Jim McCotter

Jim McCotter

Infobox Celebrity
name = James Douglas McCotter


caption =
birth_date = birth date and age|1945|4|27
birth_place = Wisconsin, USA
occupation = CEO, Maverick Jets, Inc.
salary =
networth =
website = [http://www.maverickjets.com/ Maverick Jets]
footnotes =
spouse=Barbara McCotter
children = 9

Jim McCotter (James Douglas McCotter) (b. April 27, 1945) is a United States entrepreneur, the CEO of Maverick Jets and controversial founder of the "Blitz Movement" which became the Great Commission Association of Churches. He was also a member of the Council for National Policy as well having been a holder of national and international media interests. He is husband to Barbara McCotter and the father of nine children.cite journal
author=Anne Straub
title=Flying High
month=August | year=2002
publisher=The Brevard Technical Journal Online
url=http://www.btjonline.com/stories/0208company.shtml
accessdate=2007-04-21
]

Childhood

Born on April 27, 1945, James Douglas McCotter spent his childhood in Texas and Colorado. He was raised by an originally Methodist family, which later joined the conservative evangelical Plymouth Brethren Church. McCotter graduated from high school in Colorado Springs. [ cite news
title = James McCotter: How he brought GCI to Silver Spring
date= 1986-02-06
publisher = The Montgomery County Sentinel
author = John Guerra
url = http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/MCS-02-06-1986-c.aspx
quote = James D. McCotter spent his boy-hood in a little Texas town, raised by a Methodist family. McCotter graduated from high school in Colorado Springs, where his family joined the Plymouth Brethren Church, a fundamentalist Christian church.
]

Apostle

In 1965, a 20-year-old McCotter left his home in Colorado Springs, Colorado and moved to Greeley, Colorado in an attempt to recreate the "New Testament Church", a church model he believed no existing Christian denomination was emulating fully. After arriving in Greeley, McCotter began sharing his faith primarily at the University of Northern Colorado campus, which he also began attending. According to McCotter, by the end of the first year 12 people had joined him, after 1966 there were thirty, and the following years it "doubled and tripled." cite video
title = "Church History" (Tapes 1-4)
year = 1984
author = Jim McCotter
url = http://www.summitviewcommunity.com/resources.html
quote = Jim McCotter: "I had one suitcase and- over a hangup bag, and $400 dollars in my pocket, and that was all I started with back in 1965."
] Eventually a handful of men moved out to other cities in Colorado, as well as Las Cruces, New Mexico, to start other "works" as they were called back then. cite book
last = Pile
first = Lawrence
title = MARCHING TO ZION: A Personal History and Analysis of the "Blitz Movement" aka Great Commission Association of Churches
edition = 2nd
year = 2002
publisher = Christians United to Remedy Error (CURE)
location = Albany, Ohio
language = English
] The size of these "works" were most likely small, as McCotter has stated that, "Most people wouldn't have called them churches. Most people never knew we were churches."cite paper
title = Controversies in Iowa Christianity
publisher = Des Moines Sunday Register
date= 1980-03-16
url= http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/DMSR-03-16-1980.aspx
quote = Taylor said when he and McCotter began evangelizing and proselyting at the University of Northern Colorado at Greeley in the mid 1960s, McCotter left Northern Colorado after two years. McCotter, in an earlier interview, said he also spent time at the University of Southern Colorado at Pueblo and at the University of Maryland. In 1970 and 1971, according to some of McCotter's associates of the time, there was enough of a group to begin a "blitz movement", traveling in a school bus from campus to campus in the South and Midwest speaking and proselytizing.
] Though McCotter was not ordained by the Plymouth Brethren, he claimed the authority of an apostle.

McCotter dropped out of college to focus on ministry full time, and was planning to move down to Pueblo, Colorado to continue his efforts; however, in 1967, at the height of the Vietnam War, he was drafted into the United States Army. During training, at a base in Fort Polk, Louisiana, McCotter met Dennis Clark, with whom he imparted his vision of God's "strategy" to reach the world.

Returns to the U.S.

