In 1999 I was trying to stay awhile
in the Worldwide
Church of God
because I thought I could help things change.
I came to realize that, even though WCG stated a change in their beliefs,
some more important things were "changing."
- The leadership kept acting like things could only change through the
Pastor General, Joseph Tkach Jr. (Why would we need the Pastor General's permission
to come to
Christ in the first place?)
- Some congregations were
against the changes, so instead of leaving
the WCG, the ministers have stayed and play nothing but old tape
messages from Herbert Armstrong and other abusive evangelists.
- The only
reason many ministers have their members tithe to the WCG is so they can
collect their salaries or retirements. [Read: Retired WCG Ministers
to Receive Funds While Members Go Without?] Headquarters knows this and
allows it so they can continue to receive tithes.
Imagine if people coming into Worldwide
for the first time were told of their current beliefs and then ended up going
to one of these congregations? Wouldn't they feel confused? There is
still a lot of emotional abuse in certain church areas.
Even though a few ministers have stayed to help preach Christ, others
stay to bring back the old
Worldwide
Church of God. Very, very few really stayed in the WCG to help
people. Most stayed
because they either couldn't get a job elsewhere, or they didn't want to
be under Roderick Meredith of Living
Church of God (who
started Global Church of God at the time of the changes. Many ministers have unpleasant memories of
Meredith.) Some also don't want to succumb
to anyone else if they leave. They decide they will have power of their
own where they are.
However, some ministers know they were
lied to and really don't know what to do about it.
When the WCG first started to change (especially the Sabbath) I was
worried and bothered, along with many others. The reason is, we were led to believe that the Sabbath, tithing, Holy
Days, and Church Government, etc. were more important than brotherly
love. Most people don't consciously realize this.1 When I pointed the
abuse out to some, they admitted it was wrong, but were more concerned
with not keeping the Sabbath. Some said people just couldn't obey the
"government of God."2
A former elder told me many ministers really tried
to change things during the
seventies. They tried to expose the Worldwide Church of God's
abusive doctrines and teach grace, but were
kicked out and branded as "Satan's ministers." [Read:
Worldwide Church of God History
(transcription); Robert Gerringer
1975 Letter to Charles Hunting; Jack
Kessler's 1981 Letter to WCG Board of Directors and order Richard
Plache Tapes]
Herbert Armstrong told us to prove it for ourselves but what he
really wanted was for us to prove him right. And if you loved
him first, and tithed to him and kept his commands, you
were "showing you loved God first." It was more important than loving
others, which came second. I know for a fact that many people left because they think
WCG is rejecting Herbert Armstrong. They care more about
what Herbert Armstrong would think than what Jesus Christ thought
about the group all along.
Herbert Armstrong attracted many people who weren't interested in religion or
church. Many people, like my mother, came in because of the prophecy.
I hold two theories about
Herbert Armstrong.
- He really was a Communist atheist who never believed in God so he
didn't worry about having to give account to God.
-or-
- He thought he was so important, so special, so unique (remember
the
"19-year time cycles") in God's sight that God had special understanding of his weaknesses. After all, he was Herbert W. Armstrong
("strong arm"); he was Elijah ("Ezekiel's Watchman"), or anyone else he
thought would make him important.3 He believed that God understood or gave special
permission for his behavior.4
Herbert Armstrong seems more like Judas Iscariot because he stole
money from the flock (tithes and offerings). If I had to give an award to someone who twisted the Bible, well, I
think it would go to Herbert Armstrong. I think he twisted the Bible better
than any other cult leader I have read about (except David Koresh5 might
be a tie).
I know many people began their journey out of the
WCG by proving
them scripturally wrong. That isn't how I started mine. Right before I
left the WCG in 1999, that was when I decided for myself that before God revealed anything
else to me I was going to ask Him to lead me to the love of Jesus
Christ, and then to be able to show that love. I knew that any form of Christianity without the love of Christ
is useless. This is why there are many abusive churches (even
Sunday-keeping ones). They have built their whole religion on doctrine, without the
love of Christ. They seem to think the more they know the more they are
assured of their salvation. This helped me understand a lot more about
grace. The love of Christ is very
healing. Sometimes, when I get down emotionally, the only thing I can do for myself is
to go ask Christ in private to take this burden from me, and He does.
Also listening to Christian music helps a lot too.
By Pauline
2003
Footnotes by ESN:
1
Members did not realize, nor were they told by headquarters at the time
of the changes, that they had been influenced by mind control (thought reform) and were
never in a Christian church to begin with, but a Bible-based cult instead. [Read: Lifton's
Eight Criteria for Mind Control to see how WCG used these.] Many members appeared to have a
certain "brotherly love" but it was contingent on loving those
who followed what the leadership had taught. [Read: The
Truth Behind WCG's "Love Your Neighbor] True freedom in Christ and
the love of the Spirit was rare, because the Holy Spirit, which will
show us Christ, was not a part of the WCG except as a "force." Only through the Holy Spirit
can we understand what Christ has really done for us and the grace He brought.
2 When
high demand,
authoritarian groups refer to obeying "God's government," "the
government of God," etc., it is always intended to mean their headquarters.
However, "government of God" is not mentioned in Scripture. While
false teachers will use 2 Pet. 2:10: "...despise government.." to try
to correlate this somehow with "God's government" (which the member is
to always obey), the verse preceding 2 Pet. 2:10 shows that Peter is talking
about "the unjust." Those who are in Christ are not in the category of
being "unjust." This word really means "dominion" and occurs
few times in the Bible.
3
Read: Profile of a Sociopath (A
number of mind-controlling cult leaders may exhibit many of the behavioral
characteristics of a sociopath)
4
Read: "None
of God's Servants Were Perfect" (for those who like to use this
reasoning)
5
The
Branch Dividians (David Koresh) were an offshoot from the Millerites
(Seventh-day Adventists), just as the WCG was.
Articles For Those Who Were Emotionally and Spiritually Abused
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