| The following transcription clearly shows how Ron
Kelly used humor to disarm the members while making
them believe that somehow they were at fault for believing in the
prophecies of Herbert Armstrong. He refers to these false prophecies as
"thoughts" and tries to make it seem as though members made these things
up (confusion). He subtly shames them for holding on to beliefs that had been
taught in the Worldwide Church of God for decades,
without ever holding HWA
accountable for perpetuating those beliefs. These are all tactics that religious cults
have used when
making new changes in their organization. (My words will be in
blue text in brackets. All grammar errors are those of the
speaker.) Also read: March 10, 2003
letter to ESN, "Your Website Gave Us Answers to a
Multitude of Questions" that tells of a later sermon Ron Kelly gave
where he called the members "stupid" for believing in polytheism.
"I have a
number of slides that I want to show you and get your reaction to this
first in a series...I want to see what you think." [Ron
Kelly begins his sermon with a slide show and showing members the city of
Petra.]
"You
will probably instantly recognize that this is the entrance to the rose red city of
Petra. Petra is the subject of some interest in the Church of God."
[Right from the start, Petra is downplayed as having
some interest in the church, when in reality Petra was central
to the church's doctrine. HWA promised the members that they would flee to
the Place of Safety before the Great Tribulation and remain there for
3-1/2 years for their "final training." Salvation would be assured to
those who made it to Petra. This is not a light doctrine. Kelly does a
great disservice to the members for sidestepping this whole issue and does
not bring truth to light.]
"...the thousands of caves that dot the surrounding hills."
[describes the slides in details and points out the
caves] "When you saw that series of slides, what did you think?
What came to mind? Well, of course, it's Petra, and you thought
of some historic things, you thought of Jordan, you thought of the Ancient
Israelites perhaps, but I would imagine many of you thought "Place of
Safety." [He says this in a playful, cocky
voice.]
"Because that's almost been synonymous over the years. Too many of us, when
we viewed this place, we've talked in our conversations about
Petra and
the Place of Safety, sometimes virtually synonymous."
[Kelly begins deploying "shaming tactics" against the members. How could
members be so dumb to think that Petra and the Place of Safety were
synonymous? Because HWA taught that they were one and the same.
Ron Kelly never
brings this up! Here was the perfect chance for Kelly to expose the
origins of how Petra came to be known as the Place of Safety in the WCG
and how this phony belief isn't found in the Bible. But he doesn't ever
hold Herbert Armstrong accountable for this teaching. Instead, he will continue to make
the members feel as if somehow they were responsible for
it.]
"Now let me show you a second sequence of slides and you tell
me what comes to your mind when we see them." [Kelly
begins to show slides of Vail, Colorado. He describes Vail in detail
during the slide show.]
"What did you think when you saw this series of slides? You probably
thought, "Great skiing!" That's a normal thing to think when you think of
Vail, Colorado...You might have thought 'Feast of
Tabernacles.' It's truly one of our gorgeous Feast of Tabernacles
sites...You probably didn't think "Place of Safety." Well,
stand by. If you are not thoroughly convinced in a few moments, then I
will be surprised [pauses] about some
fascinating 'new thoughts' and I'm saying that, somewhat facetiously. If
you like to title sermons, then let's call today's sermon, 'Fun with
Prophecy.'" [Chuckling by members can be heard in the
background.]
"Or an alternate title: 'The Beast, 666' and all those
other numbers. I know a lot of you in this audience are very
interested in prophecy, and rightly so. You should be."
[At this point, Kelly encourages this behavior of
"being interested in prophecy." Later, he will discourage it.
This is all part of the double-talk.]
"It is one of the fascinating subjects of the Bible and we have noted
that the Bible--depends on how you count the chapters--between a third
and maybe downwards to a quarter of the Bible, or books of prophecy,
verses of prophecy, if you take them in their total, surely one third of
the verses of the Bible could be considered 'prophetic.' So it's a
fascinating subject to us." [Kelly is backing HWA's
teaching that one third of the Bible is prophecy, although he attempts to
downgrade it to "a quarter." Kelly never explains why
prophecy is a "fascinating subject" to the members. This is what HWA
focused on and had his member focus on, but Kelly wants members to think
that the "fascination" was their own doing].
