Walking Fraud Street
David C. Pack’s 10,000 Piece Puzzle of Nothing Beyond
Around 1927, when a young-in-faith Herbert W. Armstrong discovered Matthew 24:14, he concluded that someone must fulfill that prophecy. Almost sixty years later, that same man was traveling the globe 300 days a year in a private jet, spreading a message of hope that would soon end all wars and strife, and the good news he brought was that there is a way to end poverty, disease, and starvation.
Until his death in January 1986, no one could accuse Herbert W. Armstrong of The Worldwide Church of God of not using “God’s money” to spread a Gospel of the Kingdom of God to a world some viewed as teetering on the edge of collapse.
In November of 2015, Pastor General David C. Pack of The Restored Church of God started his self-described authoritative defining of the Mystery of God and laid the foundation of the complete schematic of God’s plan for all mankind. Those of us attending RCG at that time could only ask ourselves two questions: Where is he going with this, and what will be the conclusion?
In the early days of “The Greatest Story Never Told!” David C. Pack framed his Series as a complicated 10,000-piece puzzle that only he could solve due to his unique background and special training. Apparently, his mother was a very talented puzzle solver, and young Dave quickly picked up the same skills. Becoming masterful at solving complex puzzles would make that person a cognitive genius.
David C. Pack’s 10,000-piece puzzle presentation was supposed to have all the details of the gospel clearly defined. All the complicated pieces were to fit perfectly together, revealing the complete good news that had been hidden from mankind for ages. Once the world heard and understood this message, they would finally have the words of eternal life.
David C. Pack’s “Greatest Untold Story” was unlike any store-bought puzzle. Puzzles at the store have spectacular photos or artwork on the box, along with a piece count and size to give the potential buyer all the information they need to decide if they want to invest the effort into building that image. They know exactly what the conclusion will be.
In The Restored Church of God, the Pastor General’s puzzle was a mystery confined behind many successive doors with an astonishing number of locks, all residing in vast darkness. The RCG members give complete allegiance of trust to their Pastor General and thus commit to paying in advance for an unseen, unsubstantiated, overhyped conclusion billed as beyond spectacular.
Through all the darkness, blindness, smoke, mirrors, and criticism over the past ten years, “The Greatest Story Never Told!” has been defended vigorously by David C. Pack as a message about the gospel of God comprising The “who”, the “what”, and “when” of God’s one, two, and three iterations of His Kingdoms. This is not a prophetic piece of work, though it contains many prophecies we have been told to believe.
If the now 10-year long series of “The Greatest Story Never Told!” has reached a conclusion and all the intricate mysteries of the final pieces of the gospel puzzle have been revealed, it is essential to understand how David C. Pack arrived at that conclusion, just as it is equally important for as many people as possible to hear that conclusion if it is true.
In 2009, David C. Pack invented the concept of “open doctrine.” “Open doctrine” is the first step to redefining “present truth.” After a present truth is established, it becomes “official church doctrine,” which demands strict adherence. For RCG members, this is a dead end with no escape. All three steps are melded together and are enacted in real-time all the time. There is no avenue for RCG members to get beyond this.
Most biblical students would strongly question the gospel being subject to exegesis some two thousand years after reaching maturity in the first century, especially if it is done by a man who believes he is the sole source of biblical interpretation. For David C. Pack, each page of the Bible was waiting for him to excise its words and then piece back together a conclusion that is mind-blowing in its revelation.
David C. Pack has often vehemently framed this revelatory process as originating from the Holy Spirit. Despite the claims of divine origin, it has not been spiritually rosy in the RCG despite the spectacular gardens.
David C. Pack started his Series with approximately 2,500 members and is finishing it with about half that. Which means in his mind, half the virgins were foolish and impatient and went to taste all the world’s delights and have no oil in their lamps anymore. The remaining 1,250 members have slumbered and slept for the past 10 years in their most important guard: “Don’t believe me, believe your Bible.” The complexities of the conclusions that David C. Pack has taught have been a grievous burden upon the RCG membership. But they do know how to follow the feigned words of their slightly held idol, and they have paid handsomely for the privilege to not only know the “who” but the “what” some of the time. And to know the “when” all the time —cough cough—none of the time.
For the weary, longstanding RCG member, “The Greatest Untold Story!” has a conclusion that contains a reward for them. That reward is to stand before eight billion people as a god figure for seven years...maybe? To obtain that reward, the RCG member must check all the boxes in David C. Pack’s works of salvation.
