Pentecostal megachurches perfect lucrative
model and export it despite corruption allegations
During the service, ushers hand out envelopes for donations,
which consume at least a tenth of the salaries of most church members.
Welcome to one of Asia's most profitable churches:
Singapore's City Harvest.
With a "prosperity gospel" that blends the
spiritual and the material, City Harvest and other Pentecostal megachurches in
the wealthy nation have perfected a popular and lucrative model.
Now, despite allegations of corruption, they are working to
export it to the world and turn Singapore into a hub for evangelical
Christianity.
"We want to preach the gospel to the ends of the
earth," said Pastor Bobby Chaw, City Harvest's missions director.
Evangelising missions by City Harvest, including pop
concerts by Sun Ho in China, Taiwan and the US, have helped it gather followers
across Asia and set up 49 affiliate churches in Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia,
Japan and India.
City Harvest, whose founder faces trial along with five
others on charges of criminal breach of trust and falsifying accounts over the
use of nearly S$51 million (HK$313 million) in church funds, also has a bible
college that trains church leaders from countries such as Norway.
Last year, the founder of another Singapore megachurch, New
Creation's Joseph Prince, toured the US, preaching to a sell-out crowd at Long
Beach Arena in Los Angeles and filling the country's largest church, Lakewood
in Texas. Prince's book, The Power of Right Believing, made it to number
two on the New York Times' bestseller list in the advice and "how
to" category.
New Creation, which says it has a congregation of 30,000,
collected S$75.5 million in donations in 2012, while City Harvest took in
S$38.6 million in 2009, official data shows.
"Whatever method that can most effectively convey the
message to our generation, we will do it," said Chaw, who is also the
vice-chairman of City Harvest's management board.
City Harvest, which says its congregation numbered nearly
20,000 in 2012, has also ventured into the entertainment industry.
The church's Crossover Project led Sun Ho to collaborate
with stars such as Jay Chou. She broke into the US market under the guidance of
producer David Foster, producer-songwriter Wyclef Jean and other veterans.
With a wealth-affirming model and efforts to engage the
young, fast-growing Pentecostal megachurches have helped to dilute Buddhism as
Singapore's traditionally dominant religion.
The most recent census showed the proportion of Christians
rose 18.3 per cent in 2010 from 14.6 per cent in 2000, while the number of
Buddhists fell to 33.3 per cent from 42.5 per cent.
Rolland Teo, 25, whose family is Buddhist, said his view of
religion as "very static" changed when he joined City Harvest.
"It was something more dynamic, more relational,"
Teo said. "This was something I couldn't find in my parents'
beliefs."
City Harvest's Crossover Project is at the centre of charges
that Ho and five other officials financed his wife's singing career by
funneling church funds of S$24 million into sham investments and then used
S$26.6 million more to cover up the deals.
This
article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as New churches
thrive in Singapore
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