Raised in
Stettler, Alberta, de Ruiter worked as an orthopedic
shoemaker in Edmonton's European Shoe Comfort. In 1983, he moved to
Toronto to attend a
Baptist seminary. After a year of study, feeling that the leadership was too rigid, he returned to Alberta and studied at the
Prairie Bible Institute in
Three Hills, remaining there for a year and deciding to intern with a pastor at Edmonton's
Bethlehem Lutheran Church. Occasionally, the pastor allowed de Ruiter to preach at the church, at times presaging the taciturn demeanor which would come to characterize his independent ministry. After some time there, he underwent a ritual in which he described his spiritual history to the
elders of the church. Speaking for nine hours straight, he discussed what he called his "awakening" and his search for the truth, alienating some in the congregation but attracting others who were to become his early followers. In the late 1980s, de Ruiter left Bethlehem Lutheran, with five couples following him to his new ministry, where he offered an unconventional Christian message every Friday from one couple's home. The venue was later moved to his own home in Edmonton's east end, where it remained until at least 1996.
Tithes from his followers allowed de Ruiter to devote himself full-time to his teaching. De Ruiter's reputation rapidly spread when he began to hold meetings in a small bookstore off Whyte Avenue on Edmonton's south side. Within months, his following had grown too large for the bookstore. By the late 1990s, de Ruiter was teaching at Edmonton's Royal Acupressure Clinic, where his followers met several times every weekend. The assembly eventually moved to a $7 million facility called the Oasis Centre. Operated by de Ruiter's College of Integrated Philosophy, it includes a café as well as an expansive auditorium with a capacity of over 350 people,
marble columns and a
proscenium stage, and is sometimes rented for wedding receptions. Devotees attend meetings at the Centre and do volunteer work for the College of Integrated Philosophy. In 1998, de Ruiter began to travel the world, visiting the United States, England, Germany, the
Netherlands, India and Israel, attracting large crowds and building followings in those countries, with some of his devotees accompanying him on his travels. His newfound admirers, most having heard about him through word of mouth, began to emigrate to Canada and relocate to Edmonton to be near de Ruiter. By the mid-2010s, de Ruiter had gained thousands of followers. == Teachings ==