"If you
want a more serious title rather than a humorous title, we might ask the
question, 'Just what do we know
about prophecy?' And I think that's an important subject, as we live in
these times that WE have tended to call, so frequently,
'The End Times.'" [Condescending tones are used.
Again, Kelly subtly shifts blame onto the members for engaging in this
behavior, instead of pointing out that HWA repeatedly taught that this was
the End Times and The Work had to be completed. Would members have given
up to 30% of their gross income if they had thought the End Times wasn't
coming for the next 50 years? Of course not! HWA squeezed money out of his
followers by scaring them into believing that they lived in the final few
years before the End. Kelly does not reveal the true motives of this
teaching to the members and leaves them feeling that somehow they were
responsible for another erroneous belief.]
"What do we know? Now to
keep you sitting on your chair for a few moments, we are going to see, in
a few moments, exactly who the Beast really is.
[Says this teasingly, trying to relax the members
for some fun.]
I know you've all speculated from time to time of
who he might be, and you've had historic
anti-types of who the Beast was, looking forward, but now we can reveal to
you today who he really is." [Tries to build
up suspense.]
"But before we get to the mysterious 666--the Beast
and who he is--let's talk about this Place of Safety for a moment."
[Kelly is jumping around from subject to subject to
confuse the members].
"I showed some slides of Petra, a place which
many speculate [condescending tones
are used again] might have some significance prophetically.
Where do
we get such an idea? Well, it is from the Bible, of course, that we have
drawn a lot of speculation about this thought of a Place of Safety."
[Now Kelly blames the Bible for this idea, instead
of telling members that it was HWA and Loma Armstrong's doing. He
minimizes the Place of Safety as a "thought," as if it was perpetuated
subliminally through "thoughts" by the members instead of telling the
truth about this doctrine being preached in countless Sabbath sermons, and
by Gerald Waterhouse.]
"Let's go to Revelation, chapter 12. In the
book of Revelation are many prophecies about the time leading up to the
Second Coming of Christ; the flow of world events, from the time of the
apostle John late in the 1st century, forward to our time today. And in
that context in Chapter 12 are some very interesting verses about
God's people and protection. The Bible, by the way,
never uses the term "Place of Safety" even in the way we use it, but it
does talk about God's people and God's protection. Verse 6
is one of those verses." [Notice that Kelly tries to
justify this teaching as Biblical, even though it isn't.]
"Using the symbolism of a woman representing The Church, the woman fled
into the wilderness where she has a place prepared by God, that they
should feed her there, 1260 days. Now here's one of those 'prophetic
numbers'
[says with sarcasm], twelve hundred and
sixty. And probably many of you have some artwork in the margins of your
Bible here--some mathematic calculations, some dates and numbers, some
addition and some subtraction, to show what that one thousand two hundred
days represents. And you might chain reference to a Scripture that shows in
prophecy a day can be equal to a year."
"In verse 14 of the same chapter is
another verse of similar terminology. [Reads verse
about the woman flying into the wilderness]. The woman again--The
Church, being protected--the symbolic wings of a great eagle."
[Talks about a mother eagle and her young learning
to fly and compares this to God protecting His Church.]
"He will
swoop down under them, symbolically at least, and let the Church nestle
correctly and protectively on His back and spare us. We've seen that
analogy--the wings of an eagle, flying into the wilderness where for a
time, one year, times, two years, and half a time, a half a year, The
Church is spared or protected." [Goes into a
long, confusing discussion about church history and the significance of
the 1260 years and how it can be applied historically or
politically.]
