On December 31, 2001, The Local
Church, The Local Churches, and Living Stream Ministry filed a $136 million defamation
lawsuit against Harvest House Publishers and authors John Ankerberg and John
Weldon. In their suit, The Local Church claimed that the book the Encyclopedia
of Cults and New Religions was libelous in regard to them. Through the course of
the legal proceedings, Harvest House and the authors have firmly stated the
language of the book does not at all defame The Local Church. The case has been
reviewed by Judge Kent Sullivan of the 80th Judicial District Court of Harris
County in Houston, Texas, and on March 9, 2004, Judge Sullivan declined
a motion for summary judgment, which is not a ruling against Harvest House and
the authors, but simply allows the case to continue forward. (At this level of
the legal process, the judge is not required to explain the reasoning behind
his ruling.) Consequently, Harvest
House Publishers, Ankerberg, and Weldon are taking this ruling to the Texas
court of appeals. We have great confidence in the fairness of our legal system,
and we truly believe that the appellate court will completely vindicate us.
For those
who desire to know more about the case, we have created this
question–and–answer document that provides an overview of the lawsuit. Please
know, as you read this, that our desire is simply to explain the facts about
the suit and other issues related to it, and to do so in a gracious manner that
speaks the truth in love. For the sake of making sure we represent The Local
Church and Living Stream Ministry with complete accuracy, all quotes excerpted
from their publications and websites are fully documented.
Who are the parties involved in this lawsuit against Harvest House Publishers and its authors?
The Local Church/The Local Churches—According
to The Local Church website
www.contendingforthefaith.org,
The Local Church is an “unincorporated association of Christian congregations”1
throughout the United States and world, and “each of these congregations is
also known as the local church in their respective city.”2 There are
96 congregations in the United States that are part of this lawsuit. The Local Church promotes the
teachings of Watchman Nee and Witness Lee. Witness Lee founded Living Stream
Ministry (which has long served as the publishing arm of The Local Church) in Southern California in
1965. Lee taught that The Local Church’s history “is a history of the Lord’s
recovery,”3 which explains why it refers to itself as being part of what
they call “the Lord’s recovery” in this age. The Local Church teaches this recovery is necessary because Christianity as
a whole has spiritually degenerated.
Living
Stream Ministry, based in Anaheim, California, is a
“not–for–profit publication and radio broadcast outreach associated with
the Local Church.”4
Among their hundreds of publications is The New Testament Recovery Version,
which includes extensive commentary from Witness Lee’s teachings. (This New
Testament Recovery Version is also distributed by an organization called Bibles
for America.5) Living Stream Ministry also offers
“Full–Time Training” for members of The Local Churches worldwide, with training
centers in Anaheim, California, and several countries.6
Harvest
House Publishers, Inc., based in Eugene, Oregon, is an
evangelical Christian publishing house established in 1974. It is one of the
founding members of the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association (ECPA) and
publishes approximately 160 books a year that affirm the essential teachings of
biblical, orthodox Christianity.
Dr.
John Ankerberg, coauthor of more than 60 books, is president and host
of the award–winning John Ankerberg Show, and has three earned degrees:
a Master of Arts in church history and the philosophy of Christian thought, a
Master of Divinity from Trinity International University, and a Doctor of Ministry from Luther Rice Seminary.
Dr.
John Weldon has authored or coauthored more than 80 books. He has a
Ph.D. in comparative religion from what is now Pacific International University and a D.Min. with
emphasis in contemporary religious
movements from Luther Rice Seminary, as well as master’s degrees in divinity (Luther
Rice Seminary) and Christian apologetics (Simon Greenleaf University/School of
Law).
What is the lawsuit about?
