF from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 24 2016 About The Family International The Family International Archived from the original on April 29 2009 Retrieved July 24 2016 File Tamar 558 jpg XFamily Children of God XFamily Archived from the original on February 14 2012 Retrieved July 24 2016 Loving Jesus album XFamily Children of God XFamily June 11 2008 Archived from the original on October 26 2011 Retrieved July 24 2016 Love words to Jesus XFamily Children of God XFamily September 12 2008 Archived from the original on October 26 2011 Retrieved July 24 2016 Loving Jesus XFamily Children of God XFamily March 16 2012 Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved July 24 2016 Mlk 168 PDF archive xfamily org Archived PDF from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 24 2016 Jones K Jones C amp Buhring J 2007 Not Without My Sister London Harper Collins Publishing ISBN 9780007248070 Bios notwithoutmysister com Archived from the original on May 28 2010 Retrieved March 12 2009 Bainbridge William Sims 2002 The Endtime Family Children of God Albany NY State University of New York Press Celmins Martin Mac Myths and Mysteries PDF Media xfamily org Archived PDF from the original on September 28 2011 Retrieved July 24 2016 Dombal Ryan September 14 2011 Girls Pitchfork Archived from the original on September 25 2011 Retrieved July 24 2016 Easley Emily Christopher Owens FAQ magazine Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Retrieved October 13 2012 Home Notwithoutmysister com Archived from the original on May 29 2010 Retrieved March 12 2009 Moreton Cole December 22 2012 Juliana Buhring becomes first woman to cycle round the world as she pedals into Naples after 152 days on the road The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Howard Stern radio broadcast Archived from the original on August 19 2000 Rose McGowan How She Survived and Escaped a Cult People Archived from the original on February 16 2015 Retrieved February 15 2015 Friend Tad March 1994 River with love and anger Esquire 121 3 108 117 ISSN 0014 0791 Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Retrieved March 22 2009 Hough Lauren November 27 2016 Work pray fear my life in the Family cult The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on December 6 2016 Retrieved December 6 2016 Apocalypse Child June 24 2017 Archived from the original on February 17 2020 Retrieved February 17 2020 On Writing The Informationist and Coming from a Cult Background Huffington Post May 25 2011 Archived from the original on August 28 2017 Retrieved December 3 2017 Guardian journalist helped me see a way out ex cult member recalls the Guardian July 7 2021 Archived from the original on April 4 2022 Retrieved April 4 2022 Jones Faith 2021 Sex Cult Nun New York HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 978 0 06 295245 5 Children of God Lost and Found at IMDb Cult Killer The Rick Rodriguez Story XFamily Children of God XFamily Archived from the original on June 16 2010 Retrieved July 24 2016 Red Letter Media Best of the Worst Wheel of the Worst 5 Redlettermedia com June 3 2014 Archived from the original on September 6 2022 Retrieved July 24 2016 Tony Robbins I Am Not Your Guru at IMDb Cults Parcast Archived from the original on December 4 2017 Retrieved December 4 2017 Episode 248 Children of God Part I Mother s Peanut Butter Spotify November 28 2016 Archived from the original on January 19 2022 Retrieved January 19 2022 Cults and Extreme Belief S1E3 aired June 5 2018 Retrieved June 13 2018 Archived from the original on June 13 2018 Retrieved June 13 2018 Further reading EditAcademic Edit Chancellor James 2000 Life in The Family An Oral History of the Children of God University of Syracuse Press Syracuse NY Bainbridge William Sims 2002 The Endtime Family Children of God State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 5264 6 Bainbridge William Sims 1996 The Sociology of Religious Movements Routledge ISBN 0 415 91202 4 Barker Eileen 1989 New Religious Movements A Practical Introduction Her Majesty s Stationery Office ISBN 0 11 340927 3 Barker Eileen 2021 Children of God The Family International Armageddon Archived April 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine In James Crossley and Alastair Lockhart eds Critical Dictionary of Apocalyptic and Millenarian Movements Barrett DV 1996 Sects Cults and Alternative Religions Blandford A Cassell ISBN 0 7137 2567 2 Boeri Miriam Williams 2002 Women After the Utopia The Gendered Lives