"Now, in the Church we've also taken a close look at those
Scriptures and mused over the possibility of it being literally fulfilled
in the time immediately preceding the Second Coming of Christ. A
literal
3-1/2 years--or a literal 42 months--a literal 3-1/2 years in which God's
Church would, as it states in these verses, fly to the wilderness on the
wings of an eagle, where she would be spared persecution, the final 3-1/2
years leading up to the Second Coming of Christ. Now there's probably no
one in this room that has not heard that expounded in a variety of ways
and puzzled over how, where, and when these events would take place--which has lead to a great deal of speculation as I was showing in the
first set of slides that perhaps Petra is this place."
[Kelly again does not hold HWA responsible for this
teaching, nor Gerald Waterhouse for traveling from church area to church
area to perpetuate these "speculations" in 3-5 hour sermons.]
"It
just so happens that I believe this place is Vail and in a moment I will
show you why--from the Bible! This is 'fun with prophecy,'
remember? So don't take me too seriously--fun with prophecy."
[Tries to make this a joke to disarm members.]
"Revelation, chapter 3, is another verse that gives us some reason to
pause and think about prophecy in the light of the Church and being
protected. In Revelation 3, verse 10, where remarks are addressed to a
church in the ancient city of Philadelphia...but to the church of
Philadelphia we read, 'Because you have kept my command to
persevere, I will keep you from the hour of trial which shall come upon the
whole world to test those who dwell on the earth.' So this church,
Philadelphia, is going to be spared some of the agonies of persecution
that the world will suffer, in the prophetic times. And so we have put
those Scriptures together--Rev. 12 and Rev. 10 and thus we have
formulated a thought in the Church in this Era that we are that Era, and
that we will be protected in that period during that 3-1/2 years in a
place in the wilderness, being taken on the symbolic wings of a great
eagle." [Does not mention that
Gerald
Waterhouse taught that Boeing jets represented the great eagle and they
would be purchased for use to help the members flee.]
"Now we get
some idea, and I'm going to summarize a few quick thoughts here, because
you may ask the question logically, 'Well why would we even speculate that
the place would be Petra?'" [There was no
speculation. It was taught by the organization as doctrine.] There
are several reasons. [Goes off onto Isaiah 2:10-12,
using the word Petra. Explain how Petra is a Greek word, and how the
people were told to "enter the rock."]
"And so some people,
transposing the languages, back and forth, have said, 'Hmmm, I think maybe
it's Petra. I wonder if it could be Petra.' And some people are
absolutely convinced it is Petra. [Shaming
tactics] Isaiah 42 is another...to why some people see this
symbolism. [Reads Verse 11] Sela means 'rock'
or Petra."
"Now there are
numerous other allusions [condescending tone
used again] that the people have used the significance of Petra in
the ancient world as a refuge, and other Scriptures...so over the course
of almost half a century, there are those that have speculated
about that." [Kelly does not confront HWA as the one
who taught this lie for almost half a century. He continues to blame
it on "some people."]
"I would like to, for the sake of fun, take a
little different view for you." [Recaps
about the slide show on Petra, and announces that he is going to present
Vail as his 'Place of Safety' theory. There is a light chuckle coming from
the audience. Kelly is beginning to play psychological head games with the
members by sounding gleeful.]
"Now I am taking my equal time today
to bring you 'Kelly's Heresy of the Place of Safety.'"
[Only a few members chuckle since they are
understandably confused and feeling discomfort. Kelly begins to unleash a
series of foolish questions, trying to make light of Scriptures by saying
Vail is 'high in the Rocky Mountains,' comparing it to Greek 'Petra
Mountains.']
"Why, I could almost stop right now! Why, that's proof
positive to some." [Condescending
tone used again. Kelly belittles those "some" he insists misinterpret the
Bible without ever naming HWA as the one who did this. Kelly goes into
another confusing comparison about snow representing purity and
righteousness. He purposefully disarms the audience with more humor by
imitating Gerald Waterhouse's famed phrase, 'The Place of Final Preparation
and Training!' and gains a few more laughs from the audience.]
"If
we're going to spend 3 l/2 years in the place of final preparation and
training, what better place to spend it as [in a] beautiful snowcapped mountain range, as opposed to a dirty, hot ole sandy desert?"
