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- From: rpitts@darth.gatech.edu (Richard Pitts)
- Newsgroups: soc.religion.christian
- Subject: Re: ARMSTRONGISM
- Message-ID: <Jan.26.03.52.31.1993.14390@athos.rutgers.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 08:52:33 GMT
- Sender: hedrick@athos.rutgers.edu
- Organization: Georgia Tech CERL/EE, Atlanta, Ga
- Lines: 185
- Approved: christian@aramis.rutgers.edu
-
- Following is an article from the Christian Research Journal.
- ---------
-
- Copyright 1991 - Permission granted. Direct questions to
- Christian Research Institute (CRI)
- P.O. Box 500
- San Juan Capistrano, California 92693 USA
-
- Unprecedented Changes Affect Worldwide Church of God
- by William M. Alnor
- (CRI Journal, Spring, 1991, p.5-6)
-
- Dramatic changes have turned the Worldwide Church of God
- (WCG) upside-down since the January 1986 death of founder
- Herbert W. Armstrong. The changes are so great and
- extraordinary that some long-time cult watchers believe the
- WCG may be moving toward Christian orthodoxy.
-
- Others, however, are warning that the sweeping doctrinal
- changes - involving the nature of God (and the doctrine of
- the Trinity), the nature of salvation, and an apparent shift
- away from the sect's controversial belief in Anglo-Israelism
- - may be cosmetic changes only, designed to make the 57-
- year-old sect appear more Christian.
-
- Leading the change to reform the WCG is Herbert W.
- Armstrong's hand-picked successor, Joseph W. Tkach
- (pronounced Ti-Kotch). Although Tkach has been under fire
- from some conservative elements in the 140,000 member
- church, which is based in Pasadena, California, the
- criticism seems to have made him more determined to
- institute reforms.
-
- In recent WCG publications, Tkach has criticized
- Armstrong's theology in certain areas, and he has lashed out
- at some of his critics. For example, in an editorial he
- wrote in the May 21, 1990 Worldwide News (a WCG news
- publication), Tkach was emphatic about moving quickly with
- his agenda for changing the WCG. He then denounced the
- "predatory prophets" who criticized his departures from
- Armstrong's teachings, adding that Armstrong was wrong about
- many things, "especially having to do with prophecy."
-
- (Since Tkach has taken over, criticism has come from WCG
- splinter groups, which have formed in an effort to uphold
- Armstrong's teachings. The Pasadena headquarters has also
- become the target of regular picketing campaigns by
- disgruntled former members.)
-
- One reason for the strong reaction against Tkach's
- innovations is that church members believed Herbert W.
- Armstrong was "God's Holy Apostle" and they looked at his
- revelations as infallible. Although Armstrong at first
- distanced himself from the designation of an apostle, he
- clearly taught that the Christian churches had been
- doctrinally astray since the first century and that God had
- decided to restore the truth to the world through him in the
- same way God raised up Noah, Moses, Christ, and the twelve
- disciples.* He taught that he had unlocked a hidden code to
- understanding the Bible. [*Joseph Hopkins, The Armstrong
- Empire (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1974), p 181.]
-
- According to WCG spokesman Michael Snyder, the church
- began a "complete doctrinal review" in 1986, which is
- continuing. Snyder added that more recently the WCG began a
- two-year project that is looking at some f the main WCG
- doctrines, such as their distinctive view of the Trinity and
- Anglo-Israelism. "We're trying to be honest with the
- biblical record," Snyder said in an interview.
-
- The review so far has resulted in the church no longer
- printing or offering copies of Armstrong's book, _Mystery of
- the Ages_, which had been an important doctrinal book.
- Also, Armstrong's book, _The United States and British
- Commonwealth in Prophecy, has been extensively revised and
- shortened. (The book delves into Anglo-Israelism - the
- theory that the so-called Lost Ten Tribes of Israel migrated
- to Northern Europe, the British Isles, and later to the
- U.S.) Snyder added that the church now allows its members
- to celebrate birthdays ad receive medical care - practices
- once forbidden by Armstrong.