of Former Cult Members Journal of Contemporary Ethnography 31 3 323 360 doi 10 1177 0891241602031003003 S2CID 145652798 Kent Stephen A 1994 Lustful prophet A psycho sexual historical study of the children of god s leader David Berg Cultic Studies Journal 11 2 135 188 Archived from the original on February 28 2005 Retrieved August 11 2004 Kent Stephen A 1994 Misattribution and social control in the Children of God Journal of Religion and Health 33 1 29 43 doi 10 1007 BF02354497 PMID 24263783 S2CID 24012781 Archived from the original on June 28 2005 Retrieved July 6 2005 Kent Stephen A 2000 Brainwashing and re indoctrination programs in the Children of God The Family Cultic Studies Journal 17 56 78 Archived from the original on February 28 2005 Retrieved August 11 2004 Lewis James R and Melton J Gordon eds 1994 Sex Slander and Salvation Investigating The Family Children of God Center for Academic Press Stanford CA Lynch Dalva and Paul Carden 1990 Inside the Heavenly Elite The Children of God Today Archived August 3 2004 at the Wayback Machine Christian Research Journal pp 16 McFarland Robert 1994 The Children of God The Journal of Psychohistory 4 21 Melton J Gordon 2004 The Children of God The Family Studies in Contemporary Religion vol 7 Signature Books ISBN 1 56085 180 5 Melton J Gordon 2004 The Family International Britannica Article Archived April 24 2012 at the Wayback Machine Melton J Gordon and Robert L Moore 1982 The Cult Experience Responding to the New Religious Pluralism The Pilgrim Press New York USA Palmer Susan J 1994 Heaven s Children The Children of God s Second Generation in Sex Slander and Salvation op cit Palmer Susan J and Charlotte Hardman eds 1999 Children in New Religions 3rd ed Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 2620 5 Shepherd Gary and Lawrence Lilliston 1994 Field Observations of Young People s Experience and Role in The Family in Sex Slander and Salvation op cit Shepherd Gary and Shepherd Gordon August 2005 Accommodation and Reformation in The Family Children of God Archived March 11 2012 at the Wayback Machine Nova Religio Journal of the University of California Shepherd Gary and Shepherd Gordon Spring 2000 The Moral Career of a New Religious Movement The Oakland Journal Wilson Bryan and Jamie Cresswell eds 1999 New Religious Movements Challenge and Response Routledge London UK Wright Stuart 1987 Leaving Cults The Dynamics of Defection Society for the Scientific Study of Religion Washington D C USA ISBN 0 932566 06 5 Contains interviews with ex members of three groups among others the Children of God Van Zandt David 1991 Living in the Children of God Princeton University Press Princeton New Jersey Young Shawn David Hippies Jesus Freaks and Music Ann Arbor Xanedu Copley Original Works 2005 ISBN 1 59399 201 7 Journalistic and popular Edit McManus Una 1980 Not for a Million Dollars Impact Books ISBN 0 914850 54 7 Williams Miriam 1999 Heaven s Harlots My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult Quill ISBN 0 688 17012 9 30 Members of Children of God arrested Archived December 14 2017 at the Wayback Machine September 2 1993 Washington Post pp A05 The Family and Final Harvest Archived March 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine June 2 1993 Washington Post pp A01 Goodstein Laurie 2005 Murder and Suicide Reviving Claims of Child Abuse in Cult Archived May 3 2015 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times January 15 2005 pg A 1 Don Lattin Jesus Freaks A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge HarperOne ISBN 0 06 111804 4 Mahoney Mary 2020 Abnormal Normal My Life in the Children of God ISBN 979 8 6317 4606 0Jones Faith 2021 Sex Cult Nun Harper Collins ISBN 978 0062952455External links EditOfficial Edit Official website DavidBerg org Official website explaining David Brandt Berg s mission vision and message KarenZerby org Karen Zerby s official site TFICharter com Official Governing Documents of The Family International Children of God com Official history of the COG pre TFI Other Edit xFamily Wiki detailing TFI includes large collections of multimedia press coverage and internal TFI publications xFamily PubsDB a near complete database of all writings by David Berg and Karen Zerby exfamily org information forums links etc about TFI by former first generation members Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Family International amp oldid 1142371426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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