Several businesses in Juneau say they were duped into a giving to a charitable event without realizing the event was intended to be a revival.
“They flat out lied,” said one local business owner, who refused to be named because he said he didn’t want to alienate his customer base. “At the very least they were very deceptive.”
Another local business, whose owner also declined to be named for the same reason, complained it was false advertising, saying no religious affiliation was disclosed in the event’s advertisements.
“It definitely wasn’t made clear initially that it was a religious organization or that it was a religious event,” he said.
Businesses in Juneau have donated more than $25,000 in retail value to Juneau Fest, which is being sponsored locally by Sam Dalin, a volunteer chaplain for the police and fire departments and the pastor and co-founder of his church, River of Glory Church.
The free electronics, sporting goods, toys and household items were to be given out as free gifts and prizes for members of the community attending the event, the business owners were told by a couple tasked with soliciting the donations.
But what the owners did not know until later is that the event was supposed to be a revival.
Fliers had been passed out around town advertising the event as “The Great Awakening” as part of the Great Awakening Tour by the founder of the River at Tampa Bay Church, Rodney Howard-Browne, who is a longtime friend of Dalin’s.
That led many to believe the group was attempting to lure people to the event under the guise of free Xboxes and iPads, including the local church coalition, which chastised the group for being deceptive.
“We disagree with what feels like deceptive, manipulative techniques to bring people into a relationship with Jesus,” Rev. Tari Stage-Harvey, the coordinator of the Cooperative Church Council, said in a phone interview Friday. “That is kind of the bottom line.”
Stage-Harvey added, “There’s nothing wrong with a revival, and go for it, but there’s a lot wrong with tricking people into it.”
By the time business owners were being solicited for donations, the “Great Awakening” fliers had disappeared. The businesses were only shown a new flier that made promises of free giveaways and two nights of honoring the police and fire departments. There was no mention of any religious affiliation.
“Six Festive Fun Nights! Every night is a night to celebrate!” the flier reads in part.
Dalin said the claim that they were attempting to draw people into a revival under false pretenses is baffling. He said by the time businesses were approached, they had already decided to split the event into two — host revival meetings in the morning and the free giveaway for the community at night.
“There’s some things that just baffle me, I don’t really know,” he told the Empire in a phone interview on Thursday.
Although Dalin denied the accusations, he admitted in the same interview that he didn’t think anyone would come to a revival, which gave rise to the free giveaway idea.
“When we start talking about doing a giveaway, then we thought, ‘OK well, people aren’t going to come to a revivalist event.’ Even the police officers that I work with and firefighters that I work with aren’t going to come to a revivalist event. If they want to go to church, they’re going to go to church. So then we tried to flip it over to Juneau Fest, and that’s where the confusion came.”
Dalin noted they have since tried to do some damage control by making new advertisements that include the phrases “Keeping Christ in Christmas” and “In God We Trust.”
“We changed the new advertising after people came and asked,” he said. “And we said, ‘Oh, we’ve never done this before. We’ll change the ads and flip the ads around.’ So that’s what we did. All the new stuff says you know, ‘The spirit of Christmas is keeping Christ in Christmas, and at the bottom it says, ‘In God we trust’ so people will know ‘Hey yeah ... this (is) a religious event.”
Dalin added, “The Juneau Fest is just like I said: Free, free, free. Giveaways, giveaways, giveaways. You know, keep their spirit of Christmas in. And you know, we’re not going to come in and put Christ on the back burner somewhere when we believe the spirit of Christmas is the Christ of Christmas. But the whole event is just to give away to show really, in my opinion, to just show, hey, the Christ of Christmas is a good guy, you know. For God so loved that he gave, so we’re just going to keep on giving.”
Jody and Regis Andrews, the couple who solicited the donations, said they felt no obligation to tell the business owners about the religious aspect of the event since only the morning portion was dedicated to the revival.
“It doesn’t pertain to them,” Jody Andrews said during an hour-long in person interview early Friday morning.
“And absolutely none of this is going to be connected with any of the pastoral meetings in the morning. This is not for that purpose at all,” Regis Andrews said, adding, “None of this that we are doing for the support and all of the goods and services go to the morning, none of that goes to the morning, it is all designated for the community — for the men and women and children, armed forces and firemen and everybody — at night for the community festival.”
Regis Andrews pointed to the recent advertisement, saying it clearly stated the free giveaways begin at 7 p.m. each night.
“7 p.m.,” he emphasized.
But according to the earlier “Great Awakening” flier, Howard-Browne was scheduled to preach at 7 p.m. from Sunday to Friday, in addition to the morning services.
