Doomsday Cult in Denver Vanishes
By ROBIN McDOWELL
.c The Associated Press
DENVER (AP) -- The leader of a doomsday cult who predicted the destruction of
Denver last weekend has vanished along with about 50 of his followers, raising
fears they are bent on mass suicide.
Followers of Monte Kim Miller's group, Concerned Christians, have sold their
belongings and abandoned their homes. Cult watchers believe the group may be
headed to Jerusalem because of Miller's belief he would die there in December
1999 and be resurrected three days later.
Miller founded Concerned Christians in the early 1980s, preaching against the
evils of cults and New Age movements.
Hal Mansfield, director of the Fort Collins-based Religious Movement Resource
Center, which has been monitoring the Denver-based Concerned Christians for at
least two years, said Miller might have started the movement as a financial
scam. But critics said the group has transformed itself into an apocalyptic
personality cult.
Miller, 44, claimed that God was using him as a vehicle to speak to his
followers. After prophesying that the Apocalypse would begin with an
earthquake in Denver last Saturday, the cult leader and about 50 of his
disciples dropped from sight.
Denver police officer Mark Roggeman said at least 20 of Miller's followers
have contacted relatives since Saturday and promised to keep in touch.
If Miller's predictions fail to materialize, tragedy could result, said Bill
Honsberger, a Christian missionary who has monitored the group. He said the
cult leader is capable of leading followers to mass suicide, much like the 39
members of the Heaven's Gate cult who killed themselves near San Diego in
1997.
Nicolette Weaver, a 16-year-old Denver girl who was a Concerned Christians
member for nearly 10 years, said she fears the worst. She left to live with
her biological father two years ago when Miller "started going off the deep
end." Her mother and stepfather stayed with Miller.
"He is so controlling, they would do anything he said," she said. "He has
been prophesying the end of world for so long. When it doesn't happen, he will
have to find some way for their world to end."
Nicolette said Miller held meetings every week or two at his house,
sermonizing that America is Satan or the government is evil.
"Sometimes when he was speaking for God he'd roll his eyes back and then
close them and get real dramatic," she said.
AP-NY-10-15-98 1746EDT
Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news
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