Letter to Worldwide
Church of God, Philippines
(On Apostasy--A Radical Proposal)
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Is WCG now embracing New Age teachers and philosophies? This letter was
sent to their National Director in the Philippines and pastors in the
area by Edgardo Meneses, a former member of the WCG, regarding the gravity of WCG's error
in doctrine. This letter later reached close to 350 Worldwide Church
of God ministers, including those at Headquarters.
This letter was begun on September 11, 2006 and was mailed out October 1, 2006. Includes comments at end by ESN and email reply from author Brian Flynn to a WCG Philippine deacon concerning how we must be discerning concerning false teachings coming into the church. Also read: Last Wake-Up Call to Joseph Tkach Jr. Goes Unheeded Rebuttal to Mike Morrison's letter from Edgardo Meneses
Las Piñas City and Baliuag, Bulacan
September 11, 2006
Mr. EUGENE M. GUZON
National Director
Worldwide Church of God Philippines
and
Pastors Andrew Teng, Rey Taniajura, Len Joson
Audie Santibañez, George Escara, Rex Dela Peña,
Pete Melendez
Dear Sirs:
This could be my last letter to you inasmuch as you do not reply
to my emails. The three decades of my association and membership in the
Worldwide Church of God speaks for itself as to why I have this earnest
appeal before I finally cut myself off from you. I take your silence to
mean that you do not want anything to do with me at all.
I am writing this letter not only in the spirit of Jude 3 but also
in the spirit of 1 John 4:11. If I were indifferent I would just ignore
what I know has been transpiring in the Worldwide Church of God for
years.
As I said in my previous letters I am bringing to your attention
only two things of concern: Amillennialism and Ecumenism. I see that
you are not convinced of the gravity of error of this doctrine and
movement, respectively. I think that you believe that the church is
doing right by embracing the same. Therefore you feel sure that there
is no cause for alarm whatsoever.
For several months I have been suspecting, from what I have been
reading in WCG publications, that the church has adopted Replacement
Theology which is an essential component of Amillennialism. Last week
my suspicion had ended. I received an email which featured
articles from "In Transition" magazine. The August 1995 issue had this
quote from Dr. J. Michael Feazell (the interview happened during FOT
1992): "We cannot understand Revelation. It is filled with wild
metaphor . . . . The advent won't occur like we thought . . . . THE
CHURCH HAS REPLACED ISRAEL. Why would there only be a few survivors of
one nation in the world tomorrow? . . . Physical blessings don't count
if they are given 4,000 years later" (emphasis mine).
An article on
WCG's website has this to say: "It seems clear that the vision in
Revelation 7 has the church in view, not the ancient nation of Israel .
. . The church is the extension of national Israel, or better, its
REPLACEMENT, elevated to a spiritual plane" ("Who Are the 144,000?"
2000, WCG, emphasis mine).
It is undeniable, then, that the Worldwide Church of God believes
in and teaches Replacement Theology. Now, you might say, what's wrong
with Replacement Theology? I would say that Replacement Theology is not
only a wrong doctrine or concept, foreign to what the Bible says -- it
is a lie (cf. 1 Tim. 4:1,2 and Rev. 12 -- Satan [the father of lies,
John 8:44] hates Israel as well as the Church). Surely, as a church we
would not teach people a lie (see Rev. 22:15). Let me quote scriptures
that prove Replacement Theology is a BIG LIE:
"Thus saith the LORD, which giveth the sun for a light by day, and
the ordinances of the moon and of the stars for a light by night, which
divideth the sea when the waves thereof roar; The LORD of hosts is his
name: If those ordinances depart from before me, saith the LORD, then
the seed of Israel also shall cease from being a nation before me for
ever. Thus saith the LORD; If heaven above can be measured, and the
foundations of the earth searched out beneath, I will also cast off all
the seed of Israel for all that they have done, saith the LORD" (Jer.
31:35-37). God has not cast off Israel (Rom. 11:26), but the WCG has
presumed that He has. The WCG does not see prophetic significance in
the nation of Israel. If we teach Replacement Theology we are making
God a liar. This is very serious indeed. See Zechariah 2:8.
"I have made a covenant with my chosen, I have sworn unto David my
servant, Thy seed will I establish for ever, and build up thy throne to
all generations . . . My covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing
that is gone out of my lips" (Psalm 89:3,4,34). But apparently the WCG
does not believe that; otherwise it would not have accepted Replacement
Theology.
