Sunday, May 11, 2025

Ai COG: Fear Religion? "We don't preach fear... trust me." -GTA


 


The WCG’s Fear Factory: A Family Business

Garner Ted Armstrong, heir to the Worldwide Church of God throne, had a knack for sounding pious while the cult he helped run did the opposite. In a 1974 piece, he decried "fear religion," claiming most faiths are built on terror—fear of death, spiritual retribution, or eternal hellfire. He painted a vivid picture: childhood nightmares of goblins and haunted hospitals, Eastern religions with beds of nails, and even mainstream Christianity with its fiery infernos. The cult, he implied, was different. God, he said, isn’t about terror but a loving "fear"—like a kid respecting a kind dad, an "awesome awareness" of divine power, not dread. Sounds sweet, doesn’t it? Too bad it’s a load of garbage.

Here’s the truth: the WCG was a fear factory, and the Armstrong family ran the assembly line. They preached a loving God while keeping members in a chokehold of terror—end-times prophecies that never came true, legalistic rules that crushed joy, and the constant threat of being cast out if you stepped out of line.

Painting the Strawman: Everyone Else’s Fear

The article starts with a parade of horrors—childhood fears of the dark, fairy tales about trolls, and grisly nightmares of haunted hospitals with bloody corpses. GTA then pivots to religion: Eastern practices like self-inflicted pain, infant sacrifice, and body mutilation, all driven by fear of spiritual consequences. He doesn’t stop there—mainstream Christianity gets a jab too, with its "ever-burning hell" tormenting souls for eternity. Fear, he says, drives people to extremes, from hiding in wilderness caves to making life-and-death decisions in a panic. It’s a powerful force, he admits, but not what God wants. The Bible, he claims, isn’t a book of fear; God desires love, not torment, citing verses like “perfect love casteth out fear” (1 John 4:18).

This is classic WCG misdirection. By painting other religions as fear-driven nightmares, GTA sets up a strawman to make Armstrongism look pure. Beds of nails? Infant sacrifice? Hellfire? Sure, those sound awful—but they’re not the WCG’s problem, right? Wrong. The cult was just as fear-obsessed, only sneakier. They didn’t need fiery pits; they had the Great Tribulation, a doomsday prediction that kept members on edge for decades. Failed prophecies—like the 1972 Tribulation that never came—didn’t stop the WCG from preaching imminent disaster, urging members to stockpile supplies and flee to Petra when the end came. That’s not love—that’s terror, the exact kind GTA pretends to reject. The hypocrisy stinks worse than a splinter group’s sermon on tithing.

The WCG’s Fear: Same Game, Different Name

GTA tries to thread the needle with a “right kind of fear.” He quotes Deuteronomy 5:29—God wants His people to “fear” Him, but like a child fears a loving father, not a tyrant. It’s an “awesome awareness” of God’s power, a respect that keeps you from evil, not a terror that paralyzes. He leans on Proverbs 14:26 and Psalms 103:11-13 to drive it home: fear God, and you’ll find confidence and mercy, not dread. Sinners, though, should be scared—Hebrews 10:27 warns of a “fearful looking for of judgment” for the unrepentant. But for the faithful, GTA says, there’s no fear in love; God gives “power, love, and a sound mind” (2 Timothy 1:7), not a spirit of fear.

Sounds nice—until you see what the WCG actually did. The cult’s “right kind of fear” was a sham, a rebranded terror to keep members in line. They preached God’s love while enforcing a legalistic nightmare: Saturday Sabbath, dietary laws, festival-keeping, all mandatory, or you’d be cut off from God. Break a rule—like eating pork—and you were as good as damned, facing the Tribulation without the cult’s protection. Members lived in constant anxiety, scrutinized for every move, from what they ate to how much they tithed, leaving families broke while the Armstrongs lived like royalty. That’s not an “awesome awareness”; that’s a fear-driven cage, the same kind GTA accuses other religions of building. The cult just swapped hellfire for the Tribulation, and beds of nails for triple tithes. Same game, different name.

Fear in the Cult’s DNA: Control, Not Love

The WCG didn’t just use fear—they weaponized it. GTA talks about the “wrong kind of fear”—fear of man, failure, ridicule, or physical harm—driving everything from crime to social climbing. He quotes Hebrews 13:5-6: God won’t forsake you, so don’t fear what man can do. But the cult thrived on fear of man, specifically fear of its leaders. Question a small point of doctrine? You’re out. Didn’t drop an offering into the collection plate on a holy day? You’re unfaithful. Step out of line, and you’d be disfellowshipped, cut off from family and community, left to face the end times alone. That’s not divine awe—that’s human control, the exact fear GTA claims to reject.

