Showing posts with label Worldwide Church of God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Worldwide Church of God. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

The Truth Shall Make You Free: Chapter 10 Excerpts




Chapter 10   Ted’s Feast

(pg 129) While the leaders of the Worldwide Church of God were fighting to patch up the crumbling financial foundation, and to discredit Garner Ted Armstrong in order to prevent him from drawing away tithe-paying members, the Church of God International was getting off to a very good start. Garner Ted, once heard on hundreds of radio and TV stations with his commanding voice and rapid fire delivery, was starting over on just one station.  Where at one time his broadcasts were produced in the most modern studios that excelled even commercial stations, he was now recording his first programs in a small commercial studio in Tyler, Texas, which operated out of a converted garage.  The first broadcast was heard on July 27, 1978 over WOAI in San Antonio, Texas, a clear-channel, 50,000-watt station.

Soon after, in early August, the Church of God International began holding services in Tyler, Texas in a rented hall.  The Church offices were initially located in a spare room of Garner Ted’s newly purchased ranch home just outside Tyler.  It wasn’t long before the mail started coming in.  Many of the envelopes contained financial donations.  By early September, the CGI was located in rented offices and already had a staff of five employees.  Plans were already being made to hold the Feast of Tabernacles and soon arrangements were made to rent the Convention Hall at Jekyll Island, Georgia.  For approximately fifteen years the Worldwide Church (pg 130) had held the Feast at Jekyll Island, and in 1978 decided to move to a large hall in Savannah and drop the Jekyll Island site.  With only one congregation meeting in Tyler, and a small radio ministry going, Garner Ted had absolutely no idea how many would show up at Jekyll Island.  Paula and I decided to attend, and made reservations at an apartment-style resort hotel, the Sand Dollar.  Ron Quinlain also decided to attend, and as it turned out we would be the only ones from the entire New York metropolitan area.

Gordon Muir, still on Quest payroll, although without any job, was watching the entire situation but didn’t know what he would do.  I told him, “I believe that Ted is going to get the work done.  I believe he is sincere and that this thing is really going to take off.  Why don’t you come to the Feast with us at Jekyll?”  Gordon wasn’t about to make any hasty decisions.  He said, “I think Armstrongism ahs had it.  The Worldwide Church of God is run by evil men and it appears that Herbert Armstrong is totally corrupt.  I certainly can’t have any part of that and I’m trying to find a job so that I can get out from under this whole thing.  If Stan hadn’t just thrown me out for no reason as he did, I would even feel guilty taking the pay checks.  I may go back to England and resume practicing medicine.  I just don't know.  But I’ll tell you one thing, I’m not about to get wrapped up in this thing with Ted. You know the problems in the past, that’s going to haunt him and the Scriptures say that a minister must be of good report, and John, Ted is not of good report.  I’m just not about to swap one Armstrong for another.”

This type of discussion went on for weeks on various phone calls and I constantly tried to convince Gordon that I thought that Garner Ted had fully repented of the past wrongdoings and that God had actually set him free in a strange way from the Worldwide Church.  I was convinced that Garner Ted was doing the right thing.  Paula had a more neutral attitude, but certainly wanted to look into it further, to see if this was where God would be working.  Ministers in the Worldwide Church were telling their members that what they called “Ted’s Feast” was going to be a disaster and the whole thing would fall on its face.  Anyone to get involved with Garner Ted, they said, would only find themselves out in the cold when the CGI collapsed.

Our entire family looked forward to the Feast at Jekyll.  On October 14th, we piled the four kids into our station wagon and headed pg 131) south.  Lat the next day we arrived in beautiful Jekyll Island.  Having spent previous Feasts at Mount Pocono, Pennsylvania, during the time of year when the air was getting chilly and leaves beginning to turn brilliant colors, this was quite a contrast. Warm weather, a beautiful ocean, and palm trees and other tropical plants, all contributed to the excitement of attending this first Fest of the Church of God International.