Dr. Feazell's statement notwithstanding, God had not reneged on
His promises to Israel after a few hundred or a few thousand years.
During Armstrong days we used to quote Abrahamic covenant scriptures and
teach that God's promises to Abraham were everlasting (Gen. 17: 6-8; 26:
3,4; 28: 13,14). Postponement of God's promises doesn't make Him a
renegade. If God can break His promises to Israel, then He may also
break His promise of salvation for us. We would have no assurance of
salvation then.
Of course we know that God cannot lie (Titus 1: 2; cf. Micah 7:
20). The problem is unbelief. Instead of believing the plain meaning
of scriptures, we look for hidden meanings. Spiritualizing scriptures
is a main cause of Replacement Theology and Amillennialism. It is not a
purpose of this letter to argue for a literal approach to reading
scriptures. I know that writers in Glendora have all their reasons for
believing as they do. I would just point out that the New Testament
shows that Old Testament prophetic scriptures were fulfilled literally.
Therefore, the message of the Bible will escape us if we are prone to
allegorizing or spiritualizing scriptures. It has happened to many,
including WCG writers.
I cannot think of why the Worldwide Church of God has come to
adopt heretical doctrines except that the Bible says apostasy will
permeate Christendom in the last days (2 Thess. 2: 3; 1 Tom. 4: 1,2;
Luke 18: 8; Rev. 3: 14-18, etc.). Looking at its history I could see
that the WCG has been susceptible to deception. In the process of going
mainstream the leaders in California did not discriminate among
theologians and church leaders whom they went to for help and
recognition as to who had sound biblical doctrines. The result is that
the WCG has ended up espousing unbiblical doctrines and liberalism.
In WCG's doctrinal articles, the way the authors write casts doubt
to the reader's mind instead of upholding firm belief in the Word of
God. This is true with the articles on creation and science and on the
Millennium. It looks like the authors write from Higher Criticism point
of view, lending more weight to man's thinking instead of believing what
the Bible plainly says. In this regard here's a startling statement:
"Out of the 260 chapters in the New Testament, only part of one is about
the millennium. I suggest that this shows its relative importance
(Michael Morrison, "Three Views of the Millennium," 2000, WCG). Dr.
Morrison is saying that part of God's Word -- Rev. 20: 1-10 -- is not
important. He is saying in effect, "Lord Jesus, your revelation [Rev.
1: 1] that the Messianic kingdom will last a thousand years is not
important. The fulfillment of voluminous Old Testament prophecies are
not that important, are they?" That's Dr. Michael Morrison versus God.
I have said in another letter that the WCG downplays the
Millennium. I'm not sure if I was correct in saying that. Maybe I
should have said the WCG has written it off as doctrine of the Bible.
Here are other testimonies to that effect: "Although the Worldwide
Church of God has traditionally been premillennial, the church does not
require its members to believe that Christ will set up a temporary
kingdom after he returns . . . Millennialism is not a doctrinal point on
which we must seek conformity" ("A Balanced Approach to the
Millennium"). "Raising premillennial dispensationalism to the level of
primary doctrine causes division in the body of Christ . . . Neither
Jesus nor the apostles preached a millennial gospel" ("18 Truths
Restored by HWA"). This is unity at the expense of doctrinal purity.
More on this later. I have to comment first on the claim that the Lord
and the apostles did not preach a millennial gospel.
Dr. Morrison also wrote, "No other scriptures [except Revelation,
he says] speak of a temporary kingdom to be set up when Christ returns .
. . The Millennium was not part of Jesus' gospel" (Discipleship 101,
Unit 10A -- The End - Only the Beginning," 1997, WCG, insertion mine).
The Millennium not part of Jesus' gospel? On the contrary, the
following scriptures will prove that the millennial kingdom was the main
thrust of the Lord Jesus' preaching prior to His rejection by the Jews.
(You well know these scriptures. I'm quoting them here to emphasize
their literal meaning as opposed to their allegorized or spiritualized
reading):
1) "And the angel said unto her, Fear not, Mary: for thou hast
found favour with God. And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb,
and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. He shall be
great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God
shall give unto him the throne of his father David: And he shall reign
over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no
end" (Luke 1: 30-33). It seems to be a belief of WCG writers that the
Jewish hope of a Messianic kingdom was just a vain wish. But the angel
who talked to Mary didn't think so. If the Messianic kingdom that the
Israelites hoped for was just a figment of their imagination, why would
the angel talk like that? Surely, Mary could not think of anything else
but a literal kingdom over which the Messiah would rule. This is
nothing less than an announcement by the angel Gabriel of the millennial
gospel.
