John de Ruiter

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_de_Ruiter an entity of type: Thing

John de Ruiter (born November 11, 1959) is a Canadian spiritual leader and author who conducts meetings in Edmonton, Alberta and abroad. He operates a centre called the College of Integrated Philosophy and conducts his seminars and lectures from the Oasis Centre, a large auditorium venue in west Edmonton also used to host weddings and events. rdf:langString
rdf:langString John de Ruiter
rdf:langString John de Ruiter
rdf:langString John de Ruiter
rdf:langString Nipawin, Saskatchewan, Canada
xsd:date 1959-11-11
xsd:integer 36086165
xsd:integer 1124459093
xsd:date 1959-11-11
rdf:langString Johannes Franciscus de Ruiter
rdf:langString Metaphysics, spirituality, psychology, philosophy
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Canadian
rdf:langString Unveiling Reality
rdf:langString Spiritual teacher
rdf:langString John de Ruiter (born November 11, 1959) is a Canadian spiritual leader and author who conducts meetings in Edmonton, Alberta and abroad. He operates a centre called the College of Integrated Philosophy and conducts his seminars and lectures from the Oasis Centre, a large auditorium venue in west Edmonton also used to host weddings and events. Born in Stettler, Alberta to a Dutch shoemaker, de Ruiter attended Bible college and interned with a Lutheran pastor before forming his own spiritual practice in the late 1980s. His charismatic presentation and teachings, characterized by one observer as "New Age gospel," attracted thousands of followers over the next few decades, with several academic scholars interpreting his movement as the possible beginning of a new religion. De Ruiter has built followings in a number of countries, primarily Canada and the United States but also the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, India and Israel among others. Many of de Ruiter's devotees relocate to Edmonton to attend his seminars and to perform volunteer work for the College of Integrated Philosophy. De Ruiter has been implicated in a number of public controversies, including accusations of being a cult leader by multiple independent news outlets, and a civil lawsuit in which he was sued by two sisters, who alleged he was in a three-way common law marriage with both women simultaneously. De Ruiter has been accused by former followers of using faith-based claims to coerce them into sexual acts.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 19951
rdf:langString Johannes Franciscus de Ruiter

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