One of those works is paying “Common.” If tithes and offerings are the basis for funding church operations and congregations, then “Common” is David C. Pack’s magnificently conceived, yet unbiblical method for extracting enormous amounts of money for mostly one specific purpose. If you ever wonder what the draw is to line up and cash out, check out just part of this highly polished RCG sales pitch contained in their article titled: COMMON—Paying One Portion of Christ’s Price.
Many millions of people (including wealthy philanthropists) collectively give vast billions of dollars to charitable organizations in an attempt to fix this world. Governments and international organizations invest additional billions to eradicate hunger, poverty, disease, and war. Yet all their efforts ultimately fail. No amount of human ingenuity can solve mankind’s problems.
You can participate in giving the most wonderful gift this world could possibly receive. By supporting the Work of preaching the gospel of the Kingdom of God and all other Bible truths in all nations (Matthew 28:19-20), you are helping to bring a message of hope to a world groping about in spiritual darkness (Isaiah 59:9-10)—the sure hope of a better world soon to come, to be established under the reign of Jesus Christ.
What greater calling could there be?
The Work has distributed scores of millions of pieces of literature during the past several years, and many millions of people have visited the Church’s websites. But consider: Earth’s population is beyond 7.6 billion human beings. Think of those who live in your city, town, village, or even your neighborhood—have they heard the true gospel? What about your family, friends, neighbors, co-workers, and acquaintances—have they listened to this greatest of news? Realize there is tremendous work to be done. Truly, we (following Jesus’ example) must be about our Father’s business!
Many live unhappy, unfulfilled lives. Some seek answers to their problems and life’s greatest questions. Knowing we can participate in bringing them precious knowledge should excite us to no end, motivating us to do everything we can.
As David C. Pack explained to the Church, Christ’s price involves three elements that Jesus plainly laid out. These are listed in Luke 14 in the context of “counting the cost” of Christianity:
(1) Loving Christ more than anyone, including our own lives: “If any man come to Me, and hate [Greek: love less by comparison] not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be My disciple” (vs. 26).
(2) Bearing the burdens/crosses that we face in life: “Whosoever does not bear his cross, and come after Me, cannot be My disciple” (vs. 27).
(3) Giving our assets to support preaching the gospel. “So likewise, whosoever he be of you that forsakes not all that he has, he cannot be My disciple” (vs. 33).
You would think that after reading that, you would conclude that the RCG is perfectly in line with what its predecessor did. In the Worldwide Church of God, Herbert W. Armstrong repeatedly reminded the lay membership that the ONLY REASON they were called was to support the work and commission of preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom of God as a witness unto the world. The difference between the WCG and RCG is that David C. Pack moved past just tithes and offerings supporting the work of God.
“Common” is how a little church does “big things,” according to David C. Pack. Christ has a price, and that is selling all that you have and then giving it to David C. Pack, who then gives “the most wonderful gift this world could possibly receive.” That is the splendid picture we are expected to believe. No one could possibly accuse the RCG of not using “God’s Money” to spread a gospel message of hope throughout the world, right?
David C. Pack has allegedly concluded the 10-year-old series, stating that he absolutely knows God’s plan and the unfolding timeline of the Mystery of God. He has repeatedly claimed God has shown him from the scriptures the date everyone is waiting for. As of October 2025, there have been 135 dates.
David C. Pack has said that Jesus Christ has sworn by God and all things made in heaven and earth that there is time no longer after he finishes making the Mystery of God clear. This is absolute earth-shattering news for a world ready to be harvested and saved from unprecedented evils. Is the Restored Church of God now prepared to take its extraordinary, precious message and wonderful gift unto the world?
Even after escaping corporate debt by selling off residential properties to his members, it has become painfully evident that there is only one truthful answer: NO!
With Restored Church of God mouthpiece extraordinaire Edward L. Winkfield completely contradicting his boss David C. Pack and God himself with his statements to a reporter late this Spring which has all the makings of “legal” postering, Mr. Winkfield emphatically declared that “this (extraordinary date) is (unequivocally) not something the Restored Church of God teaches or that Mr. Pack is claiming.” He continued, “The Restored Church of God is a group which remains hopeful... more than anything definitive, maybe you could go as far as speculating different things, but I wouldn’t take it as anything beyond that.”
