Herbert W. Armstrong and the Plagiarism of Judah’s Sceptre and Joseph’s Birthright
Herbert W. Armstrong built much of his distinctive prophetic and identity theology around the doctrine of British Israelism (also called Anglo-Israelism). This teaching claims that the “lost ten tribes” of Israel migrated to northwestern Europe and that the modern English-speaking peoples—especially the British Commonwealth (Ephraim) and the United States (Manasseh)—are their literal descendants, inheriting the birthright promises made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
A central pillar of this teaching in Armstrong’s writings was his booklet The United States and Britain in Prophecy (originally United States in Prophecy, with various editions from the 1940s onward). Critics, former insiders, and even WCG leadership after Armstrong’s death have long pointed out that this work substantially derives from J.H. Allen’s 1902 book Judah’s Sceptre and Joseph’s Birthright.
J.H. Allen (John Harden Allen), an American minister and author, published Judah’s Sceptre and Joseph’s Birthright in 1902 (with later editions, e.g., 1917). The book analyzes Old Testament prophecies, distinguishing between the Sceptre (royal lineage and Messiah promise through Judah) and the Birthright (national promises of multitude, wealth, and power through Joseph’s sons Ephraim and Manasseh). Allen argued that these promises found fulfillment in the British Empire and the United States as the modern representatives of Israel.
British Israelism itself was not original to Allen. It had roots in 18th- and 19th-century writings, including works by John Wilson (Our Israelitish Origin, 1840), Edward Hine, and others who traced supposed Israelite migrations through the Scythians, Cimmerians, and Celts to the British Isles. Allen synthesized and popularized these ideas in a more accessible American context.
British Israelism itself was not original to Allen. It had roots in 18th- and 19th-century writings, including works by John Wilson (Our Israelitish Origin, 1840), Edward Hine, and others who traced supposed Israelite migrations through the Scythians, Cimmerians, and Celts to the British Isles. Allen synthesized and popularized these ideas in a more accessible American context.
Evidence of Substantial Borrowing
Side-by-side comparisons reveal extensive overlap in structure, arguments, biblical interpretations, historical claims, and even phrasing. For example:
- Both works emphasize the division of the kingdom after Solomon, with the Birthright going to Joseph’s line (the northern kingdom, “House of Israel”) and the Sceptre to Judah (southern kingdom, “House of Judah”).
- Discussions of the name “Jew” as applying only to Judah, the 2520-year punishment period (a “seven times” prophecy from Leviticus 26), and the sudden rise of Britain and America after ~1800 A.D. show strong parallels.
Joseph Tkach Jr., who succeeded Armstrong and led the WCG’s transformation into Grace Communion International (GCI), openly acknowledged the issue in his book Transformed by Truth and related statements: “From an ethical point of view, it is a well-known fact that Mr. Armstrong did not originate this teaching. In fact, earlier editions of the US & BC plagiarized vast portions of a book entitled Judah’s Sceptre and Joseph’s Birthright.” Tkach noted that it was not possible to claim divine revelation for material clearly copied from an existing source.
A copy of Allen’s book was reportedly found among Armstrong’s possessions after his death, and Armstrong had referenced similar British Israel literature positively in earlier correspondence and studies (e.g., in the late 1920s/1930s while researching in libraries).
Armstrong did add his own elements—such as tying the doctrine more tightly to his broader prophetic schema (e.g., The Plain Truth magazine, radio broadcasts, and warnings of end-time punishment on the “modern descendants of Israel”)—and presented it with his charismatic, authoritative style. However, the core framework, historical identifications, and many proofs were drawn directly from Allen and the broader British Israel tradition without adequate credit in his popular publications.
Defenders sometimes argue it was common practice in that era to draw from public-domain or shared ideas without formal citation, or that Armstrong’s version had unique emphases and was “revealed” through intensive Bible study. Some claim the similarities reflect independent study of the same scriptures. However, the volume and specificity of the borrowing, combined with the lack of attribution in the booklets distributed by the millions, have led most neutral observers to classify it as plagiarism or uncredited adaptation.
