Monday, July 28, 2014

Deaton Murder Trial Postponed AGAIN - Cult Details

The trial of Micah Moore has been postponed, yet again and is now scheduled for November 2014; over two years from the date of Bethany Deaton’s murder.  Some speculate there are higher powers at work with a trail leading right to IHOP’s doorstep.

Without re-hashing the entire story, I’d like to share a couple of links that will give background information and updated information you may not have heard before.  I will admit some of it was new to me.

Read here and see what Rolling Stone didn’t tell you about the Deaton case: 


In my research I’ve had the opportunity to talk with many people in and around Grandview, home of IHOP-KC.  Some are current members of IHOP, some former members and some with no affiliation at all.  There are many perspectives but I’ve noticed a common thread in every story.  One word, really.  Cult.  No matter who I interview, the word comes up.  They are either convinced IHOP is a cult, concerned that it might be a cult or defending it as a non-cult entity. 

Years ago, IHOP founder, Mike Bickle, created a list of seven ways to recognize the difference between a religious community and a cult. 

1. Opposing critical thinking

2. Isolating members and penalizing them for leaving

3. Emphasizing special doctrines outside scripture

4. Seeking inappropriate loyalty to their leaders

5. Dishonoring the family unit

6. Crossing Biblical boundaries of behavior (versus sexual purity and personal ownership)

7. Separation from the Church

The irony is when analyzing the testimonies of numerous former members, IHOP clearly meets all seven of these statutes.

One former FITN intern said, “I, as well as several people I know, were shut down when we dared to question our teachers.”

One former IHOPU student wrote:  “IHOPU discipleship is based on assimilation and a shame-based unity.” 

Another student noted, “The cycle of victim blaming or quasi-Stockholm Syndrome is alive and well there (at IHOP).”

But profound was an utterance from the lips of a former IHOPU teacher when he said, “Toxic faith, lies, pride, shaming…these kinds of things are sadly becoming an epidemic at IHOP.” 

I could literally quote from hundreds of testimony, but in the end the IHOP-ers will continue to defend their theology and claim that anyone against them is “disgruntled” or “misled.”  So, the point becomes moot and the agenda not to talk-down but rather to share the experiences of those who have been and are still involved with a hope to educate others.

In speaking with a literary acquaintance, the book House of Lies by S.R.Claridge came up in conversation, prompting me to contact the author, whose vast personal interest in IHOP was one of the driving factors behind her controversial novel.  Why the controversy?  As some of you will recall, two weeks after the release of House of Lies, which describes a cult member being drugged and ultimately murdered near a lake in Kansas City, Missouri; Bethany Deaton is found dead under similar circumstances.  FOXNews and the rest of the mid-west wanted to know if the author knew more than she was letting on.

The answer, yes.  Interviews with several reporters indicated that the author’s sister is personal friends with Mike Bickle and in leadership with the IHOP organization; starting an offshoot called Gateway House of Prayer (GHOP) in St. Louis.  In an interview Claridge expressed concern for her sister, stating, “IHOP possesses cult-like tendencies, theologies and practices of which I believe are detrimental to the individual, destructive to families and downright dangerous.”

After the release of House of Lies, Claridge received hundreds of hostile emails from IHOP members upset about the book, some of which stated that they were “praying for her to die.”

In a recent interview, Claridge stated that the hate mail, as she called it, has died down but she fully expects it to ramp up again when the sequel to House of Lies is released in 2015.  “I’ve said it a thousand times, ‘the books are fiction’ but their hatred of me is only proof that I have struck a chord of truth within the pages.”

What is that truth?  According to a former IHOP Editor, “members suffer from a spirit of elitism, and a demonic arrogance that trickles down from the top and stems from the belief that they really are the chosen members of God’s elite army.”  Upon what is this belief based?  A vision allegedly given to Mike Bickle from God. 

What happens if a member questions the validity of the vision?  Former member Anthony wrote, “Asking questions about or having any skepticism about the foundation of IHOP or Bickle’s vision is forbidden.”  Another former member, Kris Koppy said, “I was shamed for asking questions, shamed for disagreeing, shamed for thinking differently than the IHOP way.”

It makes one wonder what will happen next?  If you truly want to know why not make an appointment at the IHOP Prophecy Rooms, where you can receive prophecy-on-demand.  Different from fortune telling?  You tell me; but sign up quick because, according to the IHOP website, time slots fill up fast.  http://www.ihopkc.org/propheticministry/appointments/


“A perverse and wicked generation looks for a sign, but none will be given to it.”  Matthew 16:4

Does anyone else find it even remotely ironic that the IHOP symbol itself is waving a red flag?


Additional Resources: