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Universal Life Church founder Kirby J. Hensley
at the Church's headquarters in Modesto, California |
Modesto, California is probably one of the last places
anyone would expect to host a religious revolution.
The smog-shrouded, agrarian Central Valley city, famed
mostly as the setting of former resident George Lucas’ movie American Graffiti, and for boasting
America’s highest rate of auto thefts, doesn’t exactly lend itself to images of
divine revelation or spiritual rebellion. There is no great Castle Church upon
whose door a potential Martin Luther could nail a litany of protests. None of
the low, brushy hills surrounding the town look as if they could yield ancient
golden plates of secret teachings to a would-be Joseph Smith Jr.
Yet this unlikely setting for religious upheaval was
the home of an equally implausible spiritual leader, church founder and
self-confessed “con man” named Kirby J. Hensley. A balding, jug-eared Appalachian
transplant, the unlettered and plain-spoken former Pentecostal preacher created
the Universal Life Church – a sect which may have revolutionized the concept of
ministry, and religious belief itself, more than any other group in modern
Western history.
For the last half-century, the Universal Life Church
has granted legal, legitimate ministerial credentials to all who ask, for free.
No specific beliefs are required of its clergy – Church ministers profess creeds
ranging from fundamentalist Christianity, to neo-Paganism, to outright atheism,
to idiosyncratic and unclassifiable faiths. Too, the ULC has helped its
ministers establish local parishes under its jurisdictions with zero doctrinal
requirements and little oversight, and has granted countless thousands of
honorary Doctorates of Divinity and other titles to donors.
At this writing, the ULC has ordained over twenty
million people, making it by far the largest sect to emerge from California.
It’s also one of the most controversial, largely because the ULC’s
free-ordination policy allows anybody to claim a legal ministerial title
without training or education, but with its status and perks – including
setting up tax-exempt ministries, many of which bear little resemblance to traditional
“churches.” This last activity has kept the ULC in the courts for decades,
fighting for its status as a legitimate religious group and a tax-exempt
organization – a situation that continues to this day.
When the Universal Life Church first appeared in 1962,
founder Kirby J. Hensley was already fifty years old, and had logged a rich
array of spiritual and secular experience. Born on July 23, 1911 in Low Gap,
North Carolina, Hensley and his six siblings were raised in a two-room log
cabin. From an early age Hensley was hard-headed and temperamental; he had
little patience with school, and dropped out before learning to read and write.
At fourteen he ran away from Low Gap, and drifted across Twenties America as a
hobo, riding freight trains.
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Kirby J. Hensley, circa 1970. |
During this period, Hensley somehow got ordained as a
Baptist preacher and took up street-corner evangelizing. But his homiletic
style was a bit too wild for the straitlaced denomination – years later, he
joked that he preached his first sermon “under the influence of the Spirit –
White Lightning”! Hensley found Pentecostalism and its informal, emotive style
much more to his liking, and affiliated with the Pentecostal Church of God.
In 1930 Hensley settled in Bakersfield, California,
where he married and had two daughters. He worked as a farmer and carpenter,
invested in real estate, and built two churches for the Church of God. Around
this time, he also hired a woman to read the entire Bible to him, and committed
the Good Book to his preliterate memory. From then on, Hensley claimed, he
could recite all of the New Testament and much of the Old verbatim. (In later
years, he would listen continuously to tape-recorded renditions of the King
James Bible.)
When Hensley’s marriage fell apart, he went on a
soul-searching journey that ended with a near-fatal car crash, and a visit to a
mysterious woman who told him to forget the past, and forge on to a new future.
He returned to his childhood home in Low Gap, and met and married Lida Gouge,
who would be his wife for the next 48 years. The newlyweds then relocated to
Detroit, Michigan.
Although Hensley tried to settle down in his new life,
the preaching bug still rode him. One night a Pentecostal pastor and his flock
frog-marched Hensley out of a meeting when he preached that the Old Testament
heroes and heroines were fallible mortals whose Biblical misadventures could
teach much about human nature. Although the pastor later apologized and invited
the maverick preacher to join his church, Hensley refused, perhaps sensing that
his Gospel wasn’t quite ready for the orthodox-Christian prime time.
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Hensley & his wife of 48 years, Lida Gouge |
But Hensley wasn’t alone among American Pentecostals.
Strange currents were sweeping through the American movement in the 1950s,
chief among them the so-called “Latter Rain Revival.” One faction of the
Revival emphasized an optimistic eschatological theology called “The
Reconciliation and Restitution of All Things”, where universal salvation of
humanity and the Kingdom of God would shortly be established on Earth. More
radical elements within the movement also promoted allegorical interpretations
of Scripture, where Heaven and Hell were seen as states of consciousness rather
than actual places, and where “the Second Coming of Christ” was a metaphysical
and individualized gnosis, rather
than a literal and historic event. Some even explored Eastern spiritual
teachings.
Still, none of the heterodox Pentecostals were more
radical than Hensley. In 1959 he moved to Modesto, California, built a chapel
in his garage, and hung the sign, “Church”, outside it. When curious passersby
asked what kind of “church” it was, Hensley would ask them what kind of church
they sought, and always answered their specifications with, “Well, you’ve come
to the right place.”
Many thought differently when they actually attended his
services. In his garage, Hensley preached a down-home, no-punches-pulled form
of metaphysical Universalism, often opening his homilies by cursing God, and
then proclaiming that the Deity would still love him despite his disrespect. “I
wouldn’t serve a God who wouldn’t take a good cussin’ ever’ once in awhile!”
he’d chuckle.
But that was just the beginning. In his best Southern
Appalachian corn-pone patois, Hensley would ask his flock, “Do you know who God
is?” After a short pause, he’d bellow, “I am God! There ain’t no God up there
in the sky!” He’d then point to each of the dozen or congregants and yell, “You are God! And you are God!” And then: “Life
is God! Your life is God!” Taking aim
at the central point of the Christian faith, he thundered, “As for salvation…No
one will ever be saved, but no one
was ever lost!”
And what of the Resurrection? “Honey forget it – there ain’t gonna be any! There ain’t no dead people in the graveyard.
An eternal spirit can’t die. Why, those spirits done come back as me and you!”
Reincarnation, Pantheism, denial of Salvation and
Resurrection – it was clear that Hensley had strayed far off the Christian
reservation. One ex-Evangelical minister, Lewis Ashmore, caught his act at a
fellowship meeting in Visalia, California, and intrigued by Hensley’s radical
teachings, teamed up with the heterodox preacher. A writer and lecturer on
metaphysical subjects, Ashmore told Hensley that he too was burned out by both
mainstream Christianity and the traditional ministry, and that the world needed
a new approach to spreading the nonsectarian vision of life and freedom they
shared.
Was it possible, they wondered, to found a church that
would literally be “a priesthood of all believers,” that would ordain all its
members as Ministers, no matter their age, sex, race, creed, education, or
station in life? After all, a Baptist sect had ordained Hensley back when he
was an illiterate, drunken, teenaged drifter. Surely if he was considered ministerial material by one of Protestantism’s
primary denominations, anyone could
qualify as a cleric. So Hensley and Ashmore decided to start a new church that
would ordain anyone who requested, and allow its ministers to preach the Truth
as each of them saw it.
Hensley had taken to calling his ministry the “Life
Church,” and Ashmore suggested they add the title “Universal” to stress their
radical-inclusion ethic – “everyone can relate to it.” With nothing but the
name, the two headed to Sacramento to incorporate the church, only to be told
they needed proper incorporation papers. Undaunted, the two photocopied a
Baptist church’s California incorporation papers, whited out all references to
the Baptists, filled in “Universal Life Church” in the newly-blank spaces, and
submitted the results to the State on May 2, 1962. And thus, the Universal Life
Church was in business, with Hensley as its Minister of Congregation, President
and Chair – titles he held for the rest of his life.
The Church’s first order of business was publicity.
Ashmore took out classified ads in FATE, a long-established American digest of
metaphysical and occult doings, with the words, “Become a Minister. We will
ordain you without question. Without price and for life.” People who answered
the call received a document affirming that they were now Ministers of the
Universal Life Church, as well as a Church newsletter with this statement on
its back page:
The Universal Life Church
has no doctrine or creed of its own, but acts only as a mediator between many
varied groups. It does not invoke or bind its fellowshipping ministers in any
way. It does advocate the freedom of the individual to believe, express, and
teach his own revelation. It is the vision of the Universal Life Church to work
toward the unification of the Brotherhood of Man and to bring people everywhere
into a spirit of understanding and fellowship.
Later this doctrine was boiled down to the simplest
and vaguest statement of purpose imaginable:
The Universal Life Church
believes only in that which is right…and every person has the right to decide
what is right for himself.
Often the Church wouldn’t even bother with this
minimalist creed, and merely stated its beliefs could be summed up in three
short words: “Do What’s Right.”
When zoning laws nixed his garage chapel, Hensley
moved ULC services to a former Baptist church at 601 Third Street in Modesto. There,
he preached his idiosyncratic gospel for the next thirty-seven years, along
with guest ministers, or anyone who wanted to speak during informal sharing
periods. Services would often be accompanied by music, not all of it sacred –
Hensley once claimed that two favorite “hymns” at the church were “The Old Grey
Mare, She Ain’t What She Used to Be,” and “Yellow Rose of Texas.”
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ULC Ordination certificates, cards, and other ephemera |
The Church’s growth was slow but steady during this
period. The FATE ad brought in between 150 and 200 new members each month, most
of them practitioners of unorthodox spiritual paths who lacked the time, money
and/or theological purity to be admitted to traditional divinity schools. By
1969, the ULC had ordained over 15,000 ministers for free, with no questions
asked about their beliefs, or lack thereof (one early “celebrity” Hensley
ordained was Madalyn Murray O’Hair, the outspoken atheist whose activism got
prayer banned from American public schools in 1963.)
Hensley spent most of the Sixties building the ULC
ministry infrastructure, and flirting with national politics. Twice he ran for
President of the United States under the banner of the Universal Party, a
political group that claimed contact with extraterrestrial beings, and
advocated world brotherhood and interplanetary peace. Along with these ideas,
Hensley’s platform advocated the abolition of the income tax and the Electoral
College, and a system of reward incentives for law-abiding that matched the
punishments for law-breaking. Although his biography claimed that Hensley
obtained three million votes in these campaigns, official records show he
finished with a mere 19 votes nationwide in the 1964 Presidential race, and a
paltry 142 in the 1968 contest. In 1970 he struck out on his own with the
People’s Peace and Prosperity Party, but despite his ambitions to remake
America with his ideas, it never got off the ground.
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1964 button promoting Hensley as a US Presidential Candidate.
He got nineteen (19) votes nationwide that year. |
During this period, Hensley kept his day job as a
carpenter, and paid for ULC printing, postage and travel costs out of his own
pocket. To raise money and create an organizational structure, he came up with
the Church Charter system, where for a filing fee and annual dues, ULC ministers
could organize their own local, self-named congregations under the mother
church’s corporate authority.
This innovation took the Church into new and potentially
troublesome territory. As it was, the mail-order ministry empowered anyone with
a postage-stamp to get ordained, and not only claim the title “Minister,” but
also discharge the historical duties of the clergy: perform baptisms, weddings
and funerals; visit prison inmates; and even get discounts on travel and other
costs. If a ULC Minister could find two co-signers, maintain minimal records, and
kick over the requisite fees to Modesto, he or she could also establish a local
ULC Church, and (in theory) get a tax exemption on any expenditure that could
be passed off as church expenses. Soon, hundreds of local ULC branches,
representing faiths ranging from Evangelical Christianity to psychedelic-drug
cultism, began to appear on the American spiritual landscape, most little more
than “house churches” comprised of ULC ministers and a handful of followers.
Hensley also created the Universal Life Church
Honorary Doctorate. For a $20 donation, the ULC would grant any of its
ministers the title of Doctor of Divinity, allowing the holder to title him/herself
“Reverend Doctor,” and use the honorific in any way they saw fit.
By 1969, the mass media started to notice the
Universal Life Church’s thousands of mail-order ministers, its little empire of
living-room churches, its 20-buck Doctorates, and (most of all) the fiery
eccentric who led the sect. When the San
Francisco Examiner published a story about the ULC and Hensley, a national
news wire picked it up, and the story got reprinted in papers all over the
country, including The New York Times.
The Wall Street Journal also took
notice, and profiled Hensley and the ULC in a front-page human-interest piece.
