Posts Tagged ‘Iris’

  • Re: Bethel’s “Statement” concerning the Brazil “Miracle” Hoax

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    If anyone is still following this story, you probably already know by now that Bethel has issued an “appeasement” statement, basically to cover their backs so that they will never have to tell the truth about this whole story/hoax.

    I am sending Bethel one last letter/email, and then I am done.  However, this is an Open Letter, for anyone who wants to see it.  Email has been sent to a Donna on staff at Bethel, Pastor on Call, as well as to Bill Johnson ministries.

    To Donna and the Bethel staff,
    I did read your statement about the miracles in Brazil which you erroneously reported.

    First of all, I would like to make myself clear, I do believe in miracles such as the dead being raised.  So the dead being raised is not “staggering—and we know—hard to believe” nor is it “wonderfully uncomfortable and ‘out of the box.’”  I was trained at the Iris Ministries missions school in Mozambique.  The miracles I saw there were verifiable, there were neighbors and family members all around to witness the deaf’s ears being opened and the blind eyes being opened.  When possible, we noted their names and locations.  If someone was to question their testimony, we would be able to find them and their family and neighbors again to testify they were healed.  For example, Selma, a teenager, was healed from deafness in both ears, on the outskirts of the village of Namapa.  I have her photo and I would be able to find her again if I went back to Namapa.  Her entire family was there and witnessed her healing.

    Yes, the world is a big place, and though it seems Brazil is a land far, far away, it is my home, and it is not “another part of the world”.  I don’t think anyone at Bethel realizes what the nation of Brazil has been going through, nor what the residents of Teresopolis have been going through.  Over 800 people are dead, in Teresopolis and surrounding region, while another 600+ are missing, and 30,000 people have been left homeless.

    An apology, not an excuse, is still in order from the Bethel staff. The miracle has no eyewitnesses because it never happened.  Bethel should send a team to Brazil, ready to work hard in humanitarian relief, and to try to find those eyewitnesses, if it plans to maintain that the story is true.

    Some local missionaries went to Teresopolis to find eyewitnesses.  There were none.  “We are learning, the hard way, what it is like to report such a dramatic miracle prematurely, with the possibility of it not being true and/or the difficulty of documenting it to everybody’s satisfaction if it is true”, however, what if it is not true?

    What amount of evidence does Bethel need for Bethel Church to report that it was not true?

    And I quote from the eyewitness account: “We made contact with the National Security Force, who are patroling the area, and they took us to the school from where the community support is being administered. Talking to the coordinator of the operation, we confirmed that no foreign teams were in Caleme during or after the disaster, thus debunking once and for all the story of the supposed ressurections”.

    If there was no foreign team there, then how would there be any resurrections done by a foreign team?

    I don’t believe that anyone at Bethel will ever respond to this email, and I don’t believe that anyone at Bethel has the grace, dignity, nor humility to ever state that the story, in its entirety, not just the faux newspaper article, was false.  However, I guarantee, that Bethel will never hear the end of this faux pas.  There are too many Bible-believing, Holy Spirit-filled Christians who are hurt and saddened by Bethel’s response and perpetuation of a hoax.

    The church in Brazil is reporting on this as well, however, they are reporting the truth.  Christian blogs, church websites, and Christian (as well as secular) news agencies are reporting with headlines such as:
    “Resurrection in the Serra of Rio de Janeiro is False”
    “News about Resurrections in Teresopolis reverberate outside of Brazil through a Christian Site”
    “News about Resurrections in Teresopolis reverberate outside of Brazil through a Christian Site: The news is not true and the source was not revealed”
    “American Christian Site Spreads False News of Resurrection in Teresopolis”

    Bethel’s ambiguous response and “washing of hands” of the issue, has not suddenly made Brazilians believe that this ever happened.  Why?  Because those who live in this country, who love this country, and serve God in this country, know the real, hard truth of what has really happened in Teresopolis, and also, the truth that not only was the newspaper altered, but that the entire story is not true.

    I find it sad that Bethel will believe the “friend” of two second-year Bethel school students that said it happened, over the EYEWITNESS accounts of two long-term missionaries serving with a reputable Bethel-friendly organization.

    You may be asking yourselves, if anyone is at all is indeed reading this message, why am I spending so much time researching this?  Brazil is a nation that God put on my heart when I was seven years old.  It is now my home, and God has given me this nation to live my life poured out among the fatherless, abused, and impoverished here.  I find it a personal matter, as well as a national matter, when un-truths are reported about a land I love so deeply.

    I believe that, Bethel, as a church, has a responsibility to the people of God in Brazil to repent, to acknowledge that they perpetuated a hurtful hoax about a nation that is currently suffering from the greatest natural disaster in its history.

    Thank you, to anyone who has read this.
    -Emily Vieira

    *This post has been edited 15:30 (Brasilia time) on February 5, 2011.  Our heart is not to hurt or to divide, we just really want people who stand for the truth and will believe the truth, no matter how hard it is.  With much respect to those who are doing relief work in the area, I have edited this post so as to protect them.  Thank you all for understanding this.

  • And then I cried…

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    And then I cried

    The truth in Tersopolis is far worse than the lie.

    The truth is bodies buried under mudslides, still not found.

    The truth hurts worse than knowing we were lied to.

