Thursday, May 14, 2026

The Divine Double Portion Dream: The Epic Saga of Bob Thiel and the Continuing Church of God

 


Once upon a time, in the hilariously hyper-fractured multiverse of Armstrongism—where church splits proliferate like prayed over casseroles that miraculously never seem to go empty at an endless Holy Day buffet, and every single group swears on Herbert's grave that they alone are the pure Philadelphian jackpot winners—there emerged a colossus named Bob Thiel. Bob wasn't some humble pork-avoiding prophecy hobbyist. Heck no! He was the Naturopath Napoleon of the End Times, armed with a shiny online PhD in nutrition, a veritable fortress of self-published prophecy epics (each one an Amazon "bestseller" in the niche category of "Books Only My Mom Buys"), and a rock-solid, divinely certified belief that God had personally Zoom-called him for the ultimate role: Prophet Kingpin, Elijah 4.0 – supercharged with herbs, dreams, and unlimited prophecy extensions!

Bob spent decades as the ultimate backseat driver in the Living Church of God (LCG), playing the ultimate doctrinal proofreader—emailing nitpicks like a prophecy-powered Grammarly bot—while dropping mega-hints: "Fellas, I might have God's private hotline. No biggie."  and mega-winks like: "Brothers, I may be the guy God’s been saving for the final push. Hint, hint." 

Then, in December 2011, what was assumed to be a routine oil-anointing before heading into a meeting with Rod Meredith, minister Gaylyn Bonjour went rogue Old Testament freestyle and begged God for Bob to get a double portion of the Holy Spirit so that the might speak words prophetically, however Bob later reinterpreted this as a biblical hand-off of HWA's mantle and thus became the endtimes biblical Elijah/Elisha mantle handoff, but with way more unintended consequences. Because why pray for basic wise words when you can accidentally turbocharge someone's ego into splinter-orbit?

Bob, master decoder of divine signs and wildly interpreted dreams, took this as God's blazing billboard in Times Square: "BOB THIEL: ANOINTED PROPHET – NOW WITH DOUBLE THE SPIRIT AND ZERO ACCOUNTABILITY!" But when LCG didn't immediately bow down, proclaim him Supreme Overseer, and rewrite their booklets per his edits, Bob was utterly devastated. "They reject my masterful exegesis on the King of the South!" he wailed dramatically. "My herbal defenses against the Beast's nano-chips! My prophecies that are 100% spot-on... after generous divine postponements, revisions, and fine-print asterisks!"

So, on December 28, 2012—strategically timed for maximum end-of-world buzz (and optimal post-Christmas deductions)—Bob dropped the mic and founded his crowning achievement: the Continuing Church of God (CCOG). The one and only legitimate Philadelphia remnant, single-handedly "continuing" Herbert's work while the rest of the COG universe apparently binge-watched Laodicean Netflix.

Starting a church solo is brutal, but Bob wielded the ultimate cheat code: dreams. Not ordinary dreams—platinum-tier, verified divine dreams from ecstatic supporters! A New Zealand woman dreams Bob leading a supernova work. A man in Africa also dreams a dream. And explosion achieved! Mostly in Africa, where over 10,000 faithful church hopped from other COG groups and SDA churches, for gratis PDFs, laptops, cars, budget animated sermons (starring clipart ten-horned beasts that look like they escaped Microsoft PowerPoint 1997), and a leader who nailed pandemics, beasts, and European superstates... give or take a few years and adjustments.

Splinter snarks fired back: "Dreams? Next, he'll divine through turmeric lattes and one-star Amazon rebuttals!" But Bob? Unfazed. He blasted out tens of thousands of cogwriter.com rants, decoding everything from the Virgin of Guadalupe "lying wonders" to Halloween paganism to why digital IDs are totally the Mark of the Beast  (coming 2026, maybe). He vehemently rejected "false prophet" labels—his forecasts aren't wrong; they're just beta-testing God's flexible scheduling app.

Bob modestly self-crowned himself as Overseer, Pastor, Double-Portion Dynamo, Chief Dream Interpreter, and Sole Arbiter of the Final Warning Work, tirelessly restoring those priceless "18 truths" which were later expanded to include a myriad of his ideas—plus his patented top-down command structure (with him as the eternal, unassailable apex predator).

From his throne room, Bob beholds his dominion of fever-dream videos, multilingual PDFs decrying everything from AI Antichrists to comet calamities, and daily blogs linking every headline to "soon-coming fulfillment," and beams with prophetic pride. "At long last," he declares, "a church that's authentically continuing—while the others eternally pause, snooze in lukewarm luxury, or splinter into oblivion."

And so the Continuing Church of God charges eternally forward—dreaming colossal, double-portioning extravagantly, prophesying with endless wiggle room, animating beasts on a dime, and hypocritically correcting Catholics, Protestants, governments, scientists, and every last COG competitor—one delayed doomsday, one herbal miracle, one apparition debunking at a time. Praise ye the Lord O, Praise ye the Lord O, anoint with the oil, and avoid the pork forevermore!

Glory, hallelujah, and hold the shrimp!

Silent Pilgrim

Rods of Iron Ready: LCG’s Rearview Mirror Theology and its Dystopian Dream of Kingdom Enforcement




What pure, soul-warming comfort it must be to know that out of the billions of Christians who’ve muddled through the last two thousand years, only the supremely enlightened members of the Living Church of God have scored the exclusive gig at Jesus Christ’s right hand when He returns. Yes, they and they alone will be the lucky hall monitors of the Kingdom, enforcing on all of humanity the Old Covenant laws that failed spectacularly at offering salvation the first time.