The publicity proved a gold mine for the Church: it now ordained as many as
3,000 ministers every month, and up to $20,000 a day poured into ULC coffers.
Predictably, the sudden influx of members and money brought
legal trouble to the mail-order ministry. On San Francisco’s talk-radio KGO,
Hensley debated the State Assistant Attorney General on the legality and
propriety of ULC ministries, doctorates and affiliate churches. Days later, the
Santa Clara County District Attorney charged the ULC with illegally issuing
honorary degrees without educational accreditation. Smelling a set-up, Hensley fought
back in court, and the matter was eventually resolved in the Church’s favor.
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ULC co-founder Lewis Ashmore's biography of Hensley |
To keep the revenue stream flowing during the
California troubles, the ULC reincorporated in Arizona, and continued to mail
out its $20 honorary doctorates from the Grand Canyon State. When Arizona
officials got word of the move, they swore out a warrant for Hensley’s arrest,
and then busted him when he visited Phoenix. After a few hours’ in jail,
however, the State dropped charges against the Modesto maverick, and the
Arizona operation continued unabated.
There was also trouble from the Internal Revenue
Service. That most feared of Federal fiduciary agencies hit the ULC for $10,000
in back taxes, and also raided the Modesto headquarters in search of incriminating
paperwork. When Hensley traveled to Washington D.C. to complain, tax officials
there told him that the ULC was “not a legitimate church,” and therefore not
qualified for the religious tax exemption. The cantankerous preacher vowed vengeance, and began a five-year court battle
that concluded in 1974 when a US District Court judge ruled for the Church, and
forced the IRS to not only refund the $10k, but also pay court costs.
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Hensley was embraced -- sometimes literally --
by many Sixties hippies and counterculturalists |
Hensley’s quarrels with the government, as well as his
radical ideas and his freedom-seeking message, made the 57 year-old preacher an
unlikely hero to the Sixties youth counterculture. On March 20, 1969, the suit-clad,
bespectacled, balding Hensley spoke at a Sonoma State College “Rites of Spring”
student festival, telling the attendees that, “All we ask of our ministers is
that they be themselves. Become what you want and go out and tell the world
what you are. The Universal Life Church believes in the reality of people, in individuals, not just numbers….And Heaven…Heaven
is when you have what you want, and Hell is when you don’t have it!”
The undergrads ate it all up, especially when he
lifted his hands to the sky and pronounced everyone on the entire Sonoma State
campus a Universal Life Church minister. For his efforts, the students strew
flowers in Hensley’s path, crowned him with a garland, and pronounced him, “The
Modesto Messiah.”
Months later, Hensley performed even bigger mass
ordinations at San Francisco State College, as well as at the venerable
Stanford University. Behind the novelty of the instant ordinations were
practical considerations; the Vietnam War was at its peak, and many young men attempted
to get the coveted 4-D ministerial draft exemption with their ULC credentials.
Although Hensley had personally intervened for one young ULC minister who’d
been called up, and claimed that hundreds of his clergy had gotten out of
military service, he cautioned potential conscription-evaders: show the draft
board hard evidence that you have a serious, full-time ministry if you want to
avoid sloshing through rice paddies for Uncle Sam.
Hensley and the ULC further bolstered their
countercultural credentials when they sponsored one of the hippie era’s
greatest rock festivals. Up in Moscow, Idaho, “The Church of the Rock”, a ULC
group formed by local rock-concert organizers, asked state officials to rent
Farragut State Park for a weekend “Church Picnic”. The state initially granted
them use of the large lakeside park, but balked when they realized that the
“Picnic” would much more resemble the Woodstock Festival than an Evangelical weenie-roast.
Perhaps fearing bad PR and Hensley’s litigious reputation, the Governor cited
First Amendment protections for religious groups, and gave the gathering a
green light, meanwhile putting Idaho State Police and National Guard on call to
quell any Altamont-esque atrocities.
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ULC Picnic Flyer, with (possibly unauthorized) art by R. Crumb |
Held over July 4th weekend in 1971, The Universal Life
Church Picnic was the Idaho Panhandle’s first and biggest rock festival. During
its three-day duration, over 40,000 attendees listened and danced to two dozen
different bands, camped in tents and teepees, drank oceans of cheap beer and
sweet wine, distributed and ingested all manner of illegal chemicals,
skinny-dipped in Lake Pend Oreille, copulated in the open air, and in general
brought Sixties Dionysian hedonism to a backwoods region that had never seen The Woodstock Nation in action.
