Teófilo Hayashi | |
Other Names: | Teo Hayashi |
Birth Date: | April 15, 1980 |
Birth Place: | São Paulo |
Nationality: | Brazilian |
Citizenship: | Brazil |
Occupation: | Missionary, pastor, author |
Known For: | Founder of the Dunamis Movement and co-founder of The Send |
Spouse: | Junia Hayashi |
Children: | Zack and Koa |
Teófilo Hayashi (April 15, 1980),[1] best known as Teo Hayashi, is a Brazilian pastor and missionary, son and grandson of pastors. Teo Hayashi founded the Dunamis Movement in 2008, after returning from the United States, where he lived.[2] In 2016, he participated in the event "The Call: Azusa Now" in Los Angeles, which would give rise to the movement "The Send" in 2019, of which Hayashi was one of the co-founders.[3]
Teo Hayashi's mother, Sarah Hayashi, founded the Monte Sião Church in São Paulo, in 1977. His maternal grandparents, Hiroyuki Hayashi and Kaoru Hayashi, were missionaries and came from Japan to Brazil in 1935, with the aim of serving Japanese immigrants living in Amazonas.[4]
Teo Hayashi finished secondary school in Brazil and went to the United States to study psychology at Liberty University. It was while graduating that, according to him, he began to "deviate from the ways of the Lord." However, at the end of this period, God would have directed him to Youth With A Mission (YWAM), which he claims he had to research about, as he did not know what the organization was about. Teo Hayashi then spent three years on missions at the YWAM base in Hawaii, where he became convinced that his work should be aimed at college students, due to his own negative personal experience. He also served as a YWAM missionary in Asia, and upon returning to the United States, spent another five years working at Kingsley Fletcher Ministries.[2]
In 2008, he abandoned his plans to remain in the United States and returned to Brazil, to serve as one of the pastors in his mother's church, Comunidade Monte Sião. In April of this same year, he founded the Dunamis Movement, with the aim of working on Gospel among young university students. It was during one of these meetings that he met his wife, Junia, with whom he had two children, Zack and Koa.[5]
Teo Hayashi has a more conservative view of what the believer's role and attitudes should be in society. According to him, discussing his rejection of "hypergrace" (translated as attitudes alien to Christian conduct),[6]
Hayashi condemns behaviors such as "consulting psychics, fortune tellers, astrology" among other things prohibited by the Bible. It also includes "listening to and dancing to music with immoral lyrics, using foul language, agreeing with abortion."[6]
Still according to his view, the lack of a clear line separating believers from non-believers, could give rise to the "stoner Christian, the mugger Christian, the clubbing Christian, the polyamory Christian, the Christian who doesn't believe in Christ" and the like.[6]
After his participation in "The Call: Azusa Now", in 2016, Teo Hayashi became one of the organizers of the "The Send" movement, preaching and mobilizing large masses of young people. Initially, the event was only held in the United States, but from 2020 onwards, it came to Brazil on the initiative of then minister Damares Alves. According to Hayashi, "The Send" is not a gospel entertainment proposal, but,
Hayashi does not deny that "The Send" is more than a revival movement, and that it also has an undeniable political dimension:
In January 2020, the Monte Sião Church where Teo Hayashi is pastor, underwent a rebranding and was renamed "Zion Church". The global aspirations of its leadership probably explain this name change, which is highlighted on its official page welcoming the new name:[7]