The London Church of Christ, which has been described as Britain's
fastest growing cult, planned to divert money from Third World
missions to fund its British operations, according to a secret
tape recording obtained by the Independent.
Church leaders have denied that cash from a #180,000 foreign missions
appeal would be spent illegally in the UK, even though its third-in-command
was taped saying some would support missions in Edinburgh, Oxford
and Bristol.
If the money raised last month by the missions campaign is spent
in the UK instead of the Third World and Australia, as members
of the cult were promised, then it would be in breach of the 1993
Charities Act and the Charity Commission said it would act.
The Charity Commission is already investigating complaints about
the church's activities, including allegations relating to funding
and pyramid-selling techniques designed to draw in new members
and increase income.
The Independent's recording is of a conversation in which
Dr. Tommy Chan, the church's lead evangelist for northwest London,
and third-in-command in Britain, tells a fellow member that some
cash will be used to buy computers and office equipment for branches
in Edinburgh, Bristol and Oxford.
Nine hundred church members, who must give a tenth of their income
to the church, were told at the end of July that they had six
weeks to raise #180,000 for a "Special Missions Contribution"
which, according to a campaign leaflet, was to be spent on missionary
work in 17 locations, including Bombay, Bangalore, Sydney, Singapore
and Kuala Lumpur.
John Partington, the church's administrator in Britain, said that
all the money would go abroad. Asked whether any would be spent
here, he replied: "No. That is not why it was raised."
But on the tape, Dr. Chan discusses spending on foreign missions
and adds: "
also, it is for churches in and around the
UK like Edinburgh, Bristol and the little ones, Oxford. Because
to support them, they all need a computer or something, some way
to record things, so we buy them computers and support them.
They need office or mail envelopes, paper, all kinds of things.
We pay for them because they need help, they have only just opened
So
the special contribution is purely for mission work, here, but
mainly abroad."
Dr. Chan whose voice was verified by an independent source, accepted
that the recording was genuine, but said he had been mistaken
in what he had told his fellow member. "I was fully aware
that this special contribution was purely for work abroad
so
I know it would not be spent in this country al all," he
said.
Mr. Partington said Dr. Chan was mistaken and stressed that he
had no control over church money.