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Tuesday 6 March 2007

From Abraham to (the other) Joe Jr.


Quick, March 13 will be on us in just over a week's time, and it'll then be too late to pick up the special issue of US News & World Report entitled Mysteries of Faith: The Prophets at the news stands.

Here, in magazine format, condensed into 88 pages, is a primer on the prophets with a line-up of contributors that includes Jonathan Kirsch, Bruce Feiler, Bart Ehrman and Karen Armstrong. Don't be put off by the cover, which is obviously not designed with COG sensibilities in mind. This is a great introduction to the historical figures who loom so large in the Bible. Beyond this familiar territory there are articles on Islam's Quran and yes, even the world's most boring and derivative volume, the Book of Mormon.

So many people dive straight into the ravings of modern-day expositors, trumpeting some kind of "inside knowledge" - tithes and love offerings gratefully accepted. Instead, why not take a deep breath first and get the low down from these guys. The real story of the prophets is quite different from the impression you get listening to proof-texts on Saturday, or reading Tomorrow's World.

Articles focus on Abraham, Moses, David ("Playboy of the Ancient World"), and characters like Elijah, the Isaiahs (yes Virginia, there was more than one), Jeremiah et al. Then there's Jesus and Paul. For a little contrast, try the articles on Muhammad and Joseph Smith. A painless, cult-free education for a modest price. As is always the case, some articles are better than others, but on balance this single issue will do a lot more for your theological IQ than a year's worth of Greg Albrecht's Plain Truth (or a two year stack of Good News magazines).

52 comments:

Anonymous said...

I did a search online and came across an eye opening "Cult test"

It stopped me dead in my tracks.

The site examines why cults are so effective in controlling peoples minds and what common denominators are present in ALL "successful" cults.

As I struggle with the grip of Armstrongism over myself and those I love I owed it to my self to put HWA, WCG, and the splinters to this test.
What I found out was a shocker!!!

Out of the 100 rules and tactics set forth in the test, 99 out of 100 of the things listed were utilized by HWA and in WCG and its Splinters. (only #100 on the list, mass suicide, was not employed in WCG)

Check this study out at your own peril, if you ever want to see WCG as a unique organization full of "truth" again.

You'll see HWAism for what is really is, a slickly packaged and highly effective mind controlling cult...not that different from Scientology, Jim Jones, and other "scary" organizations.

CHECK OUT THE LINK:
http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult_q0.html#cq_guru_right

Sorry I posted this right at the beginning of a new thread. But it opened my eyes.

Steve said...

Anonymous said...
I did a search online and came across an eye opening "Cult test"
http://www.orange-papers.org/orange-cult_q0.html#cq_guru_right


Oookay. Where do I go from there?

Steve K

Steve said...

My mistake. I punched it in wrong the first time.

Steve K

Steve said...

From the "Cult Test":

41. Disturbed Guru, Mentally Ill Leader.

MY COMMENT: I don't believe the cult we were in had this. The guru knew exactly what he was doing, and didn't really practice what he was selling. It was just a scam. That doesn't take a mentally-ill person, just one who is calculating and deceptive. I'm not saying that Herbie WASN'T mentally-ill. He might have been, but he didn't exhibit mentally-ill characteristics...did he?


74. Trance-Inducing Practices

MY COMMENT: Did anyone ever practice this one?

Steve K

Anonymous said...

From the Cult test:
74. Trance-Inducing Practices
"In some cults, members spend too much time on mind-numbing trance-inducing practices like prolonged meditation, chanting, praying, or voodoo dancing. Hypnosis, repetition, monotony, and rhythm are often used to numb the thought processes of new recruits."

We are encouraged to study, meditate, and read only proof text literature for LONG hours and on a daily basis. And then fast ontop of that periodically!

Just the time alone we were supposed to commit was trance inducing.

Anonymous said...

FROM THE CULT TEST:
41. Disturbed Guru, Mentally Ill Leader.

