Take heed that no one deceives you. 5 For many will come in My name, saying, ‘I am the Christ,’ and will deceive many.
How many have come? Here's what two web sites have to say:
How many have come? Here's what two web sites have to say:
List of False Christs (cults)
1. John Nichols Thom
2. Ayya Valkundar
3. Klaus Kinski
4. Maria Devi Christos
5. Dore Williamson
6. Jim Jones
7. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh
8. Michael Travesser
9. Mitsuo Matayoshi
10. Marshall Applewhite
11. Suma Ching Hai
12. Sergey Antoyevitch Torop
13. Grigory Petrovich Grabovoy
14. Jung Myung Scok
15. Suh Myung Moon
16. Maitreya Bodhisattua
17. Jose Luis De Jesus Miranda
18. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
19. Mohammadi Begum
20. Joseph C. Dylkes
21. "Father Divine"
22. Hogen Fukunaga
23. Abu Isa
24. David Koresh
25. Krishna Venta
26. Charles Manson
27. Hakeem Noor-ud-Din
28. Solomon Molcho
29. Cyrus Teed
30. Yahweh ben Yahweh
2. Ayya Valkundar
3. Klaus Kinski
4. Maria Devi Christos
5. Dore Williamson
6. Jim Jones
7. Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh
8. Michael Travesser
9. Mitsuo Matayoshi
10. Marshall Applewhite
11. Suma Ching Hai
12. Sergey Antoyevitch Torop
13. Grigory Petrovich Grabovoy
14. Jung Myung Scok
15. Suh Myung Moon
16. Maitreya Bodhisattua
17. Jose Luis De Jesus Miranda
18. Mirza Ghulam Ahmad
19. Mohammadi Begum
20. Joseph C. Dylkes
21. "Father Divine"
22. Hogen Fukunaga
23. Abu Isa
24. David Koresh
25. Krishna Venta
26. Charles Manson
27. Hakeem Noor-ud-Din
28. Solomon Molcho
29. Cyrus Teed
30. Yahweh ben Yahweh
Nineteenth century
- John Nichols Thom (1799–1838), Cornish tax rebel who claimed to be the "saviour of the world" and the reincarnation of Jesus Christ and his body temple of the Holy Ghost[citation needed] in 1834. He was killed by British soldiers at the Battle of Bossenden Wood, on May 31, 1838 in Kent, England.[1]
- Arnold Potter (1804–1872), Schismatic Latter Day Saint leader; he claimed the spirit of Jesus Christ entered into his body and he became "Potter Christ" Son of the living God, he died in an attempt to "ascend into heaven" by jumping off a cliff.[citation needed] His body was later retrieved and buried by his followers.[citation needed]
- Bahá'u'lláh (1817–1892), born Shiite, adopted Bábism later in 1844,[2] he claimed to be the prophetic fulfilment and promised one of all major religions and founded the Bahá'í Faith in 1866.[3] Followers of the Bahá'í Faith believe that the fulfillment of the prophecies of the second coming of Jesus, as well as the prophecies of the 5th Buddha Maitreya and many other religious prophecies, were begun by the Báb in 1844 and then by Bahá'u'lláh. They commonly compare the fulfillment of Christian prophecies to Jesus' fulfillment of Jewish prophecies, where in both cases people were expecting the literal fulfillment of apocalyptic statements.[4]
- William W. Davies (1833–1906), leader of a Latter Day Saint schismatic group called the Kingdom of Heaven located in Walla Walla, Washington from 1867 to 1881. He taught his followers that he was the archangel Michael, who had previously lived lives as the biblical Adam, Abraham, and David. When his son Arthur was born on 11 February 1868, Davies declared that the infant was the reincarnated Jesus Christ. When Davies's second son, David, was born in 1869, he was declared to be God the Father.[citation needed]
- Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of Qadian, India (1835–1908), claimed to be the awaited Mahdi as well as (Second Coming) and likeness of Jesus the promised Messiah at the end of time, being the only person in Islamic history who claimed to be both.[citation needed] He claimed to be Jesus in the metaphorical sense; in character. He founded the Ahmadiyya Movement in 1889 envisioning it to be the rejuvenation of Islam, and claimed to be commissioned by God for the reformation of mankind.[citation needed]
[edit] Twentieth century
- Haile Selassie I (1892–1975), the Rastafari movement which emerged in Jamaica during the 1930s believes he is the Second Coming (although he himself did not encourage this belief). He embodied this when he became Emperor of Ethiopia in 1930, perceived as confirmation of the return of the Messiah in the prophetic Book of Revelation 5:5 in the New Testament but is also expected to return a second time to initiate the apocalyptic day of judgment. He is also called Jah Ras Tafari, and is often considered to be alive by Rastafari movement members.[5]
- George Ernest Roux (1903–1981), called the "Christ of Montfavet" or "Georges-Christ",[6] founder of the Universal Christian Church (now named the Universal Alliance) in France, claimed to be Jesus, then God. He presented himself as a persecuted prophet to carry out the law of love unfulfilled by God's representatives, including Jesus.[7]
- Ernest Norman (1904–1971), an American electrical engineer who co-founded the Unarius Academy of Science in 1954, was allegedly Jesus in a past life and his earthly incarnation was as an archangel named Raphiel.[8] He claimed to be the reincarnation of other notable figures including Confucius, Mona Lisa, Benjamin Franklin, Socrates, Queen Elizabeth I, and Tsar Peter I the Great.[9]
- Krishna Venta (1911-1958), born Francis Herman Pencovic in San Francisco, founded the WKFL (Wisdom, Knowledge, Faith and Love) Fountain of the World cult in Simi Valley, California in the late 1940s. In 1948 he stated that he was Christ, the new messiah and claimed to have led a convoy of rocket ships to Earth from the extinct planet Neophrates. He died on 10 December 1958 after being suicide bombed by two disgruntled former followers who accused Venta of mishandling cult funds and having been intimate with their wives.