Who needs that silly New Covenant anyway — the one where God writes His law on actual hearts by the Holy Spirit (Jeremiah 31:31–34; Hebrews 8:8–12), and which is literally dwelling and walking among them? Clearly, just a minor plot twist, these folks have chosen to ignore while cosplaying as modern-day Moses.

Armstrongism has always been hopelessly addicted to rearview-mirror theology, romantically pining for the leeks, garlic, and heavy chains of the old system that kept the plebs in line and fed their delicious sense of specialness. Even now in COGland, hordes of members still get all dewy-eyed, waxing nostalgic about the “glory days” of the Worldwide Church of God, instead of, you know, actually living in the radical grace and freedom purchased by the One who saves them from the very legalistic prison they keep enthusiastically running back into.

And the cherry on top? These folks are being carefully trained to enforce those same old laws in the coming Kingdom. Plenty still drool at the thought of personally wielding “rods of iron” to smack compliance into the masses. Given the sterling track record of how some of their higher-ups have spiritually abused, controlled, shunned, and financially squeezed members for decades, that future “glorious Kingdom” isn’t going to be paradise — it’s going to be a dystopian theocratic hellhole of joyless, fear-driven obedience. 

Learn from Today’s Leaders by Doug Winnail drops some heavy biblical warnings about corrupt leaders leading people astray, then applies it to today’s moral mess. Solid observation on the symptoms. The proposed solution, though? “Let’s prepare by doubling down on the exact system the New Testament calls weak, useless, and incapable of producing real righteousness” (Hebrews 7:18–19; Galatians 3:21). Brilliant. Nothing screams “ready for Christ’s return” quite like ignoring the cross so you can play Old Covenant enforcer in the ultimate LARP.

In the end, this mindset reveals the tragic irony at the heart of Armstrongism: a movement that claims to be preparing for the Kingdom of God is actually stuck in spiritual regression, romanticizing the very shadows and external rituals that pointed forward to Christ — yet refusing to embrace the substance once He arrived. Instead of resting in the transforming power of grace, the indwelling Spirit, and a genuine relationship with the Savior, too many remain chained to a system that offers control, superiority, and the illusion of being “special.”

The real tragedy is that while they dream of ruling with rods of iron, they’re missing the far greater invitation: to be ruled by love, led by the Spirit, and freed from the very bondage they’re so eager to impose on others. True preparation for Christ’s return isn’t found in rehearsing Old Covenant checklists or fantasizing about future authoritarian roles — it’s found in living out the New Covenant reality today. Anything less is just spiritual time travel dressed up as prophecy.

The future really is bright… if you’re really, really into living in the past.

Learn from Today’s Leaders: Some of the strongest condemnations in the Bible are directed at the leaders of Israel who “cause My people to err by their lies and by their recklessness” (Jeremiah 23:32; Isaiah 3:12). Few today realize these prophetic warnings are dual and apply to leaders in modern Israelite nations! When teachers, preachers, and politicians in nations that have been given God’s laws so they could be examples to the world turn away from and despise those laws, there are serious consequences. As we witness the results of legalizing drugs, defunding police, rampant fornication and adultery, same-sex “marriages,” etc., we need to connect the dots between cause and effect. When Jesus Christ returns, He is going to need individuals who understand that the real solutions to these problems will involve teaching people how to apply the laws of God (Isaiah 2:2–4; 30:20–21). Are you preparing for that important role?
Have a profitable Sabbath,
Douglas S. Winnail


Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Ronald Weinland: Armstrongism’s Clown Prince of Epic Prophetic Faceplants and First COG Leader to be Sent to Prison



Ronald Weinland is living proof that in the wacky world of Armstrongism, you can be spectacularly wrong about everything, live like a mini-tycoon on other people’s tithes, go to prison, call yourself a prophet, and still lead a Church of God. This guy didn’t just fail — he failed with Olympic-level commitment.

Born in 1949, Weinland slurped up Herbert W. Armstrong’s doomsday stew in 1969, became a WCG minister, then bailed when the main church started acting less culty. He bounced to the United Church of God before launching his own little kingdom in 1998: the Church of God – Preparing for the Kingdom of God (COG-PKG). Because nothing says “God’s true remnant” like starting yet another tiny splinter group with you at the top.

The Two Witnesses: Him and His Wife (Obviously)

In his 2006 masterpiece 2008 – God’s Final Witness, Weinland declared that he and his wife Laura were the Two Witnesses of Revelation 11. You know, the super-powered prophets who breathe fire, kill enemies, die in Jerusalem, and resurrect after three and a half days. Laura got the fancy title of “prophetess.” In practice, she was mostly the “quietly standing there prophetess.” How convenient.

Nepotism? What Nepotism?

Weinland turned the church into a full-blown family jobs program. In 2010 he ordained a bunch of new elders, including his daughter Audra (church bookkeeper) and his then-24-year-old son Jeremy. Nothing suspicious about putting your kids on the payroll and controlling the financial spreadsheets, while telling followers the world is ending and they should send more money. Totally normal Church of God prophet behavior.

