Eli Soriano

Eliseo "Eli" Fernando Soriano (born April 4, 1947), also known as BES (Bro. Eli Soriano), Brother Eli or Kapatid na Eli, is a Filipino televangelist. He is currently the "Overall Servant" (Tagalog: Lingkod Pangkalahatan), formerly called "Presiding Minister", of the Members Church of God International (MCGI), an international Christian religious organization with headquarters in Pampanga, Philippines. He is the main host of radio and television program Ang Dating Daan (English: The Old Path, Portuguese: O Caminho Antigo, Spanish: El Camino Antiguo), which is considered as the longest-running religious program in the Philippines.

Brother

Eliseo Soriano
TitleOverall Servant
(formerly "Presiding Minister")
Other namesBrother Eli
Personal
Born
Eliseo Fernando Soriano

(1947-04-04) April 4, 1947
(14 of Nisan 5707 in the Hebrew calendar)
ReligionMembers Church of God International
NationalityFilipino
Notable work(s)Leaving Behind the Fundamental Doctrines of Christ (Published 1999)
Controversy Extraordinary
Other namesBrother Eli
RelativesDaniel Razon (nephew)
YouTube information
Channel
Years active2020–present
GenreReligious
Subscribers106 thousand
Total views6.7 million
Associated actsDaniel Razon

Updated: 17 January 2021
Senior posting
PredecessorNicolas Antiporda Perez (as the Minister of the Iglesia ng Dios (Haligi't Suhay))

Soriano is known for his signature method of "Bible Expositions". It is a live Bible symposium where guests get the chance to ask impromptu questions personally or via live video streaming or telephone calls.[1]

He is also known for straightforward preaching and "exposing" what he believes are doctrinal errors of various local and international religious groups. He also had numerous religious debates with different pastors.

An incident when he used a defamatory word in his television show[2] consequently led to a three-month suspension of the program in a case that went to the Supreme Court of the Philippines.[3]

Biography

Soriano was born to Triunfo Soriano and Catalina Fernando in Pasay, Philippines, and is the seventh of eight children. He grew up in Pampanga. He started school at the age of eight.[4]

Soriano was supposed to receive the highest honors of the school, but he dropped out three months before graduation due to an alleged religious debate between Soriano and the school administrator.[5] On April 7, 1964, three days after his 17th birthday, Eliseo was baptised in Seneguelasan, Bacoor, Cavite, and became an official member of the Iglesia ng Dios kay Kristo Hesus, Haligi at Suhay ng Katotohanan (Church of God in Christ Jesus, Pillar and Support of the Truth) founded by Nicolas Perez where his parents were also members.

Appointed as minister

In 1969, Nicolas Antiporda Perez, who was then the church's presiding minister, bestowed upon Soriano the title minister making him the only minister in the Iglesia ng Dios kay Kristo Hesus, Haligi at Suhay ng Katotohanan at that time. Rumors were circulating that Soriano was going to be Perez's successor.[5] However, after the death of Nicolas Perez in 1975, Levita Gugulan was appointed as temporary Presiding General Secretary of the group. Soriano initially accepted the appointment of Gugulan but subsequently denounced her leadership stating that women should not be leaders of the church according to the Bible.[6]

The schism

In 1976, Soriano and his allies left Gugulan's sect. In 1977, Soriano registered a new group, called Iglesia ng Dios kay Kristo Hesus, Haligi at Saligan ng Katotohanan (Church of God in Christ Jesus, Pillar and Ground of Truth), which was later changed to Mga Kaanib sa Iglesia ng Dios kay Kristo Hesus, Haligi at Saligan ng Katotohanan sa Bansang Pilipinas, Inc. (Members of the Church of God in Christ Jesus, Pillar and Ground of Truth, Philippines, Inc.).[7]

Because of the similarity between the name used by Gugulan's group and Soriano's group, the former filed a suit, which was resolved by the Supreme Court of the Philippines in 2001 in favor of Gugulan's group and Soriano's group was ordered to change their church's name.[8] In 2004 Soriano's group changed their church's name as Members Church of God International.

Golden age of Ang Dating Daan

Before starting his flagship TV program, Soriano would preach in different towns and municipalities in the Philippines.[5] In 1980, Soriano started the Ang Dating Daan radio program, which became a television program in 1983. In 1983, Soriano was invited as a panelist in GMA-7's multi-religious program, Dis [This] is Manolo and His Genius Family. He, along with other representatives of religious groups, would debate and defend their beliefs in the show. Soriano won and was awarded "Most Outstanding Gospel Minister of the Year 1983".[5] Soon, Soriano would receive multiple awards from different charity organizations, notably as Bayani ng Lahing Kayumanggi (Hero of the Brown Race).