The Local
Church claims that The Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions (from
here onward, referred to as the Encyclopedia), published by Harvest
House Publishers and authored by John Ankerberg and John Weldon, defames The
Local Church, The Local Churches, and Living Stream Ministry by accusing them of
criminal and immoral conduct. The Local Church, on their website www.contendingforthefaith.org,
states that the Encyclopedia’s Introduction “clearly labels all of the
groups in the book as being guilty of the most deplorable, illegal and immoral
acts.”7
However,
much to the contrary, the book does not attribute such activity to The Local
Church or its followers, nor to “all of the groups in the book.” In fact, a
reading of the Encyclopedia clearly shows that a large percentage of the
groups do not have criminal or immoral conduct attributed to them. As is the
case with almost all of the groups in the book, The Local Church was included on
the basis of their significant theological deviations from biblical, orthodox
Christianity—deviations found in their written and published materials that
have to do with key essential doctrines about God, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, the
Trinity, the future state of the believer, and so on.
The Local Church has attempted to
argue that a small number of general statements in the Encyclopedia’s
Introduction and Doctrinal Appendix—statements about the characteristics and activities
of various cults—apply directly to them. But in actuality,
there was never any intent for the general statements in question to ascribe
misconduct to any specific group, and the language of the Encyclopedia
does not at all support their contention. Thus the book does not defame The
Local Church.
Particularly
noteworthy is the fact that The Local Church, in its lawsuit, does not dispute
the accuracy of the Encyclopedia chapter that comments on their beliefs.
This chapter is only 1¼ pages in length and includes fully documented quotes
taken directly from publications produced by The Local Church and Living Stream
Ministry.8 Neither does The Local Church dispute the accuracy of any
of the more than 1,350 fully documented quotes in the rest of the 731–page Encyclopedia.
Why did the authors include The Local Church in the Encyclopedia?
While The
Local Church professes to adhere to scriptural Christian beliefs, a look at
their books and resources, published by Living Stream Ministry, reveals that
both biblical and unbiblical teachings appear within the volumes. A primary
purpose of the Encyclopedia is to identify religious groups that claim
compatibility with Christianity, yet adhere to teachings that stray seriously
from the Bible. Our encouragement to interested readers is to carefully
evaluate the writings of Witness Lee and the publications produced by Living
Stream Ministry and compare their teachings to the light of God’s Word, and
arrive at their own conclusion about whether or not serious discrepancies
exist. We especially emphasize the need to review The Local Church’s current written
materials (including their books, newsletters, The New Testament Recovery
Version, etc.), because many of their websites generally seem orthodox while their theology
as a whole contains numerous unorthodox teachings. A few examples of some
of their unorthodox teachings are cited
here, and full documentation for each quote is provided so readers can examine
them in their original context, if they wish. Our purpose here is merely to
make readers aware of what The Local Church teaches.
For context, it is
important to know The Local Church views itself as part of “the Lord’s
recovery” and teaches that Christianity as a whole has degenerated. Witness Lee,
in his book titled The History of the Church and the Local Churches, said, “We
are still in a situation in which we need the Lord’s rescue, the Lord’s recovery.
I am afraid that a number of us are still under the negative influence of Christendom.
We all have to realize that today the Lord is going on and on to fully recover us
and bring us fully out of Christendom.”9According to various
current Local Church publications, including the New Testament Recovery Version,
Witness Lee also taught:
“Christianity is just
the expression of dead religion....”10
“The Lord is not
building His church in Christendom, which is composed of the apostate
Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant denominations. This prophecy [in
Matthew 16:18, where Jesus said He would “build My church”] is being
fulfilled through the Lord’s recovery, in which the building of the
genuine church is being accomplished.”11
“The only way to
follow the Lord absolutely is to go the way of the local church.”12
“We must stay away
from the practice of the deformed and degraded Christianity and come back
to the divine revelation for the Lord’s recovery.... The traditional
way of [church] meeting...builds up something
satanic and demonic.”13
“Christianity is not
focused on the divine economy but is a human religion saturated with
demonic and satanic things.”14
“Roman Catholicism
and Protestantism, as well as Judaism, all...[have]
become an organization of Satan as his tool to damage God’s
economy.”15
Especially
revealing is Witness Lee’s following statement, which also appears in the New
Testament Recovery Version:
The reformed church, though recovered to the Lord’s word
to some extent, has denied the Lord’s name by denominating herself, taking many
other names, such as Lutheran, Wesleyan, Anglican, Presbyterian, Baptist, etc.