Disturbed Gurus
Cult leaders are often charming, charismatic figures with above-average intelligence. The "charismatic charmer" is one their personalities -- a pseudo-personality.
Many cult leaders suffer from borderline, disassociate or multiple personality disorders. Members feel honored to be with, and be seen, around them. But their personality can change dramatically in a flash. Cult leaders are always very disturbed individuals. They are usually victims turned persecutor, having a history of involvement in other social, political or religious cults and/or suffering the effects of a traumatic childhood. Behind their strong and confident exterior (pseudo-personality) they need their leader position to compensate for a very fragile sense of self-worth, self-esteem and self-identity.

This is also shown by the fact that they cannot "hack it" in the real world and need to live in a cult/sect environment to live out their problems. Their past histories show social marginality and a tendency to drift from one cause to another, one cult to another, one job to another, one marriage to another, etc. They spend their lives dedicated to their cause (also, increasing through the Internet, now). They are obsessive-compulsive, fanatical and manipulative.

Nothing will stand in the way of their visions, schemes and self-glorification -- not even the well-being of their partners or children. They manipulate the minds of vulnerable members, extorting money and sexual favors and/or abusing them psychologically, physically and/or sexually.

Hmmmm, sounds a bit like HWA, his ministers and the splinter leaders!?

Anonymous said...

Okaaaayyy .... That's enough thread drift for now.

Dennis, excellent first response. You sure got up on your soapbox, and stated what is (now) so obvious. But back in my days as a WCG cult member, it was not obvious to me at all.

One mistake WCG made was to ready ancient documents with modern sensitivities. The bible was written mostly in the stone age and bronze age, by primitive people. Modern-day ethical concepts such as plagarism and citing sources were not even imagined back then. Heck, they hadn't even thought of putting spaces between the words, putting periods at the end of sentences, using capital and small letters and using vowels.

Until VERY recent times, a copyist of a text saw nothing wrong with "improving it" to say what is "should" mean, by his understanding of course. This as power shifted and beliefs changed, bible verses were altered, interpolations were inserted, lines were removed, etc. Bible scholars know this, as do all who study ancient documents. Hence we have hundreds of different versions of any given scripture, which teams of theologians needs to study to derive the "true" meaning in developing modern-day translations.

Changes were easy to make back then - illiteracy was rampant, many who were "literate" could scarcely read, and they all realized that no two versions of a text were the same and didn't expect them to be.

Anonymous said...

Dennis,

Aside from this US News article, have you come across any other online destinations that address this same topic??

Anonymous said...

"We are encouraged to study, meditate, and read only proof text literature for LONG hours and on a daily basis. And then fast ontop of that periodically!"

We were encouraged to study the Bible, fasting occassionally, prayer for sure, and mediation was based on what did in our lives, not a trance like meditation. This does not equate at all with WCG practices. Rediculous.

camfinch said...

"We were encouraged to study the Bible, fasting occassionally, prayer for sure, and mediation was based on what did in our lives, not a trance like meditation. This does not equate at all with WCG practices. Rediculous [sic]."

We were to study the Bible within the parameters of understanding that the leaders set; we were to pray in a manner that the leaders described to us. Going through our lives within a pattern of
[non-] thinking is a form of trance. It takes us away from seeing full reality.

Meditation, by the way, does not necessarily lead to "trance", although certainly cultic groups and leaders may manipulate their followers to meditate in such ways. Essentially, meditation is meant to free the minds of practitioners from mental "sludge" and external distractions that cause illusion.

But for myself, and certainly for many others, sitting through long sermons by boring pastors (especially when the message got repeated ad nauseum that we are merely so many gallons of water and dirt, that's all we are) could put one into a trance--a trance of defense, in which the listener tunes out to save him-/herself a complete loss of self-esteem and independent-mindedness.

Anonymous said...

This politicizing and redacting of scripture by priests, judges, scribes, and others certainly flies in the face of what we were taught as truth in WCG. I remember hearing stories of how scripture was painstakingly copied by scribes from one scroll to another, with the scribe often washing his hands each time he created a difficult letter or character, so that every perfect word would be preserved.

