Rebecca Brown

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For the former Australian breaststroke swimmer, see Rebecca Brown (swimmer)
Rebecca Julia Brown is the name of a child actress who starred in the film School of Rock.

Rebecca Brown, M.D. (born Ruth Irene Bailey[1] in Shelbyville, Indiana on May 21, 1948) is a controversial Christian doctor best known for her claims of having helped people escape the occult in California and elsewhere throughout the world. Brown later had her medical license revoked for improper diagnosis and over medication of patients. She is known among some Fundamentalist Christians for her promoting a campaign against Satan. According to Brown there are the existence of Satanic recruitment camps throughout the world which train future Satanists and Witches. Brown married Daniel Michael Yoder December 10, 1989.

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[edit] Elaine

An important associate of Brown's is an ex-Satanist[citation needed] known as Elaine (born Edna Elaine Knost), who is described in Brown's book, He Came to Set the Captives Free, as having left Satanism and converted to Christianity. Elaine's surname is not mentioned in any of Rebecca Brown's books. Elaine is also the source of many of Rebecca Brown's claims. Among the two women's claims are that Yoga is Satanic, Roman Catholicism is Witchcraft, that Satanists work very closely with the Freemasons and the Roman Catholic Church, that Brown and Elaine converted about a thousand Satanists, that Dungeons & Dragons and other role-playing games are Satanic, and speaking in tongues and divine healing cannot always be trusted. Elaine has also claimed to have been a Satanic High Priestess and to have been involved in a marriage ceremony with Satan.

Elaine and Rebecca were roommates at the time her first two books were published. They have since gone their separate ways. Elaine passed away in 2006 and Rebecca Brown is now married.

[edit] Jack Chick

Rebecca Brown and Elaine decided to come forward with what they had experienced to Jack Chick, owner of Chick Publications, who published their claims in two cassette tapes Closet Witches 1 and Closet Witches 2 and in two books He Came To Set The Captives Free (1986) and Prepare for War (1987). Rebecca Brown's stories were the basis for the Chick tract The Poor Little Witch, which portrayed witches recruiting school children into Satanism and infiltrating Christian churches in order to buy off ministers with bribes. [1]

Chick and Brown later decided to end their business relationship after her medical license was revoked. Brown's books were reprinted by Whitaker House in 1992. Jack Chick still defends Rebecca Brown and believes her books are truthful. Many Christians have claimed to have been helped by these books although there are also many who doubt the validity of them. [2]

Her other books are Standing On The Rock, Unbroken Curses and Becoming A Vessel of Honor. Rebecca Brown currently leads a Christian group called Harvest Warriors with her husband Rev. Daniel Yoder. Brown has written a handful of books based on her experiences. Two noteworthy ones are Prepare for War and He Came to Set the Captives Free.

[edit] Controversies

Perhaps the biggest controversy surrounding Rebecca Brown's books are the existence of large, Satanic covens in America performing various evil works, rituals and sacrifices and the teaching in her books that born-again Christians can be inhabited (not possessed) by demons.

In 1984, Brown's medical license was revoked by the issuing state of Indiana. The licensing board ruled that on numerous occasions she had "knowingly and intentionally misdiagnosed her patients", blaming their illnesses on "demons, devils, and evil spirits"; a secular board-appointed psychiatrist diagnosed her as suffering from "acute personality disorders including demonic delusions and/or paranoid schizophrenia". The board also found that she had over-medicated her patients, failed to properly document their treatment.

The 1984 medical board findings from the state of Indiana identified Elaine as Edna Elaine Moses (aka Elaine Moses, aka Elaine Bailey), one of Brown's patients, and charged that Brown had misdiagnosed her with leukaemia and inappropriately treated her with large doses of Demerol and Phenobarbital. The findings also reported that Elaine had to be hospitalized for detoxification of the controlled substances Bailey had given her.

Brown's husband, Daniel Yoder, was arrested on July 29, 1991 in Phoenix, Arizona and extradited to Iowa. Yoder was charged with falsifying motor vehicle registrations and driver’s licenses, and falsifying social security records, allegedly using the social security number of a dead man. During the court proceedings the prosecution amended court documents to include the defendant’s true and correct name as William Joseph Stewart. After initially pleading not guilty, Yoder eventually agreed to a plea bargain in which he plead guilty and was fined $1,976.92, plus a surcharge of $593.08 and court costs.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ In 1986, Bailey successfully petitioned the California Superior Court to change her name to "Rebecca Brown"

[edit] External links