There were 520 people in attendance at this first Feast of the CGI, and, incredibly, they were from all over the world.  There were people from Canada, Australia, France, and just about every state.  There were many people who in their long drive to Jekyll Island had actually driven through as many as three locations where the Worldwide Church of God was holding their Feast.  Obviously people were committed to making a break from the Worldwide Church of God. That attitude was quite well expressed by a man from Tennessee who as staying in an apartment near ours.  He said, “Yes sir, these are the thinking people down here.  They’ve had enough of old Herbert.  One thing old Ted had better realize, we ain’t going to follow him either if he tries to pull any fast ones onus.  Yep, we’re the ones who won’t follow a leader blindly again. If Ted does right, God’s going to use him mightily. If he does wrong, he better realize that the people who are here just ain’t going to put up with it.”

Of course I hoped that Garner Ted was sincere.  I believed that he was, but at this point there was no way one could really be sure.  As the Bible says, “By their fruits you shall know them”.  It was much too early to see what kind of fruit would be born as a result of these fledgling efforts.  Time will tell, and we certainly had to give it a chance and see what would happen.  It was an exciting Feast and everyone seemed to feel the almost electrifying atmosphere of a new vibrant spirit.  The sermons of Garner ted and Ron Dart, a former evangelist with the Worldwide Church of God all served to inspire us to pull together to do the work of Jesus Christ.  There was to be no autocratic leadership, they said. The hard rule and the (pg 132) dictatorial government were all things of the past.  They were not scriptural, we were told.  Of course, those of us who were there knew that and it was good to hear that the leadership of the CGI planned to break out of that mold.  Was this genuine? Was this spiritual high that we were on for a week for real, or were we just caught up in the flash of being part of something new?  Time would tell.

During all the time of the Feast, the conduct of he Worldwide Church of God leadership was anything but Christian.  Since it was customary to take offerings at the Feast on the first and last days which are holy days, it was necessary to open a local bank account.  What Garner Ted did not realize until almost the last minute was the fact that his father and Rader had registered the name of the Church of God International in the State of Georgia when they found out that the CGI was going to hold the Feast at Jekyll Island. There was even a question as to whether or not the signature on the registration papers was truly that of Herbert Armstrong. Herbert Armstrong, the man who said that competition was the way of Satan, was engaging in a type of competitive practice worthy of the most unscrupulous businessmen.  This entire maneuver was viewed as blatant attempt to seize the funds that would be deposited by the CGI in its bank account. The conduct the Worldwide Church was more in line with that of organized crime than that of a church.

The entire attempt was outsmarted very simply.  The CGI opened its bank account in the name of the “Church of God International (a Texas non-profit corporation).”

Each day at the convention center, while CGI services were in progress, the Rader operatives were busy in the parking lot.  The Worldwide Church had to know who the traitors were in order that they could be purged out from among “God’s faithful people.”  License plates were photographed in order to aid in identifying those who were rebelling against Herbert Armstrong. While the Worldwide Church was playing its childish spy games, the CGI members were laughing in ridicule about the whole foolish scheme.  The general attitude was that if they wanted to know who was attending CGI services, there were no secrets; people would be happy to tell their names.  As long as the Rader spies seemed to enjoy their activity, we felt it would be poor sport to spoil their fun.

Everyday there were Ambassador College students visiting at Jekyll Island, having decided to come down from the Worldwide (pg 133) Church Feast site in Savannah.  Even they were under close scrutiny.  One student told of overhearing a festival monitor at the motel where he was registered, speaking to the desk clerk.  “Festival monitor” sounds like a title out of the “new-speak” vocabulary of George Orwell’s 1984.  Officially, their duty is to assist Feastgoers with any problems that they may have with their accommodations. However, their true purpose was somewhat more sinister than that.  In this one instance, the festival monitor was overheard to instruct the desk clerk to make note of all Worldwide Church registrants who did not return to their rooms for the evening. Through this means, going on the assumption that anyone who did not return to their room for the evening would be staying over night at Jekyll Island, the spiritual guardians of the Worldwide Church would know which unfaithful members they were going to consign to the lake of fire.

In the past, it had been Herbert Armstrong’s policy, as well as Garner Ted’s, to speak at each Feast site throughout the United States, which meant about twelve speaking engagements in the course of eight days.  In 1977, the father was unable to conduct his speaking tour due to his illness. This year, he was back at it again, although he was going to limit his speaking engagements to perhaps three or four.  “Garner Ted’s Feast,” as he called it, could not be ignored and Armstrong felt the necessity to speak nearby.  He chose to speak at the Worldwide Church Feast at St. Petersburg, Florida, where he announced mockingly, “My son has his little Feast going on up there at Jekyll Island and he has only 17 people, that’s all he has.”  From the reports of those who heard Armstrong make his statement, it was felt that he actually believed that what he was saying was actually true.  It appeared to many that he was becoming senile as had so often been reported.

