Church Life

Germany: Authorities Pull Plug on Power for Living

DeMoss Foundation says it is not a cult

Battling a perception that it is a cult, the Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation is having a hard time giving away its faith in the land of Luther. German broadcasting authorities in January pulled the plug on an extensive television advertising campaign for the foundation’s free evangelistic book, Power for Living.

Wolfgang Baake, executive director of the evangelical media association KEP, says many Christians “wonder what is going on. There is no room for Christian content on TV, but late-night programs offer all kinds of nudity and porn.”

But some point out that organizers of the campaign, which began in December and continues in magazines and on billboards, made some unwise decisions. The foundation gave no interviews and did not work with prominent German Christian leaders, which caused speculation in the German press. Several newspapers and TV programs suspected a “cult” behind the campaign.

The German Evangelical Alliance, however, welcomed the campaign, although it came as a surprise. The alliance’s general secretary, Hartmut Steeb, regretted that the foundation, based in West Palm Beach, Florida, had not contacted the major German denominations in advance.

Broadcast authorities in January decreed a halt to the televised Power for Living spots, saying regulations do not allow the promotion of political, ideological, or religious views in advertising. Most channels cooperated. One channel, RTL, continued broadcasting until threatened with a $434,000 fine.

In response, on January 21 Mark DeMoss told the press, “Our goal is to tell everybody what we have experienced: a personal relationship with God. This is the most important thing in life.”

By early March, Germans had ordered more than 500,000 copies of Power for Living. Evangelical leaders and two mainline churches have encouraged Christians to talk more about their faith. One regional church started distributing New Testaments to let interested people read “the real thing.”

Copyright © 2002 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere

The Apologetics Index has a page to explain that the Arthur S. DeMoss Foundation is not a cult.

See the official Power for Living Web site.

Related news coverage includes:

U.S.-Style Evangelical Drive Rouses GermanyThe New York Times (Jan. 17, 2002)

‘Power for Living’ Sponsor Defends OrganizationFrankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Jan. 22, 2002)

Also in this issue

Texas-Size Faith: How Dallas has become the new capital of American Evangelism

Cover Story

The New Capital of Evangelicalism

Creationism Scandalous

Colombia: Missionaries Defy Terrorist Threat in Colombia

Deann Alford

India: Critics Assail Dialogue with Hindu Radicals

S. David

Nigeria: Where Adultery Means Death

Obed Minchakpu

"Inside CT: Big City, Big Ministry"

Letters

Parsonage in Peril

Quotation Marks

"It's Soccer, Not Quidditch"

Witless Witness

West Bank: Crackdown Hits Churches

Blessing Abortion

Peace (and Quiet) Be With You

"Goodbye, Dolly"

Christianity Today Editorial

Give Us a [Tax] Break

Christianity Today editorial

Cremation Confusion

Suffering & Grief

Richard A. Kauffman

Uncle Sam Is Not Your Dad

Religion that's Fit to Print

John Wilson

Servant in Chief

Tex-Mex Orthodoxy

News

The Rolling Superchic[k] Revue

Todd Hertz

Wire Story

Catholics: Coverups Prompt Demands for Resignation

Religion News Service

Wire Story

France: Anti-Semitic Violence Spurs Crackdown

Religion News Service and Christianity Today

Review

Joshua

LaTonya Taylor

GOP Seeks Black Clergy Affiliations

Sunday Colors

Parachurch Passion

Southwestern's Predicament

Larry Eskridge

News

Go Figure

The Hispanic Challenge

Jeff M. Sellers

Fundamentalist With Flair

Randall Balmer

"Plus: 'You're Right, Dr. McIntire!'"

Richard J. Mouw

Want Better Grades? Go to Church

Amber Anderson Johnson

Bottom-Up Apologist

Karl W. Giberson

Sex Abuse: 'A Time of Justice'

Corrie Cutrer

New Dispensation? Camping: 'Leave Church'

Mark A. Kellner

Asian Americans: Embracing the Unwanted

Tony Carnes

Parents' Rights: Fatal Revelations

Bob Smietana

View issue

Our Latest

The Christianity Today Book Awards

CT Editors

Our picks for the books most likely to shape evangelical life, thought, and culture.

Review

Today’s Christians Can Learn from Yesterday’s Pagans

Grace Hamman

Classicist Nadya Williams argues for believers reading the Greco-Roman classics.

Trading TikTok for Time with God—and Each Other

Some young Christians embrace lower-tech options.

Beyond the CT Book Award Winners

20 more suggestions from our editor in chief.

The Bulletin

Welcoming Christmas with Russell Moore, Clarissa Moll, and Steve Cuss

Steve Cuss, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

Hosts of CT Media podcasts discuss their Christmas traditions, memories, and advice for navigating the season.

Synthetic Love Will Tear Us Apart

When we outsource intimacy to machines, we become what we practice. And we’re practicing the wrong things.

The Russell Moore Show

N.T. Wright on ‘The Vision of Ephesians’

The professor is in—and he’s talking about Ephesians.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube