| Is
Worldwide Church of
God condoning evolution?
Read the following letters from John Miller, former member of WCG, who tried to tell them
they were. Includes responses.
Worldwide
Church of God and
Their Universalism Views (by John Miller)
Letter to Michael Morrison of
WCG headquarters:
2002
Dear Michael Morrison,
Once again the WWCG has
spoon fed their congregations an idea from the Bible that is completely
full of speculation, a problem that seems to follow them wherever they
go. Your article, “The six Day Creation literal or figurative?”
plants the seed of doubt in those that are in your congregations. Your
article is full of the word "perhaps." "Perhaps" as defined
in the Webster's dictionary means, "possibly but not certainly,
something open to doubt or conjecture." According to this
definition of "perhaps," you are wrong.
Why is a literal translation of
the account of creation so difficult for you to accept? Is it because a
literal creation of six days goes against what evolutionists say? Do you
believe that everything evolved over a period of millions of years, that
life crawled out of the slime pits of the new earth, and that men were
at one time monkeys? Do you believe that this earth and all of the
universe began with a “big bang?” You cannot sit on a fence between
what God says He did, and what man says.
All the "could it be" and
"perhaps" that seem to take on some sort of authority in your
article are nothing more than mere speculations of men. The fact is, you
can never prove by using the Bible as your only source--which by the way
is the only source a Christian should use--that creation was anything
other than in six literal days.
The creation account tells us
in Genesis 1:31, "And God saw everything that he made, and, behold, it
was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day."
Notice, “it was very good,” God does not say, "it will become very
good." The word "good" is the word "Tobe" in the Hebrew, and
it means "good, beautiful, best" and is taken from the word "Chesheb"
meaning a belt or strap, being interlaced.
The earth was created in such a
way that it was the "best" it could be from the very beginning. God
made it "ready" to serve His purpose. God made it "beautiful."
It did not become all these things over millions of years. This fact
flies in the face of science and critics who say that the account of
creation in Genesis is merely figurative and poetic, nice to tell small
children but is no more then a fable. To say that the account of
creation in Genesis is figurative is to say that He did not set the
Earth, the moon, and the sun in their places, at the same time that He
made the first day. This we know would have been impossible, because we
know without the moon and the sun, there would be no Earth, and
therefore no time, no existence at all of anything.
God asks Job a question in Job
38: 2-3. It is the same question we must ask ourselves whenever we think
we have all the answers concerning God and what He does. "Who is this
that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?" The Bible, the Word
of God, and only the Word of God is our knowledge and our counsel.
Anyone that uses any other words other then God's word “Darkeneth” it.
The Hebrew word here is translated "Chashak," meaning
to hide. We are to seek counsel that does not hide God's true counsel.
Your article does that; it attempts to cover up the truth of God and
only God as sole creator. God did not need “millions of years” to
create everything. He says He did it in six days.
In closing, God says He created
everything in six days; man says He did not. Who do you think we should
believe? Your article says "Faith should be built on the correct
foundation, not on an overly specific interpretation when other
interpretations make better sense." I must point out to you that faith
is not built upon the foundation of things that make sense, but rather
in most cases to the human understanding faith make no sense at all.
Heb.11: 1, "Now faith is the substance hoped for, the evidence of
things not seen." Vs. 3, "Through faith we understand that the
worlds were framed by the Word of God, so that things which are seen
were not made of things which do appear." To human understanding, this
makes no sense at all.
Yours Truly,
John E. Miller Jr. (former WCG
member)
John Miller's letter sent to WCG
headquarters:
2002
Dear Sir,
In your article on the net
entitled "What are Human Beings?" you say, whether God created
everything "in one day, six days, or six billion years is not as
important as the fact that He did." While it is most important to
know that God created everything, I believe it is equally important to
know that His word is true. In my opinion we must be careful with the
idea that the time span that God said He did it in isn't reduced to mere
allegory, as I believe you think it is. Am I right? If we believe God
"did it" and that part is not an allegory, why do you not
believe the time period God says He did it in is any thing else but true
and not? After all, how long does it take to "speak some thing into
existence?"
Is the story of Adam and Eve an
allegory; is Noah and the Ark allegory; is Daniel and the lions Den an
allegory; is Samson's strength; the parting of the Red Sea; David and
Goliath; Jesus Christ's death and resurrection; all allegory? If not,
what separates actual happening from allegory, do you know? Is it
allegory because it seems impossible to believe, or because the
unbelievers in the world might scoff at the idea that we might believe
such a childish idea?
What makes some things that are
written in the Bible an allegory and other things not? Do you see my
point? It seems to me that any one of these stories are just as
difficult to understand as God creating everything in 6 days as the
Bible says.
One other point is important to
ask. What part of creation was written as allegory and what part as in
actual time periods? I was under the impression that all of God's
creation is dependent on each other. Did he make all animal life at the
same time? Did the plant life get created later? When did He create the
light and dark; when did the sun come into being? Are we to understand
God's speaking things into existence is an allegory, or is that what He
actually did?
