Concerns raised about local church, The Network
The Network, a series of non-denominational churches across the United States, England and Taiwan, has recently fallen under controversy as multiple churches are leaving and denouncing the group for allegedly hiding sexual abuse its leader committed and practices endangering children.. Members are also accusing the College Station location, Christland Church, of predatory recruitment and spiritual abuse of its members.
Boiling over in a protest on Saturday, former members and families negatively impacted by The Network have been vocal online through blogs, subreddits, YouTube and Facebook.
The Network began in 1995 when Morgan founded Vine Church in Carbondale, Illinois. It was renamed when Morgan created his own group that focused on spreading its influence through new churches called “plants.”
Originally from Illinois, Emma Wright, Class of 2022, wanted to attend a church she was familiar with when she moved to attend A&M. A former Vine Church attendee, she joined Christland in 2018.
“I literally started going there when I was a baby,” Wright said. “A lot of the people who were at Christland, who planted it, lead it, currently lead it. A lot of those people I knew from Vineyard, I’ve known my entire life.”
As reported by The Battalion last year, Wright was involved in Christland through a women’s group and often felt belittled and silenced by the sermons given by Sándor Paull, Christland’s head pastor and the vice president of The Network.
“There were so many red flags that I wished I didn’t gloss over,” Wright said. “There was definitely a culture of secrecy … It was very much expected at Christland that you would obey your leaders in all things. I remember being told what kind of music to listen to and not listen to by leaders. I remember being told what kind of person to date or not date.”
In 2022, court documents from Kansas revealed that Morgan, the group’s leader, was on charges of aggravated sodomy against a minor in 1987 when he was working as a youth pastor. Morgan signed a diversion agreement allowing him to avoid a criminal conviction. For Wright, the revelation was the last straw.
She left and was cut off from her friends at Christland. To this day, Wright has not heard from the majority of people she knew for four years.
Rick Alan Ross, the founder and director of the nonprofit Cult Education Institute, remains an expert in defining cults despite being a controversial figure within the cult education sphere. According to Ross, this treatment of members is a sign of authoritarian behavior not consistent with that of a typical church.
“A mainstream church will certainly acknowledge that you have a legitimate reason to leave, and they would probably say, ‘Well, we’re sorry to lose you. Please drop in when you visit. All the best. God bless you,’” Ross said.
On Saturday, Geneva Moore stood outside Christland Church with other members of FACC and LTN to raise awareness of the three Network churches in Texas. Moore is a former Network member from Joshua Church in Austin, where Morgan is the head pastor.
“I was recruited in college, like a lot of people,” Moore said. “I started my junior year of college, then I moved here to Austin to help start Joshua Church. Initially, my experience was really good … [but] the more insular it becomes, the more you realize the destructive patterns of it.”
Having devoted years of her life to The Network, Moore understood the ease and draw of groups like Christland. As a Black woman, Moore said she felt discriminated against for multiple reasons that leadership chose to not address.
“Things started to get really bad for me when I moved … to Joshua Church,” Moore said. “The destructive patterns of it. The discrimination and isolation there was so systemic and orchestrated by Steve Morgan.”
Along with Moore’s experience, former members of The Network have reported discrimination against minorities and women on blogs online.
“The trauma that I experienced there was so significant that it actually led to me trying to make a suicide attempt,” Moore said. “And when I left, I went through the details of … trying to get [leadership] to understand, and their main response was that, essentially, mistakes happen and they have a clear conscience.”
Moore said that the culture of Network churches was insular to the point that when someone accused a member of being in a cult, they considered it a badge of honor.
“You can look at the website,” Moore said. “You can listen to sermons. You can interact with people, and everything seems fine. But you don’t realize until outside people are like, … ‘You’re not the same person you were before you joined’ or having outside people describe the light leaving your eyes.”
Church attendees standing outside of Christland on Saturday did not respond to requests for comment, and Christland leadership did not respond to email, phone and in-person inquiries.
Melanie Hartmann of Illinois has a daughter who joined a Network church when she left for college and hasn’t spoken to her in over two years. Hartmann said at first, she was just confused.
“She had to be baptized again … and she said, ‘Well, I was never really saved’ when I confronted her,” Hartmann said. “You’re not saved outside of a Network Church. That’s the only place. They’re special. ‘Nobody does church like us.’ … It was this frantic sense of devastation and fear.”
Hartmann said her daughter’s relationship with her became strained after joining The Network which was unusual because they had always been close. Once she noticed that, other concerning behavior became apparent.
“One of the warning signs was when she married her husband after knowing him for 10 days,” Hartmann said. “He was already a member of the Network church. There was another red flag when she said, ‘Family has been my idol.’ … Some of the pastors have said that anything before the mission of the church can be an idol.”
Hartmann said that right before her daughter cut her off, she arranged a visit to talk to both of her parents.
“They teach them to make amends but not reconcile,” Hartmann said. “I believe they are instructed to kind of wrap it up, so that they feel good and have a clear conscience and then cut the family off,” Hartmann said.
After 2018, her daughter didn’t allow her to talk to Hartmann alone, and whenever she texted her, it had to include her son-in-law.
