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Jesus of Kingaroy

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I have been writing and broadcasting about cults and new religious movements for the last 25 years, during this time I have met more than 10 people who claim to be Jesus Christ.

About five years ago, I organised to meet two of them in the hope that they would see the absurdity of what they were saying. They talked to me for two hours and afterwards thanked me, for they could now see more clearly that they were the true Jesus. Both also warned me that the other was mad. I had to agree with them.

And then there is Alan John Miller, the 47-year-old real estate developer and computer whiz who says that he is Jesus. What makes him different is that he is not mad. On first meeting he is a friendly, generous, easy-smiling man who has followers joining him at his centre outside of Kingaroy in Queensland.

Earlier this year, I attended a seminar Miller held at the Murgon Town Hall. There were people there from Japan, Russia, Switzerland, the UK, USA and Germany. For two days, he held the group entranced. At one point he wrote in large letters on the white board: “I’M JESUS, DEAL WITH IT”. He told me it began about 10 years ago: “I started having violent memories of my earlier life. It was horrific visions of my crucifixion”.

Miller has the first characteristic necessary in leaders like this - he believes every word he is saying. You cannot attract followers if you have the slightest shadow of doubt. So in this sense he is not a conman who goes to bed at night delighting in his subterfuge, he says he is the same Jesus who lived 2011 years ago.

Since his first death he spent the time making his way through an elaborate series of heavenly levels, until he achieved oneness with God.

Miller was happy to talk to me about the people he met in the afterlife: “I was good friends with Plato, we had lots of talks. He has changed his mind on a lot of things”.

Miller claims he knew Napoleon and Mahatma Ghandi, who have changed his mind about sex. Apparently he is now all for it. He was buddies with Elvis, Socrates, Saint Augustine, and his cousin John the Baptist.

At one level, Miller is a curiosity who is fascinating to watch. We live in a pluralist democracy in Australia so we have no right to constrain his right to tell the world that he is Jesus. But there is always a problem with people like Miller. He will consume you. As you walk along the path with him, every step the demands compound. You can never match the ferocity of his self-belief. The closer you come to his fire, the more you will be burnt.

There is a strange dance between gurus and their followers. He needs their money, time and absolute obedience; they need him to be who he says he is. Outside the group Miller is nobody. He is a knockabout, Aussie bloke who no one can take seriously. Inside he is a colossus. To his followers, his words burn with the light of divine truth. To the rest of us, his endless DVDs are nothing more than prolix ravings.

Miller is surrounded by people who have walked out of marriages and businesses - they have forsaken all to follow Jesus. Neuroscientist Dr Louise Faber left the Queensland Brain Institute to buy a property next to Miller’s in O’Dea Road, outside Kingaroy. I asked her if she believed Miller was Jesus. “Oh yes, David, I know he is Jesus,” she said.

In the same road the ebullient Peter Heibloem has a property. Heibloem runs Alpha Dynamics, which he claims is the oldest registered self-help program in Australia. You have to pay big dollars to attend a Heibloem seminar. He told me repeatedly that Miller was Jesus, and that he knew of at least two occasions when he had seen him perform miracles of healing. In the same road is David Ward who Miller has convinced was Cornelius, the Roman Centurion who was in charge of his crucifixion.

And then there is Mary Luck. According to Miller, Mary was with him in the first century, they had a child together and since then Mary was with him as they climbed through the spiritual realms to achieve oneness with God. Miller was the first to reincarnate in 1962 and Mary followed 13 years later. Mary is a beautiful but sad figure. She has been recovering memories of her former life and now believes that she was Mary Magdalene. She has bought the entire package now she and Miller are inseparable. She is untroubled that Miller has had at least two other Mary Magdalenes before her. There was the 20 year old he left his wife and two sons for, and there was a girl in Barbados.

All gurus create a distinctive culture around them. Miller lives in a world of emotional intensity. His followers break easily into tears. They practice beating pillows; Miller has destroyed his garden shed.
Baseball bats and pillows are supplied. Mary is first among them. She fights back tears when she recalls her memories of Jesus being crucified: “This was the annihilation of the man I loved most. I saw him tortured to death. I was there and it is like it is happening again”.

Mary recalls being raped by one of Jesus’ disciples and the baby dying of starvation and neglect. She relives the seven years she spent in a brothel in Jerusalem. It is all returning in excruciating detail.

“I now understand why I have had trouble with sex in this life,” she said. She has written about this in a blog she calls, ‘God and my vagina’.

When she heard that my program was going to air on Channel 7 she wrote: “I rest easy in the knowledge that our intentions are pure, and we are honest people who speak up for truth. I will simply be humble to the storm ahead“.
There was a moment in the life of Jesus (ie. the first one) when things became so difficult that many of his disciples walked away. It says in John’s gospel Jesus turned to the twelve disciples and said: “Are you also going to leave?” To which Simon Peter replied: “To whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life”.

I fear there are the faithful few who will do the same today and follow this Jesus to the end.

By David Millikan