Jim McCotter returned to Colorado after he had completed his service in Vietnam. In May 1970, Dennis Clark returned from the service as well and joined Jim in Colorado. On a bus in 1970, while attending a conference, Jim struck up a conversation with Herschel Martindale, who would become one of the early leaders of the movement in the summer of 1970. In the early 1970s, he helped start an evangelical movement with other young Christians at a Colorado university. He spent a summer touring Southwest universities, setting up campus-based churches, which according to one member church, were characterized by a literal interpretation of the Bible, a "strong expectation of the soon return of the Lord, and an aggressive emphasis on evangelism." Over the next decade, the movement spread into the wider community.

"The Blitz"

In 1970, under the leadership of Jim McCotter, Dennis Clark, Herschel Martindale, and others, approximately 30 college-age Christians embarked on a summer-long evangelistic outreach known as "The Blitz" to several university campuses in the Southwestern United States.cite paper
author = MacDonald, Jerry
title = Reject the Wicked Man: Coercive Persuasion and Deviance Production: A Study of Conflict Management
publisher = Cultic Studies Journal
year= 1988
url = http://www.gcxweb.org/Academic/RejectTheWickedMan.aspx
] "The Blitz" was named after the Blitzkrieg military offensive of World War II.

In the next few years, additional mission outreaches and training conferences took place as the movement expanded to many more campuses. By the summer of 1973, nearly 1,000 attended the movement's national conference held on an eastern campus. Fifteen new campuses were "Blitzed" that summer by hundreds of recruits fresh from the conference, and the movement continued to gain strength. By the end of 1973, there were about 15 "works" established.cite paper
title = GCLI Document, Church History: Great Commission
author = GCAC Executive Director John Hopler
location = Columbus, OH
] The movement would eventually become known as Great Commission International, and then later Great Commission Association of Churches.

Media attention

In the late 1970s, selected newspapers, former members, and select watchdog groups began to publicly criticize the movement's practices, many of these articles criticizing McCotter's teachings and influence on the movement. This continued throughout the 1980s and into the early 1990s. (See below)

Child rearing controversy

In 1978, McCotter was criticized in the Des Moines Sunday Register for a statement he made during a sermon about child rearing. The sermon was based upon the Bible verse Proverbs 20:30 ("Blows that wound cleanse away evil; strokes make clean the innermost parts.") In it, McCotter said, "When you discipline, this verse indicates, as others do, that you want to do it so it wounds. Now, when you say ‘wounds,’ it doesn’t mean that you have a bloody mess on your hands necessarily. It doesn’t mean that you have a child ‘wounding’ like he has a broken leg.... And he may, and often will be, black and blue. My children have been many times. And it cleans evil from them." cite news
title = McCotter explains views, finances of Bible group
publisher = Des Moines Sunday Register
author = Sherry Ricchiardi
url= http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/DSR-11-26-1978-b.aspx
date= 1978-11-26
quote = McCotter's sermons often are tape recorded and sold at the THEOS owned bookstore. The theories in one tape dealing with child rearing practices drew criticism from ISU child development professor Sedahlia Crase. Crase says, "A student asked me to invite McCotter to speak to the class because she felt I wasn’t presenting the Christian perspective on child-rearing. The student said McCotter was a nationally known authority on children, but I had never heard of him. That's when I learned of the tape. I was shocked when I heard it. He actually advocates bruising children." Part of the taped sermon was based on Proverbs 20:30, which McCotter translates as, "Blows that wound cleanse away evil; strokes make clean the innermost parts." On the tape, McCotter says, "When you discipline, this verse indicates, as others do, that you want to do it so it wounds. Now, when you say 'wounds,' it doesn't mean that you have a bloody mess on your hands necessarily. It doesn’t mean that you have a child 'wounding' like he has a broken leg." McCotter added in his taped sermon that this means you have been severe enough that the child's attitude at that point has been reversed. "And he may, and often will be, black and blue", McCotter continued. "My children have been many times. And it cleans evil from them."
]

ISU child development professor Sedahlia Crase was quoted as saying, "What he advocates on this tape is just poor child-rearing practice in every sense of what we know now. Besides that, it's illegal to injure a child and bruising is injuring them. I’m upset that he goes around preaching these kinds of things." McCotter responded to Crase's comments with, "She might have taken what I said out of context, but I would stand by the idea that the Bible very strongly advocates spanking children. Of course, they also need to be loved and played with."

