December 2012 -
Kansas City, MO - Susan Claridge (S.R.Claridge),author of seven
mystery novels, never imagined she would receive threatening letters from
readers. But she never imagined one of
her stories would play out in real life either.
The problem: International House of Prayer (IHOP) members
are claiming her book, ‘House of Lies’ is about their group.
On her blog today,
Claridge posted the threatening note: “S.R.Claridge,
I have read your blogs about IHOP and your book House of Lies. I know it's
written about IHOP but your information in the book isn't accurate. You tried
to make your character Max Sagan be like Mike Bickle, but Bickle is a true man
of God and a true prophet. You are going against God and God will not allow you
to spread lies about His chosen people. You are offended by what you don't
understand and you're mocking people you shouldn't. If I were you I'd be careful.”
The sender is someone
who calls themself “AnonBerean12.” Anon
stands for anonymous. Berean is a common
term used within IHOP and means “one who tests what is told.” The number twelve can be symbolic of many
things, the twelve apostles, the fact that IHOP founder, Mike Bickle, teaches
that God is raising twelve new super-prophets and apostles, etc. Regardless of the symbolism, it is clear that
the sender is an IHOP advocate.
Claridge’s response
reads calm. She first states factual
evidence about Bickle, his history with false prophesy and his status of being
what she calls a “self-proclaimed” prophet of God, and follows it up by asking
the sender a question.
Claridge wrote: “I will
end this blog by asking you one question:
Could it be that House of Lies offended you because deep down you know
you are indeed dwelling in a house of lies?
Could it be that it is just too close for comfort?”
If we were to tally points on who won this round it would be Claridge,
hands down. But one point cannot be
overlooked and that is the fact that a threat was made to “be careful.”
'House of Lies' is a story about a 29-year old woman who tries
to save her sister from a Kansas City cult group called P3, led by Maxwell
Sagan. The book probably wouldn’t have
drawn as much media attention were it not for the likeness between the
circumstances surrounding IHOP member, Bethany Deaton’s death, and what happens
to cult members in the story.
Now, IHOP members are bringing it even more attention with
their angry threats.
In relation to receiving hate mail about the book, Claridge
commented in a thread on her Facebook page:
“It doesn’t hurt me anymore because I know they are speaking from a
brainwashed view… but it saddens me.”
Accusations toward the book and the author from IHOP members have
been outlandish and Claridge states on her blog that she finds them “humorously
ironic.” One such complaint is that the
book doesn’t show IHOP accurately.
Any reader or mildly intelligent individual will tell you that
there is neither accuracy nor inaccuracy in fiction. It is whatever the novelist wants it to be. However, IHOP members have gone as far as to post negative reviews on Amazon, stating the book shows that the author has a personal vendetta against IHOP.
Despite the fact that Claridge has stated in a Fox 4 news interview, on her Facebook page and in her blog that the book is not written about IHOP, IHOP members refuse to listen. "I studied five cult groups before writing this novel. IHOP was merely one of those five," Claridge told Fox reporter, Gia Vang.
"They'd rather attack the author and place blame on her for their own insecurity about their cult group than face the truth," said one ex-IHOP member.
Outside of IHOP, ‘House of Lies’ is receiving rave reviews,
likening it to Dan Brown’s ‘The DaVinci Code’ and calling it “another
action-packed adventure by S.R.Claridge.”
(RipeReviews)
Is Tyler Deaton’s Southwestern group angry because the book, which
released three weeks prior to the Deaton murder, foretold the killing in which
they were involved? Are IHOP members
angry because ‘House of Lies’ hits too close to home?
Whatever the case, Claridge is taking the brunt.