2) "In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the
wilderness of Judea, And saying, Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is
at hand" (Matt. 3: 1,2). "The kingdom of heaven" that the Baptist was
talking about is not a kingdom in heaven. Rather, it is the same
Messianic kingdom to be established on earth as prophesied by the
prophets of Israel. John was Christ's forerunner announcing or
preaching the millennial kingdom.
3) "From that time Jesus began to preach, and to say, Repent: for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Matt. 4: 17). Having proclaimed that
the millennial kingdom was at hand, the Lord Jesus proceeded to
elucidate the laws of the kingdom. Hence the Sermon on the Mount. It
is to be noted that the offer of the kingdom was conditional: the
people had to repent. We know the story. The Jews rejected and
crucified their Messiah. Thus the kingdom was postponed. God's program
for Israel was not discarded -- it was only postponed because of their
unbelief. At the Second Coming of the Messiah, the people will believe
(Zech. 12-14), and the millennial kingdom will be set up.
4) "Then answered Peter and said unto him, Behold, we have
forsaken all, and followed thee; what shall we have therefore? And
Jesus said unto them, Verily, I say unto you, That ye which have
followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the
throne of his glory, ye shall also sit upon twelve thrones, judging the
twelve tribes of Israel" (Matt. 19: 27,28). The regeneration of the
world will begin with the onset of the Millennium. Who says the Lord
Jesus didn't preach a millennial gospel?
5) "Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations.
And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me;
That ye may eat and drink at my table in my kingdom, and sit on thrones
judging the twelve tribes of Israel" (Luke 22: 28-30). The twelve
tribes of Israel are on earth, not in heaven.
6) Matthew 20: 20-28 relates the story of John and James' mother
requesting the Lord for top positions for her sons in the coming
kingdom. The Lord did not question the validity of the request. There
was indeed a kingdom coming; only, He said that "to sit on my right
hand, and on my left, is not mine to give, but it shall be given for
whom it is prepared of my Father" (v.23).
7) "When they therefore were come together, they asked of him,
saying, Lord, wilt thou at this time restore again the kingdom to
Israel?" (Acts 1: 6) From the beginning of John the Baptist's ministry,
no clarification was needed as to what the "kingdom" was. It was the
Jews' hope of a coming Messianic (millennial) kingdom foretold by their
prophets. Again, the Lord did not censure the disciples' question; it
was a valid question. His answer: "It is not for you to know the times
and seasons, which the Father hath put in his own power. But ye shall
receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall
be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in
Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth" (vv. 7,8). Because
of the Jews' rejection of the offer of the kingdom, judgment must first
come, the kingdom being postponed until the Second Coming when the
remnant of Israel will accept Him (Matt. 23: 39).
There are many more scriptures in the New Testament that prove
that the Lord Jesus and His apostles preached a millennial gospel (Matt.
10: 5-7, etc.), contrary to Dr. Morrison's bold but false statements.
Now concerning the matter of Ecumenism. True,
as a Bible-based
cult we have been exclusivist in the past. But to go to the other side
of the pendulum, I believe, is not warranted. The Bible upholds the
doctrine of Separation. There is the biblical injunction to separate
from those who hold heretical doctrines. TO JOIN OR ENDORSE THEM IS TO
APOSTATIZE.
I have quoted from a WCG article a statement that says to raise
the Millennium question to the level of primary doctrine is to divide
the body of Christ. Here is Dr. Joe Tkach himself speaking of the same
thing: "Christianity would be better if we can focus on the primary
core issues, the essential doctrines of the Christian faith and be more
generous of the peripheral items. So often, the reason that
denominations split is because they focus on secondary, peripheral
items." ("Evangelicals Today," March-April 1998, Philippine Council of
Evangelical Churches). In other words, doctrinal accommodation for the
sake of unity. Unity at the expense of truth.
Does the Bible contain peripheral doctrines? Who has the right to
judge which parts of the Bible are important and which parts are not?
Should we tolerate false doctrines and false teachers?
1) Matthew 4: 4 and Acts 20: 27 do not say that some parts of the
Word of God are negligible or "peripheral."
2) Acts 20: 29-31; Phil. 3: 2; Col. 1: 28 -- If we love the
brethren we will warn them about false doctrines and false teachers.
3) 2 Tim. 4: 2-4 -- False teachers are to be reproved.
4) Romans 16: 17 -- Apostate teachers are to be avoided.
5) Titus 3: 10 -- They are to be rejected.