Many who attended the Feast at St. Petersburg, upon hearing such a statement from Herbert Armstrong, followed by a scathing attack on his son, made that their last day in St. Petersburg and transferred to Jekyll Island for the balance of the week.  Yet others who continued to follow Herbert Armstrong were even more strengthened in their resolve to remain with the Worldwide Church of God.  After all, they reasoned, if Garner Ted was so evil that his own father would reject him in faithfulness to God, certainly they must follow Herbert Armstrong in order to please God.

It was obvious to any thinking person that the Worldwide (pg 134) Church leadership was reacting in a paranoid way to just about every move made by Garner Ted.  Some time prior to the Feast, Garner Ted announced that the CGI was going to be open, no secrets.  He announced that the financial details of the Church would be made public each year at the Feast, and that an audited financial statement would be issued each year at that time.  This put the Worldwide Church on the spot, as they had not released any financial information to the membership in several years.

While Garner Ted was releasing full details of the first couple of months operation of the fledgling Church to those gathered at Jekyll Island, the Worldwide Church of God was distributing what it called the “Treasurers Report.”  This report came out in October and was merely two pages with some graphs showing the apportionment of income and expenses.  Included was a very brief summery showing the total revenue of $76,161,300 and total expenses of $68,4290,500 leaving a deficit of $1,259,200 for the year 1977. There was no way from this abbreviated report that one could glean out any meaningful information other than a few grand totals.  The interesting point is that while this report covered the period ending December 31, 1977 it was not released until October 1978, after Gamer Ted had announced to the press that the CGI would not keep its financial affairs secret as was the practice with the Worldwide Church.  In a misleading statement signed by Stanley Rader, the “Worldwide Church Report” said, “The Work’s financial statements were audited and certified each calendar year by an independent firm of Certified Public Accountants.”  What Rader failed to note was the name of the accounting firm – Rader, Cornwall and Kessler, more recently known as Cornwall, Kessler and Pallazzo.  That was the firm with which Rader had been associated for so many years.  While he claimed to have withdrawn himself from any act of participation in the firm, the matter of independence was certainly one of question.  According to Rader’s own statements, there was never any cash consideration given to him by others for his share of the business, and he continued to maintain an association with Henry Cornwall in their ownership of Worldwide Advertising.




Monday, February 7, 2011

Pious Conviction With Marginal Information is NOT Your Friend



Dennis Diehl - EzineArticles Expert AuthorI have been watching and reading about the current and ongoing drama in the United Church of God.  Many if not most of the ministers still involved on one side or the other are people I knew as kids thinking we had discovered the one final truth of the Bible and the organization that represented it.  I guess we've all learned a lot since then.

Some believe that if we just get back to what Herbert Armstrong taught, all will be well.  Others, called progressives may realize that all the truth there is was not all the truth Herbert Armstrong had.  Even the word "truth" is somewhat suspect as the vast majority, dare I say all COG ministers, including myself, were not well trained in the history of the Bible, its true origins, the politics involved and its rather errrant condition. I shake my head in wonder when I hear grown "theologians" base their views or examples on what any well trained and taught minister would know were mere mythologies of the day.   

When a grown man, who claims to know his Bible and world history, uses the accounts in Genesis 1-11 as that which "really , really happened,"  it is rather discouraging.  Such a man has no genuine credibility in what he understands as "truth."  Don't get me wrong.  There were genuine reasons for the transmission of the Adam and Eve story and the Fall.  There was a genuine reason for the story of Cain and Able or for the flood mythologies, but to take them literally is laughable in the world of theological , archaelogical and scientific understanding.

For beginners I would ask any COG minister to lay out the simple order of the New Testament.  If you begin with "Matthew...Mark..."  Ehhhhht'..., thank you for playing. Sit down.

 If you think the four Gospels were written by eyewitnesses to Jesus or that the names on the books are the real authors....ehhhhhht...please sit down. 

 If you think there is a harmony in the four Gospels, please sit down. 