Dating teaching controversy

McCotter has been criticized for his teachings on dating. In a 1984 Great Commission International (GCI) teaching, McCotter taught that dating was forbidden by the Bible because, "What we call 'dating,' the Bible may call 'partiality' (James 2:9). What we call 'boyfriend/girlfriend,' the Bible may call a 'clique' or a 'faction' (Galatians 5:20)." [ cite news
title = Recovery from Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse
publisher = W. W. Norton & Company; New Ed edition (June 1995)
id = ISBN 0-393-31321-2
author = Michael D. Langone
] cite book
last = Martin, Ph. D
first = Paul
title = Cult-Proofing Your Kids
publisher = Zondervan Publishing House
location = Grand Rapids, Michigan
year = 1993
id = ISBN 0-310-53761-4
] According to former member and researcher Larry Pile, quoted in a 1988 newspaper article, " [In GCI] You’re practically engaged by the time you have what you normally consider a date. I do know of cases where couples were actually broken up by the leadership." [ cite news
title = Ex-members label GCI a coercive environment
url = http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/Wheaton-11-06-1988-c.aspx
publisher = The Sunday Journal
location = Wheaton, IL
date= 1988-11-06
]

Resignation

In late 1986, McCotter announced his resignation from GCI, stating a desire to utilize his entrepreneurial abilities in an attempt to influence secular media for Christ as his reason. Two years later, Jim moved to Florida and has not attended a church affiliated with the movement since that timecite journal
author=
title=The Mysterious Citizen
publisher=North and South
month=April | year=2002
url=http://www.rickross.com/reference/mccotter/mccotter2.html
accessdate=2007-04-17
] , with the exception of the 2003 Faithwalkers conference.cite book
last = Martin, Ph.D.
first = Paul
title = Cult-Proofing Your Kids
publisher = Zondervan Publishing House
location = Grand Rapids, Michigan
year = 1993
id = ISBN 0-310-53761-4
] [cite web
url = http://www.gcnwdads.com/articles/thepassion.doc
title = Letter To Dads "On The Wall"
date 1-2004
author = Rick Whitney
quote = And Jim and Barb McCotter and their family were a surprise, late addition. It was good to talk with them. Jim wrote, 'How my heart was blessed to hear each of you share what God put on your hearts this last week. I felt so unworthy... and so humbled... and at the same time so overjoyed.'
format=DOC
] In an interview with New Zealand's "North and South", McCotter denied involvement with Great Commission, saying, "I personally grew up as a Protestant and have tried to contribute most of my life to Christian or charitable organizations. However, I am not remotely involved in any way, in any "Church Movement" as you suggest, although I do go to church."

References in "Churches That Abuse" book

In Ronald Enroth's 1992 book "Churches That Abuse", Great Commission International, and specifically Jim McCotter, are given as examples of an "abusive church" situation. Specifically, McCotter is criticized for authoritarian leadership practices during his time with Great Commission:

In abusive-church situations, the "spiritual family" often displaces the biological family, and church leaders assume the role of surrogate parents. The founder of Great Commission International, Jim McCotter, is said to have usurped "the very authority of parents over these young people" by allowing youthful "elders" to exercise greater influence in the lives of the young adults than did their own parents. [cite book
last = Enroth
first = Ronald
authorlink = Ronald Enroth
title = Churches That Abuse
publisher = Zondervan Publishing House
year = 1992
id = ISBN 0-310-53290-6
]