She alleged that women were not allowed to talk directly to pastors and had to go through their husbands.
“It took me a while to wrap my head around it,” Hartmann said. “There was a part of denial — like, no, not my kid. She’s a Type A personality. She’s so smart. They’re really about conformity. They say uniformity, but it’s about conformity.”
Hartmann said her daughter often made excuses for not coming to family gatherings that she had never missed before joining The Network. If she ever visited home, she would arrive on a Friday evening and leave to be able to serve in church on Sunday.
Moore experienced the same pressure at Joshua Church and still feels the impact years later.
“I experienced a lot of trauma here,” Moore said. “It affected my mental health in very significant ways. What I wished someone told me when I was that age is that if you have outside opinions — unbiased parties that tell you concerns about something that you’re a part of — you should listen to them.”
Moore and Hartmann both expressed concern about college students being “love bombed,” a practice in which people are influenced by demonstrations of affection and attention.
“They may approach someone in a very friendly way and extend an invitation to some activity that isn’t necessarily religious,” Ross said. “For example, there are some groups that have volleyball games, hay rides, potluck dinners … in that sense, you don’t really know what you’re getting into.”
Christland’s registered student organization status was revoked last spring, but Wright was uncertain that it would stop them from recruiting on campus. Various founding members of Christland work on campus in senior positions.
“The Network churches have a pattern of continuing to use methods that have harmed people over and over again, even when they have been called out on it,” Wright said. “I want to warn people, and students in particular, about Christland. It’s not a safe place.”
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Devastated Parent • Oct 30, 2024 at 1:44 pm
Your investigative work over the last year on The Network led by criminal child rapist Steven D. Morgan has helped bring awareness on the devastating effects these 25 churches have had on their respective college communities. This high-control group of churches have all claimed to be independent self-governed churches when in fact they are tightly controlled by The Network Leadership Board including Steve Morgan (Pres. & Lead Pastor of Joshua in Austin, TX), Sandor Paull (VP & Lead Pastor of Christland in College Station, TX), Tony Ranvestel (Regional Mgr. & Lead Pastor of Vida Springs in Gainesville, FL), Luke Williams (Regional Mgr. & former Lead Pastor of Vista in San Luis Obispo, CA *closed 9/15/24), and Psychologist James Chidester of Austin, TX. Their Network leadership structure, Morgan’s criminal past, finances and 1000’s of complaints have been hidden from members. These leaders continue to refuse to comment on claims of ongoing abuse, & they continue to hide their finances and leadership structure while they are tearing countless families apart. Thank you for shedding light on this danger to students, families and children. People stay away from these churches – they are after anyone 18-25yrs. old especially. They are not who they seem to be. There are much safer places to worship and no conditional friendship is worth staying in a system that abuses others even if you haven’t seen or felt the abuse directly. Leave now! For more information visit Leaving The Network. org.
Friend of a member • Oct 19, 2024 at 5:12 pm
Thank you for this story. One of my very best friends was going to this church and when I didn’t commit to going n a regular basis I was just sort of cut off over a pretty short period of time. Stopped returning messages, stopped being invited. I knew something wasn’t right. Makes sense now. My friend’s family was also cut off I found out later.
Impacted Parent • Oct 18, 2024 at 6:48 pm
As a parent who has been greatly impacted, I am so thankful to each reporter and former member who has taken a risk to be a voice to bring more attention to the impact this whole Network has had nationwide. Every article, every interview, every comment brings more awareness of the magnitude of abuse.
Former Network Leader and Member • Oct 17, 2024 at 3:08 pm
This situation at Christland Church and the Networks so closely mirrors what happened with Mike Bickle and the International House of Prayer in Kansas City (IHOPKC) and with Robert Morris at Gateway Church in Dallas. They all have a long time charismatic leader who built a large church system over the years. Stories of control and manipulation started creeping out. Come to find out, the leaders/founders at the top of all these systems had engaged in illegal sexual behavior with a minor WHILE they were an ordained pastor. In all three cases, the documented abuse was long ago. Yet, the main difference between the Network and the other situations is that the Network leader remains intact while Bickle and Morris were summarily fired because the elders, members and the press saw the lies, cover up, danger and hypocrisy of leaving someone with an abusive background as the leader and pastor of so many. Time to wake up and protect the people rather than the abusive leader and his supporters.
There’s a Call to Action signed by 19 former Network leaders and 731 individuals asking for an independent group to come in and conduct an investigation. Only after implementing recommendations from such an endeavor can these churches become safe places.
Concerned Parents • Oct 17, 2024 at 1:58 pm
Thanks once again Batt for your commitment
to keeping A&M students safe from Christland Church & Steve Morgan’s Network. Your investigative work will be seen by many beyond the Aggie community, as Morgan’s Network has 25 churches and all of them are listed on both LeavingTheNetwork.org as well as FamiliesAgainstCultsonCampus YouTube.
Network churches are not safe for students. #leavingthenetwork
julia • Oct 17, 2024 at 2:19 pm
ur welcome 🙂