God is Love Pentecostal Church
The God is Love Pentecostal Church (IPDA) (Portuguese: Igreja Pentecostal Deus É Amor) is a Pentecostal Christian denomination in Brazil. The headquarters is in São Paulo.
History
The Igreja Pentecostal Deus é Amor was founded in São Paulo in 1962, by Daví Martins de Miranda (or David Miranda).[1] The spread of the IPDA and other pentecostal churches was encouraged by economic regression, urbanization and the emergence of the informal settlements since the 1950s, where the IPDA gained most of its new followers at this time. Among the poorest, promises of "the miracle that will free them from their situation", fell on fertile grounds.[2] By 1995 it had spread to 30 other countries, with a membership of 800,000 members in 2001 Census.[3] As of 2003, there were 8,140 churches.
In 2004, the church inaugurated the Temple of the Glory of God in São Paulo, with an auditorium of 60,000 seats. [4]
Beliefs
The denomination has a Pentecostal confession of faith.[5]
The organisation's emphasis is on divine healing, exorcism, and missionary work. Compared to other Brazilian Pentecostal churches, Deus é Amor is of a fundamentalist Christian ideology and separates itself from society.[6] Members are forbidden from watching television or playing soccer. It is not allowed for men to wear a beard and for women to wear make-up or jewelry.
- "Here among us are many adulterers and adulteresses, masturbators, people obsessed by sexual intercourse, thieves, vagabonds. Who of you likes television and secular music, is misguided. Those who join in today's fashions, even in miniskirts, their tummy free, walk around, are sinning heavily against God." - David Miranda[7]
Controversies
The IPDA has established strict control mechanisms to survey the presence of its followers. Members of the churches have to obtain "faith cards", which must be stamped each day of the week to prove their presence at the worship service and the obligatorial payment to the church.[2]
The organisation, together with Edir Macedo's Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus, is accused of using the acquisition of the Edificio Cines Plaza y Central cinema in Montevideo, Uruguay as a disguise to cover up money laundering.[8]
Furthermore, the IPDA is accused to have connections to the organized crime scene of Brazil. Many former favela gang members work as priests after their conversion.[7]
References
- Peter Clarke, Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements, Routledge, USA, 2004, p. 237
- "Why Pentecostal Churches are Growing in Brazil". Retrieved 2020-04-28.
- data from IBGE, Brazil's Geography & Statistics Institute
- Folhapress, Morre fundador da igreja pentecostal Deus É Amor, correiodoestado.com.br, Brazil, February 22, 2015
- J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann, Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2010, p. 393
- Peter Clarke, Encyclopedia of New Religious Movements, Routledge, USA, 2004, p. 237
- Klaus Hart: Brasiliens Sekte "Deus è Amor" und ihr Megatempel in Sao Paulo (German), São Paulo, 15. Dezember 2006. ]
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-01-29. Retrieved 2019-07-22.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)