He even brings up Jesus’ day, pointing to the Pharisees’ “fear religion” that kept people in line—parents too scared to celebrate their son’s healing (John 9:22), Nicodemus sneaking to Jesus at night (John 3:1-2), disciples hiding from the Jews (John 20:19). Jesus, GTA says, came to free us from this, preaching a message of faith, not terror: “Fear not, little flock” (Luke 12:32). But the WCG was the Pharisees 2.0, using fear to crush dissent while pretending to offer freedom. Members lived in terror of the cult’s judgment, not God’s—a far cry from the “calm, reassuring faith” GTA claims Jesus taught. The Armstrongs built their empire on the same fear they condemned, all while pocketing millions from scared followers.

The Fruits of the WCG’s Fear: A Legacy of Broken Lives

GTA ends with a flourish, claiming Jesus came to free us from fear religions that “lade men with burdens
grievous to be borne,” quoting Isaiah 29:13 to say fear of God taught by men is empty. But the WCG’s fruits tell a different story. Members were burdened with rules, guilt, and end-times panic, driven to give everything to a cult that offered nothing but control. Families went broke paying tithes while the Armstrongs flew private jets. The constant fear of the Tribulation—always just around the corner—kept members on edge, some even fleeing to remote hideouts, exactly the kind of fear-driven behavior GTA mocks in other religions.

This hypocrisy mirrors what we’ve exposed before: the WCG preached against paganism while inventing their own myths, and now they preached against fear while wielding it like a weapon. The result? Broken lives, shattered faith, and, as we’ve seen, a pipeline to atheism for those who escaped. The cult didn’t free anyone from fear—it just redirected it, turning God into a boogeyman to enforce compliance. That’s not love; that’s a con, and GTA’s pious words can’t hide it.

The WCG’s claim to reject "fear religion" is their biggest lie yet. They didn’t cast out fear—they repackaged it, using end-times terror, legalistic rules, and threats of disfellowshipment to keep members in line, all while GTA and his family lived like kings off their tithes. The “right kind of fear” was just control with a halo, a way to make their fear factory look holy. Splinterland, you’ve been sold a bill of goods. Ditch the cult’s lies and see God for what He is—not a tyrant to dread, but a Father who loves. The WCG didn’t free you from fear—they built a prison of it. Break out, and leave their con behind.


Fear Religion? © 2025 by AiCOG is licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0


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7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Yeah the Armstrongs presented a false 3 tithes 7 feasts god but you should still abstain from "unclean" not healthy meat and observe the weekly still existing sabbath.

Byker Bob said...

in the mid 1950's when my parents bought into the scam, fear was indeed the overwhelming motivation. Actually, the sabbath had something to do with it as well. The PU's were making a choice between Billy Graham and Herbert Armstrong. I remembering us watching Billy Graham and Herbert Armstrong on TV. Billy's altar calls were just incredible, but my parental units had bought into HWA's "Schtick" sufficiently that they decided Billy Graham didn't have the truth about the sabbath, and down the rabbit hole we went!. Then gigantic thunder couds suddenly covered up every aspect of what had been our lives, as Dad read the "Plain Truth about the US and BC" to us, and "The Book of Revelation Revealed at Last!". And, the church never stopped harping on that theme! It was what "watching world news" was all about! It took years for me to realize that it was absolutely ridiculous, and during those years, we lived in constant fear of not qualifying to escape.

At this late stage of the game, I don't even care if their scenario actually transpires. I'm not even interested in living forever if they are the gatekeepers and enforcers. The "reward" would be an eternal tribulation. The fear would hypothetically continue as their reward would become ruling with rods of iron. Inflicting all of their $hit on the next guys!

I'm sorry! That is not a reward! Believe I'll pass!

BB

Anonymous said...

The Armstrong movement would not have flourished if it did not have willing fellow travellers supporting the leadership. Just like Stalin Hitler Mao Kim Il Sung etc etc etc. These individuals bear the same responsibility for the ‘fear’ they inflicted upon the membership. And perhaps some were more doctrinally fierce than even the leaders they served. When I see JWs at their ‘booths’ book stands, I shudder at what has bound them, enslaved them to this organisation. Yet I don’t doubt many are perfectly at home and accepting of their lot within the confines of this appalling sect. Such is the human condition. We are a funny lot we humans.