Figuratively taking “it” as anything beyond that is precisely what David C. Pack came to conclude. Although the conclusion of David C. Pack’s 10-year, 10,000-piece puzzle constituted a convergence of a “date that cannot tarry” and a “man that would know and reveal that date,” the Pastor General could see no way forward to carry that message anywhere beyond the closed doors of the Restored Church of God. David C. Pack’s prophetic vision of a “thief,” “time no longer,” and a future “marvelous work and wonder” is a three-wheel brake to a prophetic mouth that has not stopped for a decade. David C. Pack’s antipathy to carrying the gospel message beyond anything or anywhere was summed up recently in this statement to the church: it “would fight prophecy” to go against God’s will to try and spread a message of ultimate truth and to grow the Church of the Living Christ. This is the same man who has concluded that setting over 135 false prophetic dates IN GOD’S NAME is not going against God’s will or fighting prophecy.
With Dave Pack singing the Guess Who’s hit song “No Time” as his new excuse, the “who,” the “what,” and “when,” of the gospel sit only as a trophy on a mantle constituting 10 years of answering nothing except for the fact that it is beyond our imagination that one man could so grossly foul up the divinity of Jesus Christ, His true gospel message and the “day and hour” that no man knows.
Comparing the work of David C. Pack to the work of Jesus Christ is a mind-bending exercise. The work of Jesus Christ in the first century AD was an unstoppable juggernaut. Revealing the Father, showing the Kingdom of God, and ushering in salvation had everything and anything any person would ever need or want to see, and all of it was done in the public eye. Filtering David C. Pack through Jesus Christ never paints a pretty picture.
ExRCG.org does this non declaratively and proves that David C. Pack is a blaspheming anti-Christ, false prophet, and false apostle. The contrast is clear: David C. Pack being against Jesus Christ is not an opinion. It has become fact.
If the conclusion of “The Greatest Untold Story!” is the most precious thing the world would ever see or hear and has at its core the complete plan of God—the gospel message of the Kingdom of God, why does David C. Pack want to hide it from the world? Is this not the treasure and “talent” of God that David C. Pack wants to go and dig in the earth and bury in a field (Matthew 25:14-18)? Speaking of treasure, or that other treasure—God’s Money, why is it that recently, on the very precipice of a predicted arrival of the Kingdom of God, did David C. Pack reveal that his longstanding prayer was for the church to be out of debt? No mention of a longstanding prayer for an open door to the world for God’s treasure to be revealed? No simple, longstanding prayer of thy Kingdom come, thy will be done? Instead, he has been bragging about asset conversion and “booming” financial wealth, both of which were initiated and executed in the “last days” in a dark back room and involved putting widows into debt would certainly conflict with John 5:29: “I am the light of the world, whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.” Burying the gospel (the light of life) from the public and doing scurrilous real estate deals in the face and advent of Jesus Christ is walking in darkness.
The Church has always taught that the start of Christ’s ministry was when He spoke these words: “The time is fulfilled, and the Kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye and believe the Gospel.” According to David C. Pack, the Opening Night of the Feast of Tabernacles on October 6, 2025, will end the almost two thousand years’ wait for the Kingdom of God to arrive. The Kingdom may be at hand, but hardly a soul has repented because they can’t believe what they haven’t heard—at least from the Restored Church of God.
Jesus Christ said in Matthew 9:37-38: “The harvest is plentiful—pray ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that He will send forth laborers into His harvest.” David C. Pack wants you to save your prayers for a future time; his immediate prayer is for a “harvest” of debt relief and financial growth.
Jesus observed in Luke 16:16 that from John the Baptist until the present time, the Kingdom of God is preached, and every man presses into it. David C. Pack has chosen not to preach the truth of the Kingdom of God, leaving the world ever more pressing into the Devil’s world.
In John 17:2-3, it says: “And this is eternal life, that they may know the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent.” David C. Pack has defined and re-defined God and Jesus Christ during the whole ten-year series of messages of The Greatest Untold Story. The world will never hear the true God and Jesus Christ from Dave Pack, because that truth is lost and buried in the thinking of David C. Pack’s mind.
“As thou hast sent me unto the world, even so have I sent them unto the world (John 17:18). I spoke openly to the world (John 18:20) .... for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth.” What a beautiful concluding message from Jesus Christ concerning His public ministry and those He trained. David C. Pack came into the world to piece together the most confounding puzzle known to mankind and then kept within his organization the revelation of it, biding his time in a gated community of yes men who eat and drink at a table of lies. Is that the “truth” the world needs to hear?