6) 2 John 10 -- Receive them not.
7) 2 Cor. 6: 14 - 7: 1 -- Separation from religious apostasy is
commanded.
Warnings against apostasy are spread throughout the Bible. God
does not take apostasy lightly. I am appalled, therefore, at how the
Worldwide Church of God has adopted false teachings from individuals and
organizations such as the following:
1) RICHARD J. FOSTER -- Dr. Tkach has announced that Dr. Richard
J. Foster will be the guest speaker at WCG ministerial conference next
year [July 26-29, 2007]. He will speak on "spiritual formation."1 WCG ministers have
learned from Dr. Foster. Headquarters probably distributed Foster's
book "Celebration of Discipline." While I do not have the historical
facts here, I know the current fact: that the church is being fed the
teachings of a New Ager.2 The members are perhaps unaware that Dr.
Foster's teachings derive from Catholic mystics and are not biblical.3
He may quote scriptures, but he has his own agenda of spirituality
foreign to the Bible.
The WCG endorses a 1995 letter that Richard Foster sent to those
on his Renovaré mailing list regarding prophecy. At the conclusion of
the letter Foster praised Augustine for opposing "the prophetic
literalism of Chiliasm. Instead of the imminent material, millennial
kingdom of Chiliasm, he helped his people see 'the City of God' . . .
May something of the same faith-filled sensibility arise today."
Augustine's Amillennialism/Replacement Theology has caused horrible
tragedies in the world -- Roman Catholicism, Crusades, Inquisitions,
Holocaust, Anti-Semitism, etc. And the WCG has chosen to believe
Augustine . . . and Foster.
2) RICK WARREN -- The celebrity of Purpose-Driven fame. My sister
received a copy of the book, "The Purpose-Driven Life," given to her by
a church member in Bulacan. I also received a copy from a friend who is
residing in California. I know that the WCG endorses the book head
over heels. There are Purpose-Driven seminars based on Warren's
spiritual growth strategy. Little do the members realize that the book
contains questionable teachings, suitable paraphrases from "The Message"
of Peterson, mysticism [New Age], pop psychology, etc.4 Warren, out of his desire
for church growth, uses marketing techniques to lure the unchurched to
join the emerging church. It is my personal view that Warren is
teaching his brand of salvation by works doctrine, which we know will
not save anyone.
3) EUGENE PETERSON -- The WCG endorses his blasphemous New
Testament, Psalms and Proverbs version. Blasphemous because he dared to
alter the words and meaning of scriptures. How liberal can the church
get? Peterson -- and those who endorse The Message -- have forgotten
Revelation 22: 18,19. Not only does the WCG recommend The Message in
its articles, it actually buys copies of the book and distributes them
to people who are object of evangelization (e. g., at their youth summer
camps).
The Message actually deletes some words of
the scriptures and puts in
instead the author's ideas. Although most of the book may be just fine
paraphrases, the watering down of key verses makes the book unworthy to
be equated with other Bible translations. The author dared to distort
moral and doctrinal teachings of the Word of God.
4) The GRAHAMS -- Last February WCG members attended Franklin
Graham's festival crusade in Manila. Although I do not know much about
Franklin, I know that
Billy Graham
has been apostatizing for decades.
His cooperation with the Roman Catholic Church is well known. He has
praised the Pope as the leader of the Church. He is number one promoter
of Ecumenism, sharing the slot with the Pope.
5) HANK HANEGRAAFF -- One of the first Christendom leaders that
top WCG leaders went to for help in their quest for orthodoxy.
Unfortunately they came to a confirmed preterist.5 Who knows how much of
Hanegraaff's preterism was caught by Dr. Tkach and Co.
6) BRIAN MCLAREN -- Author of "A Generous Orthodoxy." Recently
Christian Odyssey ran a short article introducing the book. McLaren6 is
another intellectual voice for Ecumenism.
The WCG doesn't need to be
convinced.
7) PROMISE KEEPERS -- One of their promises is to support one's
pastor 100%. Mormons in this organization do that. So do the Jehovah's
Witnesses and Roman Catholics. Seventh-day Adventists, too, etc.
Promise Keepers is religious tolerance (Ecumenicalism) organization.7
I limit myself to sevens. There are others, of course.