The recovered church not only has returned in a full way to the Lord’s word but
also has abandoned all names other than that of the Lord Jesus Christ. The
recovered church belongs to the Lord absolutely, having nothing to do with any
denominations (any names). To deviate from the Lord’s word is apostasy, and to
denominate the church by taking any name other than the Lord’s is spiritual
fornication.... the church in the Lord’s recovery has the revelation and presence
of the Lord and expresses the Lord in a living way, full of light and with the
riches of life.16
With
reference to Witness Lee’s own words, it is clear that The Local Church, which sees
itself as part of the Lord’s recovery, claims it has “returned in a full way to
the Lord’s Word” and “has the revelation and presence of the Lord,” while
Christendom is “degraded” and has committed “spiritual fornication.”
Examples of The Local Church’s
Teaching on the Deification of the Believer
One
example of The Local Church’s serious departure from biblical Christianity is
Witness Lee’s teaching on the deification of the believer: “Sooner or later,
you have to be made God.... All of God’s redeemed people will eventually become
gods as the very God in life, in nature, and in appearance but not in the
Godhead.”17 In the October 2002 issue of Affirmation &
Critique, a journal published by Living Stream Ministry, an article titled
“Becoming God” states, “Because we have been born of God, we have the life and
nature of God, and in this sense we are God.”18 The Local Church
goes to great lengths to clarify that “there are permanent boundaries to our
deification: In Christ we become God in life and in nature for God’s
expression, but we do not become God in the Godhead or as an object of
worship.”19
But no
matter how The Local Church explains their perspective, it simply is not found
within biblical, orthodox Christian doctrine. Christian theologian Millard J.
Erickson states, “There will always be a difference between God and man.... Even
when redeemed and glorified, we will still be renewed human beings. We will
never become God. He will always be God and we will always be humans, so that
there will always be a transcendence.”20
According
to The Local Church, God has a specific goal for deifying believers: “If God
did not become man, and if the believers do not become God, then God’s economy
will not have a consummation. God’s ultimate goal is the New Jerusalem, and for
this He became man. Our ultimate goal is also the New Jerusalem, and for this
we must become God.”21 The New Jerusalem is then explained in this
way: “The New Jerusalem is not a material city, it is not heaven, and it is not
a place; the New Jerusalem is a corporate person, the processed and consummated
Triune God and His redeemed, regenerated, transformed, and glorified tripartite
elect becoming one entity. In God’s economy, both God and the believers must
become the New Jerusalem.”22
Examples of The Local Church’s Teaching on God Mingling with Man
Another
deviation is The Local Church’s teaching that God “mingles” with redeemed man.
On their website www.mingling.info
The Local Church quotes 1 Corinthians 6:17 (“He who is joined to the Lord is
one spirit”) and then goes on to explain, “This mysterious declaration implies
that the Lord’s believers are mingled with Him in life and are thus organically
blended with Him.”23 In one of his books, Lee expands on what is
meant by the term “mingled” when he says, “Every saved person is a hybrid of
divinity and humanity mingled together. The dual nature of this hybrid is the
divine with the human. Though we are human beings, we have God within us. Since
God and man have become one entity, we are the God–men.”24
To
suggest that Christians are a hybridization of the human and the divine so as
to become “god men” and are one entity with God goes well beyond what biblical,
traditional Christianity teaches—namely, that God is always perfectly and
uniquely God, and that humans have always been and always will be created
creatures who will never have the nature of God, even in their future glorified
bodies. Bible doctrine teaches that God and man will always be distinct
entities.
