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Brian Houston Teases New Book and Comeback

By Liz Lykins
hillsong brian bobbie houston comeback
Brian and Bobbie Houston, formerly senior pastors of Hillsong Church, lead prayer at the megachurch in Sydney, Australia. (Photo courtesy Hillsong Church)

Disgraced Hillsong founder, Brian Houston, has announced plans to write a new book sharing his story. Houston resigned from the global megachurch last year for alleged sexual misconduct, but has complained that he was “betrayed,” “lied about” and “defrauded.”

Since recently cleared of criminal charges, Houston has been active on social media and revealed his plans for the book on X, formerly Twitter, this past Saturday.

“I’m writing my story. It’s a big job and may take a while. But gee there’s a lot to praise God about,” the 69-year-old shared over the course of two posts. “My book will lift the lid and tell the untold story. But it will also tell the amazing story of God’s grace and blessing.”

The posts follow a Sept. 16 post where he proclaims, “We are coming back!”

Houston made headlines this past month when in August, an Australian court found Houston not guilty of concealing his father’s sexual abuse and not reporting it to the police, The Roys Report (TRR) previously reported.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Baptistland: A Memoir of Abuse, Betrayal, and Transformation” by Christa Brown. To donate, click here.

exposé hillsong
On December 19, 2022, Hillsong founder Brian Houston exits Downing Centre court complex in Sydney, Australia. (Video screengrab / 7News)

Houston had been charged with concealing a serious indictable offense of another person in 2021. Police say his late father, Frank Houston, also a preacher, sexually assaulted a young male in the 1970s. Court documents allege that Houston knew of his father’s abuse as early as 1999 and failed to disclose this information to police.

Frank Houston died in 2004 at age 82.

However, Sydney Court Magistrate Gareth Christofi ruled that Houston had a reasonable excuse for not reporting his father’s crimes.

“The Crown submits that the reason was that the accused was trying to protect the reputation of the church and his father,” Crown Prosecutor Gareth Harrison explained during his closing arguments in the trial.

Houston, who co-founded Hillsong Church with his wife, Bobbie, in the suburbs of Sydney in 1983, had stepped down from leading the global megachurch in January 2022 to focus on the trial and court proceedings.

In March 2022, he formally resigned, after an internal investigation revealed he acted inappropriately toward two women. Houston allegedly spent time alone in a hotel room with a woman, not his wife, in 2019 after consuming anti-anxiety medication and alcohol, the board of directors of Hillsong said.

Houston acquitted not guilty
Brian Houston addresses his resignation from Hillsong Church in a video released Nov. 3, 2022. (Source: Video screen grab)

In April of this year, Houston pleaded guilty to charges in California of driving under the influence of alcohol after a prior arrest on Feb. 26, 2022, which was less than a month before his resignation from Hillsong.

Now, Houston has focused on traveling with his wife and speaking at churches around the world. 

Houston’s latest book announcement comes during multiple years of scandals at Hillsong.

Scandals began at in the church in November 2020 when NYC lead pastor Carl Lentz was fired over an extramarital affair. In the years following, several other Hillsong pastors have been accused of sexual misconduct. Several more resigned or broke ties with the megachurch or shuttered.

Two unflattering documentaries painted a picture of a celebrity-like hierarchy and a culture of cover-up that permeated the U.S. and Australian branches of the megachurch.

In Australia, the church faces an investigation into financial fraud by Parliament member Andrew Wilkie. Wilkie accused Hillsong of mass money laundering, tax evasion, and fraud, and using church money “to do the kind of shopping that would embarrass a Kardashian.”

Now led by Phil & Lucinda Dooley, Hillsong has 27 locations around the world. Hillsong’s music program has produced 36 albums with more than 500 songs, including “Oceans,” “What a Beautiful Name,” and “Shout to the Lord.”

Freelance journalist Liz Lykins writes for WORLD Magazine, Christianity Today, Ministry Watch, and other publications.

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7 Responses

  1. The Evangelical Industrial Complex will welcome Houston back with open arms. Maybe Houston can start a new church and have Donald Trump speak at a service. Both will get standing ovations……

  2. Brian Houston’s new book: I’m Full Of Myself/How I Was Victimized By My Own Megachurch.

    What a pathetic ungodly narcissist!

  3. Brian Houston, Mark Driscoll, and the like are like the mouse in the old kids story…if you give a mouse a cookie then they’ll want…

    As long as there is grift to be had these grifters with grift! It’s what they do, who they are and will do whatever it takes to continue the game!

    Pawning their version of Jesus just to make their kingdom on earth as comfortable as possible.

  4. Yes, unfortunately no surprise here. Up next his reunion tour with Carl Lentz. All while feeding off the mother’s milk ($,$,$) of Evangelical Industrial Complex.

  5. I notice an serious omission in this article.

    The article states that the Crown (the court) finds that Houston’s reasons for not reporting to the police were sufficient, and then states the position of the prosecution, but never states the reasons the court found were sufficient.

    As I understand them, many would consider them sufficient. Leaving them out while including the prosecutions position is implicitly condemning.

    The reasons I understand are, (1) the alleged victim did not want him going to the police, (2) the elder Houston was reported to the denomination and had his clergy credentials and privileges revoked; vis a vis had his access to parishioners through the church removed, a responsible internal response; both punitive and precautionary.

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Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Baptistland: A Memoir of Abuse, Betrayal, and Transformation” by Christa Brown.