[Says this in exaggerated tone and elicits more
laughs from the audience. He discusses more foolish comparisons from
Scripture to his "Vail Theory," and brings up that an airport has been
constructed near Vail. He discusses Loma Dillion Armstrong's name
and about the symbolism in her middle name.]
"It was to Loma Dillon
Armstrong that the truth was first revealed, and that Mr. Armstrong was
inspired as a result by Loma Dillon Armstrong's... [cuts off rest of
sentence] Now you say, 'Where do people come up with these ideas?' I'll
tell you how we came up with these wonderful heresies."
[Continues to discuss a story about being snowed in
at Vail with a ski group and after drinking a few "hot totties," they came
up with all this. The audience breaks out in laughter. Now that Kelly is
confident he has the audience's trust, he will begin to plant more
notions.]
"Now folks, surely the greatest skeptics among us would
now be convinced that this must be the Biblical Place of Safety.
[Begins another slide show about Petra.] Wouldn't you rather have a half-million dollar condo in Vail as a
place to spend 3-1/2 years? Now, remember,
this is all for fun. But I wanted to make a point. Because I've
been able to take words from the Bible and thoughts from a place--now--and tie them together, and draw what no doubt seems like a very humorous
and far-flung conclusion, a radical thing, and surely no one would take me
seriously, in spite of all my personal human desires to the contrary that
we should consider Vail as the Place of Safety. But then you say, 'Now
wait a minute! Have we drawn some equally humorous
conclusions as we have viewed Biblical prophecy over a variety of times
and numbers and places and events?" [Jumps to a
different topic and discusses the number 666. Prattles on for the next 20
minutes about this "mystical number" and playing "number games." He
confuses the audience about how to calculate people's names to prove WHO the
Beast is. Discusses how the name of the Beast could be calculated to
represent Nero, the Papacy, Ellen G. White, Hitler, the Kaiser, Sun Myung
Moon, the computer in Brussels, Jerry Falwell, Billy Graham, Ronald Reagan,
and Pat Robertson. The audience breaks out in laughter when Ron Kelly reveals
that John Halford is the Beast.]
"You see what we do,
though? [Chastising voice used on audience]
We play games with prophecy. [Quickly reverts
to a playful tone] And you can have fun playing games with prophecy
and I titled the sermon 'Fun with Prophecy.' And John Halford, in spite of
this, remains my friend."
"Now we have found ourselves, in the Church, in prophetic times looking
for answers to prophetic puzzles, and prophetic terminologies. We have,
sort of a hobby, so to speak, about doing that, you and I do, and that's
fine, so long as we don't let it lead us to wrong conclusions."
[In the same breath, Kelly chastises members for
making a hobby out of prophecy, and then tells them that it's okay to do.
This causes cognitive dissonance in the members.]
"So long as it
doesn't lead us to look at incorrect sequences of events, looking for
numbers, people, places and events to fulfill prophecy, only to have our
prophecies disappear in time, passing it by because it didn't happen in
the way we thought, where we thought, to whom we thought."
[Members did not think up these things on their own.
It was taught from the pulpit and in the Church's literature.]
"And
we have a trail left behind us today, you and I do, of unfulfilled,
mistakenly interpreted prophecies which were, as it turns out, to be frank
with you, little more than prophecy games and speculations."
[Kelly refuses to call this what it really is: False
prophecies. And he refuses to point out that is was HWA who made these
countless false prophecies that members centered their lives around. Reads
Matthew 24; discusses the sequence of events in the Olivet prophecy.]
"This has lead us in the Church, over the years, to look for the beginnings
of those sequences...We have looked for a specific figure to
fulfill a specific event that would trigger the sequences."
[HWA taught members to look for these specific events to be fulfilled.]
"We have looked for special wars to be the trigger of sequences. We have
watched for famine, earthquakes, and pestilences. Over the many years, you
have built, if you were zealous, a file-folder of news clippings and
information that have made you watch the world's events to see the
triggering of a sequence." [Members were taught to do
this by the leadership. There were special columns written by John Halford
and Dexter Faulkner in the Worldwide News1 that focused on world events.
They were the "watch dogs," warning the members about these triggering
events.]
"Now I think it's a very safe statement to say, and I hope
you all agree with me, I don't think I'm doing something heretical here, I
think you'll all agree that no single event, no single prophet or messiah,
no single war, no single drought or famine, no single earthquake, no
single disease or pestilence, has yet triggered any sequence that
has lead to the Second Coming of Christ. And if there is a
sequence, it has to be yet in the future, but by that very statement it
makes some people still want to look for the sequence."
[Discusses that the new WCG booklet by David Hulme, "When Will
Christ Return?" points out that there will always be false Messiahs, wars,
famines, droughts and earthquakes. Talks about the big earthquake of 1987,
and the drought for the past several years. Admits that they have sent
reporters to cover it, and have written a sequence of articles and
television articles, which, "we introduced that thought." He defends
himself by saying that they weren't trying to call the Drought of '88 the
trigger, but merely announcing that there would be droughts and that '88
was "one of them," and that there have been scores of droughts in the past
2000 years.]
"Series of signs have been important in the Church. Let's go to
Leviticus 26 and see how we, in the past, took a series of events in the
Bible, applied them to conditions in the world we live in today, and
were wrong, to predict such a series of
sequences. Now does that shake anybody's faith?"
[Kelly puts the members on the spot. He is implying
that belief in false prophecy shouldn't shake one's faith, instead of
pointing out that they had all been following a false prophet.]
"For
me to stand in this auditorium and say that we who speculated that certain
events, or names, or numbers, in the past were wrong...I was among those who
did that. You might have been among those who did that. I will stand
before you with a certain amount of embarrassment to be frank and say, 'we
were wrong,' but I'll still say it." [Apparently
Kelly isn't embarrassed enough to admit he had been following a false
prophet and taught others to do the same.]
"I'm still willing to say
it, and why not? Why should that hurt to say we didn't understand it. And
should it not teach us a lesson?" [Continues to read
Leviticus 26 and the "seven times" punishment.] These
sequences of prophecy were interpreted by some to be a series of 7
year events that would begin and then culminate to establish God's Kingdom
on Earth..." [Talks about the drought of 1951, the Korean War, the Atomic
Bomb, the Russian threat, bomb shelters, and Sputnik.]
"Indeed, we
said, America has lost the pride of her power."
[Discusses 1952, '53, and '54 and articles he clipped from the newspaper
about "rabid bats" and "coyotes and skunks" and how they would render
America helpless. Talks about baptizing tours in 1960-61 and warning people
about the fulfillment of prophecy.]
"Sounds so silly
today that we would have said such a thing. And some of you who are
younger would say, "Aw, we didn't say that,
did we? [pauses for effect] Yeah...we
did.
[Said in sheepish tones. Audiences laughs.] Not all of us, maybe,
but we did." [Talks more about history, about the
forming of the EEC].
"Now that was proof positive that we were on
the right track and these things were rolling right along, and would
culminate in 1972. That final cycle would begin in 1972, but because the
Tribulation was only going to be 3-1/2 years, that last time would be 'cut
short'...so 1972 would trigger the final 7-year period but it would only
last 3-1/2 years because the Second Coming of Christ would come half way
into it and intervene and stop it." [Goes off onto
another subject--the 19-year time cycles; doesn't ever address that HWA
taught that 1975 would be Christ's return. Talks about the first broadcast
on Radio Luxembourg in 1953.]
"Now some enterprising mathematical
games player said, 'Isn't that interesting. Just like in the early New
Testament church, 19 years later, the gospel leaped to Europe.'"
[Kelly fails to point out that it was HWA who played
this "mathematical game" and told his followers in the
Mystery of the Ages that it was 19
years later that the gospel went to Radio Luxembourg. Goes on about
19-year time cycles and how it led to 1972. Talks about Daniel and the
1335-year prophecy. Talks about how it was calculated that the Church was
going to Petra on January 7, 1972.]
