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Perhaps the reference to the "cult group" founded by Rick Joyner in the 1970's would look a little bit less suspicious if a citation were given. Barring that, I think that this might be a warning sign for a neutrality disupte.
Perhaps the reference to the "cult group" founded by Rick Joyner in the 1970's would look a little bit less suspicious if a citation were given. Barring that, I think that this might be a warning sign for a neutrality disupte.

i was a member of a church that split because the new pastor only taught out of books by joyner. i don't trust him because he focuses far to much on his own revelation and not enough on the focus of christianity.. the bible. --- focus_on_time


I agree. Unless there is any evidence it is quite an allegation to say that a mainstream church leader ran a cultic group. As suggested I have put up a neutrality warning sign
I agree. Unless there is any evidence it is quite an allegation to say that a mainstream church leader ran a cultic group. As suggested I have put up a neutrality warning sign

Revision as of 02:37, 3 September 2006

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Rick Joyner's church has yet again changed its name, this time to "Every Nation". I would suggest we need to make more of a comment about the cult accusations surrounding this 'movement'. --144.138.162.221 03:09, 3 Dec 2004 (UTC)

An encyclopedia article should be unbiased, but I agree a mention of the cult accusations could be acceptable in this case. Does anyone know about this enough to add something to the article? Malachi456 03:23, 19 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think User:144.138.162.221 might be confused. The Every Nation website [1] has no mention of Rick Joyner as its founder. There is a comment on this by another wikipedia user (see below). --Nathaniel 05:14, 20 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Rick Joyner did not change the name of his church. Another group located in Nashville called Morning Star changed its name to Every Nation so it would not be confused with Morningstar under Joyner.

Yes, Rick Joyner's ministry is still called Morningstar - this is his website [2] Malachi456 02:40, 21 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Perhaps the reference to the "cult group" founded by Rick Joyner in the 1970's would look a little bit less suspicious if a citation were given. Barring that, I think that this might be a warning sign for a neutrality disupte.

i was a member of a church that split because the new pastor only taught out of books by joyner. i don't trust him because he focuses far to much on his own revelation and not enough on the focus of christianity.. the bible. --- focus_on_time

I agree. Unless there is any evidence it is quite an allegation to say that a mainstream church leader ran a cultic group. As suggested I have put up a neutrality warning sign