Within the past 5 years, I've even read posts by evangelicals who believe that the KJV of the Bible, with its extensive footnotes, is the most perfect preservation or rendering of the work of our forbearers.

Personally, hey, I have to remember that old gradeschool game of gossip, in which the teacher would whisper a phrase or sentence into the first student's ear, who would then repeat the process to the next in line. The goal was to give to the next person exactly what was given to you. Without exception, the last student would utter aloud something that was completely unrecognizeable to the first student.

Anonymous said...

Sorry Dennis.

Gavin,
Aside from the US News article, have you come across any other sources on the same or similar topic of the OT being written and rewritten by the prophets and judges?

I can't think of a more important topic as I try to make sense of the bible by giving the OT context.

Anonymous said...

We need to repent of our evil ways, and acknowledge Herbert W. Armstrong as the Apostle of God, the Elijah to come. He turned the hearts of the fathers to the sons as prophesied in the book of Malachi.

The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. The carnal mind is an emnity against God.

But, this gospel of the kingdom - God's work of witnessing and warning to this earth - shall be preached in ALL the world, and then shall the end come.

The end cannot come until this gospel has been preached in all the world.

Send your money to headquarters for the building fund, after you have paid your 1st tithes and offerings (and, 3rd tithe if applicable). TIME IS SHORT. Mortgage your house and send the money to headquarters to finish the work - the final push, the final gunlap.

This Work of God is the most important work on earth.

Some of you just don't get it! You didn't get it then, and you still don't get it now. You will never get it!

Anonymous said...

"I remember hearing stories of how scripture was painstakingly copied by scribes from one scroll to another, with the scribe often washing his hands each time he created a difficult letter or character, so that every perfect word would be preserved."

Saac's son, I too had this preached to me by a WCG minister. There is a kernel of truth to this - this painstaking method was adopted by the Jews around the year 200 AD (I'm taking this from memory, it could be off a bit, give or take).

However, what they DIDN'T say, and perhaps didn't realize, was that all through the Old Testament era there were no such painstaking procedures. It was basically a free-for-all. Whoever owned a book and chose to copy it could do whatever he wanted. After all, it was his book.

Similarly, until the canonization of the bible (separately by the Jews and the Christians, both in the A.D. time frame), the idea of "scripture" was a vague term which was generally "in the eyes of the beholder". Pretty much everyone agreed the first five books were scripture, but after that, people pretty much had their own opinions of what was scripture and what wasn't. It was all vague and undefined. And you couldn't be right or wrong - there was no official list.

Hence, we have New Testament verses quoting "scripture" that is found nowhere in what we currently know as the Old Testament. Most likely these verses were in some other book, perhaps now extinct, that some people considered scripture.

All we have at this late date are the writings that survived and found acceptance by the religious authorities of the time. And it shows.

Anonymous said...

"Anonymous said...
We need to repent of our evil ways, and acknowledge Herbert W. Armstrong as the Apostle of God, the Elijah to come. He turned the hearts of the fathers to the sons as prophesied in the book of Malachi.

The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. The carnal mind is an emnity against God.

But, this gospel of the kingdom - God's work of witnessing and warning to this earth - shall be preached in ALL the world, and then shall the end come.

The end cannot come until this gospel has been preached in all the world. "

Anonymous, I can never tell if you're pulling our legs or if you really mean this stuff. If you mean it, don't you realize you're preaching to the wrong group of people? Or are you, like HWA, doing it so you can say "at least they've been warned, now they have no excuse"?

Please let me know if you're joking.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous PCG flurrybot who keeps posting:
"We need to repent of our evil ways...blah, blah, blah

Either:
A. You're joking and it stopped being funny a while ago.
OR
B. More disturbingly you are serious, are a member of PCG, and are clearly violating the non blogging mandate. or was that RCG?

Either way, I can't imagine Flurry endorsing blogging even to promote his crackpot Malachi's message???

And Oh yeah...send $$$ to the PCG "building fund"?
Do you know what happened the last time Flurry begged and Cajoled the PCG flock to strain and sacrifice $$$ for the "building fund?"

After raking in a few million for the church "building fund" what did he build? He built new palacial homes on the PCG compound for himself and his kids!

What a sad bait and switch!
It would be funny if it weren't so sad.

Anonymous said...

Let's nickname flurrybot "Amos"

Ignore Amos!

Anonymous said...

Gavin, I am reading a couple of Jonathan Kirsch's books, "Moses a Life" for one. Not sure we he comes from totally. He creates doubt that Moses even exists, then he writes as if the story were true. Just not totally sure where he is coming from.

He does feel as do the scholars that Genesis was written by at least three authors.

He mentions often that Moses is not quoted much at all in the OT, a little in the NT, making that suspicious to him.

Yet, David definately quotes and alludes to "the Law" when he writes Psalms. Compare Psalm 8 to Dt 4:15-21 and Genesis 1 where God said man would be over the beasts of the field, etc.

Kirsch mentions two of the supposed authors of Genesis, "The Elohist" because he used the term Elohim, and "The Yahwehist" because he used the term Yahweh to describe God.

Here is a question then from the non-unitarian/trinitarian perspective. The WCG in it's heyday used to say that Elohim was a uni-plural word.(plural in other words). Yahweh was always singular. In Genesis 3:1 we see the "Lord God" (Yhwh Elohim) mentioned and his name is singular.

Has anyone ever thought that just maybe, the Elohim (let us make man in our image) was a plural name referring to the God head. And Yahweh would a sort of "first name" for lack of a better term, for the one who became the Logos?

Hence, if one were 'he', the other 'they' we have the tense in Hebrew, translated correctly in English.

This could indicate simply the same author throughout who understood God. He spoke with YHWH face to face, so, you would think he would know.

Just a thought. One day I will email Dr. Kirsch for his consideration of this.

Sincerely,

The Sabbathite

Anonymous said...

Hi Gavin

I don't have your email address, but someone needs to do an unbiased review of

Raising the Ruins: The Fight to Revive the Legacy of Herbert W. Armstrong (Hardcover)
by Stephen Flurry (Author)

It is in Dalton's and Amazon. I figured your the fellow to do it.

KScribe said...

A new cult test........
http://coxcult.com/Cult.html
The Video

Anonymous said...

Sorry to interrupt the thread here but I think it would be interesting to get your take on "Raising the Ruins" Gavin.

Here is my "Raising the Ruins" review:

First a little context. I grew up in the Church with a father who was a minister and attended AC, left WCG for UCG, and then happily left it all in my rearview.

Steven Flurry constructs an interesting account, from the court documents, of the battle for the right to print Mr. Armstrong's literature. In addition, it details the calculated way Joe jr. systematically did away with everything.

I actually thought it was very well done and based on facts. All in all a very interesting book.

I think Flurry is cuckoo for cocoa puffs but this is as unbiased an account as can be expected.

The "raising the Ruins" part really only represents the last couple chapters of the book which details the PCG "reconstruction" of the Armstrong dream in Oklahoma.

If you have even a passing interest in WCG and its Splinters, I'd read the book. But, skip the last two chapters unless you are prepared to drink the Kool-Aid.

At least flip thru it next time you visit Barnes and Noble.

Anonymous said...

Ken said
"A new cult test........
http://coxcult.com/Cult.html
The Video"

That was classic! But, I can't get that music that accompanied the video out of my head:)

Anonymous said...

Steve wrote:

>>>74. Trance-Inducing Practices

MY COMMENT: Did anyone ever practice this one?<<<

I wish I had saved the picture, but a few years ago there was a picture posted on wcg related site that was of HWA leaving a Feast site. HE was getting into his limo and in the background a number of members were standing watching him. that was the really creepy part. Many of the women and even some of the men were crying!