"There could be no doubt. Was
there doubt? Should you have believed it? Should you have made
any plans based upon it? [Talks in a loud,
challenging voice] Well I think, you know,
[stutters and muses] we've had 19 more years virtually gone by. You
look back upon that and we chuckle a little bit about it, which is okay."
[Those members who sold their homes and business are
not chuckling. Read more about the
1972 fiasco.]
"We had a program outlined where
the Church was going to flee on Sunday; we were going to Petra, we were
going to buy…uh, we were going to go aboard a fleet of airplanes. It--wasn't it interesting--that 747's, Lockheed 1011's, and DC-10, jumbo jets,
and maybe Airbuses...but we had jumbo jets now capable of taking 144,000
people on several flights from all over the world and somebody thought
that there was an airstrip being built right outside Petra. Maybe you
remember the rumors--to accommodate these jets that were going to take
us. We played games." [sounds incredulous using a "Can
you believe how stupid we were?" voice. Who was responsible for starting
the game in the first place? Members never thought this teaching was a
"game."]
"Uh, I mean it was fun and it was speculation, but it
wasn't always interpreted as fun and speculation."
[Who said it was fun? Child survivors were frightened to death, especially
if one of their parents was considered "unconverted" and wouldn't be able
to flee with the rest of the family.]
"What I gave you about Vail is
fun--foolishness if you please. Who's the Beast? It's fun! It's a word
game! It's a number game! But--if you take these things too seriously,
you have a problem. [The problem was HWA and his
organization who would have put people out for not taking these beliefs
seriously. Kelly repeatedly resorts to subtle shaming tactics to get
members to reject their former beliefs.] I hope you can see what I
mean."
"Now I want to put some words of caution in. Let's go to 2 Peter 3:3-4,
lest you draw now a totally wrong conclusion as to where I'm going to end
up today. 2 Peter 3:3-4 warns us not to get into a flippant
[starts scolding], casual,
fun-with-prophecy attitude that leads you to an opposite
conclusion." [Well which is it, Ron? Another example
of causing cognitive dissonance by telling members to have "fun with
prophecy" and later telling them that the Bible warns against having a
"fun with prophecy" attitude. Reads 2 Peter 3:3-4]
"So I'm not up
here today having fun with prophecy to implant doubt or
discouragement in your mind. Rather just the opposite. I'm trying to
ask us today to take an intelligent, careful look at
prophecy. [Reads Luke 21:29-31] When you see
the things prophesied in the Bible begin to happen, know that the Kingdom
of God is near. But you see, He didn't say that you
couldn't misinterpret some of these things and draw some wrong
conclusions, and indeed we have." [Yes, Jesus did
warn about false prophets, but Kelly will avoid discussing this. He
excuses false prophecies as "misinterpretations". If the WCG was God's
only true church, then why would God allow His apostle to misinterpret
Scripture?]
"I don't think anyone would now look back on the events
from 1951, or the 19-year time cycle theory, and have it hold any
validity." [Discusses a person he met who said that
the Church wasn't ready in 1972 and had to go through a third 19-year time
cycle. Kelly does not explain that it was HWA who blamed the members for
Christ not returning because the "members weren't without spot or wrinkle"
and the Church hadn't "gotten herself ready" and had to be "put back on track." This
was his excuse for his failed prophecy. Kelly points out that the "church
is back on track" but the 19-year time cycle will expire next January and
he hasn't packed his bags, nor intends to. He makes a joke about going to
Vail in January every year and gets the audience to laugh.]
"So you
can draw some wrong conclusions if you know what I mean."
[Talks about being in the process of
preaching the gospel to the whole world as a witness. He states that The
World Tomorrow program and church literature has "taken a very cautious
approach."]
"A conservative approach, if you please, to prophesying
wild things and setting dates. You have seen NO programs proving where the
Place of Safety is; you have seen NO programs about the Beast and the
mysterious number 666, and I don't think you will any time soon."