Enroth's 1994 follow-up book, "Recovering From Churches That Abuse", further mentioned McCotter when researcher Paul R. Martin noted that:Cquote|Some encouraging reforms have occurred in recent years after the founder, Jim McCotter, left the movement in the late 1980s. However... most ex-members that I have talked to are not fully satisfied with the reforms or apologies and feel that the issues of deep personal hurt and offense have not been adequately addressed.cite book
last = Enroth
first = Ronald
authorlink = Ronald Enroth
title = Recovering From Churches That Abuse
publisher = Zondervan Publishing House
year = 1994
id = ISBN 0-310-39870-3
quote = The network known as Great Commission Association of Churches (GCAC) claims that it has taken significant steps in the direction of reform and reconciliation with disaffected ex-members. They have published and circulated a "Statement of Errors and Weaknesses" and have discussed the issues raised in that statement in several elders' conferences. The leadership believes they have made sincere attempts to seek reconciliation with disaffected former members. The group has taken steps to encourage accountability to others and has sought advice from several ministry consultants, including leaders of the National Association of Evangelicals and leaders of Campus Crusade for Christ, concerning the errors and problems of the past. They have also encouraged their staff and pastors to pursue additional seminary training, and they have instituted a Council of Reference, individuals to whom the GCAC leadership can go for counsel. Dr. Paul Martin, director of Wellspring and a former member of Great Commission International (as the group was formerly called), concurs with the opinions of many other former members:Some encouraging reforms have occurred in recent years after the founder, Jim McCotter, left the movement in the late 1980s. However, the current leadership has not yet revoked the excommunication of its earlier critics. The admissions of error so far have been mainly confined to a position paper, the circulation of which has been questioned by many ex-members. Furthermore, Great Commission leaders have not yet contacted a number of former members who feel wronged and who have personally sought reconciliation. There has been some positive movement in that direction, but most ex-members that I have talked to are not fully satisfied with the reforms or apologies and feel that the issues of deep personal hurt and offense have not been adequately addressed. GCAC leader David Bovenmyer indicated in a letter that "we have not been able to achieve reconciliation with all, yet our sense is that some of our most severe critics will not be pleased with us unless we fully vindicate them and join in their denunciations of Jim McCotter, something we cannot in good conscience do." A former member sees in such an attitude a pattern that "protects unequivocally the prophet-leader, keeping him in holy light, irregardless [sic] of the realities of distortion and problems seen from those not under the spell. The implication is, then, that they, even though having made significant moves, are still under 'the spell.'"
]
Also in the book, Great Commission International (GCI) was criticized for not denouncing McCotter's teachings and negative influence on the movement , something GCI elder Dave Bovenmyer was quoted as saying "we cannot in good conscience do." A former member was quoted in response, suggesting such an attitude "protects unequivocally the prophet-leader (McCotter), keeping him in holy light, regardless of the realities of distortion and problems seen from those not under the spell. The implication is, then, that they, even though having made significant moves, are still under 'the spell.'"

Media mogul

While with GCI, McCotter began several publishing enterprises, including a monthly publication called "Today's Student", which claims to have reached circulation of 500,000 (a figure disputed by researcher Larry Pile in his book "Marching To Zion".) His further interests in media continued with the acquisition of two radio networks (including Florida Radio News Network in 1988), and Media Net (a television holding company).cite journal
author=
title=Just who is Jim McCotter?
month=April | year=2002
publisher=North and South
url=http://www.rickross.com/reference/mccotter/mccotter1.html
accessdate=2007-04-22
] cite web
title=New Zealand Media Group
url=http://web.archive.org/web/20011011141111/nzmg.co.nz/profile/index.shtml
accessdate=2007-04-25
]

