Church spokesman Jared Viljoen said: "We welcome all visitors. Due to beliefs around family as a central focus to our beliefs and Christian values, lots of people are responding to that these days, which could have been what Jonah responded to."
Asked whether Lomu might pedal about Auckland spreading the church's message, Viljoen laughed. "No, that's probably not going to happen. That aspect of things is more for the young 18 to 35-year-olds, but later in life we also have senior couples going out."
Viljoen said another famous All Black great, Northland's Sid Going, had recently returned from an 18-month mission in Australia - so the Lomus could very well go on a mission one day too, just not by bike.
Lomu and his wife Nadene, whose maiden name was Quirk, were wed in Wellington last May by a "bishop from their church" according to an article in the Woman's Weekly at the time. Ma'a Nonu, whose father was a bishop in the Mormon Church, was one of the wedding guests.
It is not clear whether the family are giving any of their income to the church. Traditionally, members tithe 10 per cent of their income. A study by Reuters this year estimated that the church was pulling in US$7 billion ($8.5b) in tithes from its 14 million members each year.
Lomu, meanwhile, continues to have dialysis treatment in Auckland while awaiting a suitable kidney donor.
He had a kidney transplant in 2004 with an organ donated by his friend and radio host Grant Kereama. But in February Lomu revealed the kidney had stopped working and he needed another transplant.