During my years of Bible study while in
the WCG I memorized hundreds of scriptures that I was led to believe
proved that our doctrines were true and that others must be in error. I
also noticed scriptures the church did not believe and this caused me
some concern. I sent some of these scriptures up for questions during
some of our studies conducted by our ministers and they would not
discuss them. I recall there is one verse that I asked, "Does this verse
mean what it says?" The one word response was, "No."
Scriptures that were not believed by the church were referred as
"difficult scriptures." I decided to believe them and that expelled the
difficult part.
After far too many years and great difficulties caused by the spiritual
and emotional abuse I suffered, I separated from the WCG.
Great
changes had been made in doctrines and while I had no problem with
doctrinal corrections, I could not see that Jesus was involved with this
in any way.
In the years following my departure from WCG I found there
are
other ministries that understand the Bible far more clearly than did the
leadership under HWA.
I did find another church (not a WCG splinter) and attended it for
awhile. I noticed in their Sunday School
classes that all the scriptures I had memorized were just as good with
them as anywhere else, and I brought them up in our classes as backups
for what the teacher was going over with us. I strongly feel there were
some really true Christians there, but the leadership that came along
later was not Christ-centered.
However, I noticed, as many other former members have, that Bible study became very
difficult after God freed me from the WCG. I didn't study for at least
several years. The way we studied it under bondage was detrimental to
continuing study after being freed from being tied to the law rather
than grace. It took me some time to get back to it and study it for what
it actually teaches.
While in WCG, I'd study chapters in the Old Testament that had laws about
tithing, the Ten Commandments, offerings, sacrifices, the priesthood,
the temple, fabric mixes, clean and unclean meats, weekly and annual
Sabbaths, and on and on. I spent hours trying to figure out how some of
these laws were required of us in this age and some were not. These
chapters certainly did not separate them in any way and there was no
clue as to how to scripturally select which ones applied under a New
Covenant. You can see the great difficulty this caused in my studies.
Bible study became quite different for me when I began to get back to
it. Freedom from bondage to the law allowed me to fully accept the
provisions of the New Covenant and to lay the old covenant aside, except
for comparisons and to understand what Jesus has done for us through his
death and resurrection.
I am enjoying my freedom in Jesus Christ and the understanding of the
Bible for what it teaches. I also deeply appreciate the great ministry
in which you (ESN) are serving those who have made the very difficult choice
to depart from the teachings of a man and his followers.
By Will
May 9, 2007
Note from ESN: See our
Booklist for ones that cover the bondage
members were under.