I even saw this in Pasadena in the Auditorium. When HWA would walk out on stage many would be driven to tears in adoration. It was the same hysteria that was given to the Pope.

Anonymous said...

Speaking to the issue of if HWA had a "trance thing going on", well...

First of all, I like what Agent Orange has to say and think he's done a fine job with the "100-point cult test", not to mention the in-depth lookings at cults, complete with careful references.

Odd, how some look at one of those 100 points or two, discount that point or two(out of 100), to proclaim HWA was not a cult leader.

When I heard OLD sermons of HWA's (that are available online, and are pre Radio Church of God), I noticed he used a "voice roll technique", and when I heard it, I thought, "Holy Crap, Herbie did it, too!"

Many others used it. Here's some about that from Sutphen:
.........................
"A 'voice roll' is a patterned, paced style used by hypnotists when inducing a trance. It is also used by many lawyers, several of whom are highly trained hypnotists, when they desire to entrench a point firmly in the minds of the jurors. A voice roll can sound as if the speaker were talking to the beat of a metronome or it may sound as though he were emphasizing every word in a monotonous, patterned style. The words will usually be delivered at the rate of 45 to 60 beats per minute, maximizing the hypnotic effect."

Just something I noticed...

~Mel

Anonymous said...

Dennis, I agree completely.

Although the end result is the same (a life destroying cult) I don't think HWA or the current Splinter leaders were knowing participants in some sort of well crafted plan to control peoples lives and create a cult. It was just the end result of kooky beliefs and "sheep" willing to participate!

The road to hell is paved with good intentions and I truly believe most WCG ministers thought they were doing their flocks a favor by "ruling with an iron fist."

You of all people should know Dennis! There weren't any memos sent around teaching ministers how to speak in trance inducing tones were there? :)

Anonymous said...

Could HWA have been demon possessed, and maybe that could have inspired him to use all of these techniques that he supposedly knew nothing about? Naaah, I don't believe in demons.

Seriously, all of the people in the sphincter groups (especially Flurry) seem to believe that somehow there was absolutely no wrong-doing, no corruption until the Tkach's came along and suddenly ruined everything. Stephen Flurry's book is significant more because of what it does not say than what it does say. If young Flurry wanted to tell the whole truth, as opposed to simply resurrecting and selling the Armstrongism product, he would have detailed the abundant and well known corruption from when HWA ruled the WCG with an iron fist.

Fortunately, John Trechak and others chronicled such corruption in the AR, and other publications. Much of this corruption seems to have surfaced during the time of receivership and at the time of the divorce from Ramona. He who hath an ear, let him hear!

BB

Anonymous said...

Dennis and Chuck,

I agree as well. I think, at the onset, that HWA was desperate for something, ANYTHING, with which he could support his family and he turned out to have a real knack for religion. Over the years, he increasingly used the techniques that worked best and stopped using the things that didn't work.

The same goes for his lieutenants. Most were only in high positions because they were the first ones to graduate AC, not because they had special skills, talents or abilities. They adapted HWA's approach to their own strengths and personalities and, again, kept using what worked and stopped using what didn't work.

HWA and his top men earned fortune, fame (at least within the church) and a good lifestyle for their efforts. They probably started believing their own preaching after a while. Most people would. Heck, I believed it. So did most of you. It was pretty heady stuff, being part of God's elect and understanding God's truth while the "world" was in darkness and ignorance. It was appealing, and it was pretty easy to convince our selves it was true.

Steve said...

Dennis said...
"You of all people should know Dennis! There weren't any memos sent around teaching ministers how to speak in trance inducing tones were there? :)"

Nope..never saw one and never took a class on:


MY COMMENT: They might not have been written down but they sure worked, didn't they? Here's another one: "Wait to see how many suckers will leave WCG before starting UCG so we can get enough tithe money to support our lifestyles."

I asked Jim Franks if only 10 people would have left WCG to be in UCG, would he have left. He said, "No, because it wouldn't have been of God with just a small amount of people". He was conveniently out of Houston when all hell broke loose.