Finally, how are we to teach
are children about what the Bible says? Should we teach them to treat
the Bible as a book written full of allegories, when they ask us,
"Did God really create every thing in six days?"
I believe there are things that
are written in the Bible that are not to be taken literally; however, I
do not believe the facts of creation recorded for us by Moses were anything but actual time periods.
You may respond to my questions
by e-mail.
John Miller Jr. (former WCG
member)
2nd Email to Paul Kroll of
WCG, Personal Correspondence, after John mailed him his article:
Six
Days of Creation:
October 21, 2002
Dear Paul.
Thank you for responding so
quickly. Yes I do believe that God created every thing in 6 days. Unlike
some, however, I do not believe that the earth was only created a few
thousands years ago but I believe it all began in 6 days. I have no
other accurate proof to go by other than the Bible. I don't know why the
article even went into the time it took God to create every thing
because like you said, it really was unrelated to the main point of the
article. May I ask why doesn't the wwcg make a stand concerning this
matter? I would be interested to know. It doesn't bother me in the least
to be in the minority about a certain belief I might make a stand on. As
a one time wwcg church member I have had to change many of my beliefs in
the past to get to where I am now and I'm sure that there will be more
things that God will lead me to see that need to be changed.
I am not writing this e-mail to
you to be argumentative, but only to find out why the wwcg believes what
they believe. One other thing I'd like to ask. Somehow in your response
I was lead to believe that you think that it is acceptable to believe
God is He or she. [emp. ours] Was I correct in that observation? If the wwcg
believes that where can you point me to in the Bible that makes that
clear?
I believe one must be very
careful in taking anything away from or adding to the Word of God. The
Bible tells us in 1 Timothy 3:16-17. "All Scripture is given by
inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, for instruction in righteousness: That the man of God may be
perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works." How do these
verses have any weight if what God says in Gen. 1 is not anything but
actual events that happened and in the time He said they happened in?
Again, thank you for taking the
time to correspond with me. I am quite willing to change any belief that
I might have when confronted with some thing that I did not know before
or some thing I did not understand.
Looking forward to hearing from
you.
John E. Miller Jr. (Former WCG
member)
| "It is easier to show by science that
evolution is impossible, than to show how if could have happened."
— Vance Ferrell, Evolution Encyclopedia, Vol. 2, Chapter 16. |
Read other letters/articles by John
Miller:
Six
Days of Creation
Worldwide Church of God and
Their Universalism Views
(sent to HQ)
Retired Worldwide
Church of God Ministers
to Receive Funds While Members Go Without?
The WCG Has
Changed Little in Their Tactics
(Oct. 3, 2003 email)
NOTE FROM
ESN: It is
vital for our readers to understand that "info control artists" are
trained in propaganda and spin control. (See:
Twenty-Rules
of Disinformation (Includes 8
Traits of A Disinformationalist)
and
OIU Newsletter, Vol. 4, Pt. 1, which covers Propaganda and Dialectical
Materialism.) Notice how parts of Paul
Kroll's 2nd email response to John included such spin control words; i.
e.:
"Regarding
Genesis 1 specifically, no doubt, our members have varying beliefs
about whether Genesis 1 means to give us a time-line of creation of
144 literal hours or not. The church does not have a litmus test
requiring members to accept any view of this chapter in regards to the
time issue. .... I've also attached an article that explains why we do
not necessarily need to view the "days" of Genesis 1 in a
literal fashion and another article that argues that the literal view
is the wrong one. ... That is your privilege to take the literal view,
of course, but you should understand that is your assumption. ...
Science tells us the moment of creation of the universe was
instantaneous; it didn't take 6 days. ... God is neither
"he" nor "she" in his essential being."
It seems
that what
Paul Kroll is saying is, "Take your pick."
Kroll never
wrote back again.
After
reading "Evolution vs. Creation Controversy" "Genesis 1:
The Six Day War" it appears that the WCG does not take the Bible
literally and are interpreting it symbolically. Will this lead members
away from believing that the Bible is the inspired, inerrant, infallible
Word of God?
John Miller stated
to ESN:
"He seems willing to correspond with me, but when I don't agree
with him he wants to drop whatever we are talking about. The WWCG would
rather believe science than the Word of God. That's really nothing new;
that is exactly what an unbeliever does. He must have physical proof
rather than faith. His mind is closed."
Note: Paul Kroll exited
the WCG sometime shortly after 1973 and was listed among other leading
men and women who left their positions because of "frustration,
matters of conscience, and disgust over doctrinal and organizational
problems" and who "no longer supported AC or the WCG."
(Ambassador Review, 1976, p.
5) One must ask why he's back in again?
RECOMMENDED BOOK:
The
Evolution Handbook by Vance Ferrell
(Thousands of solid scientific facts,
disproving every basic area of evolutionary theory. Most complete
refutation of evolution available in a single book.)
Read the
book online.
A Rebuttal to Michael
Morrison (This is the rebuttal to Morrison's
reply
regarding On Apostasy--A Radical Proposal. It was later sent to more than a hundred
WCG ministers and members.)
Back to Articles
on WCG's Changes and History Revision
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