Diamond Rings and the Lavish Lifestyle

While screaming that the world was about to collapse, Ron and Laura were out buying diamond rings like it was Black Friday at Jareds. Court records showed multiple jewelry shopping sprees with Audra in tow. Supposedly, when the economy crashed and money was not worth anything, they could use these diamonds to bribe their way into Jerusalem and elsewhere. Church money paid for a big house, endless travel, and security systems. But sure, brethren, keep those tithes coming so the Two Witnesses can rock some serious bling.

The Ideacity Debacle (Among Many)

In the glittering world of big ideas and TED-style enlightenment, few spectacles could match the glorious mismatch of 2009’s Ideacity conference. There, amid visionaries and futurists, strode Ronald Weinland—a self-anointed apostle, prophet, and one-half of the biblical Two Witnesses. Fresh from publishing books that promised the global economy would crumble in 2008 and that nuclear trumpets would soon herald the end of days, Weinland took the stage like a man confidently selling beachfront property in the Book of Revelation. With a straight face and zero hint of irony, he laid out his timeline for humanity’s fiery finale, apparently unaware that some of his boldest 2008 predictions had already quietly face-planted.

The audience, expecting provocative thought experiments rather than doomsday fan fiction, reacted with the polite Canadian version of stunned silence mixed with muffled snickering. Weinland’s big moment as the internet’s favorite end-times evangelist didn’t exactly set the room on fire—unless you counted the slow burn of secondhand embarrassment. Reports suggest the prophet was so unimpressed by the comedian who followed him that he made an early exit, perhaps to go recalculate his next revised date for Christ’s return. In the end, Ideacity didn’t launch Weinland to prophetic stardom. Instead, it became a punchline for critics: proof that even in the marketplace of ideas, some stalls sell nothing but expired prophecies. And yet, true to form, Weinland’s small band of believers kept the faith, demonstrating once again that cognitive dissonance is one hell of a resilient spiritual gift.

Failed Prophecies

Weinland’s prophecy batting average is a perfect 0.000:
  • April 17, 2008: Two Witnesses ministry begins. First trumpet sounds. Cities get nuked. (Crickets.)
  • June 2008: If nothing happens by Pentecost, he’s a false prophet. (Spoiler: nothing happened.)
  • December 14, 2008: Okay, now the first trumpet starts (spiritually, of course).
  • September 29, 2011: Jesus returns!
  • May 27, 2012: No, wait — Jesus returns now!
  • May 2013: Final final date. Or maybe it’s a “thousand years is a day” thing. Just keep waiting, guys.
Every single date sailed by without so much as a divine fart. Weinland’s response? Spiritualize it, move the goalposts, blame God for showing “mercy,” and keep collecting offerings. 
Classic. Ron must have taught Bob Thiel how to be a prophet.

First COG Felon Leader: Tax Evasion Edition (Now With Extra Irony)

This part is pure gold. While breathlessly warning the world about nuclear fire, divine wrath, and the total collapse of civilization, Weinland was secretly squirreling away $4.4 million in unreported church income — including cozy little Swiss bank accounts. Apparently, the Two Witnesses needed offshore tax havens to survive the end times.

In 2012, a federal jury took a leisurely but prophetic 3 1/2 hours to see through the nonsense and convict him on five counts of tax evasion. Boom — 42 months in federal prison, a nice fat fine (a deliberate prophetic sentence by the judge of 3 1/2 years), and over $245,000 in restitution. Mr. “I’m God’s Prophet” had to self-surrender to Terre Haute Federal Correctional Institution in 2013 like a common grifter.

Congratulations, Ron. You did it. You became the first major Church of God splinter-group leader in history to serve time as a convicted felon. In a movement already overflowing with kooks, failed prophets, and con artists, you managed to hit a new low. Truly, the Mount Everest of embarrassing legacies. While your followers were selling their stuff and waiting for the apocalypse, you were playing “hide the tithe money” like a budget-level televangelist who got caught.

The Real Danger: Why This Fraud Is Poison to Real Christians

Here’s the blunt truth: Ronald Weinland is a straight-up spiritual predator who endangers real Christians by dragging them into a toxic cult of personality built on lies. He steals their money, wastes their lives on endless false deadlines, and isolates them from actual biblical Christianity while he and his family live high on the hog. Every failed prophecy doesn’t just embarrass him — it crushes sincere believers, leaves families broke and broken, and mocks the genuine hope of Christ’s return. This convicted felon isn’t “preparing for the Kingdom of God.” He’s building a personal piggy bank and calling it prophecy. Real Christians don’t follow ex-cons who can’t get a single date right. They follow Jesus. Weinland is Exhibit A of why the Bible warns about false prophets: stay far away, or you’ll lose your faith, your finances, and your future to a grifter who already proved he belongs behind bars, not behind a pulpit.

Silent Pilgrim



Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Gerald Weston Perturbed Some LCG Members Stay At Home On Saturdays



Church of God leaders absolutely adore it when members have the unmitigated gall to use their brains and make their own decisions. Oh, wait! Sorry, what was I thinking?