Examples of The Local Church’s
Teaching on the Trinity
One of
the more significant examples of serious doctrinal deviation relates to The
Local Church’s teachings on the Trinity, and this is especially evident in
their current publications and from a very careful reading of some of their
websites.25 Biblical Christianity has long taught that there is only
one God, who is comprised of three persons. These three persons of the Trinity
are the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and are co–eternal and always
co–existing. In other words, all three persons of the Trinity are distinctly
co–existent at all times. The Father is always and only the
Father, the Son is always and only the Son, and the Holy Spirit is always
and only the Holy Spirit. By contrast, notice what Witness Lee taught about
the members of the Trinity:
“...the entire
Godhead, the Triune God, became flesh.”26
“The Father was
expressed among men in the Son, and the Son became the Spirit to come into
men. The Father is in the Son, and the Son became the Spirit.”27
“...the Lord Christ is
the Spirit and the Spirit is the Lord Christ....”28
“The Father is not
only the Father, but is also the Son.”29
“...God the Father is
also the Spirit (John 4:24). Hence, all three Persons of the Godhead are
the Spirit.”30
“...the Lord Jesus who
is the Son is also the Eternal Father.”31
These
statements from The Local Church and current Living Stream Ministry
publications are in stark contrast with the biblical Christian view of the
Trinity, which teaches that while there is only one God, all three members of
that Godhead are eternally distinct entities. While all three members are God
and all three are eternal, one member does not equal another member, as The
Local Church teaches. Respected Christian theologian Wayne Grudem states, “The
fact that God is three persons means that the Father is not the Son;
they are distinct persons. It also means that the Father is not the Holy
Spirit, but that they are distinct persons. And it means that the Son is not
the Spirit.”32
What was said about The Local Church in the Introduction of The Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions?
Absolutely
nothing.
What
makes this defamation lawsuit peculiar is that The Local Church is never
named in the Introduction of the Encyclopedia, nor does the group
dispute anything said about them in the chapter on The Local Church. In their
suit, The Local Church alleges that, in the Introduction, a general list of
characteristics of cults and a brief statement about criminal behaviors that
have been exhibited by some cult leaders or gurus33 might give
readers the impression that The Local Church exhibits immoral characteristics
or participates in criminal activity. However, before these traits are
mentioned, the Encyclopedia’s Introduction very clearly says “not all
groups have all the characteristics.”34 The only way a reader of the
Encyclopedia can possibly determine the characteristics or activities of
any particular group is to go to the specific chapter that discusses that group
rather than look at the Introduction (and, in fact, people know that’s how an
encyclopedia is used). Of significant note is the fact that a large percentage
of the chapters in the Encyclopedia deal only with theological
deviations, and make no mention of criminal or immoral conduct whatsoever.
The
normal purpose of an introduction to any reference work is to provide readers
with an overview of general facts or observations related to the subject matter
at hand. Indeed, the 16–page Introduction to the Encyclopedia provides
readers with a big–picture look at cults and new religions, discusses the
impact they have on our society, and encourages readers to develop discernment
with regard to what such groups teach.
What about The Local Church’s claim that the Encyclopedia promotes religious intolerance?
The Local Church, on their website
www.contendingforthefaith.org,
alleges the Introduction of the Encyclopedia “promotes religious bigotry
of the worst sort, extolling ‘intolerance’ as a
‘virtue’....”35 Yet a
simple reading of the Introduction reveals the very opposite. In actuality, the
authors affirm that their readers have full freedom to think for themselves and
that “anyone who wishes can be tolerant of the kinds of things described in
this encyclopedia.”36 They also state, “It is not intolerant to have
exclusive views in religious matters and therefore to reject other
views....especially if the other views can be demonstrated to be false, harmful
and destructive.”37 In other words, it’s perfectly legitimate to use
the teachings of orthodox Christianity as a standard against which to measure
various religious groups and offer a cautionary warning to others about those
groups known to exhibit unbiblical teachings or harmful behaviors.
