According to foreign media reports, a bishop in Neptune, New Jersey, said the Facebook site was "a door to marital infidelity" and ordered married clerics to delete their Facebook accounts, or he would ask them to resign.
The bishop, named Cedric Miller (Cedric Miller), is 48 years old and is head of the Living Word Christian Fellowship Church Christian Church in Neptune Town. This week, when Miller issued instructions to ban the use of Facebook, his actions drew attention across the country. He claims that in the past 1.5 years, many of the relationships he has consulted have been the cause of the agonizing marital infidelity caused by social networking sites. Social networking sites like Facebook tend to rekindle old friendships, leading to marital infidelity. To this end, he ordered about 50 married church officials to delete their registered accounts on the social networking site, otherwise they would have to resign their leadership positions in the church.
Miller had asked the married people at the Church party to share their registration information with their spouses, but now he is prepared to recommend that they abandon the Facebook site together. The bishop also claimed that he would leave the Facebook site completely this week.
As early as April 2003, when testifying in court, Miller claimed that his wife had an affair with a church assistant. The Church assistant was involved in the sex party many times, and the wife of the Church assistant was present. Miller says these sex party events are sometimes held in the Thursday Bible study and Sunday after church--at Miller's house. Later, when several women in the church accused the Church assistant of having a relationship with them, the sex party activity "stopped short". The assistant was eventually dismissed. Miller did not mention the assistant and his wife's name, saying he feared that the old news would "irreparably" hurt someone.
"My very painful events often come to my eyes. Miller said that a few years ago his court testimony had been e-mailed to his church officials and other priests. "It was over, so we won't let it spoil our mission to save as many marriages as possible," he said. ”
Miller wants people to think correctly about his ban on using Facebook. "As priests, husbands, fathers and friends, I think it is my duty to help as many people as I can to consolidate, protect and repair their sometimes very fragile marriages," he said. "said Miller.