Jump to content

Neville Johnson: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Early years: fix ref
m Add reference and link
Line 4: Line 4:


==Queen Street AoG==
==Queen Street AoG==
The church moved several times as numbers grew eventually settling in the Auckland Town Hall and became known as the Queen Street Assembly of God. During this time the media began go show some attention to what was happening in the AoG, and Pastor Johnson did the first radio interview on commercial radio by an AoG pastor on 1ZB. He spoke on [[divine healing]].<ref>p134 Clark</ref>
The church moved several times as numbers grew eventually settling in the Auckland Town Hall and became known as the [[Queen Street Assembly of God|Queen Street Assembly of God]]. During this time the media began go show some attention to what was happening in the AoG, and Pastor Johnson did the first radio interview on commercial radio by an AoG pastor on 1ZB. He spoke on [[divine healing]].<ref>p134 Clark</ref>


During this time Mission work with the Queen St Assembly as a base grew and a Bible College began, the Zion Bible Training Centre. This was a period of huge change in the Assemblies; [[Frank Houston]] resigned as Superintendent in 1977 and soon after [[Jim_Williams_(pastor)|Jim Williams]] was elected in his place.<ref>p166 Clark</ref>
During this time Mission work with the Queen St Assembly as a base grew and a Bible College began, the Zion Bible Training Centre. This was a period of huge change in the Assemblies; [[Frank Houston]] resigned as Superintendent in 1977 and soon after [[Jim_Williams_(pastor)|Jim Williams]] was elected in his place.<ref>p166 Clark</ref>
Line 34: Line 34:
*Ian G. Clark ''Pentecost at the Ends of the Earth: The History of the Assemblies of God in New Zealand (1927-2003)''
*Ian G. Clark ''Pentecost at the Ends of the Earth: The History of the Assemblies of God in New Zealand (1927-2003)''
*[http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10063/1110/thesis.pdf?sequence=1 Philip D. Carew, ''Māori, Biculturalism and the Assemblies of God in New Zealand, 1970 - 2008''] (Thesis in PDF format)
*[http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/bitstream/handle/10063/1110/thesis.pdf?sequence=1 Philip D. Carew, ''Māori, Biculturalism and the Assemblies of God in New Zealand, 1970 - 2008''] (Thesis in PDF format)
*Jonathan Harper, “The Church that’s Taking Over Auckland,” Metro no. 29 (1983): 122-135.


{{AOG}}
{{AOG}}

Revision as of 11:30, 4 November 2010

Neville Johnson is a former Missionary and Pastor in the Assemblies of God church in New Zealand. For most of the 1970's his church was the largest pentecostal church in Australasia. He currently runs a ministry called The Living Word Foundation. [1]

Early years

From 1968 until December 1970 Neville and Josie Johnson served as missionaries in New Caledonia. It was then that they returned to New Zealand taking over the leadership of the Auckland Assembly following on from Bob and Noelle Midgley, a church which had entered a period of significant growth.[2][3]

Queen Street AoG

The church moved several times as numbers grew eventually settling in the Auckland Town Hall and became known as the Queen Street Assembly of God. During this time the media began go show some attention to what was happening in the AoG, and Pastor Johnson did the first radio interview on commercial radio by an AoG pastor on 1ZB. He spoke on divine healing.[4]

During this time Mission work with the Queen St Assembly as a base grew and a Bible College began, the Zion Bible Training Centre. This was a period of huge change in the Assemblies; Frank Houston resigned as Superintendent in 1977 and soon after Jim Williams was elected in his place.[5]

During the 1970's issues arose in the assemblies for serious dialogue that included divorce and remarriage, church government, the structure of mission and the relationship of the AoG to other pentecostal streams. Neville served on the National Executive from 1971 until 1975.

Scandal

On April 27 1983 at a special members' meeting at the Queen Street Assembly it was announced that Neville Johnson had resigned, having admitted charges of 'misuse of office, and immoral, improper and deceitful conduct'. His credentials were withdrawn, and such was the potential effect on the denomination as a whole, General Superintendent Jim Williams sent a message to all AoG pastors. Efforts were made to assist in his restoration, but he resigned from the denomination in February 1984. Many of the details of these events are unclear.

From Ian Clark's book: [6]

Neville then moved to Perth, Western Australia where he established his own independent congregation. Following this, Pastor Johnson wrote a letter of repentance to the national Executive asking that forgiveness be extended to him. At it's August 1985 meeting the executive agreed to do this . . . He was also encouraged by the executive to write an apology to the Auckland Assembly for the hurt he had caused the church. Nothing appears to have come of this.

Current Activities

In the 1990's Neville founded a church in Perth. He has since moved on from this and now runs The Acadamy of Light.

From the website[7]:

The Academy of Light is an End time Training facility using the Internet and Satellite transmission which can be received direct to television sets and computer screens worldwide. Its purpose is to train and prepare Christians and non Christians for the end-times

His message now has a special focus on end time revelation, the ministry of angels [8] and The Book of Enoch, referenced on his website.[9]

This has not been without controversy, with some debate over the validity of these visions and this teaching. [10]

References