Broader Pattern in Armstrong’s Work
This was not an isolated incident. Armstrong frequently synthesized existing ideas (on topics like church history, prophecy, or doctrines) and presented them as fresh revelations or his own discoveries. British Israelism served as a “central plank” for interpreting end-time prophecy, national identity, and the need for WCG membership to understand God’s plan. Dropping it after Armstrong’s death was a major step in the church’s doctrinal overhaul.
Why This Matters Little for Christians Today
For believers grounded in the New Covenant, Herbert W. Armstrong’s plagiarism of J.H. Allen’s work—and the British Israelism doctrine itself—is ultimately of minor importance. Here’s why, reasoned from Scripture:
The New Testament reorients God’s people around faith in Christ, not ethnic or national descent. Paul emphatically teaches that “not all who are descended from Israel are Israel” (Romans 9:6) and that true children of Abraham are those of faith: “If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise” (Galatians 3:29; see also Romans 4, Galatians 3). Physical identities and old covenant national promises find their fulfillment and transcendence in Jesus, the true Seed.
British Israelism relies on a literal, ongoing distinction between “Israel” and “Judah” that the New Testament largely collapses. In the NT, terms like “Israel,” “Jews,” and the people of God increasingly point to the multi-ethnic church (e.g., Ephesians 2:11–22; 1 Peter 2:9–10). The promises of land, seed, and blessing are realized supremely in Christ and His spiritual kingdom, not in 19th/20th-century empires.
Plagiarism reveals character flaws—lack of transparency, overclaiming originality, and presenting human ideas as divine revelation—but it does not invalidate every teaching Armstrong promoted, nor does it define the gospel. Many teachers throughout church history have borrowed without credit; the Bereans (Acts 17:11) and faithful Christians today test all things against Scripture (1 Thessalonians 5:21).
What does matter is the gospel of grace: justification by faith, the finished work of Christ, freedom from the old covenant’s ceremonial and civil shadows (including tithing, food laws, and calendar observances as binding), and the indwelling Holy Spirit guiding believers. Obsessing over national identities or failed prophetic timelines distracts from the “better covenant” mediated by Jesus (Hebrews 8:6).
Armstrong’s errors, including this one, highlight the danger of elevating any human teacher or “one true church” claim. New Covenant Christians are called to liberty in Christ (Galatians 5), humility, and discerning truth by the Word and the Spirit—not by tracing 19th-century book borrowings or Anglo-Saxon genealogy theories.
In the end, whether HWA copied Allen extensively changes little for those resting in the New Covenant. It serves as a cautionary tale against personality cults and proof-texting for national exceptionalism, but it does not alter the unchanging truth: “There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). Focus there, and such historical details fade into proper perspective.
Silent Pilgrim
Sources:
Wikipedia: British Israelism
Grokpedia: British Israelism
If you would like to read the book in question, "JUDAH'S SCEPTRE
ReplyDeleteAND JOSEPH'S BIRTHRIGHT" here is a link to a PDF version of it.... https://www.cbcg.org/franklin/Judahs_Sceptre_Josephs_Birthright.pdf
Again, I just hit them with this (only scriptures):
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/dRG9y8U_psc
But it has been debunked linguistic, historical and with the science.
Thanks
The ‘Revealed Truth’ That was just yesterday’s British Israelism. Yes sir, it is yesterday’s history, but in truth it isn’t, as it is not history and even true, but bunkism lol. Astonishing that this myth/nonsense is still core to the cog/armstrong narrative. Without it they are doomed, and with it they are doomed. That they are also so divided speaks volumes against them.
ReplyDeleteConcerning the Church, the NT does reorient God's people around faith in Christ, and not ethnic or national descent. But that does NOT collapse the literal or ongoing distinction between physical Israel and Judah. Both exist now and will exist in the Messianic kingdom.
ReplyDeleteGalation 3:28 is a spiritual perspective of our equal and complete standing before God. It does not change physical RACE, BIOLOGY, OR SOCIAL STATUS.