Gerald Weston is back, regaling us once again on how SINFUL and REBELLIOUS some Living Church of God members are. It seems some LCG members skip church services and watch them at home online, or do something else more enjoyable.  Remember, it is always more important to drag yourself untold miles through rain, snow, or soul-crushing traffic just to worship in a rented high school gym or its cafeteria that still smells like yesterday’s mystery meat, or a creaky Masonic/Odd Fellows Hall haunted by the ghosts of 1950s bingo nights. How dare these ingrates tire of the same pre-packaged, formaldehyde-preserved sermons that get exhumed and paraded around every other year like a bad holy day potluck casserole? God forbid a minister stray even an inch from the official approved prepackaged booklet/telecast script—after all, actual original thought might cause the entire fragile ecosystem to collapse. Fresh ideas? Innovative topics? Perish the thought. The pinnacle of excitement is hearing someone mumble, “Hey, that wasn’t completely soul-destroying. Maybe next week won’t feel like a root canal.” Tragically, that never happens.

You shuffle in and are immediately “welcomed” by the elite squad of stealth attendance takers—those smiling hall monitors with clipboards who could give the Stasi lessons in subtle intimidation. Before your briefcase is even opened, you’re conscripted into the unpaid serf brigade: wrestling with wobbly folding chairs and tables, slaving over industrial coffee that tastes like regret, scrubbing bathrooms that see more action on Sabbath than any other day of the week, and performing whatever other menial miracles the deacons demand. Only then do you earn the privilege of enduring the musical portion—those dirge-like Dwight Armstrong hymns celebrating blessed men or soldiers marching off to glorious, bloody war. The opening prayer inevitably balloons into a pre-sermon sermonette, cleverly designed to soften you up for the real punishment ahead.

Then comes the main event: the two-hour (minimum) butt-numbing sermon, a relentless barrage of 40 bullet points on the topic with 4,000,000 cherry-picked Bible verses that you frantically scribble down like a possessed stenographer, all while your inner voice quietly admits you’ll never crack open those notes again. The topic is always a greatest hit you’ve suffered through hundreds of times—how to keep the law perfectly, or an exhaustive catalog of everything fun, normal, or remotely human you must never, ever do. Because clearly, the average COG member is a drooling moron who can’t be trusted to discern good from evil without constant, soul-crushing reminders that they’re lower than the dogs under the table, fighting over scraps—or perhaps mere earthworms, blind and writhing in the filth of their own inadequacy.

And let’s not forget the other beloved COG traditions. There’s the annual Feast of Tabernacles “vacation” where you’re guilted into driving/flying to some overpriced resort in the middle of nowhere, only to sit through eight straight days of the exact same recycled messages while being pressured to “give offerings” that mysteriously fund the minister’s upgraded hotel suite. Or the charming post-service potlucks where the real sermon is delivered via passive-aggressive gossip: “Did you hear Sister So-and-So only tithed two percent last month? Laodicean to the core.” Then there are the holy day services that stretch into eternity, complete with the special music from that one painfully off-key lady who’s been “practicing” since 1987, and the endless parade of announcements about upcoming “youth Bible studies” that somehow always circle back to obedience, tithing, and not dating “worldly” people.

Two and a half hours later, your posterior has achieved total numbness and appears to have permanently bonded with the metal chair in unholy matrimony. Finally, deliverance arrives in the closing prayer, where you’re commanded to “inculcate” every magnificent pearl of wisdom you’ve just endured so you can stay pure and remain a true Church of God member—unlike those disgusting Laodicean riff-raff down the road in the other splinter group who have the audacity to meet in their own building like actual functional adults.

Weston, still whining about COVID, claims some members no longer see the need to show up each week and prefer to watch at home or—God forbid—NOT attend church at all! Oh, the humanity!!!!!!!

The “once saved, always saved” doctrine of mainstream Christianity is easily disproved (Hebrews 6:4–6; 10:26–31). Therefore, we are told, “Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is faithful” (v. 23). Note that this warning is in the context of those who forsake assembling together: “And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you see the Day approaching” (vv. 24–25). The overwhelming majority of us came out of COVID-19 assembling as we always did, but a few have failed to return to their previous pattern of regular Sabbath attendance, thinking they can sit at home and take part online—or, worse, not at all!

Monday, May 11, 2026

Stanley Rader: The Jewish Evangelist at the Heart of the Worldwide Church of God



Stanley Rader
The Jewish Evangelist 
at the Heart of the Worldwide Church of God

Stanley Rader (August 13, 1930 – July 2, 2002) stands as one of the most fascinating and controversial figures in the history of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG). Born a secular Jew, he became Herbert W. Armstrong’s (HWA) closest advisor, general counsel, treasurer, and eventually an ordained evangelist — all while openly maintaining his Jewish identity. For nearly 25 years, Rader was the sharp-minded strategist who professionalized the church’s operations, launched ambitious cultural initiatives, defended it in high-stakes legal battles, and wielded enormous behind-the-scenes influence.

From Accountant to Trusted Insider

Born in White Plains, New York, to a non-observant Jewish family, Rader moved to California as a young man. He graduated from UCLA in 1951, became a certified public accountant in 1954, and earned a law degree from the University of Southern California in 1963 — with financial support reportedly provided by HWA. In 1956, he was hired to reorganize the accounting systems of the Radio Church of God (the WCG’s predecessor) in Pasadena. HWA quickly recognized his talent, and by 1969 Rader had become the church’s full-time general counsel and treasurer.Rader built and oversaw a network of affiliated companies handling the church’s legal, accounting, advertising, travel, and aircraft needs. While these ventures improved efficiency, critics later accused them of creating conflicts of interest and enabling personal gain.