- Ahn Sahng-Hong (1918–1985), a South Korean who founded the World Mission Society Church of God in 1964, who consider him the Second Coming of Jesus. The church believes that his wife Zahng Gil-Jah is "God the Mother," who they believe is referred to in the Bible as the New Jerusalem Mother (Galatians 4:26, and that Ahn Sahng-Hong is God the Father[10]
- Sun Myung Moon (1920–), believed by members of the Unification Church to be the Messiah and the Second Coming of Christ, fulfilling Jesus' unfinished mission.[11][12]
- Jim Jones (1931–1978), founder of Peoples Temple, which started off as an offshoot of a mainstream protestant sect before becoming a personality cult as time went on. He claimed to be the reincarnation of Jesus, Akhenaten, Buddha, Vladimir Lenin, and Father Divine in the 1970s. [13] Organized a mass murder suicide at Jonestown, Guyana on 18 November 1978.[14]
- Marshall Applewhite (1931–1997), an American who posted a famous Usenet message declaring, "I, Jesus—Son of God—acknowledge on this date of September 25/26, 1995: ..."[15] This was two years before he and his Heaven's Gate cult committed mass suicide to rendezvous with a spaceship hiding behind the comet Hale-Bopp in 1997.[16]
- Yahweh ben Yahweh (1935–2007), born as Hulon Mitchell, Jr., a black nationalist and separatist who created the Nation of Yahweh in 1979 in Liberty City, Florida. His self-proclaimed name means "God, Son of God." He could have only been deeming himself to be "son of God", not God, but many of his followers clearly deem him to be God Incarnate.[17][18] In 1992, he was convicted of conspiracy to commit murder and sentenced to 18 years in prison.[19]
- Laszlo Toth (1940-), Hungarian-born Australian who claimed he was Jesus Christ as he vandalised Michelangelo's Pietà with a geologist hammer in 1972.[20][21]
- Wayne Bent (1941-), also known as Michael Travesser of the Lord Our Righteousness Church. He claims; "I am the embodiment of God. I am divinity and humanity combined."[22] He was convicted on 15 December 2008 of one count of criminal sexual contact of a minor and two counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor in 2008.[23]
- Ariffin Mohammed (1943-), also known as "Ayah Pin", the founder of the banned Sky Kingdom in Malaysia in 1975. He claims to have direct contact with the heavens and is believed by his followers to be the incarnation of Jesus, as well as Shiva, and Buddha, and Muhammad.[24]
- Mitsuo Matayoshi (1944-), a conservative Japanese politician, who in 1997 established the World Economic Community Party based on his conviction that he is God and Christ, renaming himself Iesu Matayoshi. According to his program he will do the Last Judgment as Christ but within the current political system.[25][26]
- José Luis de Jesús Miranda (1946-), Puerto Rican founder, leader and organizer of Growing in Grace based in Miami, Florida, who claims that the resurrected Christ "integrated himself within me" in 2007.[27]
- Inri Cristo (1948-), a Brazilian astrologer who claims to be the second Jesus reincarnated in 1969,[28] Brasília is considered by Inri Cristo and his disciples as the “New Jerusalem” of the Apocalypse.
- Thomas Harrison Provenzano[29] (1949–2000), an American convicted murderer who was possibly mentally ill. He compared his execution with Jesus Christ's crucifixion.[30]
- Shoko Asahara (1955-), founded the controversial Japanese religious group Aum Shinrikyo in 1984. He declared himself "Christ", Japan's only fully enlightened master and the "Lamb of God". His purported mission was to take upon himself the sins of the world. He outlined a doomsday prophecy, which included a Third World War, and described a final conflict culminating in a nuclear "Armageddon", borrowing the term from the Book of Revelation 16:16.[31] Humanity would end, except for the elite few who joined Aum.[31] The group gained international notoriety in 20 March 1995, when it carried out the Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway. He has been sentenced to death, and is awaiting execution.
- David Koresh (1959–1993), born Vernon Wayne Howell, was the leader of a Branch Davidian religious sect in Waco, Texas, though never directly claiming to be Jesus himself, proclaimed that he was the final prophet and "the Son of God, the Lamb" in 1983. In 1993, a raid by the U.S. BATF, and the subsequent siege by the FBI ended with Branch Davidian ranch burning to the ground. Koresh, 54 adults and 21 children were found dead after the fire extinguished itself.[32]
- Hogen Fukunaga founded Ho No Hana Sanpogyo often called the "foot reading cult," in 1987 after an alleged spiritual event where he claimed to have realized he was the reincarnation of Jesus Christ and the Buddha.[33]
- Marina Tsvigun (1960-), or Maria Devi Christos, is the leader of the Great White Brotherhood.[34] In 1990 she met Yuri Krivonogov, the "Great White Brotherhood" founder, who recognized Marina as a new messiah and later married her, assuming in the sect the role of "John the Baptist", subordinate to Tsvigun.
- David Shayler (1965 -) In the summer of 2007, former MI5 agent and whistleblower proclaimed himself to be the Messiah. He has released a series of videos on Youtube claiming to be Jesus, although has not built up any noticeable following since his claims. [35] [36] [37]
- Sergei Torop (1961-), a Russian who claims to be "reborn" as Vissarion, Jesus Christ returned, which makes him not "God" but the "word of God." He founded the Church of the Last Testament and the spiritual community Ecopolis Tiberkul in Southern Siberia in 1990.[38][39]
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