News

The Jesus Army's headquarters was at New Creation Hall, the Grade II-listed farmhouse in Bugbrooke where Noel Stanton lived.
The man who ran the theatre owned by an orthodox evangelical church said the group would "pack out" the 900-seater auditorium ...
Charismatic preacher turned cult leader Noel Stanton built a religious empire that hid horrific abuse behind colourful buses ...
SURVIVORS of abuse in the Jesus Fellowship/Jesus Army — described by its trustees as “widespread and systemic” — were the ...
TO casual visitors the Jesus Army’s communal farms in a quiet Northamptonshire village appeared idyllic. Children played in ...
Noel Stanton turned the Jesus Army into one of the largest and most controversial religious movements in the UK - but it was ...
Sarah left the Jesus Army 21 years ago. She has been in therapy, on and off, ever since, trying to reclaim her personality ...
With powerful testimony from former members, their children and former community Elders, the series traces the story of the ...
Philippa was only six when her parents joined the Christian cult in Northampton. She later helped to expose what went on ...
The Jesus Army is not to be confused with the Salvation Army, founded by William and Catherine Booth in 1865 and now numbering 1.7 million members worldwide; nor with the Church of England’s ...
The Jesus Army was a religious movement that sprang up in Northamptonshire in the 1970s. At its peak, it had more than 2,000 members, hundreds of whom lived together in communal houses throughout ...
Diving deep into the Fellowship Church and the 'Jesus Army', led by Baptist evangelical maverick Noel Stanton in the ...