Monday, November 12, 2018

Schism In The Church of God

The Fragmentation of a Sect – Schism in the Worldwide Church of God by David V. Barrett: Book Review(available on Amazon
This book is based on his PhD thesis and is an independent look at what happened, what is happening, and how WCG is similar to other founder churches. 
Part one discusses the doctrines (Sabbatarianism and Observance of the Law, millenarianism, the ten lost tribes and British Israelism, Church governance, and a comparison between Worldwide and Mormonism. Then continues with how WCG got started. Next it covers failure in prophecy, major doctrine changes (Pentecost, divorce and remarriage, and liberalism), sex scandals, ousting of GTA, and other problems.
Next a chapter on Tkach doctrinal changes, membership of WCG then and today.
The final chapter in Part one covers the schism, the schism of the schisms, smaller groups, and special focus groups.

Part two – Analysis 
First chapter – authority and governance in HWA and Tkach eras, and in the offshoots.
Second chapter – after the founder dies – examines other organizations as well as the WCG splits, plus looks at what happens when the split founder dies.
Third chapeter – who went where and why.

Finally, he covers his research behind the book.

For an unbiased look at what happened and how we compare to other groups, this is a book well worth reading regardless on whether or not you are a believer in the original WCG doctrines.
Submitted by TLA



My comments

David Barrett was given almost unfettered access to Worldwide Church of God historical archives and Herbert Armstrong's writings.  Of all the hundreds of books written about the WCG over the decades, this one has been deemed the fairest and most balanced.

Barrett also goes into depth the doctrine of British Israelism.

Living Church of God even quoted his book in their The Incredible History of God's True Church by Ivor C Fletcher, as did the United Church of God's Michael Snyder..

James Tabor had this to say:
Prof James D Tabor, Chair, Dept. of Religious Studies, UNC Charlotte, wrote:
“Millions around the world listened by radio or watched on television 'The World Tomorrow' program with Herbert W Armstrong or his son Garner Ted Armstrong, or subscribed to The Plain Truth magazine in the 1960s through the 1990s. Both were sponsored by Ambassador College and the Worldwide Church of God. The Armstrongs believed they had been raised up by God to warn the world before the final Apocalypse. In many ways they were the most successful such movement of our times. David V Barrett, a sociologist of religion with no connection to the Church, has provided us with the most thorough and objective history to date. From its inception in the 1930s to its schisms and transformations, Barrett weaves the fascinating story of faith, corruption, disappointment, and hope. His careful research and skillful analysis has not only advanced our understanding of the Worldwide Church of God and its history, but clarified the dynamics of such modern apocalyptic groups more generally.”

Oxford University Press had this to say about the book:

The Worldwide Church of God was a largely American 20th century Christian sect (or new religious movement: NRM) with heterodox beliefs and practices. It was Sabbatarian, millenarian, British Israelite and legalistic. After the death of its charismatic founder Herbert W. Armstrong in 1986 his successor changed the Church’s distinctive doctrines, leading it towards an increasing convergence with mainstream Evangelical Christianity. Ministers and members faced massive cognitive dissonance: whether to accept or reject the authority of the Church leadership which had abandoned the authority of the founder’s teachings. Groups of ministers left to form new Churches, taking thousands of members with them. These schismatic Churches in the “Worldwide family” in turn faced continuing schism, resulting in over 400 offshoot Churches by 2009. This sociological study examines some of the processes involved in schism, including the legitimation of authority, within both Worldwide and its range of offshoots, from hardline to comparatively liberal. Religions frequently face a period of turmoil and readjustment following their founder’s death. This book offers a new typological model for categorising various outcomes, including schism, and explores the usefulness of this model by applying it to both the Worldwide Church of God and a wide variety of other religions. It also extends Stark and Finke’s rational choice concepts of “social capital” and “religious capital” when people make religious choices, specifically reaffiliation between movements; it introduces a third factor, “moral capital”, covering for example past problems with leaders, and tests the relative strengths of these factors.

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not read the book yet. I read his first book covering all religions and he chose WCG for more indepth research.

For his research he spoke to many. I communicated with him but i thought he already had formed his opinion.
He is a catholic so make of that what you will.

James said...

This is a very good book that helped to make sense of it all and also provided the keys to understand how such movements end. I highly recommend this book.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...


Does anyone - for a second - believe Tkach's claim on wikipedia that he has "50,000 members"?

Wikipedia flags G.C.I. page as being propagandistic:

" This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Question book-new.svg
" This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable, independent, third-party sources."