[Comments how some will say The World Tomorrow
program has "watered down" prophecy. Kelly claims it's a strong voice that
gives an introduction to the world, not the church to the Kingdom of God.
Confesses that he was "one of those people" who told people in the 1950's
about "rabid bats and 7-year time cycles, etc. and states:
"And I
am embarrassed. And if these events don't happen, you will know there has
been a false prophet among you! [The
audience chuckles.] That was dumb to say. Because you know what's
true? There was a false prophet--me--among them."
[Kelly is willing to be the scapegoat and never says
that he learned these false prophecies from HWA and minimizes his actions
by stating that "it was done sincerely."]
"Perhaps there was no major
harm done, but I do know some harm was done because I know people made
decisions based on dates; they made decisions about marriage, about
children, about their health, about home buying, about careers, about
educations..." [Another duplicitous statement. Kelly
insists that no major harm done, but gives a long list of things that
members had suffered due to HWA's false prophecies. How can Kelly make
such a callous statement? Major harm was done to the members, and Kelly
can never hold HWA accountable.] You see, I hurt for that. [Apparently he didn't hurt enough to tell the truth
about HWA.]
"I don't want people to do that in the church, or
viewers of The World Tomorrow telecast, or readers of our literature--to
make those kind of mistakes again. The lesson we should have learned is
that if you don't know when the date is, who the person is, and what the
numbers mean, don't state them publicly.
[annunciates between each word] I don't
care. You can sit around with a group of friends and start playing with
1335s, 1290s, 1260s, 42 months, 666s and all those numbers. That's fine.
Just consider it speculation." [The lesson that members
should have learned is, "Don't follow a false prophet."]
[Kelly discusses members stating that the Church will "lose it's zeal"
when prophecy is taken away.]
"Why? Why would the
Church lose its zeal to proclaim the wonderful message of the Kingdom of
God to the world because we can't name names, places and dates??"
[Kelly gives a long analogy about how God views
prophecy from His perspective. Tries to give a time frame from Adam
through to today. Claims that when we are within a century of Christ's
return, we are in the last 2% of time. Compares this to a human lifespan.
Gives distracting equations and states that members have a job to do no
matter how much time is left. Kelly states that this doesn't discourage
him and that he's excited about the work that's left to do. Since the
ministry only pays one tithe, he can stay excited, but understandably,
members cannot.]
[Kelly emphasizes that members must "be ready whenever that
occurs."] Because I don't know who the Beast is, doesn't bother me.
But when I do know who it is, it will be very interesting...But you know
we thought it was a variety of people from the Kaiser, to Hitler, to Franz
Joseph Strauss. Do you remember the Franz Joseph Strauss-Beast-Theory??
And some people now say, 'Otto Von Hapsburg.'" [Makes
a joke about not being able to make his name come out to 666, and the
audience laughs.]
"And when we get to those last 3-1/2 years in
which the Church would be in its final preparation and training for the
Kingdom, that would be about the last two weeks of the human life."
[Kelly, again, engages in duplicity as he supports
the idea that the Church would go into a final preparation and training in
the 3-1/2 year time period.]
[Reads Acts 13:41 and states that the early apostles read it and
realized it was about them. Kelly states that the phrase "The Work" comes
from this verse.] "The Work. You and I are a part of what we call
the Work. The Work is the job of proclaiming and teaching the message of
Christ, to go out and make disciples of all nations, yes, as a witness and
as a warning before the end comes." [Warning? Didn't
Kelly just tell members that it was foolish to speculate about the
end?
Reads Rom. 9:28 and discusses the "short work."]
"Jesus Christ sets the
tone in John 9 the same way we ought to do it. We're doing the Work of
God, carrying out the instructions of Christ. We have a Church of
enthusiasm and excitement [And one completely devoid
of truth], a church growing in wisdom and in knowledge and in
balance, and how to proclaim the gospel to the world without falling into
the traps of number games and prophetic puzzles that lead to embarrassment
in the wrong way." [Kelly may be "embarrassed," but he
isn't sorry. Reads John 9:4 and talks about working while it's day.
