Another email I received about the TRINITY FOUNDATION
Since I published her email, I guess you might want to read her second letter too…so here it goes….
Thank you, Andrea. I understand and appreciate your skepticism. I wish I had been more skeptical when I started attending Trinity Foundation! But then I would have missed knowing the love of my life who I have now been married to for seven years. Several people have told me that they believe God led me to this cult for the primary purpose of getting my husband out. He had been there for over twenty years! After we dated for seven years and still were not able to secure the blessing to be married from our leader, we finally ran off (at the age of 40, no less) and were married which eventually led to our leaving the cult.I appreciate that you prayed about it before posting my letter on your blog. May God bless you. I’m not out to make a buck, but feel this is my ministry now to warn others about religious cults and spiritual abuse.Here is an excerpt from a recent post on the Dallas Observer blog:
“The controversy surrounding Dallas-based Trinity Foundation and the book I Can’t Hear God Anymore: Life in a Dallas Cult, by Wendy Duncan, is going national next week. And then, it’s going international. Of course, we were here first: In August we ran a story about Duncan’s book in which she says Anthony, who built an international reputation by busting televangelists such as Robert Tilton is spiritually and emotionally abusive toward his followers. Duncan also claims the Trinity Foundation a cult. Though many of his former followers agree, Anthony and members still involved with the group deny many of her allegations.
This month, the book received a rave in the Cultic Studies Review; Dr. Lois V. Svoboda called it a “page-turner” and insisted it “ranks along side of Hassan’s Combating Cult Mind Control and other first person cult narratives.” On February 8-10, at the Evangelical Ministries to New Religions conference in Birmingham, Alabama, David Clark, an international expert on cults and thought reform, will host a session called “Ole Anthony, the Trinity Foundation and the Cult Controversy.” Then, in June, he’ll do the same thing at the 2007 ICSA International Conference on Cults in Brussels, Belgium. There, 100 speakers from 22 countries will conduct sessions on everything from recovery for former group members to recent research developments on cult-like behavior…
Clark decided to do a workshop on Trinity this month because the group has an internationally high profile but few insiders have ever described their own experiences inside the group. What the outsider sees is very different than what the insiders see.
“The way the organization is set up concerns me,” says Clark, “this role Anthony has of opening up the mysteries of the kingdom of God. He’s known for quoting Scripture. He dazzles people with a tap dance about the Bible. He’s like a psychological pit bull.”
Wendy Duncan’s seven-year involvement with the Trinity Foundation ended after Anthony repeatedly refused to consecrate their marriage. “Anthony said he didn’t give a ‘rat’s ass’ about their marriage,” says Clark. “That says a
lot about what he’s like.”
Clark praises Anthony for raising issues of homelessness and simple living. “A lot of the stuff he points out publicly is very noble and noteworthy,” Clark says. “I find Trinity very resourceful. I think in the anti-cult community he’s known for all those resources he makes available. But he points out that many other leaders of cult-like groups are known to be humanitarian. One example: Jim Jones, who led his followers in a mass suicide. “Very powerful people were associated with Jones and he was known for his social work with the poor,” says Clark.
Duncan, naturally, is pleased that her book will be getting attention at the two conferences.
“When I set out to write the book, I had no intention of starting a war with Ole Anthony or his group,” Wendy Duncan e-mails. “I only wanted to write about my experience in order to provide an alternative perspective on the Trinity Foundation other than the one which has been publicized in the media. Additionally, I wanted to write something that would help others recover from a cultic or spiritually abusive experience. I hoped that by sharing my story former members of Trinity Foundation and other similar groups would begin to heal from their experience.
“As I began writing the book,” Wendy writes, “I assumed that everything Ole told us about himself and his background was true. It never occurred to me that a man who preached rigorous honesty and demanded accountability from the televangelists would not hold himself to the same standard. However, in the course of writing the book my research turned up some discrepancies between what Ole says about himself and what could actually be verified.
“In my opinion, Ole Anthony is running a religious cult, although he has presented himself as one of the guardians of Christianity against the
excesses of the televangelists. However, there are serious issues that call his motives and credibility into question. I think it is this lack of
veracity that is gaining notice for my book in certain circles-especially the various apologetics and anti-cult groups.” –Glenna Whitley



momlovesbeingathome said,
March 28, 2007 at 9:23 pm
Wow! What a story. People like that are so dangerous because they weave just enough truth (and in this case humanitarianism) in that they lead people astray without them even realizing it. That’s why we need to always be on our guard about what we allow others to teach us. We must always compare it to Scripture and make sure what they are teacing agrees with the Bible. I’m so glad that this couple was able to recognize what was going on and get out of the cult. I hope God uses them to reach many more that are involved in things like this.
(By the way, I tried to click on your links but neither of them worked for me. I don’t know if it’s my computer or the link but wanted to let you know.)
momlovesbeingathome said,
March 28, 2007 at 9:25 pm
Andrea, if I type in the web address you listed it worked. I don’t know why it won’t work to click on it but you can still access it if you type it in yourself (or copy and paste).
momlovesbeingathome said,
March 28, 2007 at 9:58 pm
You got it! It works now
timbob said,
March 29, 2007 at 12:57 am
Greetings. It’s amazing how deceptive some groups can be in these days. Indeed we need to be watching at all times. We have the word of God and we have the Holy Spirit abiding within who will guide us in all truth.
I have never heard of this group that’s mentioned before. Thanks for the warning. When asked about the last days, the first thing that Jesus said was “take heed that no man deceive you.”
have a blessed day in Christ.
timbob
heaintthroughwithmeyet said,
March 29, 2007 at 7:16 am
MOOOM, and TIMBOB
first of all thanks for your comments!
And another thing, dont leave the blogging world. Two have left this week, I cant stand to lose another one!
Love ya both
Andrea