Baptism, Ordination, and Dual Identity

In 1975, HWA personally baptized Rader in a hotel bathtub in Hong Kong. Four years later, in 1979, Rader was privately ordained as a WCG evangelist alongside Joseph Tkach Sr. and Ellis LaRavia. The ordination helped quiet internal criticism about an unordained advisor holding such power. Remarkably, Rader never renounced his Jewish identity. The church’s observance of the biblical holy days (which mirror Jewish festivals) and its non-traditional doctrines made the environment relatively comfortable for him. 

Cultural Ambassador and Global Traveler

In 1975, Rader founded the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation (AICF), funded primarily by church tithes. The AICF gave the WCG a sophisticated public face. It turned the Ambassador Auditorium into a premier performing arts venue, launched the high-quality Quest magazine, acquired a publishing house, and even helped finance films. Most significantly, the foundation enabled HWA to travel the world as an unofficial “Ambassador for World Peace.” Accompanied by Rader and Robert Kuhn, HWA flew on private jets, met heads of state, and presented expensive gifts. These high-profile trips were extensively documented in church publications.

Conflict with Garner Ted Armstrong

Rader’s rising influence created tension with HWA’s son, Garner Ted Armstrong (GTA), the church’s popular television evangelist and presumed successor. GTA saw Rader and the AICF’s worldly direction as threats. Their rivalry ended in 1978 when HWA disfellowshipped GTA amid personal scandals. Rader assumed a more dominant role, moving into GTA’s former office.

The 1979 California Receivership Battle

In 1979, the California Attorney General placed the WCG under temporary receivership following complaints from six former members. The state alleged that HWA and Rader had misused millions in tax-free donations for personal luxuries. With the church generating over $70 million annually, the stakes were enormous. Rader mounted a fierce defense: he assembled top lawyers, rallied support from other religious groups, and successfully lobbied for new legislation limiting the Attorney General’s power over churches. The receivership was lifted after just weeks. In 1980, Rader published Against the Gates of Hell, a book defending religious liberty. His combative 1979–80 interview with Mike Wallace on 60 Minutes — during which he walked off the set — became widely remembered.

The “Raiders of the Lost Ark” Lawsuit

In 1981, Rader and Robert Kuhn filed a major copyright lawsuit against George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, and Paramount, claiming the film Raiders of the Lost Ark stole key ideas from Kuhn’s earlier screenplay about the Ark of the Covenant. The $100–210 million suit was eventually dropped.

Resignation, Severance, and Later Life

By early 1981, amid shifting internal dynamics, Rader resigned as general counsel and treasurer. Some insiders called it a “banishment,” yet he continued briefly as AICF director and personal advisor to HWA. He received a generous severance package, including a $250,000 after-tax bonus and ongoing retirement payments. Rader and his wife, Natalie “Niki” Gartenberg, owned several properties, including a notable home at 360 Waverly Drive in Pasadena.

Death and Legacy

Diagnosed with acute pancreatic cancer, Stanley Rader died on July 2, 2002, at age 71 — just two weeks after diagnosis. His funeral at Mountain View Cemetery in Altadena was conducted by Joseph Tkach Jr., and he was buried near the Armstrong family plot. He is buried next to his wife, Niki. He is survived by his children Janis, Carol, and Stephen, and several grandchildren.

Rader was a complex man: a brilliant lawyer and accountant who became an ordained minister in a church that observed Jewish holy days. Supporters credit him with saving the WCG from government takeover and modernizing its operations. Critics viewed him as a symbol of the church’s 1970s excesses. Regardless of perspective, his life remains deeply intertwined with the rise, turmoil, and transformation of the Worldwide Church of God.

Silent Pilgrim

Gerald Flurry and The Blood On The Prayer Rock




Gerald Flurry launched the Philadelphia Church of God (PCG) in 1989 after being disfellowshipped from the Worldwide Church of God amid its doctrinal shifts following Herbert W. Armstrong’s death. He positioned PCG as the sole faithful “Philadelphia era” remnant of Revelation 3, with himself as the end-time “That Prophet” — God’s exclusive messenger receiving fresh revelation. What began as a tiny splinter meeting in a home has ballooned into a high-control, authoritarian empire sustained by mandatory three-tithe demands (roughly 20–30% of gross income, plus endless “special offerings,” “sacrifices,” and guilt-driven pledges). This funds an opulent headquarters in Edmond, Oklahoma, featuring Herbert W. Armstrong College and the $25 million Armstrong Auditorium — a gleaming performing-arts venue critics universally label a lavish money pit that drains members while leaders live large.

PCG’s foundational “revelation” — Flurry’s booklet Malachi’s Message to God’s Church Today — launched the group by denouncing WCG changes. Yet documented evidence from ex-members and Jules Dervaes himself shows Flurry plagiarized large portions from Dervaes’ earlier Letters to Laodicea (seven letters mailed 1986–1988 to 237 WCG ministers, including Flurry). Dervaes sent Flurry a certified letter on September 26, 1990, with proof of delivery, accusing him of direct plagiarism. Side-by-side comparisons reveal verbatim and near-verbatim lifts. PCG still markets the book as pure divine prophecy from God.

Flurry’s “new revelations” have escalated into outright megalomania. In 2002, PCG retrieved Armstrong’s humble Oregon prayer rock. By 2017, Flurry announced it is now the new Stone of Destiny, replacing Britain’s traditional coronation stone. Citing Micah 2:12–13, he declared the Throne of David has physically and spiritually relocated to Edmond, Oklahoma. Flurry himself is the literal “king” on this throne until Christ returns to it for coronation as King of Kings. He claims he will personally deliver the final message to Jesus at His return, has asserted he will still be alive then, and touts “prophetic accuracy” as proof of his office — despite a long trail of failed predictions (Obama as America’s last president, specific Trump timelines retrofitted after losses, Benedict XVI’s end-time role derailed by Francis, repeated “no gap” Amos 7 timelines quietly revised).