Steve K

Anonymous said...

"When HWA would walk out on stage many would be driven to tears in adoration."

That is just stupid. Nobody cried when he came out on stage he even yelled at people to stop applauding for him. It was Tkach who would stand at the back sometimes and start clapping, or one of his minions.

Crying for him......get out.

Anonymous said...

Why is it that all the HWA supporters sign on as "ananymous"?

Or ... maybe it's not "all" the HWA supporters - maybe it's just one person?

Steve said...

Anonymous said...
"When HWA would walk out on stage many would be driven to tears in adoration."

That is just stupid. Nobody cried when he came out on stage he even yelled at people to stop applauding for him. It was Tkach who would stand at the back sometimes and start clapping, or one of his minions.

Crying for him......get out.

MY COMMENT: I have seen people cry, tears of joy, at the FOT when Herbie and Teddy would hug each other on the stage(what a stage!). Everyone would stand on their feet and applaud in adoration for a long time until Herbie would stretch forth his arms to demand silence. It was side show hype. I'm not sure if Herbie wanted people to act like that, but there sure was a lot of hypocrisy on that stage. First of all, Herbie and Teddy already met each other before coming onto the stage. Second, if they were at odds or had an argument before coming on stage, they put on a good show for the dumb sheep.

Steve K

Anonymous said...

Dennis,

Where is your faith????

Remember Lot's wife!

Anonymous said...

Dennis,

How well did you personally know Dave Pack?
What were your personal thoughts on him "back in the day?"

Anonymous said...

Dennis,

You wrote, "Ok, now, crucify me....."

I just ain't in a crucifying mood(some may be!), lol.

You wrote, "I can guarantee they had little or no idea of what they were doing and there was no conscious effort to talk certain ways, say certain things or induce trances in the audience."

I think you are right.

BTW, I should correct something I wrote, I said that I noticed the "voice roll technique" in "pre-Radio Church of God" by HWA. I meant to say "pre-WCG".

I heard it on a site that has archived a huge number of old HWA sermons. Some are even just snippets, but it is a valuable resource. Dang, I forget where that was...someone reading this may give a website addy.

I do think that him using the "voice roll" was simply a matter of him learning from those around him, the stuff which he admired.

And yeah, it's a hindsight and analytical thing for someone to look back and give it a category/name like "voice roll technique".

Not that he was saying to himself, "Ok, I'm going to be an evil cult guru and will cause much destruction in this world....What exactly are the techniques I need to use to do that?"

Also I find it interesting that he seemed to leave the "voice roll technique" behind as he went ahead with what he was doing.

Perhaps that was a function of his personality.

~Mel

Anonymous said...

Dennis said: "...many languish under unrealistic expectations of themselves and those of others about them to their personal harm."

Truer words could not have been written Dennis. If only I had seen this in myself sooner...

Anonymous said...

Gavin mentioned that the book of Mormon was derivative. But what should we say about Biblical Criticism? C.S. Lewis identified the two majors trends in Biblical Criticism about half a century ago and thought it was just a fad.

But after many derivations, it is still around, still trendy. What Lewis identified:

1. Critics discover, reapeatedly, the "historical" Jesus (a liberal Jesus, a Marxists Jesus, a marginal Jew, etc.) and this historical Jeus is always in sharp contravention to the Biblical Jesus. This seems to go for the some of the prophets as well. There is so much dissension, over time, among Biblical Critics, how can we give any credence to the melange.

2. Each of the books of the Bible is attributed to many sources. So we may have six authors of the Book of Ezekiel and so on.

While Lewis' analysis was incisive, his expectation that this would all come to an end, based on what happened with Shakespearean criticism, was wrong.

God is a very uncomfortable concept to people who have rejected him. So I expect that these derivative arguments have the same longevity as disbelief.

-- Neo

Anonymous said...

How on earth did U.S. News and World Report get re-elevated as an authoritative matchstick on critical theology?