Discusses Jesus and the Passover. Discusses that the Church was small and
persecuted.]
"It's still very small, but has a very powerful voice
in the world. It is day, and has been day since 1934 when the Work began
in the media methods that we are presently using...It's day, and Mr. Tkach
leads the Church shining in the light, to proclaim and preach the gospel
of the Kingdom of God to the world. Excitedly, with zeal,
and I hope you'll never lose that zeal. [Tries to
drum up enthusiasm. Talks about night will fall, but one cannot
predict when that will be]. There's still a job to do, and I hope
YOU will share in the excitement and enthusiasm. And when you think about
prophecy, I hope you will think about it from a balanced, CORRECT
perspective, and realize where we are, where we're going, and the most
important thing is, as Mr. Tkach is leading us, is to be prepared, to be
ready, to be personally growing, to be growing as a Church, to be united
as a family, but doing the Work that we've been called to do. I hope you can enjoy having a little "fun" with prophecy and at the
same time, carry on as long as it's day."
******************* End of Tape ********************
Final thoughts:
I clearly recall when Ron Kelly gave this taped sermon. After services,
I heard comments from members such as, "I never believed in
that stuff!" One young lady, a newer member, said, "I didn't know what he
was talking about. I didn't know the church believed all of that." Another
member, standing next to us, quickly interjected in a snooty tone, "Some
people, who didn't know what they were talking about, would take the
Bible out of context and make prophecies that weren't true. As a result,
some of them were dumb enough to sell their homes and quit their
jobs." Kelly's propaganda worked well. Members quickly divorced themselves
from the idea of going to Petra. I know I was stunned by this sermon. If
we weren't going to the Petra, why had I been taught all those
years that we were? If we weren't going to Petra, why did HWA teach
this in his literature? Why did Gerald Waterhouse travel from church to
church teaching about our "final training"? And how would we obtain our
salvation if we weren't going to be there? Why should I continue to give
sacrificially when "the Work" could go on forever?
I gave all I had
because I was made to believe that time was short. Still, I was a very
loyal member and was taught to never question headquarters. I trusted Ron Kelly. After all, he was one of the
presenters of The World Tomorrow program. How could he ever do anything
wrong? I blamed myself for lacking zeal and
for being a fool to have believed in all this nonsense for the past
decade. Now I see that the "new" leadership is no less deceptive
than the old. They have learned how to use mind
control but with a new twist. Instead of the yelling and threats, they
used humor to "laugh away" all our former beliefs, and shame,
condescension, and embarrassment to get us to adopt the new ones. "Wasn't
that silly? Ha! Ha! Ha! How could we ever believe in such nonsense! Ha!
Ha! Ha! Well, now we're more mature, and we aren't afraid to change,
unlike these other churches." Jehovah's Witnesses use
the same tactics. They believe that they are given "new light" and they
believe they are the True Church because "they are willing to change." Of
course, what they don't understand is that they, like the WCG have made so
many "changes" that there won't be any unity in the Body when Christ
returns. Those who have died with outdated beliefs will come up in the
First Resurrection along with those who are still alive and holding
completely different beliefs. But Ron Kelly and the Headquarters
leadership will never point this out, nor have they ever been truthful to
the members during "The Changes." Kelly was willing to be the
scapegoat so members wouldn't focus on HWA and ask too many questions.
His gamble paid off handsomely as he is now one of the top men at WCG
Headquarters.
Transcription and comments by
Kelly Marshall
Exit & Support Network™
October 27, 2006
Footnote:
1 In Feb. 2005 The Worldwide News in the United States
changed its name to
WCG Today. In May 2006 it was changed to Together.]
Rumors (Sermon Excerpts by Joseph Tkach Jr. Denying Changes;
April, 1993)
Read more of Ron Kelly's words
from the DVD/Video Called to Be
Free (2004).
Propaganda
(also shows how to detect it)
Back to
WCG Changes and History Revision
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