Hensley’s biographer would claim that Santana, Grand Funk Railroad, and Iron
Butterfly played the Picnic, although the only “name” act proven to have
mounted the homemade stage there was eccentric street-singer and ULC minister
Larry “Wild Man” Fischer, who brought down the house with an a cappella rendition of Simon and
Garfunkel’s “Bridge over Troubled Water.”
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Hensley (center, seated) doles out ministerial credentials to
attendees at the ULC Picnic |
At the center of the festivities was the Modesto
Messiah himself. Ensconced in a travel-trailer, Hensley handed out free Idaho
potatoes to hungry hippies, ordained thousands of new ministers, and even
performed nuptials for two young Canadian women in what might have been the
first lesbian wedding in modern history. When it was all over, the Picnic
boasted zero deaths, virtually no incidents of crime or violence, good feelings
from the locals, and cleaner grounds then when the Boy Scouts had used the park
for an earlier jamboree. Hensley’s positive views of human freedom, the youth
culture, and the Church’s mission to bless human life and gatherings of all
kinds, were vindicated.
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Part of the ULC Picnic crowd |
By the 1970s, the ULC had grown far beyond hippiedom
and the American metaphysical/spiritual underground. With ministers now
numbering in the millions, the Church counted among its ranks not only ordinary
folk following their self-defined calls to ministry, but also such celebrities
as Johnny Carson, Betty Ford, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, Mae West, and
scores of other A-Listers. When Playboy founder/publisher Hugh Hefner
interviewed Hensley for a proposed film, the sexagenarian preacher ordained not
only Hef, but everyone else on the set.
Hensley also added new titles for the mail-order
diplomas. For a seven-dollar donation, a ULC Minister could purchase documents
that dubbed the holder a Priest, Bishop,
Rabbi, Guru, Prophet, or scores of other religious titles from every
imaginable tradition (although even Kirby Hensley didn’t quite have the nerve
to grant the title Pope). For another
$20, the ULC would grant honorary Doctorates of Divinity, Metaphysics, Religious Humanities, Religious Science,
Motivation, Universal Life, or
Immortality. And the Church even offered correspondence education, running
a paralegal “Common Law Course” as well as a Masters’ Degree in Religion
program that was approved by the International Accrediting Organization – which
happened to be, conveniently enough, the ULC’s in-house accrediting agency.
Perhaps Hensley’s greatest exposure to a mass audience
came on September 26, 1976. That evening, Morley Safer interviewed the Modesto
Messiah on the 60 Minutes national
news-magazine show. During the segment, Hensley cheerfully called himself “a
con man…When I give a fellow an Honorary Doctor of Divinity, it’s just a little
piece of paper. And it ain’t worth anything….” He also excoriated organized
religion: “I think that they’re all wrong, and that they’re all wet…I think
they cause more grief and hell upon this earth than anybody else….” And he
discussed the ULC’s tax-exemption controversies with similar aplomb and
irreverence, a far more colorful and sympathetic figure than the strait-laced IRS
official who countered his claims on camera. Years later, Safer recalled
Hensley as “a lovable scoundrel that I think everyone really likes…He was a
wonderful character.”
Hensley also got to throw raffish philosophical
curveballs on The Donahue Show, where
millions of TV viewers saw the iconoclastic minister declare to the host,
“Jesus Christ was the worst man who ever lived on this planet, and Richard
Nixon was the best.” When the studio audience and the host gasped in shock,
Hensley quickly explained: the world wasted 2,000 years waiting for the
Messiah, killed him when he appeared, and have since wasted another two millennia
anticipating his return; whereas Richard Nixon so perfectly symbolized the
human rot and corruption that cried out for a mass revolution in consciousness.