un Newspaper Group

In 1989, McCotter formed the Sun Newspaper Group and associated Sun Newspapers, which at their peak circulated 235,000 copies a week. cite news
date= 1991-10-17
title = How The Sun Set
author = Jeff Truesdell
url = http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/TheWeekly-01-17-1991.aspx
publisher = The Weekly (Orlando, Florida)
quote = Launched 15 months ago with titanic hopes and bigger boasts, the weekly tabloid of neighborhood news grew to 18 editions before layoffs thinned coverage and McCotter's own tactics chased away an ardent buyer – certainly once, perhaps twice. Unwilling to ante up further, he called it quits, forcing the last 96 employees – all of whom were owed at least two weeks’ wages – into the street without paychecks five days before Christmas. Immediately locks were changed and guards posted. Employees who learned of the closing at about 5 p.m. on a Thursday were more or less escorted out. Those who left earlier learned they could return Friday for their belongings. In fact, few have been allowed back inside. As of last week many still awaited overdue pay. McCotter, a dynamic and self-assured businessman, has yet to offer an explanation. Though engaged for 14 months in a regular exercise of the First Amendment, in the end he handled the press as he did his employees – with silence.
] After 15 months, McCotter unexpectedly fired the 96 employees and closed the newspaper. The Sun's content was described by Bill Bradford, formerly the Sun's managing editor, as "a very conservative viewpoint." Fred Fedler, chairman of the University of Central Florida journalism department, at one point criticized the Sun's content as "a bunch of fluff." McCotter was further criticized for his business practices as well as the sudden shutdown of the paper, which occurred without warning five days before the Christmas holiday of 1991. One former employee was quoted as saying, "I like Jim McCotter, and that sounds crazy, 'cause I also see him as devious and unethical and a money-grabber. And yet he's a very likable guy. You go figure it out."

Canterbury Television

In 2001 in New Zealand, McCotter bought Canterbury Television (CTV) for $500,000 and set up a newspaper called "The Citizen". He further consolidated television interests there by buying out rival Now TV the following year.cite paper
author=David King
title=TV pioneer shows interest in CTV
date=September 18, 2002
publisher=The Christchurch Press
url=http://www.accessmylibrary.com/coms2/summary_0286-26542472_ITM
accessdate=2007-04-22
] cite paper
author=Bill Rosenberg
title=News Media Ownership in New Zealand
date=February 2004
publisher=The Campaign Against Foreign Control of Aotearoa (CAFCA)
url=http://canterbury.cyberplace.org.nz/community/CAFCA/publications/Miscellaneous/mediaown.pdf
accessdate=2007-04-25
format=PDF
] Following this, McCotter purchased an $800,000 luxury home with "spectacular ocean views" in Christchurch, New Zealand. "The Citizen" lasted about two year, before shutting down unexpectedly in July 2002. At least eight former employees sought legal advice over employment disputes with McCotter, and at least five of these cases were settled out of court. Sports editor Ken Nicholson publicly criticized McCotter's business practices following the closure of "The Citizen", saying, "My first impression was that he was a slimy, greasy American and my impression since is that for all his supposed religious beliefs he has absolutely no caring for people at all. All it would seem McCotter is interested in is money and more money." McCotter was also criticized for damaging "the regional television product quite severely", having been accused of driving the three previous news programmes out of business prior to the closure of "The Citizen". McCotter, an American, was also criticized as a "foreign investor" for not caring "about the interests of the locals." cite news
publisher = The Press
location = Christchurch, New Zealand
title = ‘Read all about it’ The Citizen has gone, ending its push into the Christchurch newspaper market. What was its American backer, still with local TV interests, hoping to achieve?
url = http://www.gcxweb.org/Articles/ThePress-07-13-1988.aspx
date= 2002-07-13
]

Political interests

McCotter also described himself through New Zealand Media Group as a "longtime member of the Council for National Policy", an umbrella organization and networking group for conservative activists. Pressed for his views about the CNP in an interview, McCotter replied "most in the Republican Party... would consider it an honor to have a leadership role in the CNP." Two of McCotter's nine children, Shannon and Liz, have also appeared on membership lists for the CNP.

Maverick Jets

In March 2001 McCotter Aviation purchased majority shares of Maverick Air Inc., the brainchild of homebuilder Bob Bornhofen.cite paper
author=Enrique Heredero
title=Pilot dies after crash in woods near airport
publisher=Florida Today
date=January 24, 2003
url=http://www.rickross.com/reference/mccotter/mccotter3.html
accessdate=2007-04-22
] cite web
title=Maverick Jets lays off staff suddenly
url=http://www.aero-news.net/news/sport.cfm?ContentBlockID=ede511d6-0dc0-4507-a83a-c696325ece5f&Dynamic=1#d
accessdate=2007-04-22
] He expanded Maverick Air Inc. under the name Maverick Jets and relocated it from Colorado to Melbourne, FL.