The Restored Church of God is a real estate organization doing business in God’s name. It is led by a faithless man using false pretenses and coercion to alter people’s lives. It operates as a temple money changer—exchanging “all” for practically nothing in return. “God’s Money” has been squandered down a giant 10-year-long rat hole. The treasure of God’s true Gospel message is purposely hidden in the depths of Hades, just as David C. Pack has hidden the savior of the world as a silent 5’6” olive-skinned Middle Eastern man in the back dark room of the Temple of God. David C. Pack’s message of strong financial standing is now front and center, while the name of God and Jesus Christ and their extraordinary Gospel message are purposely hidden from the world.
The poor RCG membership never could fully understand the complexity of David C. Pack’s message. They were always buried in papers, timelines, metrics, days, weeks, months, full moons, moeds, rushing, running, absolutes, impossibilities, inarguable suppositions, all while under pressure to pay for their very lives.
God’s will is not being done in the RCG, and Jesus Christ is aghast at the conduct of its leader. The real thief breaking up people’s houses has been exposed. The confounding non-action of one part of the conclusion of “The Greatest Non-Story Ever Told!” is just as concerning as what was revealed in most of the rest of the Series.
A Series that became a bait and switch sham show that always interchanged one error for another error to come to some new and improved assumed truth. A Series that included a scheme to manipulate and coerce the RCG membership into paying “God’s money” for a purpose that David C. Pack either doesn’t or poorly and passively executes. The only real conclusion of “The Greatest Untold Story!” is that David C. Pack stands alone above and apart from all of God, the RCG membership, and the world. David C. Pack enlightened and enlivened himself as the only person indispensable in the Bible and the mediator of 8 billion people’s path to salvation. He satisfied all the desires of his soul by in part shaking sown widows to resolve his longstanding prayer. He rode the real estate market up and cashed out to make himself strong financially. He successfully baited his membership into funding a lifestyle that he himself forbids them to have. He operates with no patience and is faithless in all his actions, while always demanding both from his membership. He embraces hypocrisy like it is a requirement to run and lead a church organization, yet his membership would never come close to such conduct.
In the end, David C. Pack’s 10-year 10,000-piece puzzle was nothing but a self-promotion exercise. The world received nothing. The RCG membership paid an excessive price to have all their expectations continually crushed. There are 10,000 proofs, 10,000 examples, and 10,000 reasons why David C. Pack failed to discern and deliver the most critical piece of the puzzle. Unfortunately, there are far too many men and women lost in the confines of the other 9999 pieces of the puzzle to even know or care.
The now conclusion of the decade-long “The Greatest Untold Story!” gave us the final picture and evidence that each of David C. Pack’s three revealed mysteries of the gospel and the implied fulfillments of each, present a vast gulf between what was stated and what was realized. The potential for David C. Pack’s 10,000-piece puzzle to be one big giant fraud is real. David C. Pack concluded that the “who” at the very end almost entirely revolved around himself. The “what” was a multi-million-dollar financial exchange for a promissory action that, at the end, was deemed undeliverable! The “when” has been framed as unassailable 135 times, but technically and legally, it was always just “hopeful speculation.” If it looks like fraud and it sounds like fraud and it walks like fraud—it is fraud!
Scott Steel/former RCG member

21 comments:
Outstanding analysis, Scott, of the completely failed Restored Church of God and its personality disordered David C Pack. Thank you for the time spent sharing your experience. I find that those who offer simple answers, as Dave always does, to complex questions, he doesn't even know how to ask, never ends well, ever.
So basically a church of really confused people with a desperately motivated but even more confused upset elderly jackass leader who have accomplished nothing except acquiring some nice property for church services and the widows dont have to drive very far to get there because they bought the houses they live in nearby. Got it. We all get this now where before with the 1057 previous articles lambasting these folks we were still struggling with it. We didnt understand it yet. But now I think we finally fully understand it. Thanks for the effort here
Mat 24:14 ESV
And this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the END will come.
1Cor 10:11ESV
Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the END of the ages has come.
Col 1:23 ESV
if indeed you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel that you heard, which has been proclaimed in all creation under heaven, and of which I, Paul, became a minister.