Also, far
from promoting religious bigotry, the authors state that “responsible religious
freedom must be defended, vigorously, including the responsible
religious freedoms of cults and new religions.”38 So the Encyclopedia
does not deny the right of cults or new religions to adhere to teachings that
differ from those of biblical Christianity. In fact, the Encyclopedia clearly
states, “Barring illegalities, or perversions, Christians are certainly willing
to accept the beliefs and practices of others and to respect their right to
hold them; after all, this is a God–given right.”39 A very key
distinction is made here by the authors: Religious freedoms should be handled
in a responsible manner that doesn’t cross the line of destructive, illegal, or
immoral behavior. If a group engages in practices that cross this line, they
are no longer exercising responsible religious freedom, and it is at this point
that intolerance becomes a virtue. Many governments and legal systems worldwide
have laws that protect their citizens from destructive and criminal acts, and
these laws are rightfully intolerant toward those who impose any kind of harm
upon individuals. The intolerance spoken of in the Encyclopedia, then, is
that of Christians not tolerating illegal or harmful conduct in the same way a
government or legal system would not tolerate such conduct.
Now, there are some world governments that go too far—that
clearly deny freedom of religion and/or freedom of speech and persecute religious
groups or individuals under the guise of governmental and societal protection.
This, obviously, is extreme and wrong. Thankfully, in the United States, we have
the freedom to believe and practice our choice of religion as well as the
freedom to discuss and debate religious topics and differences without fear
of governmental intervention, harassment, or worse. Harvest House and the
authors contend these freedoms need to continue being protected.
So,
contrary to the claims of The Local Church, the Encyclopedia does not
promote religious bigotry. It supports religious freedom and respects the
rights of others to hold to beliefs and practices that differ from those of biblical
Christianity. At the same time, the Encyclopedia does encourage readers
to become fully informed before they get involved with any religious group. Indeed,
the authors say they wrote the Encyclopedia “for [people] to try to help
them. We wrote it for people on the outside who are unknowingly misled by the
claims of these groups.... We also wrote it for Christians who may unsuspectingly
join these groups, or be introduced to them and confused by their claims to be
compatible with Christianity.”40
What did the Encyclopedia actually say directly about The Local Church?
On their
website www.contendingforthefaith.org,
The Local Church makes this
claim about the Encyclopedia: “The book ascribes many evil traits to us
as a ‘cult.’...the book twists our teachings beyond recognition....”41
Again,
keep in mind The Local Church is never named in the Introduction, and none of
the general comments about immoral or criminal conduct that appear in the
Introduction are ever applied to The Local Church. In the 1¼–page chapter on
The Local Church on pages 211–212, absolutely no evil traits, criminal
activities, or immoral behaviors are ascribed to the group. In fact, the
chapter is entirely theological in nature, and examines some of the serious
doctrinal aberrations taught by The Local Church. More specifically, the
chapter provides brief summaries of The Local Church’s views on God, Jesus, the
Holy Spirit, the Trinity, salvation, man, sin, Satan, the Fall, the second
coming, the Bible, heaven, and hell. And far from twisting The Local Church’s
teachings beyond recognition, the chapter includes five quotes excerpted
directly from Living Stream Ministry publications, and every quote is
accompanied by full and accurate documentation. In fact, The Local Church, in
its lawsuit, does not dispute any of the information in this 1¼–page chapter.
How do
Harvest House and its authors respond to The Local Church’s claims
that their numerous reconciliation efforts were ignored for a year prior to The
Local Church/Living Stream Ministry filing their lawsuit?
In a news
release dated June 20, 2003, Local Church spokesman Dan Towle stated, “Harvest House Publishers and
its authors chose to ignore our year–long efforts to resolve this issue.”42
And on their website www.contendingforthefaith.org, in an article titled
“Facts about Pending Litigation with Harvest House Publishers and Authors,” The
Local Church claims Harvest House Publishers and authors Ankerberg and Weldon
“utterly disregard[ed their] letters” and that there was an “aggressive refusal
to give timely consideration” to their appeals.43
These
allegations are seriously misrepresentative, for in fact, every letter from The
Local Church received a timely and courteous response from Harvest House and
Ankerberg and Weldon. For the sake of setting the record straight, here is a
detailed chronology of what happened:
January
11, 2001—The Local Church Writes to
Harvest House: The Local Church sent their first letter of complaint, which
was only one page long, general in nature, and did not point to the specific problems
they alleged were in the Encyclopedia. In a
clear reference to a previous lawsuit filed by some Local Churches, they closed
their letter with these words: “We hope you know that this kind of writing has
been ruled as libelous concerning us in the past.”
