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Are MCGI members in Brazil just proxy actors?

It’s a question that once sounded like sarcasm. Today, it reads more like a thesis. Beneath the surface of the Members Church of God International’s (MCGI) supposed missionary success in Brazil lies a troubling possibility, that the entire operation was less about faith, and more about flight.


Brazil wasn’t chosen at random. It was chosen because it does not have an extradition treaty with the Philippines.



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And for a preacher hounded by mounting legal cases, that made all the difference. Bro. Eli Soriano, facing allegations back home, found in Brazil not just a new mission field, but a legal safe haven.

But what’s a religious mission without followers? That’s where the so-called converts come in.


Multiple insider accounts suggest that MCGI’s Brazilian members were never really converts in the traditional sense. They were proxy actors or people brought in, helped, and displayed not because of doctrinal conviction, but because they served a purpose.


Many were vulnerable, mentally ill, unhoused, or economically desperate. Some came for the free food. Others came for a sense of community, with little interest or understanding of the rigid teachings imposed elsewhere.


And unlike their Filipino counterparts, they were spared the burdens. There were no fundraising targets. No tokahan. No mandatory offerings. Attendance was optional, and enforcement of doctrine was practically nonexistent. Women in pants and makeup? No problem. Baptized members wearing jewelry while singing hymns? Look the other way.


The explanation was always the same: “Bago pa kasi.” But even a decade in, the congregations remained small, scattered, and shallow.


The leniency wasn’t out of compassion, it was strategic. The Brazilian locals served a singular purpose and that is to justify the preacher’s continued stay.


They were the backdrop. A supporting cast that helped project the illusion of ongoing mission, while shielding the man at the center of controversy.


In other words, proxy actors. Tools in a larger game of evasion and optics.

And the legacy of that model lives on.


Today’s MCGI Cares under Kuya Daniel Razon, with its emphasis on free services, softened image, and charity-first branding is not an innovation. It is actually replication of the Brazilian template done locally. Loose on doctrine, heavy on appearances, and built to rebrand an increasingly scrutinized organization.


And now, with Bro. Eli Soriano gone and MCGI deep in crisis, a deeper question confronts Bro. Daniel Razon.


Is the Brazilian stage play still sustainable especially if his own goal now is self-preservation?


The answer, given his Philippine base of operations, is a no-brainer.


Without the same legal threat Soriano faced, there is no strategic benefit in maintaining a costly, stagnant foreign ministry propped up by proxy actors and dwindling numbers.


Which is why, the foreign ministry have been ninja-recalled. Not because the mission is done, but because the illusion is no longer needed.


First posited by the Clouds1752430 here:

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This website exists for educational, awareness, and advocacy purposes, focusing on the analysis and critique of high-control religious practices. Our goal is to promote recovery, informed dialogue, and public understanding of religious excesses and systems of coercion.

 

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