Earlier this week, Juneau was listed online at www.revival.com, the website for the River at Tampa Bay Church, as one of the cities involved in the Great Awakening Tour. By Saturday, Juneau was removed from the website and is no longer listed.
Dalin, who identifies as a Christian revivalist, says the original idea behind Juneau Fest was for it to be a large revival. The revivalist movement is commonly associated with the stories of disabled people who jump out of wheelchairs and walk, healed alone by the power of prayer.
“The vision was simply let’s just call it a revival, period, and come in and do what we do on Sunday morning,” Dalin said.
Dalin said that during the midst of the revival, he also wanted to honor the fire and police departments, whom he has worked alongside for the past 12 and six years, respectively.
Dalin flew to Tampa, Florida to see his friend Howard-Browne last year and asked if he would be interested in preaching to the Juneau community for the event. Howard-Browne said yes and told Dalin to find a venue. Dalin booked Centennial Hall and Convention with the financial backing of his church’s congregation.
Howard-Browne also sent Dalin help by flying about 30 students of their River Bible Institute to Juneau to assist, as well as the Andrews, who are members of Howard-Browne’s congregation. The Andrews say they were not asked to come to Juneau by Howard-Browne, but by Dalin.
Howard-Browne is a controversial pastor who founded the River at Tampa Bay Church and Revival Ministries International, which aims to “see America shaken with the fires of revival, then take that fire to the far-flung corners of the globe,” according to its website.
One theme of the church is to save souls and make non-believers believers. Its website encourages the church members to register the number of souls “won” and features a “Gospel soul-winning package” as a guide on how to save people.
Dalin’s church, the River of Glory, is listed as one of the four “Soul Saving Stations” in Alaska, according to the website. Two are located in Sitka and one in Anchorage.
The website for Dalin’s church streams a videoclip of Howard-Browne in action preaching. The video shows crowds of people praying, then fainting and falling to the floor during the services.
Howard-Browne is known for the widely criticized phenomenon of “holy laughter,” wherein audience members laugh uncontrollably during the services, apparently from joy and healing.
Howard-Browne will be speaking at the morning services at Centennial Hall next week, but not in the evenings during the community giveaways, according to Dalin.
Juneau Fest also raised some red flags with the police department, according to chief of police Greg Browning. Browning said the police did not officially launch an investigation into the giveaways, but that an officer did look into it to make sure it wasn’t a scam.
“It seems suspicious on its face that something’s being given away for nothing, and he kind of wanted to know what was going on, and I don’t think he found anything,” Browning said in a phone interview.
Browning met with Dalin earlier this week to make sure he was clear that the Juneau Police Department is not sponsoring the event. Browning said he had never heard of Juneau Fest until Monday morning when he got back from vacation. He said he received a phone call from the city manager, who wanted confirmation the department wasn’t backing the event.
Browning also said he found a flier and was surprised to see that they were raffling off firearms for members of the police department. JPD officers will not be allowed to accept the firearms due to their rules and regulations, Browning said.
“I think that they were trying to do a good thing by honoring fire and police but in this particular case, like I said, we have to say thanks but no thanks,” Browning said. “And we do that a lot. When people want to give us something, but on the other hand, our officers aren’t even allowed to take like a free cup of coffee because of the implications that could come from that, and we’re real strict about that, so that’s just the way it is.”
• Contact reporter Emily Russo Miller at 523-2263 or at emily.miller@juneauempire.com.





Comments (167)
Add commentVery clever
First, get the free goods. Then gin up the controversy so you get a whole ton of free media coverage. You guys hire Karl Rove to run your marketing strategy?
deceptive practices...
Regis approached me the other day to tell of this event, but didn't mention the revival aspect, or anything to do with religion, just prizes and giveaways.
It put me in mind of one of the beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mount:
"Ye are the light of the world. A city that is set on an hill cannot be hid.
Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house.
Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven."
Real "holy laughter"...
Chalk one up for the snake
Chalk one up for the snake oil salesmen! I hope the merchants of Juneau will, in the future, be a little more wary of con artists of this ilk.
the real meaning of Christmas
Very good investigative journalism, Empire & KTOO.
I find it ironic that this religious group says ‘The spirit of Christmas is keeping Christ in Christmas..." yet felt they needed to resort to materialism of free merchandise give-aways because, "we thought, ‘OK well, people aren’t going to come to a revivalist event.’ "
Holy laughter, indeed!