January
19, 2001—Harvest House and Authors
Respond to The Local Church: Because of The Local Church’s reference to
libel, and because of Harvest House’s desire to maintain the highest of
integrity in any matter in which libel might possibly be involved, Harvest
House answered through one of its attorneys and asked for “written information”
that would help us to evaluate The Local Church’s concerns and provide them
“with a meaningful response.” Response time: 8 days.
May 16, 2001—The
Local Church Writes to Harvest House: Surprisingly, The Local Church took almost four months to respond to
Harvest House’s January 19 letter. In this one–page letter The Local Church
indicated a desire to meet to discuss the book, but again, never provided
specific explanations that would help Harvest House and the authors to know
which statements in the Encyclopedia were allegedly problematic. In the
letter, The Local Church referred to “preparing to answer” via lawyers, and
cited a 1985 lawsuit filed by the Local Churches. (In that suit, The Local
Church obtained a default judgment—a judgment in which the losing party
“defaults,” or is unable to or does not defend itself. The ministry that The
Local Church sued had to declare bankruptcy because it could no longer afford
the cost of defending itself.)
June
4, 2001—Harvest House and Authors
Respond to The Local Church: Harvest House and authors Ankerberg and Weldon
answered directly, and for the second time, asked for specific details instead
of general complaints: “we are requesting that you provide us with a written
explanation of your specific objections....we shall thoroughly evaluate it,
approaching the evaluation with an open mind.” This letter also stated, “If we
feel that there would be any benefit in having a meeting as suggested in your
letter, we shall certainly contact you to arrange for it.” That hardly
constituted an “aggressive refusal” to The Local Church’s attempts to resolve
the issue. Response time: 19 days.
November
20, 2001—The Local Church Writes to
Harvest House: Nearly a year after The Local Church sent its first
complaint letter and more than five months after Harvest House sent its second
request for their specific objections about the text of the book, The Local
Church finally sent a lengthy written explanation of what they viewed as errors
in the Encyclopedia. Ironically, while The Local Church took 10
months to supply the information Harvest House and the authors had
originally requested back on January 19, The Local Church firmly demanded that
Harvest House respond to the lengthy compilation of allegations in a mere two
weeks. The Local Church also closed the letter by emphatically stating, “Your failure
to do so will give us little alternative but to pursue legal action against
you.”
November 29, 2001—Harvest
House and Authors Respond to The LocalChurch: Once again Harvest
House replied immediately, explaining that the company “has just moved its
offices, and we are currently in the process of completing our transition. In
addition, as I’m sure you realize, during the holiday season, it is extremely
difficult to devote the time necessary to a project such as this in order to
truly do it justice.” Still, Harvest House promised to provide a response, and
stated that “the points made in your letter will be carefully reviewed and
evaluated.” Response time: 9 days.
Contrary
to The Local Church’s claim that Harvest House “utterly disregard[ed their] letters,”
in every case, Harvest House sent a gracious and timely response. More
importantly, because The Local Church waited until November 20, 2001 to detail
their complaints, Harvest House and the authors were left for nearly a full
year in the awkward position of not knowing how they should evaluate The Local
Church’s undefined complaints about the Encyclopedia. All the complaints
in The Local Church’s first two letters (January 11 and May 16) were very vague
and never pinpointed which statements in the Encyclopedia were
supposedly defamatory. While waiting for this
information from The Local Church, authors Ankerberg and Weldon had, in fact,
carefully reevaluated the Encyclopedia’s chapter on The Local Church to
ensure it was accurate, and confirmed that indeed it was.
How do Harvest House Publishers and its authors respond to The
Local Church’s accusation that Harvest House Publishers was
the first to file a lawsuit?