END......Strong's 5056 (telos, plural telē) embraces the ideas of completion, goal, outcome, fulfillment and consummation.
The END came almost 2000 years ago when the goal of proclaiming the gospel to all the world was achieved.
All COGs are offshoots of SDA, and RCG is a far-right cult compared to the rest.
And influenced by JWs and Mormons. But the sheep don’t even know it
Right-wing? That's a moral code. The RCG basically has no moral code. All it teaches is some stripped down, Mickey Mouse version of the ten commandments. What they really teach is Herb's "give way," which is slavery to the irresponsible, plus blind rule following. Members have only been fed spiritual milk, and don't even recognize this since they have never experienced moral meat. It's only people who who read self help books that comprehend this. The other ACOGs aren't much better than Dave's group.
The good news is that there are only 1,250 members left. And as everyone knows, the toilet paper disappears much faster as the roll reaches the end!
”Commons” is a grift, but it is also biblical — at least in the New Testament, as it does violate Moses and the Hebrew Scriptures. Jesus’ teachings show him to be an Essene, and the Gospel accounts and the first few chapters of Acts all point to this as well as the Commons practice.
It was for the maintenance of all members. From each according to his ability; to each according to his need. The basis for communism. (So much for Health-Wealth.) Pack’s use of the practice focuses it on a self-service. But it is all the same scam.
No, common is not biblical. Not in the sense that Pack is using it. The "common" was the result of the joyful exuberance of a group that had just received the holy spirit. But it was voluntary rather than demanded as Pack wrongfully asserts. Peter states this in Acts. Acts 5:4 "Didn’t it belong to you before it was sold? And after it was sold, wasn’t the money at your disposal?"
By contrast God refers to tithe money as his.
I have seen here Acts 5:4’s reference to the property and money in question being under the control of the members used to challenge the authoritative view of Commons.
I have taken it in-universe as focusing on the deception by the sellers and the civil-legal reality (“Hey, it’s not like we can legally force you to give us all your money”) much more than the nature of the supposed religious/spiritual authority to demand it (“but Mr. Armstro…, ur, Mr. Pa…, ur, Jesus said you are supposed to”). It conforms with reading Jesus’ words in the Gospels as authoritative commands.
But indeed, the verse might show the Jesus’ communalism (“sell all,” et al — and yes, insert some of Pack’s stuff) being viewed as less authoritative than that for whatever reason. Think Admiral Lütjens in “Sink the Bismarck”: “We have to take orders from Group North. We do not have to take suggestions.” Think of it as Jesus being less an Armstrong HW and more an Armstrong GT — the God-appointed leader of the sect, but not a (semi-)inspired doctrinal tyrant in his every word. Very different from nominal traditional Christology.
Plus, communists are good at rationalizing away living by their own principles — such as they have principles.
I can definitely respect that alternate approach in-universe, but it’s a bit of a slippery slope which really does knock Jesus’ words down a notch, even more than some Bible “moderates.” He really did express a generally-directed statement to “sell what you have and give alms” (Luke 12:33).
Googling Luke 12:33, every explanation describes it as referring to generosity toward the biblical poor. And it doesn't say sell all of one's possessions. Luke 10:7 states that "the workman is worthy of his wages." That is, ownership is determined by production rather than need.
The MSG translation is Luke 12:33 "Be generous. Give to the poor. Get yourselves a bank that can't go bankrupt...".
Part 1 — Commons is an excellent example of why a document is a poor intermediary between God and man. It is too easy for a reader to make or be led to make irrevocable decisions on the basis of supposed divine command not subject to contrary facts, common sense, or human conscience — and be wrong. Both in Armstrongism and outside, legitimate careers have been lost, families have been broken up, and the impoverished have forsaken deliverance on the basis of misunderstanding or manipulation of biblical text.
This goes to why I personally do not, except as “divine truth” anything not coming directly from the Divine Himself, confirmed to be the Divine (Bones was wrong in the fifth Star Trek movie — you can indeed ask the Almighty for his ID).
Continued.
Part 2.
If something is accepted as divine, it cannot be challenged or. I had a sergeant on my military deployment, who, uncharacteristically for him, expressed a very strong near-atheistic position in a very un-PC discussion. (It was 2008 — We could get away with it back then.) Later, I asked him why he was so vehement about it, I normally he never got into such discussions. He said that while he had to hold out to slight sliver of possibility that there is indeed a God, he didn’t want to give up his “independence.”