A major problem with the Worldwide Church of God is that prophecy
is not being preached from the pulpit as it should be -- another swing
of the pendulum. Prophecy is a large part of God's revelation,
therefore it is not hard to see that to refrain from teaching it to the
members is amiss. One reason given as to why the present-day WCG does
not give emphasis to prophecy is that of past debacle with "prediction
addiction." But I think we should not be held back from teaching
prophecy by the memory of past proclivities of Armstrongism that we
did. We were a cult then, therefore our posture on prophecy at that
time should not be considered as a reference point in deciding how we
preach the prophetic Word today. The Bible is the guide.
Now, prophecy says that in the last days, a world religion will
exist, called Babylon. During the Tribulation Period this world church
will be a cohort of the Beast and the False Prophet. The book of
Revelation tells the story, a story that will be fulfilled as foreseen
by the apostle John. I believe that today's Ecumenical Movement is the
beginning of this end-time religious Babylon.
We had better be warned! More than ever we need to have
DISCERNMENT. Let us not suppose that because the goals of this
ecumenical movement are good in themselves that there is nothing wrong
with it. Ecumenical churches are ripe for the picking. If we neglect
prophecy we are wide open to deception by the enemy. The WCG, steeped
in ecumenicalism and neglecting prophecy, is too close to the trees and it
cannot see the forest, or, it is like the frog in a pot of slowly
boiling water.
I believe that the foregoing is serious enough an expose to merit
a doctrinal conference of the Philippine ministry. If you are concerned
about doctrine -- and I know you are -- you will not ignore this
letter. May I have a suggestion to make:
I have asked Mr. Paul Kroll for Dr. Tkach's email address, but my
request was refused. I suggest that this letter be forwarded to the
Pastor General himself. If he is concerned about doctrine -- I presume
that he is -- he will make a reply. From there, you would know what to
do next.
Based on track record, however, church officials in California
would not readily listen to members or field ministers pointing out to
them some doctrinal errors. It may be expected therefore that they will
ignore letters of this kind.
Haven't we noticed that it is the "imperialists" who have
[wittingly or unwittingly] deceived us in the past? This is not to
prejudice other nationalities, but only to learn from past and present
experience. Many of our brethren in the old WCG are right now being misled
by non-Filipino leaders of UCG,
PCG, LCG, CGI
[ICG],
RCG, WCG Remnant,
etc. Can't we judge things with the Bible as our guide, independent of
ministers from overseas? We don't have the Americans, or Australians,
or Irishmen, or Germans, or Russians to interpret the Bible for us.
With the foregoing premise, therefore, I am proposing to the
Philippine ministry of the Worldwide Church of God for them to at least
for a while keep a distance from Headquarters and take time to review
things for themselves.
If Headquarters will not change from their doctrinal errors, then
Acts 5: 29 is the scripture to follow. To do otherwise would be treason
to truth. Declaring independence from religious oppression by HQ is
imperative if they will not listen to reason and revelation. Surely, an
organizational connection is very little to give up when it is God who
is calling us to His side.
I hope that this letter will serve as a whistle blower. Apostasy
in the church must be arrested. You owe it to the members to be on the
side of the truth, and most of all, it is to God that we have to account
for how we respond to His Word.
Sincerely, in Christ,
EDGARDO S. MENESES
cc: WCG Bulacan
Read Edgardo's 8-2-06 email to ESN about WCG and the apostate church COMMENTS FROM ESN: Edgardo (who also goes by Edgar) said he sent this letter out of concern for the WCG pastors, and especially out of concern for the members and in obedience to God. Few, if any, bothered to reply, and those that did were either unfavorable towards what he sent, questioned if he had "misconceptions," or else remained silent. It is evident that most pastors will not easily give up their affiliation with WCG even when they see errors. One person that received his letter was a writer for the "new" WCG and a member in a WCG congregation in North Carolina. He replied to Edgar's letter by saying,
Another WCG minister in the U.S. replied with these words to Edgar:
And still another WCG minister told Edgar that he (Edgar) had chosen to follow "heresy" of dispensationalism, which (according to this minister) is "elevating Israel above the body of Christ--the Church." [December 27, 2006 email; emp. ESN's.] One must ask if WCG is the one accepting heresy by their endorsement of New Age teachers such as Richard J. Foster, Rick Warren, Dallas Willard, etc.? [For links to articles exposing these men, see Worldwide Church of God: New Changes, Ecumenical & New Age Connections] One man forwarded ESN a recent email correspondence that he had with a WCG pastor in a North Carolina congregation. The pastor was asked if he believes that Christ is coming back to earth to set up a millennial Kingdom for one thousand years. Here was his reply: [emp. ours]
Mike Morrison of WCG HQ (now a "doctor" from his studies in Fuller Seminary8) also received Edgar's letter and replied with a lengthy letter on 10-16-06 to "set the record straight." Morrison also Cc it to the other eight ministers. Some of his confusing words were:
Then what do they teach? Morrison didn't make that clear. Some of the words Mike Morrison used (in regard to Edgar) were: [emp. ours]
Morrison ended his letter by stating:
Morrison also included three "Wows"
to some of Edgar's statements. One ESN helper who reviewed Morrison's letter said it was "belittling" and the "overall
deception was thinly veiled." In spite of Mike Morrison denying that WCG
teaches the Church is "spiritual Israel," there are enough quotes on
their site to prove otherwise.9
Morrison included with his email an attachment on "Replacement Theology"
which was to explain that they don't teach it, but in
reality was actually supporting it!