Just days after these broadcasts, the ULC made
national headlines again – this time, in the political arena. Residents of the
town of Hardenburgh, New York, an impoverished Catskills village whose land was
being bought up by untaxed nonprofit organizations, were being dunned to make
up the lost revenue. Faced with paying up to two-thirds of their subsistence-level
incomes on school, town and county taxes, the town’s farmers, loggers and
shopkeepers turned to George McClain, a 41 year-old ULC Bishop from the nearby
town of Liberty. In a ceremony at a cocktail lounge, McClain ordained most of the
town’s property owners, who then quickly filed for religious tax-exemption with
the county. One report said that by 1977, 236 of the town’s 239 property
holders had gotten religion with the ULC, saving their homes and land from liens.
This, and other shenanigans by ULC ministers, once
again prompted an attack by the IRS. In 1984, the Feds canceled the Church’s
tax-exempt status for the years 1978 through 1981, saying that the ULC’s
expenditures during that period didn’t qualify as truly “religious”
transactions. Eventually the ULC settled with the revenuers for $1.5 million, and
sold its portfolio of rental properties to cover the bill. But the IRS wasn’t
quite finished yet: they also pulled tax-exempt privileges from about 3,000 ULC
local congregations, saying they were “paper churches” that did no active
pastoral work.
Along with the blatant tax-dodgers, some of the ULC’s
most embarrassing ministers were the ones that walked on all fours. Over the
years, various animal lovers and practical jokers have ordained their pet dogs,
cats, and other beasts as ULC ministers, proudly displaying Church certificates
that designated their Rover and Fluffy as clergy-critters. The ULC officially
restricts its ministry to Homo sapiens,
but any entity with a “human-sounding” first and last name and a legitimate
address can probably obtain credentials, albeit illegitimately. (One
ULC-ordained pet, a Miniature Schnauzer by the name of “The Reverend Tyker,”
has an Internet-based ministry where he performs “pet weddings” of dubious
legal validity.)
In 1991, Hensley turned 80, and produced his Magnum
opus: The Holy Bible for the 21st
Century. The product of over sixty
years’ of Bible study and theological rumination, the book was based on the
preacher’s belief that “not one verse of Scripture…will take you beyond the
20th Century,” and that a new spiritual guidebook was needed for the
rapidly-changing modern world.
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The ULC's Bible. Like Christian Scripture, it was
assembled from a wide variety of sources. |
To that end, Hensley and his ULC associates, like the
Council of Nicea had sixteen centuries earlier, compiled a variety of lectures,
anecdotes, meditations, epistles, and ephemera into the closest thing the ULC
has to an “official” doctrine beyond Do
What’s Right. Materials ranged from inspirational writings, to a Genesis
exegesis titled “Did Eve Have Sex With an Animal?” to an excerpt from William
Gayley Simpson’s White-supremacist tirade, Which
Way Western Man? In the main, though, it featured Hensley’s rambling
discourses about the Bible, Christianity, God, Jesus and religion in general,
all marked with his usual heterodox and even blasphemous takes on the same.
Kirby Hensley was not one to waltz gracefully into old age, or embrace a
deathbed conversion.
The end for the Modesto Messiah came on March 19, 1999,
at 87 years of age. Upon his death, his widow Lida took over leadership of the
Church, and held it until her own passing in 2006. Currently, Hensley’s son
Andre heads the ULC.
In a 2009 story about the ULC, Modesto Bee reporter Sue Nowicki brought readers up to date on the
hometown phenomenon that had made Modesto synonymous with universal ordination.
In the piece, Andre Hensley revealed that the ULC’s many court battles had
drained its coffers; the man who headed a 20 million-member organization
admitted that he lived on a Church salary of $36,000 a year, and couldn’t pay
the ULC’s eight employees any more than the minimum wage. Still, the ULC boasted
over 15,000 active congregations, many of which had more than 100 members. And
it still ordained as many as 10,000 ministers every month.
Many of the new ministers joined the ULC via the
Internet. In yet another innovation, the Church became the first organized
religious group to ordain its clergy online, accepting applications for the
ministry via its official Web site. As always, the credentials were free and
for life.
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The Modesto ULC's current main Web page |
The online ordinations caused yet another round of
legal headaches, as both the Church and the government struggled to incorporate
new communications technology into the affairs of God and State. In Universal Life Church vs. the State of
Utah, the ULC fought the Beehive State over the legality of nuptials
performed by an Internet-ordained cleric. The case was ruled in the Church’s
favor, as was a similar one in Pennsylvania – the latest in a long line of
skirmishes with State governments over whether ULC ministers’ weddings would be
recognized in their jurisdictions. (To this day, the ULC provides ministers a
guide to the 50 States’ ever-changing legal intricacies concerning weddings.)