Now, I understand our situation. We were two Missouri ARNG soldiers on federal orders in uniform, bearing arms (literally — we had our M9s, and were required by U.S. Army post policy to be so basically all times save athletic activity; it was not an exercise of Second Amendment rights), deployed in a hostile-fire zone during GWOT, unable to leave the post without permission, and could be ordered at any moment to go fight and kill people we had never met, for whatever reasons. Short of prison, American citizens do not experience many lawful situations with LESS “independence” than we had.
What he meant was his “independence” in making evaluations. He may have to do things he didn’t want to do, but he could hold his own views of them. However, if there is a Supreme Deity out there, he couldn’t do that. He would be obligated to conform — to completely subordinate his own evaluations to that of the Deity, whether he thought it was “right” or not. No reasoning, no mitigation.
He was correct on that.
To be concluded.
Part 3.
Personally, I believe it more likely than not that Jesus and the early apostles indeed pressed Commons as a requirement or “strong recommendation” (like some of Armstrong’s dogmas, but backed up by Jesus’ supposed miracles and Peter’s sword) on disciples to liquidate their material possessions. Think what Pack is doing, and more so. It fits with the history (“Ebionites”?), the spirit of the Essene theology, and how so many cults like that work. Luke 12:33 does indeed call to a general audience of disciples for the liquidation of assets solely to give the money away. (And we all know that when cult leaders want you to give away your money, they want the check made out to them.)
But, as I said above, I could be wrong! Acts 5:4 might counteract that. And that goes to why I do not accept such a deposition when the purported divine Deponent can so readily appear.
Fortunately for Bible believers, there is an in-universe defense I noted before: It would be violative of Torah, and thus invalidate Christianity (Deut 4:1-2; 12:32-13:4; 30:1-10).
Part 3 was the conclusion.
I just don't understand the logic of attempting to validate Dave's stance on common.
It has always been considered historical fact that early Christians voluntarily lived communally from the standpoint of survival and common sense during extraordinary times of persecution from both the Romans and the Jews. When Christians got kicked out of Temple, they also frequently lost their employment, families, and homes. Peter was so dogged by the Romans that he could not effectively function as the leader any more, and went into hiding. Christians who had lost their homes were actually hiding out in the catacombs!
That they did this was not based on some proof of "common" by scripture for which they all could recite scriptural exegesis to support. They also were not using "common" to build a lavish campus or purchase Lincoln Navigators or horses, or for the most egregious misuse of funds, which is Dave using common to publish a litany of false prophecies!
Why attempt a bogus defense? This is cuckoo for cocoa puffs!
People here should understand the purpose behind my comments on this:
Dave Pack is running what I would judge to be a grift. I call him out for that. That said, a broken clock is right twice a day. He did lock onto something that is in the New Testament, a practice derived from the theology and culture of the Essene sect, and at least alluded to by Jesus in his words and practice. And Pack is playing it to his advantage, even as the apostles played the same, uh, business model to their advantage. “Voluntary” back then, I suppose, but at the least so universal as to constitute a compelling culture of expectation to participate. Members were hesitant at the least to acknowledge if they were not doing complying (Acts 5).
People can point out differences in motivation and execution between Pack today and the apostles then. And to a some extent, they are right. Certainly, the money back then was used for general support of the membership, not specific operations. But the practices and perhaps even the philosophy are comparable. Pack didn’t just pull it out of his… third point of contact. And as a former Christian, I see it not just as an abuse, but as an unintentional exposé of the early Christian cult.
That is my point in this. Well, that and it’s fun to see an Armstrong HW-venerating ACOG going against Health-Wealth.😀
OK. Gotcha, I guess. Everyone knows that Dave twists and misappropriates, and maybe there are people out there who didn't realize that that's what he had done with first century Christians' communal living arrangement, although it all seems so obvious.
I don't believe the propaganda of RCG's literature placement numbers, especially considering the membership has halved. All that trouble rewriting Herb booklets and no takers!
There must be a lot of disappointed ministers who assumed that Armstrongism would practically self-pilot to success for them, just as it appeared to have done for HWA. Instead its been like a Fourth of July fireworks show in which most of the fireworks turned out to be duds!
I bet a lot of people at the F/T are reminiscing about past feasts when there were upwards of 5,000 members in attendance at any given site.
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