The merchants declined to identify themselves because they
did not want to alienate their customer base?
More like they don't want to appear naive.
On the one hand JPD did not find anything during a cursory look but the business owners could have done the same with a simple call to the fire and police departments before loading the solicitors up to their chins in free products.
On the other hand this group did indeed misrepresent the beneficiaries of raffles, the police, in writing. How can this be interpreted as "finding nothing"?
futomake: The only significant difference in the news coverage
I see between the Empire and KTOO is a video designed to show the revivalists' religious practices in a poor light. The message I get from this 'news coverage' is this Church is on the 'fringe' of established religions.
Protect Juneau's Children
It is one thing for us adults to be "handled" by a master crowd manipulator such as Rodney Howard-Browne, the "guest" speaker at JuneauFest 2012...
...but when the main TARGET of this emotional manipulation is adolescents and children as young as 5 years old, so mom & dad will "donate"...
...it just is... well... devoid of soul.
Damage control is right...
People have dug up the dirt and Pastor Dalin's defense is to deny that their intention is what the ministry has written in black and white.
If I used a government position to solicit goods for a third party, I would be taken up on ethics charges and blackballed from future employment with that government unit. As commendable as it is that Chief Browning is distancing JPD from the event, there should also be some serious questions for Pastor Dalin as to why he used his title for third party gain and why he implied police and fire department involvement without seeking clarification from JPD, CCFR, or the City.
At best, this demonstrates an extreme lack of judgment; at worst, a severe ethical lapse. In either case, Pastor Dalin should no longer be allowed to retain the governmental titles he has misused.
Misrepresentation at best, CRIMINAL more like it!
Approaching businesses and even non-profits under false pretenses is just the same as THEFT. This is NOT Christian behavior. As one person put in on Facebook, they are PREYING, not PRAYING. One non-profit that was approached has a charter that specifically says not to do donations to organizations of a religious nature. They could have lost their non-profit status over a violation. Now on KTOO some supporters of this church are talking about how poor, down-trodden Juneau seems to be full of heathens - hateful, spiteful, unsaved souls with no heart. I know the national economy is in poor shape, and I know we have some people in Juneau who are hurting but to hear that we are cold, suffering, and destitute was a surprise to me. I prefer to pick the stars and names off local trees or donate to local non-profits (they need us all year around btw) in order to help.
Lying for Jesus
Lying for Jesus, or Lying for the Lord, is a behavior that is well-known amongst those citizens with no faith beliefs.
We see this deception all the time and in multiple formats ranging from world-televised, professional debates in the Royal Albert Hall to Mickey Mouse fund-raisers just like this one.
These people are victims of a wider problem plaguing our species since time immemorial: embracing the comfort that superstitions give to people who are basically afraid of the dark.
Mike
bUSINESS IS GOOD
sEEMS THE RELIGON BUSINESS IS DOING JUST FINE FOR THIS DIRT BAG
So let's see...
Money (gifts, that cost money, can be sold for money)+ Religion = A story of a temple where a young man so many thousands of years went into and destroyed...hmmmm...Not right at all. Why not be truthful and up front?? Something to hide?? Sorry dishonesty brings out honest questions.
So let's see...
Money (gifts, that cost money, can be sold for money)+ Religion = A story of a temple where a young man so many thousands of years went into and destroyed...hmmmm...Not right at all. Why not be truthful and up front?? Something to hide?? Sorry dishonesty brings out honest questions.
Bah..
This guy is doing nothing different than any other "Christian" group does.
He is just a little more honest in his approach.
After all, we are talking about a religious belief that has made their most holy days (Christmas) (Easter) into gigantic commercialized retail spending spree's.
@MIke
Well Put!
The Beauty
Of this is that it exposes the meat and bone of the "Christian Faith" for all to see.
spill off
Every merchant has some guidelines they use to determine how much they will give and to whom they will give it. Instances like this result in few merchants be willing to support community events. It may not have been criminal but the end results are the same to the merchant and the community.
Deceptive
@islander took the words out of my fingers! However I hope that local merchants will not be less supportive of community events but be more inquisitive and fend these people off the next time these CRIMINALS solicit for donations. Taking advantage of us Juneauites, tsk tsk, karma will hit them hard.
L Ron Hubbard said the best
L Ron Hubbard said the best way to become a millionaire is to start a church. He did and he did.
I agree that this
I agree that this organization is being intensionally deceptive and manipulative. Sounds like at the least Jpd needs a new chaplain. I also feel that a real criminal investigation is warranted. Thanks for making it harder on our local fundraising efforts!