According to Jesus (Matthew 19:28), in the Messianic kingdom, there will still be physical tribes of Israel being ruled by the 12 apostles. Paul affirms that ALL physical Israel will be saved when "out of Zion comes the Deliverer, and shall turn away ungodliness from JACOB" (Romans 11:26-27). As the new covenant is now made with the Church, the time is coming when God will make a new covenant with the house of Israel AND with the house of Judah (Hebrews 8:8).
Ethnically speaking, the tribes of Israel exist now in isolation. We just don't know who they are (see Revelation 7 in this context). But God knows, and one day we will too.
BTW, this is not an endorsement of BI.
Correct statements, God knows, but let Armstrongist tell you and they seem to know. The truth will come out when He reveals it.
DeleteThe problem with ACOG and their leader is that they promoted the house of Israel and house of Judah outside of a covenant with God (based on nationality and race). Instead of based on faith. The Revelation 7 & 14 combines the faith with the tribe.
And I hate to quote GTA, but as he always said, "there's not one Christian church organization that has 12,000 jewish members in it." And that's just one tribe.
Cowboy
It used to be that HWA was seen as being a "type" of God, and GTA as a "type" of Jesus Christ. Later, in keeping with unfolding events and revealed secrets, GTA's image shifted, becoming more like Absalom, Hophni and Phinehas, or perhaps more kindly, Solomon, with his experience-based collection of wisdom. Later, HWA had an image shift of his own, with people trusting the man as he was in his prime, and not the man who ingratiated himself to foreign dignitaries, married Ramona, fled to Tucson, and selected Joseph W. Tkach Sr. as his successor.
DeleteIf this is the Laodicean era, one would need to consider the fall of the leaders of the Philadelphia era as initiating it. This, based on the hypothesis that there are church eras, a dubious supposition to begin with.
The promises made to Abraham are explained by both the apostles Peter and Paul as referring to the blessings of the Gospel.
ReplyDeletePeter quotes them at the conclusion of his speech in the temple precincts after the cure of the lame man, and states definitely that the blessing promised through Abraham and his seed to all families of the earth consists of conversion and that the promise is fulfilled through the Gospel - see Acts chapter 3
Paul similarly explains the promises as fulfilled in the justification of the Gentiles by faith, and declares that the seed referred to in the promise is Christ (Gal. chapter 3).
Paul also states that the promise to Abraham that he should be the father of many nations is fulfilled in the call of the Gentiles through the Gospel (Rom. 4 v 16, 17).
In Acts 15 v 14-18 we have the quotation in full of Amos 9 v 11, 12 and a valuable interpretation of it - prediction of future blessing in the book of Amos, are explained as having their fulfilment in the salvation of the Gentiles through the Gospel, which had at that time begun.
All something totally different to the 2520 yr claimed fulfillment theory which was claimed to commence about 1800 .AD And the figure 2520 yr is a fantasy in any event.
The one thing that always baffled me about the 2520 years is that, okay the Louisiana Purchase was 1803 and that took place in America. But what was going down in England in 1803? Well England was fighting France in the Napoleonic Wars in 1803 (And a war is not a blessing). ACOG ministers seem to always forget their "ephraim" when referring to those 2520 years. They hardly ever apply it to Britain.
DeleteAnother thing 7:30, that Paul and Peter agreed upon was the last part of that video that was posted. Their application to Hosea’s prophecy of Lo-Ammi within the Gospel of Jesus Christ is consistent.
ReplyDeletePaul uses Hosea 2:23 & Hosea 1:9-10, for the gospel to the Gentiles
Romans 9:25-26 As He says also in Hosea: “I will call them My people, who were not My people, And her beloved, who was not beloved.” “And it shall come to pass in the place where it was said to them, ‘You are not My people,’ There they shall be called sons of the living God.”
Peter uses Hosea 2:23, for the gospel to the Jewish converts.
1 Peter 2:9-10 that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light; who once were not a people but are now the people of God, who had not obtained mercy but now have obtained mercy.
Armstrongism bypasses its current application within the new testament and attempts to apply it for only their future prophecy gospel. Once again the apostles Peter and Paul’s example is overlooked by them.