Anonymous said...

"After the death of its charismatic founder Herbert W. Armstrong in 1986 his successor changed the Church’s distinctive doctrines, leading it towards an increasing convergence with mainstream Evangelical Christianity. Ministers and members faced massive cognitive dissonance: whether to accept or reject the authority of the Church leadership which had abandoned the authority of the founder’s teachings"

I didn't suffer from any cognitive dissonance! I immediately during services called Tkach a heretic. HWA was wrong to set dates, to allow the many of membership to idolize him, and run the church in cultish ways. But the many doctrines that separated WWCG from "mainstream Christianity" can be easily proven which I did over 50 years.

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a snoozer.

But nobody is unbiased.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...

I was raised Catholic. The Catholic Church, without question, is the largest "Christian" Cult on this planet, period! Anyone want to debate that?

Anonymous said...

Although Tkach would have been able to dodge much County & State taxes as a Church, but being on the highest salary of G.C.I. – a big six-figure salary set by the Board he controls (perhaps as high as his dad’s $500k*?)

The reason Tkach moved to the Bible Belt? -

He would have been personally hit hard by California’s socialist income tax of 13.3% – this is on top of Federal income taxes!
Moving his operation to Nth Carolina, he enjoys below average state income tax of 5.5%!
https://taxfoundation.org/state-individual-income-tax-rates-brackets-2018/

*Ambassador Report

Anonymous said...

7.13 AM
"Are you a trained theologian?" Spoken like a Herbie minister. So only the big people ministers have a right to 'prove all things.' They in turn tell the little people what to blindly believe.
Only the big people have a natural right to exercise intellectual independence, and make up their own minds. Also, the little people, including women (they are too emotional and irrational) should not be allowed to vote. The little people are so stupid (insufficient educational level) that consumer choice should be eliminated and replaced with government boards dictating the consumer products, quantity and quality. The communists had some things right. And no more pop corn movies. Only movies praising the party and great leader should be tolerated. Etc, etc.

Unknown said...

The fall of the WCG is a parallel of whenever a dictatorship that is unnaturally holding a group of people that do not have commonality , has a death of its leader.

Example, Tito and the Balkans, Sadaam and Iraq, of even the Soviet Union.

The collapse of the WCG is not unexpected and in fact was totally predictable. The same will occur in any of the sects that have one man government, like Flurry, Pack, etc.

Anonymous said...

6:42 AM wrote: "I didn't suffer from any cognitive dissonance!"

I totally agree! I did not suffer any kind of mental anguish of Tkach and the changes. I totally got them and they were easily proven right! Hebrew holy days are not applicable to Christians. That was easily proven. The church was entirely right in debunking the heresies of Armstrong, but the way they did it and the endless deception while denying they were doing it were totally wrong. They deserved to have their "new and improved" church implode around them.

bill said...

Isn,t this the book that came out ages ago? I'm sure its in my church,slibrary.

Anonymous said...


Anonymous at 10:08 AM said...“I did not suffer any kind of mental anguish of Tkach and the changes. I totally got them and they were easily proven right! Hebrew holy days are not applicable to Christians. That was easily proven.”


That is one of the really strange things about modern professing Christians. They think that the biblical annual holy days given by God himself in the Bible, and observed by Jesus and his apostles, are of no importance or significance at all for modern professing Christians, but that unbiblical, man-made, pagan-based customs like Christmas, Easter, Halloween, etc. have great meaning and significance, and that everyone should observe them instead.

Anonymous said...

Anon 3:50 PM, Warriors may be forged in the fire of battle, but heroes are discovered in the most unlikely of places.

Anonymous said...

Which doctrines the one on first, second and third tithe plus offerings? The doctrine that claims WCG was the only true Church? The place of safety? I suppose many churches have doctrines members think they have proven to be true as well.

Byker Bob said...

Catholic kids study their Catechism. But, alas, Armstrongite kids only have Cateschism.

Hey! That’d probably make a good series of Burm Shave signs!

BB

Ed said...

The truth is that the Sabbath and holy days where observed long before the old testament was even written. Ancient civilizations had harvest and fertility festivals that where very similar to the O.T. holy days. God did not give the Hebrew holy days they where customs carried over from other ancient civilizations.

RSK said...

Hey, when you're pooping in a hole in the ground as God commanded instead of an unbiblical man-made pagan-based water-using commode that whisks your turds away to places unknown...

Anonymous said...

RSK at 9:56 AM, What in the name of Jesus are you talking about ???