Leader

In August 2002, McCotter was featured on the cover of the "Brevard Technical Journal" (a Florida Today publication) touting the Maverick Jets Leader, a Very Light Jet priced at $750,000 for "the common man." McCotter has experienced several setbacks in seeking certification and production for the Leader, the twinjet VLJ in which Maverick Jets chief pilot Jack Reed suffered a fatal crash in January 2003.cite paper
author=R. Randall Padfield
title=In the works: Maverick Jets Leader
date=April 1, 2004
publisher=Aviation International News Online
url=http://ain.gcnpublishing.com/content/news/single-news-page/article/in-the-works-maverick-jets-leader-1/?no_cache=1&cHash=35043e07ea
accessdate=2007-04-24
] On May 8, 2003 Maverick Jets laid off a significant portion of its staff suddenly and without warning. and McCotter's attempts to secure production with Tbilisi Aerospace Manufacturing in the Republic of Georgia fell through in January 2004, leaving McCotter with the task of finding yet another means of production.cite paper
author=Gordon Gilbert
title=Maverick Jets working on another Very Light Jet
date=November 2, 2006
publisher=Aviation International News Online
url=http://ain.gcnpublishing.com/content/news/single-news-page/article/maverick-jets-working-on-another-very-light-jet/?no_cache=1&cHash=7de9b65140
accessdate=2007-04-24
]

martJet

Having produced very few Leaders, Maverick continued development of a next-generation VLJ, the SmartJet. Sohu reported that McCotter eventually signed a treaty with Xi'an, China Vice-Mayor Yang Guangsheng to begin production of SmartJets there. The treaty-signing ceremony was held on November 24, 2006.cite paper
author=Zhangpingyang
title=Yang Guangxin meets the American visitors
date=November 25, 2006
publisher=Sohu.com
quote=Vice Mayor Yang Guangsheng met with the American Jim McCotter, Maverick jet CEO. Jim McCotter comes to my city to attend the SmartJet light jet type official business machine production project treaty-signing ceremony.
url=http://news.sohu.com/20061125/n246608369.shtml
accessdate=2007-04-24
]

Big Horn Mountain Resorts

McCotter purchased Big Horn Mountain Resorts in the late 90's along with fellow Christian Andrew Purrier until a dispute broke out on December 23, 1999. McCotter insisted that the resort bar remain open despite the moral toll it was taking on residents and workers who lived at the resort. Finally Purrier quit the business, but told Jim he would like to stay to help transition his role to someone else. At that point the situation began to escalate, because Purrier would not vacate the premises, which he partially owned. Purrier remained at Deer Haven Lodge until the cabin he and another family were living in was rented out by McCotter forcing Purrier to finally leave on January 5, 2000. On April 9, 2007 he was cited by the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality for violating health, safety, environmental and sanitation conditions of his Forest Service permit because of raw sewage that had polluted Ten Sleep Creek.cite paper
author=Whitney Royster
title=Sewage leak closes lodges
date=April 13, 2007
publisher=The Casper Star Tribune
url=http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2007/04/13/news/wyoming/20244d5c1cad19fe872572ba0081b033.txt
accessdate=2007-04-22
] cite web
title=Complaint and Notice of Opportunity for Hearing
url=http://www.epa.gov/region8/compliance/SDWA0820060053COMPL.pdf
accessdate=2007-04-22
format=PDF
] Bighorn National Forest Supervisor Bill Bass shut down Deerhaven and Meadowlark Lake resorts because of the spillage. Frozen lines at both locations were suspected of causing the leaks. On May 15, 2007, Bass reported that McCotter, who had been restricted from touching the sewer systems during the closure, had submitted a plan to fix the problem. The remedy is subject to approval by the U.S. Forest Service and the Wyoming DEQ.cite paper
author=
title=Resorts submit sewage plan
date=May 15, 2007
publisher=The Billings Gazette
url=http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2007/05/15/news/wyoming/72-resorts.txt
accessdate=2007-05-18
]

External links

* [http://www.maverickjets.com/team/ McCotter's CEO page at Maverick Jets website]
* [http://www.thebighorn.com/ Big Horn Mountain Resorts]

References


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