Minister’s Advice on Disabled Child and Tithing

Yes, this incident is documented in critical Armstrongist sources. A PCG minister reportedly told a family with a disabled/special-needs child to take the child to a shopping mall and abandon him/her there so the state would assume care—freeing up the family’s money for tithing to the church instead of medical/support costs. Critics cite this as an extreme example of tithing pressure (PCG requires first, second, and third tithes—roughly 20-30% of gross income—plus offerings and “sacrifice” for special projects). PCG has not publicly addressed this specific allegation, but tithing is non-negotiable and framed as obedience to God.

Financial Exploitation, Nepotism, and Lavish Hypocrisy at Members’ Expense

PCG extracts tithes even on pensions and pressures families relentlessly. Ex-members describe door-to-door tithing collections when you fail to mail in tithe checks promptly and sermons linking non-payment to curses or disfellowshipment.

PCG owns a Gulfstream G450 private jet (the “Righteous Ride”), acquired in the mid-2010s so Flurry and top leaders never have to sit next to the “public” on commercial flights. The same jet shuttles son Stephen Flurry, his wife Amy, and their children (including star dancers and choreographers Jude and Vienna Flurry) worldwide for Irish-dance competitions and Celtic Throne performances — a costly road show the church ties to “King David’s dance” and British-Israelite claims. Professional Irish dance coaches are hired, and Flurry’s grandchildren Grant and Paris Turgeon have been employed full-time as “airline stewards” on the jet, complete with PCG-paid training vacations. Ex-members call it blatant nepotism while ordinary members are told to “sacrifice.”

The money pit deepens: Armstrong Auditorium alone cost $25 million. In 2014, PCG bought Edstone Hall in England for $4.5 million (after locals blocked purchase of the old Bricket Wood Ambassador College site due to “cult” concerns). Extensive renovations (tennis court, soccer field) followed, yet by 2025 Edstone was quietly listed for sale at £6 million amid financial strain. Flurry continues promoting excavations at Ireland’s Hill of Tara for the buried Ark of the Covenant as end-time “proof.”

Flurry’s Personal Hypocrisy: The 1993 Drunken Arrest and Church Cover-Up

While preaching strict Sabbath observance, sobriety, and moral purity, Flurry himself was arrested in 1993 for public intoxication. Oklahoma police report #93-090-5282 details Flurry found drunk on the Sabbath, passed out behind the wheel of his car. Beer cans were piled outside the door, an open one in his crotch, and more scattered on the seat. He attempted to bribe the arresting officer $25 (some accounts say $20) to avoid jail. He was booked, taken to county jail, and faced charges.

PCG never told members the truth. The official line minimized it to “a couple of empty beer containers in his car” and even suggested the officer was a disgruntled WCG member out to persecute God’s apostle. When the full police report surfaced in 2008 (via FOX25 news exposĂ©), Flurry and the church downplayed it as an isolated incident from 15 years earlier. Flurry later admitted alcohol “was getting in his way,” but the cover-up exposed the two-tiered morality: members face disfellowshipment for minor infractions while the “That Prophet” gets a pass and a sanitized story.

Authoritarian “Gestapo” Enforcers: Ministers Who Destroy Lives

Flurry’s inner circle — routinely called “Gerald Flurry’s Gestapo” by ex-members — includes son-in-law Wayne Turgeon, Cal Culpepper, Fred Dattolo (Dattalo), Brian Davis, and others. These ministers read personal “sin files,” use abusive language, threaten disfellowshipment for questioning authority, and enforce total control over members’ lives (moves, dating, jobs, medical decisions, even home inspections).

Wayne Turgeon (Flurry’s son-in-law and headquarters minister) is a prime example: described as intimidating, reading Exit and Support Network letters aloud to mock ex-members’ pain, and blocking member relocations without headquarters approval. In one sermon, he ridiculed an anonymous letter about ministers acting like the “KGB,” then disfellowshipped the writer when identified. Ex-members report Turgeon’s hypocrisy — e.g., boasting about harassing airport workers while preaching obedience to government.

Cal Culpepper (longtime regional director) has a documented “trail of destruction.” He pressures divorces (including the publicized Scott Flory/“Cal Flory” scandal), conducts home interviews to assess finances, and ruthlessly enforces no-contact. Ex-members call him tyrannical; letters detail families shattered, members interviewed like suspects, and lives ruined by his interventions.

Fred Dattolo enforces no-contact with equal zeal, disfellowships members for “not having the Holy Spirit,” and coerces offerings in sermons that guilt-trip the faithful. He was directly involved in cases leading to suicides.

These ministers operate with impunity, enjoying luxury while members suffer. There are two sets of rules: one for the Flurry/Turgeon inner circle (jets, high salaries, special medical leniency) and another for the rank-and-file (no medicine in some cases, total financial sacrifice).

The No-Contact Policy and the Trail of Suicides

Flurry’s 2007 sermon hardened the policy: zero contact with disfellowshipped or “Laodicean” members — including parents, siblings, and adult children (spouses sometimes excepted). This “emotional murder” has destroyed countless families. Ex-members document relentless isolation, fear of the Tribulation, and ministerial overreach as direct contributors to despair.