Anonymous said...

Members were expected to fake reality. It was the chuch culture Members weren't ev,en allowed to be authentic. The members were seen in terms of ministers needs rather than whom they really were. It's bully morality. Truth and reality just wasn't there.

Anonymous said...

That's the ACOG way. Blindly believe the ministers words and don't believe your lying eyes.
Members were accordingly expected to fake reality in keeping with the fake narratives. Like the bestes feast of tabernacles ever bull. Members were often punished for being authentic. This is the stuff of dysfunctional toxic family systems that one finds on the Web. I don't find Christ being fake or asking others to be so as well.

BillW said...

We all had to come to terms with the reasons why we joined this terrible cult and chose to accept its claims of truth. We can however forgive ourselves and be confident for the future:
“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” – Romans 8:1
“Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.” – Philippians 3:13-14

John said...

Byker Bob, Sunday, May 11, 2025 at 5:06:04 PM PDT wrote about tribulation he and his parents endured:

[[in the mid 1950's when my parents bought into the scam, fear was indeed the overwhelming motivation. Actually, the sabbath had something to do with it as well. The PU's were making a choice between Billy Graham and Herbert Armstrong…and down the rabbit hole we went!. Then gigantic thunder couds suddenly covered up every aspect of what had been our lives, as Dad read the "Plain Truth about the US and BC" to us, and "The Book of Revelation Revealed at Last!"…"watching world news" … it was absolutely ridiculous, and during those years, we lived in constant fear of not qualifying to escape.

At this late stage of the game, I don't even care if their scenario actually transpires. I'm not even interested in living forever if they are the gatekeepers and enforcers. The "reward" would be an eternal tribulation. The fear would hypothetically continue…That is not a reward! Believe I'll pass!]]
******
BB, tribulation: what's new?

John 16:33 "These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation:…."

Revelation 2:10 "Fear none of those things which thou shalt suffer: behold, the devil shall cast [some] of you into prison, that ye may be tried; and ye shall have tribulation ten days:..."

While all of us go through tribulation, we're learning to discern between good and evil and are coming to hate evil. Tribulation is for each of us, and not just a particular church era/church/congregation (e.g. Smyrna), and it's been ongoing since that waster, destroyer, was allowed to enter that Garden. Pain isn't forever.

BB has had it kind of tough, and so have in different, but similar, ways, and BB is a survivor. Aren't we all? Despite it all, has the salvation of anyone of us been negatively impacted? Time will tell.

We've been told that God is not a respecter of persons, that He teaches, that He loves us...and unconditionally. We cannot say the same for Satan and his angels, who will ultimately taken and destroyed.

Aren't we going to be in either the first or second resurrection? And there is no third, but if one wants to believe in one: go ahead and believe it. Either of those two resurrections are good, although one is better.

God sent His Son not to condemn this world: the human inhabitants. He promised eternal life. Something will be prepared: done-deal.

e.g. second resurrection: "Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world:" Matthew 25:34

And won't the meek inherit the earth? Satan and his angels, anything but meek, will have something prepared for them too: Matthew 25:41, 46 In fact, they, not humans, have reservations for them. Time will tell.

Is there any reason to believe those two thieves by Jesus' side, and others like Judas, Solomon, King Saul, etc. won't have it made, too?

We all have learned that we cannot qualify for any of this good news stuff. Either God is a Giver of gifts to us, loves us, or He doesn't.

We, despite our tribulations, still have so much to be thankful for. Every human being who has ever lived, lives and will live, will be God's witnesses of what we went thru in tribulation, and will live again, and never have to go through those experiences again. This is our great tribulation, but it is with great hope.

Yes, we have been exposed to some stupid scenarios, pushed upon us by deceived (intentionally or not) hirelings, used, like Pharisees were (Matthew 23:33, 35-36), by a generation of evil spirit beings, of the former WCG, but none of them has impacted what God has in store for all of us.

So, BB, hang in there, and I know you are and you will. You've demonstrated that, and been a "good" example for decades of that for us.

The reward will be eternal life: nothing like we endure through today, but will each of us endure to the end?

Time will tell...

John