-
- Snyder said the church could have also opted to revise
- _Mystery of the Ages_. But "we fell it doesn't represent
- what the church believes, and that it would be dishonest to
- change it" while leaving Armstrong's name on it.
-
- WCG Scholars are working on a new statement on doctrine
- of the Trinity and the nature of God, Snyder said, and added
- that he can't say in which direction the church will go.
- But during an October 22, 1990 "Truths that Transform" radio
- program (produced by D. James Kennedy's Coral Ridge
- Presbyterian Church in Fort Lauderdale, Florida), portions
- of a private WCG working paper on the Trinity were
- discussed, along with speculation that the long-standing WCG
- view of the Godhead might be revised.
-
- Historically the WCG has affirmed a belief in only one
- God. But Armstrong defined "God" not as a Trinity, but as a
- collective term like "church" or "family." He said the Holy
- Spirit is an impersonal force and is therefore not a member
- of the God "family" as God the Father and Jesus Christ are.
- He also added that God the Father and Christ plan to
- reproduce themselves in humans so they can add many members
- to the God family. Therefore, humans will also someday
- become God, the WCG has taught.
-
- Even after Armstrong's passing, the WCG steadfastly held
- to that doctrine. An article in the church's November-
- December 1988 Good News magazine affirmed: "You are destined
- to become God! Shocking? Unbelievable? If you understand
- the purpose of God's government. you will not be
- surprised...God is in the process of reproducing Himself in
- you! You look like Him, and ultimately He wants you to be
- like Him in every way" body, mind and spirit...You will be
- what He is - God!"
-
- Now, however, the ideas in that article have been
- declared "officially obsolete," said Snyder, adding that the
- church also now affirms salvation by faith in Christ alone,
- instead of what (critics maintain) has historically been a
- works-based salvation.
-
- James Walker, the Watchman Fellowship's Texas director,
- has been closely following the activities of the church. He
- said evangelical should be aware of the possibility that the
- doctrinal changes may be similar to the Temple Endowment
- ceremony changes in the Mormon church last year. These did
- not represent any real move toward orthodoxy, but they made
- the Mormons less offensive to some Christians. (See p. 6 in
- the Summer 11990 Christian Research Journal.)
-
- Walker points out that salvation by works was clearly
- taught in the January-February 1990 issue of Good News. He
- adds that although the church claims that the previously
- mentioned article is "obsolete," no notice of that fact (or
- of other changes) was ever given to the church at large.
-
- In other news affecting the WCG, although membership is
- at an all-time high, there are indications that the church
- is not doing well financially. Good News magazine was
- dropped from publication as of January 1991. And
- circulation of the church's Plain Truth magazine has dipped
- from over 7 million at its height to 2.3 million by the end
- of last summer, according to the January 1991 issue of the
- Ambassador Report. Recently the magazine was phased out in
- areas of the Middle East, West Africa, and other regions,
- the Report continued. (The Ambassador Report [P.O. Box
- 60068, Pasadena, CA 91106] is a critical periodical
- published by former members of the WCG. [ zip code maybe
- 91116.])
-
- The church's 70-acre unaccredited Ambassador College in
- Pasadena held its fortieth and final commencement ceremony
- in May 1990. Although Snyder denied that the campus - which
- also houses the church's headquarters - was officially "for
- sale," he said that the church would consider any offers
- that came its way.
-
- Construction at the church's remaining Ambassador
- College campus in Big Sandy, Texas has been lagging behind.
- The church hoped to make the Texas school an accredited
- four-year college, but due to state law, accreditation
- cannot come before June 1992, according to the Ambassador
- Report. Many are speculating that the church's headquarters
- will also be moved to Texas in the near future.
-
- The WCG's media empire is also crumbling. The church's
- glitzy television program, "The World Tomorrow," has shrunk
- from 350 stations in 1988 to only 113 this past year,
- according to the January 1991 Ambassador Report. And,
- according to the June 18, 1990 Worldwide News, the church
- discontinued its "World Tomorrow" radio broadcasts and
- eliminated the toll-free telephone number on its telecasts.
-
- ----------end
-
- For Christ and His Kingdom,
- Richard Pitts
-
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