The Internet also spurred an organizational disaster
that remains unsolved to this day in the Church. As unlikely and ironic as it
might seem for such an anarchic, ultra-liberal sect, the ULC experienced two
major schisms.
The first breakaway happened in August 2006, when a
large, Seattle-based ULC congregation split from the Modesto Mother Church.
Known as the Monastery, the congregation was headed by “Brother Martin” (aka
George Freeman), who ran a Seattle mission to homosexual youth and other social
outcasts that featured disco-dancing ceremonies, “sacramental” booze, baptisms
in private hot tubs, and the kind of party-time atmosphere that would have
delighted rock-festival veteran Hensley. Eventually the police shut down
Brother Martin’s operation, and he claimed persecution, taking his case to both
the courts and the media at any opportunity.
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Main Web page of "The Monastery", the ULC's Seattle-based faction |
When the Monastery left the Modesto ULC, it took along
ownership of the ulc.org domain – until then, the first point of Internet contact
for the Church. The Seattle faction began to represent itself as THE true heir
of Hensley’s legacy, much as every Christian schism in history has justified
itself as the custodian of orthodoxy. To this day, Web searches inevitably list
the ULC Monastery first on searches for “Universal Life Church” – a situation
that’s caused both great confusion for seekers of free ordination, and losses
of revenue and membership for the Mother Church. The two factions have
continuously traded charges and countercharges online and in the courts, with
no chance of an easy solution in sight.
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Seattle ULC "Monastery" leader George "Brother Martin" Freeman |
The one thing that unites the Modesto and Seattle ULCs
is their scorn for a third faction: Michael Cauley’s Universal Life Church. In
2010 Cauley, a moderator with the ULC Ministers Network, was accused of
sexually harassing Church members, and carrying on Internet-based vendettas
against critics. A Florida-based Evangelical minister with a past every bit as
checkered as Hensley’s, Cauley resigned his position that year, and claimed
that in 1962 Hensley had deliberately adopted the name of the second-century
Christian Church, “The Universal Life Church,” to promulgate his blasphemous
doctrines and confuse the faithful. He then formed his own ULC with a
ministerial corps restricted to professing Christians. The schismatic minister
also claimed to possess something Hensley had never attained: a legitimate
Apostolic Succession that allowed him to rightly claim the title of Catholic
Bishop, and ordain other Catholic (but not Roman) Bishops and Priests. Like the
Monastery, the Florida ULC is active as of this writing.
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Bishop Michael Cauley, leader of the ULC's Florida-based Christian schism |
Still, for all the schisms and legal troubles, one
aspect of the ULC has persisted unchanged to the present day. On any Sunday
morning in Modesto, one can still climb the steps of the little church at 601
Third Street, open the door, and join with a dozen-odd others in prayer and
fellowship, the same as they have for a half-century.
During each service, the worshippers share Scripture
readings, inspirational prose and poems, and songs, while their children play
up on the pulpit-free platform. A table at the head of the pews serves as an
altar; upon it is always a spray of flowers and a photograph of the Modesto
Messiah – the man whose mission to freely ordain millions was as far-reaching
as it was controversial, and whose influence on the American spiritual scene
will be felt as long as mail-order ministers retain the same First-Amendment
protection to practice their faiths as any “legitimate” church or cleric.
Sources/Notes
Ashmore, Lewis The Modesto Messiah. Modesto, CA: Universal Press, 1977.
Nowicki, Sue. "Universal Life Goes On." Modesto Bee, 3/6/2009
Melton's Encyclopedia of American Religion - Eighth Edition. Edited by J. Gordon Melton. Detroit: Gale, 2009.
The Holy Bible for the 21st Century. Edited by Kirby J. Hensley. Modesto, CA: ULC Printing Dept, 1991.
Jacobs, Patrick. "'Idaho's Woodstock' at Farragut Not Remembered for the Music." Idaho Spokesman-Review, 3/22/2009.
Eichhorn, Dennis P. The Legend of Wild Man Fischer. Portland, OR: Top Shelf Productions, 2004.