Good grief, for a second I had a unsettling flashback to Gene Hogberg and the Plain Truth News Bureau in 1980. Next thing you know, we'll all be re-grasping the "God is dead" Time cover from the 1960s. In that vein, anybody want to sign up for the casting call for the next "America listen!" public bible studies and WCG-flavored quasi-"Up With People"-type music extravanganzas? (of which one of the music co-directors was none other than one John Trechek.

(Reaches for a glass of dystilled water and 500 mg of thiamin)

Trader

Anonymous said...

>>>"When HWA would walk out on stage many would be driven to tears in adoration."

That is just stupid. Nobody cried when he came out on stage<<<

I don't know what Armstrongite world you are presently on, but people DID cry at HWA's presence on the Ambassador stage. I was there. I saw it. I was there from the mid 70's thorough the refuting of the perverse teachings. So I know what I saw. I also was a part of WCG since 1960. And every time Herbie was present there were people crying and adoring him. He could do no wrong. You can deny all you want things about Herbie so that 'saintly' image can be preserved, but facts make a mockery of all things Herb.

Anonymous said...

I do remember the thunderous roar of the crowd at Feast of Tabernacle services when HWA's pilot would "buzz" whatever meeting place the congregation was at. It was kind of like the way in which crowds show their approval at Country and Western concerts.

Really, the adulation accorded HWA should not even be in question, since we have Flurry's group's example here in modern times. They worship HWA more than Jesus! And, really, it's not all that different from the way it was way back when. For some of these imbeciles, HWA is a Moses-like or Christ-like leader type figure. Wouldn't it be nice to watch HWA polish the Pope's sandals during the KoG?

Anonymous said...

I have been going thru the website that Dennis recommended:
http://www.awitness.org/lostmess/fprophet.html

Also I've been doing just as HWA told me to do when he said "don't believe me, open your own bible"

Well I have opened my bible and some of the OT accounts, in particiularly that of David and the flood, are so painfully inconsistent it is unreal!
There is no way that one man could have written such patched together stories.

What were ministers told about these inconsistencies? I'm ashamed that I never read them more closely, FROM MY OWN BIBLE!

Anonymous said...

"I can't say I'm not a little depressed about waking up way late after the fact while Joe Jr. and Co. gets to rule over the ruins as an overpaid Sunday School Teacher."

Hey Dennis, I have very mixed feelings for Joe Tkach, and Joe Jr., myself. On the one hand, they did me a big favor. They made me question my beliefs, and once I started asking questions I started my journey out of the cult.

On the other hand, what they did was extremely immoral and unethical. They took all our assets. If they disagreed with the WCG teachings, the ethical thing to do would have been to leave and join a church that matched their beliefs. What they did was to keep all the assets to themselves and make the true believers leave.

It's sickening to think about. It was all set up throught the "Corporate Sole" setup, legally, and the "God Rules through One Man" doctrine that conned us into falling for it. That worked great for HWA, and for us true believers who believed whatever HWA told us, but after HWA died we were screwed.

Oh well, what did he care? And even though it's sickening, it DID pry me loose from the cult.

Douglas Becker said...

Planned?

My observation over the decades: Nothing much was planned and less was followed up -- the practice of most business today.

Instead, it was hopeful thinking and as opportunistic as an aggressive disease.

As for the prophets, as in "The US News and World Report" analysis, they were hopeful and, when the situation was right, opportunistic.

Nothing has changed... ever.

Anonymous said...

This adulation of HWA and GTA that I saw back in the Seventies now strikes me as being creepy. I recall church women talking about how GTA was one of the handsomest men they had ever seen. What once seemed innocuous, now seems beyond the pale, after the checkered history of the WCG.

Although I have never heard anybody explicitly state it, I think comparisons were made between HWA and God the Father and GTA and Christ. I really cannot cite anything concrete to support this feeling.

"In fact, God rather drops out of the Bible somewhere in the OT and is not much heard from again..."

This is what we would class as an unfounded assertion. God is mentioned throughout the Bible except maybe the Book of Esther, where he is present implicitly.