Harvest
House and its authors did not receive a written explanation of The Local
Church’s allegations against the Encyclopedia until November 20, 2001. Nine days
later, Harvest House promised to respond to those allegations, and said it
would need time to do so. While Harvest House and authors Ankerberg and Weldon
were evaluating the complaints, the attorneys representing The Local Church and
Living Stream Ministry sent a letter to Harvest House’s attorneys, saying,
“Conditioned upon Harvest House’s and the Author’s execution and return
(receipt by us) of the tolling agreement enclosed herein by Tuesday, December
18, 2001, Mr. Hawkins [the president of Harvest House Publishers] will be
afforded up to and including Wednesday, January 15, 2002 in which to respond to
our clients. If he fails to provide an adequate response within that time, The
Local Church will have exhausted its efforts to settle this matter without
recourse to the courts and will proceed accordingly.”
What was
this “tolling agreement” The Local Church wanted Harvest House to sign? The
purpose of the tolling agreement was to get the statute of limitations extended
so that The Local Church could preserve its right to sue in court. What’s more,
the tolling agreement proposed by The Local Church’s attorneys was completely
one–sided. It stated that if there were a breakdown in negotiations, The Local
Church could immediately file a lawsuit, while Harvest House and its authors
would be required to wait for a prescribed period of time to pass before being
able to take any defensive action. Also, the Local Church’s attorneys continuously
made it clear The Local Church
would file a lawsuit if Harvest House and its authors did not acquiesce to The
Local Church’s demands.
To
protect itself from this very real threat, Harvest House’s attorneys filed a
legal action for a declaratory judgment in Lane County, Oregon. The purpose of
this was for a judge to establish that the Encyclopedia was not
defamatory in regard to The Local Church. Harvest House and the authors were
simply assuming a defensive posture in the face of an imminent lawsuit.
The action, then, was protective in nature, and more importantly, it did
not ask for any money or civil retribution whatsoever. By stark contrast, the lawsuit
that was filed by The Local Church demands $136 million from Harvest House and
authors Ankerberg and Weldon.
Did Harvest House and its authors attempt to resolve this dispute out of court?
Absolutely, yes.
Harvest
House Publishers and its authors tried several times, through different
avenues, including the use of a Christian mediation service, to meet with
representatives of The Local Church, discuss their allegations, and hopefully
resolve the issues at hand. After several failed attempts to meet with The
Local Church, an Oregon court required the parties to meet, and unfortunately,
even then an agreement could not be reached.
How does The Local Church and Living Stream Ministry’s lawsuit
against Harvest House and the authors endanger the freedom of speech?
Before we
answer this question, keep in mind that The Local Church and Living Stream
Ministry have alleged in their lawsuit that some general statements in
the Introduction of the Encyclopedia—statements that do not point to any
group in particular and were never intended to—could lead readers to conclude
that those general statements relate specifically to The Local Church and
Living Stream Ministry and to all the other groups in the Encyclopedia.
Their lawsuit does not point to any actual errors of fact, and does not
challenge what the book states in the chapter on The Local Church. The claims
in the lawsuit are based entirely upon unfounded speculation about how a reader
might somehow misinterpret some brief and select portions of the Encyclopedia’s
Introduction clearly meant to address cults and new religions in general.
Having
said this, if The Local Church and Living Stream Ministry actually prevail in
this lawsuit, then media organizations everywhere would become dangerously vulnerable
to lawsuits filed merely on the basis that an isolated reader or listener might
somehow connect two totally unrelated portions of a book or broadcast that were
never intended to be connected. They would not have the freedom to publish or
air legitimate and factually based differences of opinion without the fear that
readers or listeners might misconstrue them and file costly yet unsubstantiated
lawsuits. Freedom of expression, as protected by the First Amendment, is
designed to allow for healthy debate. For a writer to be declared guilty
of defamation simply because of a reader’s misinterpretation is to
severely inhibit freedom of speech. It also punishes the writer for an imagined
crime he or she never committed. This would change the face of publishing and
broadcasting forever, for in such a climate, the threat of unmerited lawsuits
would be so great as to have a chilling effect on the free expression of ideas
and opinions.