First the presidential election
And now this!
"STALINISM"
My personal feeling
When I read the article and saw that some merchants felt they had been duped, and one eve said lied to - I wasn't surprised, but was dismayed and disappointed.
Although I was, but am no longer a "believer" in Christianity or any religion, I still respect people of various religious beliefs who give their lives to benefit others, not themselves....Albert Schweitzer, Ghandi, Mother Teresa, Nelson Mandela, and people like the "Heroes" featured on the CNN television channel and even local organizations like the Salvation Army, St. Vincent de Paul and the Glory Hole.
What I find challenging to tolerate and agree with are those who demand that "my way is the only way", "one must be 'saved' and live by my beliefs, my customs and traditions" or they will suffer in some kind of hell forever... that to me is so far from the teaching of Jesus that I find it hard to accept as "Christian" at all.
When I found a flyer on the knob of my door inviting me to come to the Juneau Fest to "receive a blessing," I knew something was up, that to me was very disappointing.
Over the years I have heard people say a standard for ethical behavior could be "What would Jesus do?" I don't think he would have duped or lied to merchants to get people to hear his message. That's why I tossed the flyer in the trash, where I think it belongs.
That's my personal opinion of what took place.
Stay away from the SCHOOLS!
Not only have I found flyers on my door twice this week - they are standing outside my son's school shoving flyers into kids' hands as they walk to the bus! UNACCEPTABLE!!! Lies and deceit.....how very Christian...
@SVEN_AK_BEAR_69
What exactly does your comment even mean? Are you comparing those who are angered by this behavior to the vicious dictator Joseph Stalin? Really?
Kudos, commenters!
You all have been very articulate about the various aspects of this deceitful, manipulative 'event'.
I would only add: Shame, SHAME on those who use our firefighters and police to try and give some credibility to their deceit.
Beware the Leaven of the Pharisees
The Pharisees rejected Jesus because He was from Galilee in John 7. They failed to investigate beneath the outward appearance to learn that He was actually born in Bethlehem as was prophesied. So Jesus said, "Judge not according to the appearance, but judge righteous judgment." -- John 7:24. Christians should beware of prejudging this thing. It is wiser to wait and see the fruit of it, i.e., if lives be transformed by God's Gospel power. Maybe there were misunderstandings or misrepresentations by someone, but if they are not representative of the whole activity, they can be dealt with individually and made right.
"He that answereth a matter before he heareth [it], it [is] folly and shame unto him." -- Proverbs 18:13
swimmergirl
Yes, exactly. They say they are giving guns to cops and the police department rules are clear they cannot accept them. The police and fire departments have had to clarify they don't sponsor the event. Every business in Juneau will unfortunately have a more critical look at their donations. This could hurt every non profit, fundraiser and community event going forward.
My Juneau
I have lived in Juneau for forty-one years. I clearly remember one cold winter day when my rear tire blew out. A man, operating a snow blower came over, he said something like, "Hey old man, I'll help you." He put on my spare tire, and I thanked him. He never asked my name, who I was, he just did a very "Christian" thing in my estimation. To this day, I have no idea who he was or is.
I have heard stories of some real "Christian" things done at the Glory Hole, and other places in town.
One day, I unknowingly dropped my checkbook at the door of Fred Meyer's. Minutes later a woman whom I had never met, came over and returned it to me.
As I visit the post office, I often see people holding the door open for someone who has come carrying packages.
These are some of the little reasons that I continue to live in Juneau. Yes, there are criminals here, some "no goods" some deceptive people, scams and cheats, but there are many good, honest, young people and older people.
When I read and see Juneau merchants, organizations and others holding dinners for senior citizens, giving awards to high school students, supporting programs, activities that benefit not themselves but others, I am proud of Juneau and glad I live here.
But when I see a photo of a supposedly Christian leader, carrying boxes of goods from a store to promote some kind of "revival" under the pretext that it is Juneau festival, I shudder. To me this is neither Christian nor the Juneau I have known.
I don't think a lot of Juneau folks have to be "saved" nor "revived" for eternal salvation in some specific form. To me, many of them are doing quite well as "Christians" or Bahai, or Baptists or Methodists, Catholics, Buddhists, Jews, or Unitarians, or atheists as members of a community.
Although at times I have considered living elsewhere, I can't seem to find a better small community in which I want to spend my remaining years.
"Spoon feed"??
You mean teach them science? Heaven forbid that our children should be educated at school (no pun intended).
Prof Olson, thank you for sharing your personal experiences
Merry Christmas!
Mike