Universal Church of the Kingdom of God | |
---|---|
Worship in 2005, Catedral Mundial da Fé
|
|
Classification | Evangelical |
Orientation | Pentecostal |
Theology | Neopentecostal with a prosperity theology element |
Leader | Edir Macedo |
Region | 180 countries approx. in 2012 |
Headquarters | São Paulo, Brazil |
Founder | Edir Macedo and R. R. Soares |
Origin | July 9, 1977 |
Members | 1.8M - 7M (in Brazil), 3M - 8.2M (worldwide) |
Official website | http://www.universal.org |
The Universal Church of the Kingdom of God (UCKG, from Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus [iˈɡɾeʒɐ univeʁˈsaw du ˈʁejnu dʒi ˈdews] (IURD) is a Neopentecostal Christian denomination with its headquarters at the Temple of Solomon in São Paulo, Brazil. It was founded on July 9, 1977 in Rio de Janeiro by Edir Macedo.
In 1999 it had 8 million members in Brazil, and had established temples in the United Kingdom and, since 1992, set up temples in Africa and in India, with a 1999 total of more than 12 million members worldwide. By 2013 UCKG had congregations in the New York City borough of Brooklyn and other US locations.
In 2017 the Church was accused of adopting children in Portugal and taking them abroad illegally. The Church has frequently been accused of illegal activities and corruption, including money laundering, charlatanism, and witchcraft, and intolerance towards other religions. It has been subject to bans in several African countries. A London UCKG pastor in 2000 arranged a service to cast out the devil when his help was sought for an ill and badly injured child whose guardians thought her possessed; she died and her guardians were convicted of murder. There have been accusations that the Church extracts money from poor members for the benefit of its leaders.
Edir Macedo's 2012 book Nada a Perder (Nothing to Lose) covers the early history of the Church. It was founded in 1977 by Macedo and his brother-in-law R. R. Soares in Rio de Janeiro.
Macedo converted to Evangelism at Igreja Cristã de Nova Vida, a Pentecostal church founded by the Canadian bishop Walter Robert McAlister. In 1968 he met Soares, who also joined. Macedo wanted to become a minister of that church, but was not accepted by its leaders, and decided to change to another denomination. Soares became interested in another church, called Casa da Bênção, and invited Macedo. In that church they considered that they saw possession by and deliverance from demons for the first time, but only Soares was consecrated as a pastor.