Have you ever read a National Geographic article, looked at it's pictures and immediately found that it supported your understanding of Herbert Armstrong's teachings? Most of us no longer do that, but there are still splinter cults of Armstrongism that look to these kinds of stories to legitimize their teachings.
The National Geographic has an article up about a hoard of gold and jewels that were discovered in a farmers field in Straffordshire England. You can read the article here: The Strattforshire Gold Hoard and see the fascinating pictures here: Strattforshire Gold Hoard pictures
One day, or perhaps one night, in the late seventh century an unknown party traveled along an old Roman road that cut across an uninhabited heath fringed by forest in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Mercia. Possibly they were soldiers, or then again maybe thieves—the remote area would remain notorious for highwaymen for centuries—but at any rate they were not casual travelers. Stepping off the road near the rise of a small ridge, they dug a pit and buried a stash of treasure in the ground.
I guess when an Armstrongite sees the words. "Anglo-Saxon, he immediately thinks of HWA and his British Israelism myth that he plagiarized from "Judah's Scepter Joseph's Birthright", by JH Allen. This book and Dugger and Dodd's, "The History of the True Religion" were important WCG "historical" documents when I came to Pasadena.
For 1,300 years the treasure lay undisturbed, and eventually the landscape evolved from forest clearing to grazing pasture to working field. Then treasure hunters equipped with metal detectors—ubiquitous in Britain—began to call on farmer Fred Johnson, asking permission to walk the field. "I told one I'd lost a wrench and asked him to find that," Johnson says. Instead, on July 5, 2009, Terry Herbert came to the farmhouse door and announced to Johnson that he had found Anglo-Saxon treasure.
The History of the True Religion was used to legitimize HWA's standing as an ordained minister who was supposedly in direct lineage from a long line of "true ministers" from the time of the Apostles. JH Allen's book was used to legitimize the existence of the Church. But it had a more insidious history in the church though.
During HWA's six month bible study in a public library, he was exposed to the books popular from the mid-1880's to the 1930"s. This was also the time period in which the British Empire was winding down in it's colonial conquests. British and American libraries were filled with a myriad of books describing those conquests and some even trying to prove them by Scripture. There were scores of British Israelism books in print and there was even a British Israel Society in existence during HWA's study phase. Many of the books tried to prove the existence of the British Empire as directly inspired by God through the lineage of Joseph and the wanderings of the 12 tribes.
Numerous books were also in print at this time on Pyramidology and how the Great Pyramid of Giza was reportedly built by Joseph as study in future prophecy. The Ambassador College library in Pasadena was filled with these books on pyramidology. Some even had HWA's had writing in the margins.
These books and more were all in public libraries that HWA used when he was doing his equivalent study of a semester of school. It also goes to show that HWA did NOT originate British Israelism. He just copied all he could from other people and claimed it as his own. It quickly mushroomed as a proof of the Bible and that God was working through him.
The trouble with all of this was that hundreds of books had already been printed refuting British Israelism. This caused Meredith, Hoeh, and others to have a knee jerk reaction and to double their efforts in legitimizing the half balked theory.
We have all see the result s of that theory in Armstrongism. It was and still is used to legitimize racism in the church and in society around them. It is used to claim that God hates intermarriage and will separate all races from each other in the kingdom. I guess that scripture of there being neither Jew nor gentile, male or female does nto apply to this, but I digress.
Anyway, back to the present day and the National Geographic story. The COG splinter cult The Knock is all hyper that the article PROVES beyond a shadow of doubt that:
Saxon Gold Treasure found in Central England – of Sythian Origin – Evidence of the Lost House of Israel!
Say what? No where in the National Geographic article does it say any such thing! Armstrongism once again is jumping to conclusions to make the story fit the mold they want it to. Usually though, they are just deliberately lie knowing that the uneducated COG members are usually too lazy to do any in depth research into the story. Far too many COG members are willing to let others tell them what to believe.
So yet again, we see items from history being slipped into COG history as legitimate proof of HWA's claims. It didn't work back then and still does not today.
The bigger the lie, the easier it is to pass it off as truth to gullible people. Hitler knew that. Herb knew that too.
ReplyDeleteWhen people are desperate to be special and important, in other words, right, they will grasp at any absurd thing as "proof."
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ReplyDeleteOld Testament Found in Nepal-Buddhists are Jewish!
About the only factor which can put some of these things from Armstrongism to rest, and provide healing, inner peace and joy is the achievement of greater, deeper spiritual understanding. In other words, you can't just stop and allow your faith to become static, believing that you have total truth and know all of the answers.
ReplyDeleteArmstrongism had the appearance of being both scientific and well documented. It was, in fact, shallow and simplistic. Yet, so many of us stopped at one point or another, failing to go deeper.
Better understanding of grace, and of the Holy Spirit have been very beneficial in my own post-Armstrong spiritual odyssey. I had always wondered why WCG was anything but a nurturing group, lacking the most important fruits of the Holy Spirit. You're just not going to ever have those if you look to someone claiming to be an apostle as being infallible.
BB