The human cost is horrific and well-documented. In 2014, 30-year-old Janet DeGenero/Privratsky (Degenerro) committed suicide after Dattolo ordered her to move out and Culpepper enforced total family cutoff; her family blamed Flurry, the ministers, and the policy. In 2018, 25-year PCG veteran Mary Ann McCullough killed herself in Milton, Ontario, while her husband and son were at services; her family publicly condemned the church’s “vile doctrines” and “dictatorship.” Philippines cases (Errol Concepcion, Rodolfo Marquez, Orville Lilangan) and others (a young man named David in 2016) add to the toll. Ex-member networks describe “countless” more suicides and attempts, with PCG blaming “weakness of mind and character” or lack of the Holy Spirit rather than its own abusive environment.

Additional abuses include forcing women in abusive marriages to stay (or leave) on ministerial orders, disfellowshipping for doubting Flurry, and using end-time terror to extract funds. Ministers explode over minor corrections and label questioners “insubordinate.”

Aaron Eagle’s Wife Forced to Divorce Him

In 2014, PCG disfellowshipped Aaron Eagle. Flurry and minister Cal Culpepper reportedly pressured his wife to divorce him and offered her a job at headquarters to facilitate separation and keep her in the church. Ex-member accounts describe it as classic ministerial interference in marriages.

Cal Culpepper and the Scott Flory Divorce Scandal

Cal Culpepper (a high-ranking PCG regional director/minister) was involved in a publicized 2016–2017 scandal where he allegedly helped destroy the marriage of member Scott Flory. Critics accuse him of counseling or pressuring the. wife in ways that led to divorce, consistent with other accounts of ministerial overreach in PCG marriages. Culpepper hand-picked a new wife for Flory.

Herbert Armstrong’s Prayer Rock

In 2002, PCG retrieved HWA’s “prayer rock” (a large stone in Oregon where Armstrong said he prayed and received inspiration early in his ministry) and placed it on their Edmond campus. Flurry has since elevated it dramatically: through new “revelation,” he teaches it is now the new Stone of Destiny (replacing the traditional one in Britain/Scotland). Jesus Christ will return to this rock to be crowned King of Kings on the new Throne of David. It is treated with near-sacred reverence in PCG literature and sermons.

Desire to Dig at Hill of Tara for the Ark of the Covenant

PCG’s teachings (rooted in British Israelism) hold that the Ark of the Covenant and the Ten Commandments tablets were taken to Ireland by the prophet Jeremiah and buried at the Hill of Tara with an Israelite princess (Tea-Tephi). They publish articles referencing this and prophesying the Ark will soon be found. Historical British-Israelite groups actually excavated at Tara (1899–1902) seeking it. Flurry has not launched a new dig, but the group keeps the Tara/Ark narrative alive in prophecy material as end-time proof of their Israelite identity.

The Edstone England Debacle

PCG tried to buy the old WCG Ambassador College campus at Bricket Wood, England, but the owners/lessees refused (local planning issues and residents opposed a “cult” moving in). Instead, in 2014 they purchased Edstone Hall (a large art-deco mansion in Warwickshire) as their UK campus, regional office, and student housing. It was heavily renovated but later put up for sale (around 2025) amid reported financial pressures. It has been for sale for some time now, but no one is willing to dish out  6,000,000 BPS. This location was also chosen because it would place them close to Ireland so they could start excavating Hill Tara when they would expose to the world that the Ark of the Covenant is there and that the Bible is true.

Celtic Dance Road Show (“David’s Dance”)

PCG produces and tours Celtic Throne, a large-scale Irish/Celtic dance and musical theater show performed by Herbert W. Armstrong College students, staff, and members. It is explicitly tied to King David’s biblical dance, where he danced naked “before the Lord,” and PCG’s British-Israelite heritage claims. They have hired professional Irish dance coaches and invest significant resources (critics say millions in tithe money) in productions, tours, and performances at Armstrong Auditorium and elsewhere. Ex-members have called it bizarre and extravagant.

Conclusion: The Real Danger — and the Real Hope

Here’s the brutal truth: Gerald Flurry’s PCG isn’t just another quirky splinter group — it is a spiritually and morally bankrupt cult that systematically destroys lives while dressing itself in the stolen robes of divine authority. Families are ripped apart by the no-contact policy. Marriages are dismantled by Gestapo-style ministers like Turgeon, Culpepper, and Dattolo. Parents have been told to abandon disabled children at malls for the sake of “God’s Work.” Young people have taken their own lives after being shunned, isolated, and terrorized with end-time fear. All while Flurry sits on his prayer-rock throne in a $25 million auditorium, jetting his family around the world for Celtic dance shows, covering up his own public drunkenness and bribe attempt, and demanding more tithes from the broken.

This is not God’s Philadelphia remnant. This is a man-made empire of control, greed, plagiarism, and hypocrisy — where one self-crowned “king” lives like royalty on the financial and emotional wreckage of his followers.

But here is the good news, delivered with zero Flurry-style drama: If you are in PCG, or have family trapped there, there is real hope on the other side of the door.