    And then I cried

    I cried for Rio, I cried for Brazil

    I cried for my own heart wanting to help

    I cried at the uncertainty of not knowing what to do next

    I cried for the families broken apart

    I cried for the little blonde haired girls, singing on TV, living in a church shelter

    I cried for those in the newspaper, no hope to carry on

    I cried for the living, walking around like zombies, shocked, purposeless

    I cried because the truth must be known

    I cried because the truth will always hurt worse than a lie

    I cried because no one was resurrected

    I cried because no foreign medical team was there

    I cried for justice, I cried for peace, I cried for us to help the least of these

    I cried at the donations, I cried at the lack thereof

    I cried at the immense need

    I cried at my own small hands

    And then I cried some more…

    If anyone wants to help the relief effort in Rio, please go to https://www.irismin.org/giving-center  At the bottom of the page is a link to give to help Trina’s relief effort there.  Thanks!  (if you give thru my website, I’m sending the money over to Trina as well)

  • 16 Dead Raised in Brazil- NOT!

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    Hey Everyone
    This is kind of unusual for me to message everyone on here about something unrelated to what Paulo and I are doing.  However, this is an instance that I believe the truth has been buried under a pile of lies, and the truth needs to get out.

    There has been a faked newspaper article going around the internet (blogs, facebook, twitter, etc) about 16 people being raised from the dead after the floods in Rio de Janeiro state.  I would like you to know that this is a hoax.  It is confirmed false.  It was originally posted on the ibethel.org website, but has since been pulled.

    Paul Cull, the founder of the Iris Ministries church in Nova Friburgo, one of the cities that has been devastated by these floods, has been doing alot of research into this matter.  He has called the newspaper and the newspaper has confirmed that the story is not true and that no one was raised from the dead and no story was ever published about it.  The neighborhood the story was about was evacuated 2 days before the supposed resurrection.  If you are interested, you can read his take on the whole thing at www.paulcull.org/blog

    Paul has a heart for Brazil, especially the region affected by the floods.  As I previously had mentioned, I had visited Nova Friburgo in 2009, and he was still working with Iris Ministries at that point, so I have personally met him.  He is heading to help out Trina Simpson at the Iris church in Friburgo.

    I would like to ask all of you, if you know people who are still perpetuating this untrue rumor, please tell them the truth and tell them to please pray for the people who have lost their homes and families in the floods.  This is a serious situation and it hurts to see it being exploited like this.

    I am not, in any way, saying that the dead can’t be raised, I believe in the God of miracles, the God of yesterday, today and tomorrow.  I believe he CAN raise people from the dead, but in this particular case, no one was raised from the dead.

    There are over 800 people dead and 400 more missing in this natural disaster.  I ask you, please pray for the people there, that God’s light would shine in the darkness.
    -Emily Vieira

    (i originally sent this as a message on facebook to friends, family, and fellow missionaries.  it is a re-post of my own writing)

  • Nova Friburgo

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    Sending greetings from Brasil! I’m still in Nova Friburgo, but will be heading to Curitiba, a city further south, tomorrow for Randy Clark’s Youth Power Invasion conference. I’ll be attending the conference and then the second half of it is ministering in local churches, and I might be translating for that.

    As I come to the conclusion of my time in Nova Friburgo, I am reminded once again that the people here are not inherently evil, the kids who make trouble in the neighborhood are not bad kids. They are wonderful. Some of them are really good artists! We all have the chance to do good or to do bad. We all have that option.

    Because of God’s grace, we have chosen to do good, to love God, to love people. Others have not chosen so wisely, and so have wreaked havoc on their lives and the lives of the people around them. I think of the mother that came asking for help for her and her many kids last week. She had no food, blankets, no clothes for her little kids, no toilet paper or laundry soap. The church here helped her out as much as possible for a small not-too-rich church. I could only cry out to God when I saw one of her boys in the street the next day, dressed in really dirty clothes, just looking awful.

    Sometimes I wonder what God is doing when I see awful things happening all around, when I see poverty and desperation like there is here, and all around the world. Then I look at the kids from the church here- the ones who know Jesus. They are absolutely wonderful kids and are rising above their circumstances. Youth group this week was about what dreams they have for their lives. They want to finish high school, do a course (kind of like an associates’ degree), go to Africa with Iris, study in the US, have kids, be a missionary. Its absolutely wonderful. There is hope rising above it all, hope rising above this little hill here, we just need more of it.

    Iris needs alot of help here, more hands to do more work, as well as finances to help these kids actually get to Africa and other places. And finances to help the people like the mom who needed help. The need is overwhelming when you look at it. Few wealthier churches here want to help out the masses of people living in favelas here, probably because the need is so great.

    I am feeling a bit overwhelmed at the immensity of the needs everywhere I go in the world, Africa, Ecuador, New Haven, Brasil, even my little town of Ansonia has big needs. I want to help everywhere and everyone! But I can’t! So, I stop for the one today, and stop for a different one tomorrow. I’ll help one person today, and show love to another person tomorrow. I can’t do it all, but if we each stop and love the one person in need in front of us, we will truly make a bit of God’s Kingdom come down on earth. (I love Heidi’s teaching… I’ve learned alot from it and am putting it into practice daily still)

    So, gente, my encouragement to you today is to love the one person in front of you. And if any one of you feels led to help out these people in Nova Friburgo more, please let me know. I’d love to see these kids go to Africa.

    Prayer Requests:
    Safety during travel tomorrow
    Conference and ministering in the churches to go well
    Direction for me as to what to do after the conference
    Trina and Paul, the missionaries here as the deal with transitions in the ministry here
    That the work of Iris in Rio state will bring in much fruit in the coming months

    Thank you for all your prayers!! They are so needed!
    Deus le bencoa