| During the Ministerial
Conference in May 1974, Herbert W. Armstrong (HWA) applied Paul's
statement from Galatians 1:11-12 to himself: "The gospel which was
preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of man,
neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ."
Then Herbert added: "I say the same thing, brethren!" Not
wanting to be outdone by Paul, Herbert claimed that he too learned
"by the revelation of Jesus Christ." He went on to say,
"I was not converted as the result of the teaching or preaching of
any man."
In a sermon on July 24, 1976,
he declared, "I came to the truth in a way I know of no other
church leader. I know of no other minister who ever came to it by
himself through the leading of God in that way."
The Origin of
Herbert's Unique Doctrines
The truth is, however, that
many of the teachings of the
Worldwide Church of God were plagiarized
from other religious leaders and were not "revealed"
personally to Herbert by God, as he claims. Consider for a moment that a
Seventh Day Adventist publication, Prophecy Speaks, was reprinted
almost verbatim with many of its gross inaccuracies in Herbert
Armstrong's Proof of the Bible booklet. (Read the article
"Herbert Armstrong 'Disproves' the Bible" for further
information.)
Much of the material in HWA's
book, The United States and British Commonwealth in Prophecy
(copyright 1967), was extracted nearly verbatim from John H. Allen's
book Judah's Sceptre and Joseph's Birthright (written in 1902).
Rather than give Allen the credit he deserved, HWA claimed God had
revealed to him the "master key" that unlocks the meaning of
the Bible's prophecies. He stated that this special key was "the
identity of the United States and the British nations" (The
United States and British Commonwealth in Prophecy, 1967, p. 8).
However, the British-Israelism theory, which taught essentially the same
thing as HWA wrote in his book, had been in existence at least 50 years
before Herbert ever came on the scene.
On at least two occasions
different Ambassador College employees have discovered boxes in
Herbert's basement containing magazines entitled The Remnant of
Israel, as well as a great deal of other related religious material.
All this material was published by G. G. Rupert (1847-1922) of Britton,
Oklahoma. When we compare Rupert's beliefs with Herbert's, we find them
to be identical in many respects. (This subject was researched for the
WCG in a paper written by Richard C. Nickels in 1972.) Some of the
teachings that Rupert and Herbert Armstrong both advocate are: tithing,
observing the sabbath and the holy days of Leviticus 23, keeping the Ten
Commandments, observing the Passover on Nisan 14, church eras, a form of
British-Israelism, the correct name of God's church is "Church of
God," man doesn't have an immortal soul, Christians shouldn't
observe Christmas and Easter, the holy days foreshadow God's plan,
anointing and laying hands on the sick, sending anointed cloths to the
sick, avoiding any military service, not voting, not electing church
officers or ministers, there is only one true church, not eating unclean
meats, the end is near, and singing psalms rather than the traditional
Protestant hymns. (See The Remnant of Israel by G. G. Rupert,
April 1919, June 1919, Sept. 1921; also see Is There a True Church
Organization by G. G. Rupert, written in 1919.)
The significance of this
discovery is that it shows Herbert's main beliefs were not uniquely
revealed to him by God but were simply taken from other ministers and
publications and pawned off as his own unique, divinely revealed
teachings.
At the May 1974 Ministerial
Conference Herbert Armstrong continued to perpetuate the idea that all
his beliefs came directly from God: "I did not go to any minister,
to any seminary, to any religious school, to any religious denomination,
any man or group of men, but I was taught by God in his Book." The
truth is that HWA ripped off the research and teachings of others and
palmed them off as his own, and. then even had the audacity to claim
that God had something to do with it!
Adolf Hitler stated in Mein
Kampf: "The great masses of the people... will more easily fall
victims to a big lie than to a small one." Herbert had duped many
with his "big lie" regarding the origin of the teachings of
the Worldwide Church of God. [Note:
Read:
HWA studied
Mein Kampf]
Herbert and His
Association With the Church of God
A second "big lie"
that Herbert tells is that he was never a member of the Church of God
groups with whom he associated: "For some years I worked in
cooperation with the Church of God.... I never joined them-never became
one of their members" (member letter, May 2, 1974, p. 2).
Research, however, has once
again shown that accuracy is not one of Herbert's strong points. David
M. Kauer, secretary-treasurer of the Church of God (7th day), Denver
office, stated in a letter to B. R. Guillory dated March 19, 1974, that
"Mr. Armstrong was a minister of the Church of God (7th Day)."
John Kiesz, long-time minister of the Church of God (7th Day) and
associate of HWA till 1945, stated in material mailed from Stanberry,
Missouri, on March 26, 1973, that "Brother Armstrong... received
his credentials from the Salem [West Virginia] group about the fall of
1934. I was one of the officers of the Salem Church of God at that
time." Carlo E. Rasmussen of the Church of God (7th Day), Salem,
West Virginia, office stated in a letter to P. Boehnhardt, dated
February 27, 1973, that "Mr. Herbert Armstrong was a member of this
Church of God and was even one of the Seventy Prophets until he departed
on his theory of British Israelism, which he preaches today. The other
officers in the Church studied this teaching for one whole year and
concluded it could not be proven through the Scripture."