ECPA
publishers would be especially affected, for within the realm of religion,
there are a wide variety of opinions on any given topic—opinions that ought to
be freely shared and discussed in a responsible manner. While Harvest House
Publishers and its authors may disagree with the teachings of The Local Church,
we have no desire whatsoever to inhibit their freedom of speech. Their beliefs
are their prerogative. Likewise, publishers should not be inhibited by fear of
legal retribution when they openly and responsibly discuss religious topics.
Why don’t Harvest House Publishers and its authors just give in to The Local
Church’s demands in order to get out of this suit?
It deeply
saddens us to have to defend ourselves in this lawsuit—an unwarranted lawsuit
that has no basis whatsoever. Indeed, it is contrary to the Bible’s admonishment
in 1 Corinthians 6:1–8. Furthermore, there’s no question that to acquiesce to
The Local Church’s demands would be to compromise the truth.
We are
ever aware that, according to Romans 14:12, there is coming a day when “each one of us will give an
account of himself to God.” When the Lord questions us about how we handled the
matters pertaining to this lawsuit and our awareness of what The Local Church
teaches in their writings, we must be able to say we took a stand for His truth
(because the Bible requires no less), and we did not fail to encourage our
fellow believers to “examine everything carefully; [and] hold fast to that
which is good” (1 Thessalonians 5:21). Isn’t it only right—and more
importantly, a biblical admonition—for us as Christians to alert others when
someone or a group is distorting key teachings from the Word of God?
How can you pray for us?
Through
the many months since The Local Church filed their unmerited lawsuit, our
constant prayer has been that we will wholeheartedly accept and follow God’s
will in this situation. While we firmly believe that defamation did not occur
in the Encyclopedia and that key teachings of The Local Church are
clearly unbiblical, we are also aware that sometimes God works in ways we don’t
understand. Our desire is to possess a complete and unwavering confidence in
the fact that God’s plans and purposes are absolutely perfect. We know He is
fully sovereign and that no person can overrule Him, and that He will work
through this situation in a way that continues to advance His kingdom and brings
glory to Himself.
We would
certainly appreciate your prayers that the desire we’ve expressed above would
be constant within our hearts and would serve as a testimony to other
Christians who may find themselves in the midst of similarly difficult
circumstances.
8. John
Ankerberg and John Weldon, The Encyclopedia of Cults and New Religions
(Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1999), pp. 211–12.
9.
Witness Lee, The History of the Church and the Local Churches, third
printing, 2003 (Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1991), p. 132.
10.
Witness Lee, Christ Versus Religion, fifth printing, 1999 (Anaheim, CA:
Living Stream Ministry, 1971), p. 184.
11. The
New Testament Recovery Version, note 184, third printing, 2001
(Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1991), p. 99.
12.
Witness Lee, The Practical Expression of the Church, fourth printing,
2001 (Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1970), p. 89.
13.
Witness Lee, The God–Ordained Way to Practice the New Testament Economy (Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1987), p. 35.
14.
Ibid., p. 29.
15. The
New Testament Recovery Version, note 95, third printing, 2001
(Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1991), p. 1247.
16. Ibid., note 83, p. 1256.
17.
Witness Lee, The Practical Points Concerning Blending, fifth printing,
2001 (Anaheim, CA: Living Stream Ministry, 1994), p. 46.
18. Ron
Kangas, “Becoming God,” Affirmation & Critique (October 2002), p.
20. This entire issue of Affirmation & Critique can also be accessed
online at http://www.affcrit.com/archives/ac_02_02.html.
19.
Ibid., p. 8.
20. Millard
J. Erickson, Christian Theology (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House,
1983), pp. 317–18.
21.
Ron
Kangas, “Becoming God,” Affirmation & Critique (October 2002), p.
21. This entire issue of Affirmation & Critique can also be accessed
online at http://www.affcrit.com/archives/ac_02_02.html.
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