Ex-Church Members Reveal Jones' Controls
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Long before the Rev. Terry Jones threatened to burn a Koran, former parishioners say he presided over a church that he treated as a personal fiefdom, imposing a strict orthodoxy that tore apart one Gainesville family after another.
Congregants at the Dove World Outreach Center, who have dwindled to 30 or so in number, are required to vow allegiance to Jones — a pledge that places restrictions on their diets, their ability to hold jobs outside the church and their personal relationships.
For Chris Nassoiy, 25, and for most members, the last restriction is by far the most painful. He has seen his parents only once since they left the church in 2009, when he gathered his belongings from his childhood home.
“I had to tell them that we won’t be able to communicate until they apologize, until they accept the Gospel,” he said, his voice cracking. “It was a little bit wrenching.”
For his mother, Sally Nassoiy, what started as heartbreak has evolved into anger at Jones and other church officials.
“They take young people willing to devote themselves to God’s word, and they exploit them,” she said. “It’s a cult. That’s the only word I can think of to describe it.”
Jones, 59, denies that the church is a cult. Those who leave the church aren’t doing it because of him. “Their faith just wasn’t strong enough,” he said.
Jones knows personally how his strict edicts and unconventional leadership can divide families. Two of his daughters have left the church in disgust.
“I don’t support him, and I don’t want to have anything to do with him,” Emma Jones said via Facebook.
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