The following quote is from a
letter written by HWA to the Salem Church of God on January 29, 1934,
just three weeks after his true church had supposedly begun:
"I hasten to follow your suggestion, and enclose herewith my
acceptance of the ministry of one of the Seventy." The acceptance
states:
"I am anxious to begin
on the ministry... in the one body, and am determined... to live and
teach the commandments of God and the faith of Jesus, as found in
the Holy Scriptures, and as outlined in the Constitution of the
Church of God.... Will you please record this my acceptance, and
have credentials issued to me...."
Note that HWA acknowledged that
they were "the one body."
In a letter to Salem, West
Virginia, dated August 15, 1934, HWA affirmed that his views were
"in harmony and accord" with their "40 Points of
Doctrine" and that his teaching was "not out of harmony with
that of the other ministers of the church."
Well, one lie leads to another.
Herbert now says: "I was not a member of this Salem organization,
nor did they pay me any salary" (member letter, May 2, 1974, p. 4).
Elder Straub, one of
Armstrong's fellow ministers in the Church of God who now lives in Lodi,
California, was contacted by telephone in early 1974 by Martin Lieber.
Here's what Elder Straub said on the subject:
"Just the other day
... when I talked to Brother Helms I said. 'Why he [HWA] claimed he
never took any money from the organization.' He [Helms] said, 'Oh,
that's a big fib.... Everything he ever got never got to any place
else but him-he hung on to it pretty tightly.'"
Elder Straub continued,
referring to a confrontation with Herbert in 1935:
"When he [HWA] said
that he never received that money, Elder Haber [the treasurer] went
to his briefcase and he got a check, over $500. It was over $500
which was cancelled by Herbert. He said. 'Herbert, what is this
here? You never received any money from the organization? What is
this here?'... That was too convincing, I mean, that was an open
falsehood."
Chris W. Royer of the Church of
God (7th Day), Salem, West Virginia, office stated in a letter to Bill
Hughes, dated July 22, 1976, that "it is time consuming to go
through old records. However, in our ledger we' find that Mr. Armstrong
received pay as late as March 1937."
Yet Herbert recklessly
declared:
"I received no salary
or remuneration of any kind from either the Salem or Stanberry
organization.… The story that I went out from them... is 100%
false! I was never even a member of them" (member letter, May
2, 1974, p. 4).
Herbert did leave the
Church of God, but why? Did he have a genuine conscience problem over a
doctrinal point? Officially, "it was basically his teaching on
British Israel and the observance of the Feast Days which led to his
separation [in 1938] from the church" (Kauer letter, March 19,
1974). At the Ministerial Conference in May 1974 HWA claimed that he
didn't leave the Church of God because of doctrinal reasons but because
he merely got so busy that he "just didn't have time to work with
them anymore."
In an April 1939 Good News
article (p. 7) he justified his leaving the Church of God and starting
his own work by declaring:
"Our heavenly Father
never planted any super-organization, or established any church
government, or set men in authority over either spiritual or
financial affairs, in the New Testament Church."
Now that HWA's church
organization has grown large and wealthy, he has disavowed his 1939
statements.
So by Herbert's own admission,
he "fell away" from what he stated was the one true church of
God. Remember, HWA said the Philadelphia era began in August 1933 (The
Autobiography of Herbert W. Armstrong, p. 492), and yet on January
29, 1934, he affirmed in writing that the Salem Church of God was
"the one body"-God's one true church.
Here, perhaps are the real
reasons why HWA left the Church of God as put forth by some of his
fellow ministers:
John Kiesz:
"The real reason seems to have been because of his
uncooperative attitude.... Nobody can work with him."
Brother Helms:
"Herbert wouldn't study.... Herbert was always the big man and
everybody else was the little man."
Elder Haber:
"He [HWA] said that he didn't have to pay any attention to
anybody."
Elder Straub:
"Here was the point. We put him on the radio. It was the
church.... But he wasn't willing to study with the ministers, and
what the Church of God was teaching.... There was no way of
reasoning with the man.... He had his way, he ordered the people....
In 1935 the ministers
offered him a study [of British-Israelism], to sit together and
study it out; they wanted to know. And he flatly denied and said,
'There will be no study. I'm going to preach what I think should be
preached.' He's definitely an independent man that takes nothing
from nobody.... He won't listen to any reasoning. What he says just
goes. How can one man be so sure?"
It is obvious, then, from
history and from the mouths of several different individuals that HWA
did not receive his teachings from God by revelation and that he was
both a member and minister of the Church of God--which he called the
true church and which he left.
-Robert Gerringer
NOTE by ESN:
Herbert
Armstrong
also copied many of his doctrines from the Jehovah's Witnesses,
Mormonism (which has occult roots), and 7th Day Adventists, along with
distorting historical church
documents. Read Kelly Marshall's
critical review of Mystery
of the Ages.
| "That we henceforth be no
more children, tossed to and fro, and carried about with every
wind of doctrine, by the sleight of men, and cunning craftiness,
whereby they lie in wait to deceive" (Ephesians 4:14). |
Roots of the
Worldwide Church of God (chart)
Worldwide
Church of God (revealing background info
on HWA and WCG)
Where Do I Find the "One True
Church"?
Articles on
Offshoots & Splinter Groups of WCG
Herbert W. Armstrong and the Incest
List of books
exposing Herbert W. Armstrong
Back to Questioning Herbert W.
Armstrong
(was he who he said he was?) (many articles)
|