Leaving this cult will not cost you your salvation. The idea that only Flurry’s little group is God’s “one true church” is a lie designed to keep you afraid and obedient. God is bigger than Edmond, Oklahoma. He is bigger than a Gulfstream jet, a Celtic dance troupe, or a rock pulled out of an Oregon field. Countless people have left PCG and found freedom, restored family relationships, mental health, financial stability, and a genuine relationship with God — without the fear, the guilt, or the constant shunning.

The prayer rock may still sit in Edmond, but the throne Flurry built on it rests on nothing but sand soaked in hypocrisy and heartbreak. When members finally walk away, the “kingdom” loses its power — and real life begins.

If you’re reading this and feeling trapped, know this: You are not alone. Support networks like the Exit & Support Network, ex-PCG forums, and professional counselors are ready to help. Your salvation was never Flurry’s to give or take away. The only thing you’ll truly lose by leaving is the chains.

Silent Pilgrim

Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Tender Mercies of Armstrongism: Threatening Widows and Lecturing Hysterectomy Patients



Here is yet another heart-warming tale from the annals of Armstrongism, that glorious beacon of Christ-like love and servant leadership. Far too many of these freshly ordained mini-popes apparently believed the second the ministerial hands were laid on them, they instantly became untouchable demigods whose every utterance was binding in heaven and on earth. How convenient! This is from The Exit and Support Network:

Minister Told My Mother He Would Have to Ask God to Kill Her: 
 
May 9, 2026

In 1969 a minister came to my house where my mother (a loyal member) was staying. She politely informed him she was done attending “church.” Right in front of me (a non-member) and the assistant minister, this paragon of spiritual maturity declared, “Then I will have to ask God to kill you.”

He also helpfully explained that because she had undergone a hysterectomy, she would need to fast longer than everyone else. Why? Because a menstrual period was how women’s bodies expelled toxins, you see. (I, being young and logical, immediately wondered how postmenopausal women and literally all men ever got rid of their toxins. Apparently God just lets them marinate in spiritual sludge. Deep theology right there.)

– J. S. B. (Former member of WCG)

Nothing says “God’s true church” like threatening divine assassination and peddling medieval nonsense about periods and fasting. The sheer arrogance, the casual cruelty, the unhinged confidence—it was never about truth or love. It was always about power, fear, and a bunch of small men playing big-shot with other people’s lives. The mountain of broken bodies, shattered minds, and destroyed families tells the real story. 

During the 1990s doctrinal meltdown, the WCG itself admitted that well over a million people had wandered through its doors. It’s an absolute mystery why the church boasted such a spectacular attrition rate for decades—truly baffling. Far more left than ever stuck around. At its proud peak, before the so-called “great apostasy” (cue dramatic music), they claimed 130,000–150,000 members. Most who escaped simply walked away quietly and tried to salvage what was left of their lives. Others, bless their hearts, got loud—and with good reason.

They were sick of watching people’s lives demolished by an abusive ministry and a pile of aberrant doctrines that were usually just Herbert Armstrong throwing a tantrum after getting pissed off about something and calling it “God’s new revelation.” Most had zero biblical backing, but that only emboldened the lesser ministers to spout their own idiotic opinions with impunity. Genius system!

Decades of needless deaths thanks to the “don’t trust doctors, trust God (and us)” policy? Check. A magnetic pull for mentally disturbed individuals plus a factory-like production of new mental illnesses? Double check. The predictable fallout was an endless parade of suicides, broken marriages, stalking, far too many pedophiles in leadership, and the occasional murder. But hey, at least everyone was gaslit into believing this was the one true church restoring pure 1st-century Christianity. How spiritually pure indeed!

It was a transparent lie back then, and it remains a pathetic, laughable lie today every time Bob Thiel, Samuel Kitchen, or the rest of the splinter clowns claim they are practicing 1st century Christianity and how they want to “restore the church to its former glory days so it can be a powerful witness”. Glory days? Please. Back in the golden era they could keep the scandals buried because the internet didn’t exist. Once members discovered AOL chat rooms and mailing lists in the mid-90s, the whole rotten facade collapsed faster than a cheap suit in the rain.

That same internet, of course, also spawned hundreds of tiny, feuding Armstrongist splinters almost overnight—each one convinced it was the real Philadelphia Church. How adorable. They too quickly ended up under the microscope as ex-members started comparing notes and shining lights on the same old lies, control, and hypocrisy.

And so it goes in the never-ending saga of “God’s one true church.” From ministers casually ordering divine assassinations over skipped services, to Herbert’s ever-shifting tantrum-based doctrines that racked up an impressive body count through medical neglect, shattered minds, and unchecked predators in the pulpit—Armstrongism didn’t just attract dysfunction; it mass-produced it while calling it righteousness. The same arrogant playbook that produced this 1969 horror story repeated across decades: power-drunk men in cheap suits playing God, gaslighting victims, and burying scandals until the internet dragged everything into the light.

Whether it’s the original WCG empire or today’s pathetic splinter clowns like Bob Thiel and Samuel Kitchen desperately LARPing a “glorious restoration,” the fruit remains identical—broken people, ruined lives, and a trail of unnecessary tragedies. They can slap on new logos, rewrite their history, and scream “Philadelphia era!” all they want, but no amount of nostalgia can polish this turd. The only thing truly restored in these groups is the same toxic blend of fear, control, and spiritual abuse that drove millions away in the first place.

Thankfully, their dream of a grand comeback is as dead as the doctrines that once demanded longer fasts from hysterectomy patients. Some churches deserve to stay in the dustbin of history—and this one earned its spot with interest.