-- Neo

Anonymous said...

I disagree with the notion that Tkach and Co. "should have just left" instead of doing what they did.

Are we to somehow suddenly believe that ethical or sensible behavior needed to be applied to the operation of the organization? Leading management literature points to the fact that what happened, would happen. There was no provision made for the future, or for succession, or, for that matter, for wise stewardship and management -- largely because it didn't exist previously.

Truth be told, whoever gained control was going to be in a position to wield control -- no different than what existed beforehand, I might add.

The fact that what they did was pretty inept and stupid is beside the point. The organization was set up in such a way that they could do what they did, and so, they did. I have difficulty believing that numerous others would not have botched it in their own special ways.

Anonymous said...

Neotherm said: Although I have never heard anybody explicitly state it, I think comparisons were made between HWA and God the Father and GTA and Christ. I really cannot cite anything concrete to support this feeling.

Comment: I recall such a statement made once or twice by RCG/WCG ministers.

Anonymous said...

If you speak with people who have left the organization, many of them will tell you that their image of God, during their WCG days was kind of a spiritualized or glorified version of HWA. A wise ancient man with his white hair Brylcreemed straight back, and speaking very authoritatively in a booming voice.

Boy howdy, GTA sure botched the Jesus connection though, didn't he?

Anonymous said...

"The fact that what they did was pretty inept and stupid is beside the point."

Inept is something I doubt on this one, stupid, yes. But this was planned, sorry to say, for sure.

These guys took away the 800# from the telecast to reduce the donor base, which actually gave 3x more than the cost of the 800#. Less donors lead to less co-workers and so on. It was planned, I was told so by some at HQ even before the 5 year plan was produced.

These guys just wanted the cash. Wonder sometimes if someone can catch these guys for mail fraud. Somewhere along the way they had to send out something via mail saying they were continuiing with this or that and asking for $ to get it done without the intent of doing so. I would like to see blackbeard (or is it greying beard?) pay for his transgressions today and hopefully he repents so he does not tomorrow as well.

Anonymous said...

" don't know what Armstrongite world you are presently on, but people DID cry at HWA's presence on the Ambassador stage. I was there. I saw it. I was there from the mid 70's thorough the refuting of the perverse teachings. So I know what I saw. I also was a part of WCG since 1960. And every time Herbie was present there were people crying and adoring him. He could do no wrong. You can deny all you want things about Herbie so that 'saintly' image can be preserved, but facts make a mockery of all things Herb."

Maybe you were one of the ones crying, I was there too, only remember people thinking he was senile repeating the two trees often. No one here is thinking of the saintly person you are envisioning. It was Tkachs people who always started the applause in the back of the aud and everyone else followed until he yelled at them.

If it were different before my time, I cannot say. People just were not that 'devoted' to him that way. I think they feared him a lot, especially the sycophants. But that is another subject for another time. This is the second time I have attempted to answer this, hope it goes through.

camfinch said...

About comparisons of HWA to the Father and GTA to Christ: yes, I heard that a number of times, either alluded to from the pulpit, or probably more often in private discussions, especially while I was an AC student.

HWA, with his more formal lifestyle, old-fashioned perspective (sometimes almost Victorian in manner), preference for classical music, etc., seemed to many to make him like the patriarchal, dignified Father-god. GTA, who seemed to be more connected with the "common folk", as demonstrated by his easygoing manner of talking (when not in the radio/TV booth), enjoyment for participating in sports with lay members, and his liking for country-western and some rock-and-roll music, was seen as being the Christ-figure, the one who mediates between humans and God.

Wow, the ideas that seemed so logical way back then!

Anonymous said...

For the interested, HWA defines what a TRUE PROPHET is, about 16 minutes into his archived sermon at:
http://tinyurl.com/2eftuu

~Mel

Anonymous said...

I posted a reference to this last year on the Fundamentalist JLF Board last Easter and was blown off by their censors

Anonymous said...

Thanks for writing this.