Popularity

On January 20, 1999, Soriano was invited[9] to be the guest in Korina Sanchez's talkshow Balitang K (K News). There Soriano admitted that the Ang Dating Doon program, which is a parody of his Ang Dating Daan show, actually helped raise the popularity of the said religious program.

Current status

He is currently on exile[10] in order to evade various death threats he received over the course of his preaching in the Philippines and the countless libel cases he faces from the people he defamed. He has since used this opportunity to preach in other countries.

Currently, Ang Dating Daan airs in 73 countries worldwide including the United States, Brazil, Uruguay, Portugal (as O Caminho Antigo), Spain (as El Camino Antiguo), India, South Africa, and Saipan.[11]

In his TV show Itanong mo kay Soriano (Ask Soriano), he invites people to ask him any Bible-related question.

Charitable works

Soriano, through the help of his nephew Daniel Razon, has been spearheading many projects for the indigent. These include free medical and dental check-ups, a free bus ride and a free transient home for homeless people.[12] Soriano and Razon created a free college scholarship program at the La Verdad Christian College in Metro Manila which provides scholarships to deserving youth.[13]

On May 17, 2010, Soriano appeared (through a live video patch) in a concert conceptualized by Daniel Razon and was titled Protest Broadcast 3. The concert aims to help the families of the victims of the Maguindanao Massacre. The victims’ representatives received the net proceeds of the concert. The media workers’ orphaned children would also be granted scholarships. During his appearance, Soriano harshly criticized former Philippine President Arroyo, whom he blamed for his legal troubles.[10]

On August 1, 2010, Soriano-Razon's free college program would receive further financial support from the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) through a basketball game to be played by the PBA. The game, titled "Hoopsters Meet The Legends: Kahit Isang Araw Lang" is scheduled for the Cuneta Astrodome. The teams involved are the "PBA legends", Hoopsters (led by Razon), and the KAPI team. All the net proceeds will be given to support the free college program of Soriano and Razon.[14]

Soriano and Razon are also involved with the donation and launch of two Mobile Schools (dubbed Dunong Gulong Project [15][16]) equipped with learning tools suited for the ALS (Alternative Learning System) of Philippine Education. The project was initially conceptualized during a talk between Education Secretary Br. Armin Luistro and Razon in the latter's television program Good Morning Kuya.

On November 27, 2010, Education Secretary Luistro signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Daniel Razon at the ADD Convention Center regarding the Dunong Gulong launch.[17][18] The two Dunong Gulong mobile school buses were launched at the SM Mall of Asia on November 28, 2010.[19] "And words became action." This is how Luistro described the project. He is impressed because of the support given by public service channel UNTV and the benevolent group, the Ang Dating Daan headed by Soriano, to the anti-illiteracy campaign of the Philippines.

References

  1. "On Overnight Bible Exposition, Preacher Encourages Guests to Be Spiritually Awake" CNN iReport January 26, 2012
  2. "P1M reward offered for information on TV host's killers" GMA News TV. April 29, 2008
  3. "SC upholds suspension on ‘Ang Dating Daan’" Archived June 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. Tetch Torres. INQUIRER.net. April 30, 2009
  4. "About Us". Ang Dating Daan. 1964-04-07. Archived from the original on September 27, 2009. Retrieved 2010-06-01.
  5. Elesterio, Fernando G. Three essays on Philippine religious culture (Monograph series). De La Salle University Press.
  6. Does a Woman have the Right to Preach in the Church of God? Archived 2007-10-18 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Justyn. "Iglesia Ni YHWH at ni YHWSA HMSYH ('Ang Dating Daan')". thebereans.ne. Archived from the original on 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
  8. "G.R. No. 137592". lawphil.net. Retrieved 2020-02-17.
  9. Castro, Levi M. (March 2000). "Special Report". Ang Dating Daan magazine (The Old Path) 58 (10): page 12.
  10. "12,000 watch concert for Maguindanao dead" Archived 2015-08-19 at the Wayback Machine The Philippine Inquirer March 19, 2010
  11. "Members Church of God International Worldwide Bible Exposition" Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine Saipan Tribune
  12. "Daniel Razon's second album out" Philippine Star August 21, 2009
  13. "Spring Films promises new season in Philippine cinema" Manila Bulletin August 21, 2009
  14. PBA meets Hoopsters Philippine Star (Aug 1)
  15. fansofkuyadaniel (2010-12-02). "Dunong-Gulong, isang natatanging proyekto mula UNTV, DepEd, at ADD". A Fan Blog for Kuya Daniel Razon. Retrieved 2020-02-18.
  16. "DepEd launches Dunong-Gulong (Mobile School)" Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines
  17. "DepEd introduces mobile school to lighten illiteracy problem"
  18. "DepEd to launch mobile school project" Manila Bulletin
  19. "DepEd launches mobile school called 'Dunong-Gulong'" PNM
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.