Edgardo has replied to Morrison's letter,
commenting on each of his statements. Read:
A Rebuttal to Mike Morrison's Letter
(includes Morrison's statements).
Leaders at WCG headquarters, in their ambivalence, will deny that they are teaching or endorsing certain things, or are a part of the ecumenical movement. They make it hard to pin down exactly what they do believe, and when confronted with their errors and what they have said, they simply give more spin control, discounting evidence, and/or saying they were "not quoted accurately." In the meantime, their mixed bag of beliefs is compatible with many modern, liberal churches. Note: Replacement Theology teaches that God is finished with the nation of Israel and that the promises in the Bible concerning Israel have now been given to the Church. For further study, see the following: The Dangers of Reformed Theology and How is the Term Israel Used in the New Testament? (The last part explains Galatians 6:16: "The Israel of God.")
----- Original Message -----
From: Brian Flynn
To:
Cc:
'Exit & Support Network'
Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2007 4:57 PM
Subject: RE: Brian Flynn's Book
Footnotes by ESN: 1 "Coming Events – activity calendar for the WCG"; "Worldwide Church of God Caribbean," July 26, 2006. [Update: More than 800 attended the conference, including 19 Filipino WCG ministers with their wives.] 2 See the exposé article: A Critique on the Ministry of Richard Foster. 3 Refer to: Renovaré, known as a mystical movement. 4 Read: Excerpts from Deceived on Purpose: The New Age Implications of the Purpose-Driven Church and An Analysis of Rick Warren's The Purpose-Driven Life. 5 Hank Hanegraaff is known as an amillennial, partial preterist. 6 For exposé articles on Brian McLaren, do a search for his name on Lighthouse Trails Research Project (Exposing the Dangers of Contemplative Spirituality). 7 The Promise Keepers came out of the Vineyard Fellowship.
8
Many of
the ministers in WCG in the U.S. who have Doctorate degrees obtained
them from Fuller Theological Seminary (some from Azusa Pacific
University). (The WCG Philippine ministry goes to Haggai Institute
for leadership training, which trains them in "quality control.")
Most of the "church growth movement" (i. e., Rick Warren, etc.) can
be traced back to Fuller. Fuller
Theological Seminary, one of the New Age WCG mentors, houses the
extensive archive of David J. DuPlessis (1905-1987).
DuPlessis, a South African British agent, was head of the imperial "cultmaster"
Apostolic Faith Mission denomination, who came to America and
supervised the creation of Pentecostalism. He was consultant to
International Missionary Council and World Council of
Churches. DuPlessis was characterized as "Mr. Pentecostalism"
for his success in infiltrating American denominational churches
with Charismatic Pentecostalism and British-Israelism. The World
Council of Churches put their stamp of approval on DuPlessis, as the
designated-by them-world representative of the new, "improved"
Pentecostalism. For more info on Fuller Theological Seminary, read
this offsite article.
9 To see some of these quotes read: Worldwide Church of God: New Changes, Ecumenical & New Age Connections.
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.)
Last Wake-Up Call to Joseph Tkach Jr. Goes Unheeded Worldwide Church of God: New Changes, Ecumenical & New Age Connections Is Worldwide Church of God Still Holding on to Some of Herbert W. Armstrong's Doctrines? Outsider's Inside Update Newsletters (Important reading which looks behind the scenes at the real activities and associations pertaining to the "transformation" of the WCG; shows how doctrine was used as a massive propaganda tool) Spiritual Formation? Another Name for Contemplative Spirituality [offsite link] The Issue of Other Religious Practices as Worship in the Church (shows the eastern mystical source of contemplative and centering prayer) [offsite link] Back to Research Information on Worldwide Church of God
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