 If you think Paul wrote after the Gospels and the literal Jesus came before the Cosmic Christ of Paul, please sit down.  

If you believe the Jesus of the Gospels is the same Christ of Paul or the same Jesus of Revelation, please sit down.  

If you think the birth narratives of Jesus match and are what really really happened, please sit down.  

If you think all the books attributed to Paul were actually written by Paul, please sit down.

  If you think Revelation is a book of prophecy for us today, please sit down.

  If you think Peter and Paul were friends or that James was not refuting Paul's rambling in Romans, please sit down. 

  If you believe that Paul really studied under Gamaliel or knew how to think like a Pharisee, please sit down. 

 If you believe the Gospel accounts of the resurrection of Jesus are harmonious and reflect different ways of looking at the same alleged event, please sit down.

  If you think Paul could not possibly have been struggling with grievous sins or shortcomings which forced him to conclude he could not obey and chose rather to rally around grace, grace grace, please sit down. 

 If you think Jesus said he was God in the flesh, please sit down. 

 If you believe the NT teaches the malarky taught by the new and improved WCG, please sit down. 

 If you believe that Jesus and atonement by execution is the only way or that without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of sins, please sit down. 

 If you understand that in the OT, simple "oh I'm sorry" to God was ok, give yourself ten points. 

 
If you believe humans were made male and female, one of mud and one of rib, please sit down.

If you believe penguins, polar bears and kangaroos were on the Ark, please sit down.

If you haven't done the hard work in study or actual field experience as to human origins, paleontology and Cosmology, please sit down

Or at least shut up.....

 If you only got ten points, resign and go to school before you declare to those under your supervision what they are supposed to be or do and not be or do.  

We've come a long way baby...unless you are an under trained and over confident COG minister.  With all due respect, you simply don't know what you are talking about.  In the small world, yeah very small world of the COG splinters and slivers, you may seem to be somewhat, as Paul noted of Peter, James and John, but "I learned nothing from them..." as Paul also admitted.  One only need examine the real politic behind the rivalries between Peter, James, John and Paul to understand this current distress is a very very old story.

There never was one true church of God in all of history. There is not one portrayed in the pages of your New Testament.  The message of the Gospels and the Gospel Jesus is NOT the same message of the Apostle Paul.  

So while you all fight over government...is there no end of that topic?  While you feel you have to pick a side as to which uninformed organization and clergy to follow or very carefully sift through all the arguments and very carefully be absolutely you make the right God following choice, please remember this...

Pious conviction with marginal information is not your friend.  If you would like a good explanation of what that means then please continue here...

Warm regards on these hot topics...
Dennis Diehl...formerly called "Mr."  :)

Sunday, February 6, 2011

The Truth Shall Make You Free: Herbert Armstrong's Empire Exposed - Chapter 1-6 Excerpts


published by: 

The Truth Foundation
11 Laurel Court
Freehold Township, New Jersey 07728
1981



Chapter 1

(pg 3)  Little did I realize that my first contact with the Worldwide Church of God, about eighteen years ago, would lead to this moment, nor could I ever have imagined what it  would lead to in just a few years.  Only a few years alter my wife and I were to make the decision to institute a lawsuit against the Worldwide Church of God and its officials, alleging that the officials were misappropriating funds.  This lawsuit was destined to become one of the most massive church/state confrontations in recent history.
(pg 7) (In searching for a church they wrote to Pasadena)…I later found that Church meetings were kept rather secret so that outsiders wouldn’t wander in.  Looking back at this, I wonder how the Worldwide Church of God could ever have expected to do the work that Christ commanded when they spent so much effort at keeping themselves hidden in the local community.

(pg 15) We didn’t realize at the time that most of what was written about Church history and Herbert Armstrong was just a subtle device to condition people’s minds to blindly following the Church’s teachings as expounded by Armstrong.  I should have realized at the time that any man who claimed to be the only servant of Jesus Christ would not put out a 540-page autobiography which only covered the period from his birth in 1892 up until the year 1938.  This book, significantly, was the largest publication ever issued by the church. There is more written about Herbert Armstrong in this autobiography than there is written about Christ in the entire Bible.

Chapter 2 Beginning of Troubles

(pg 21)  When we first contacted the church in early 1974, we did not realize then, and in fact did not realize for some time, that we were coming into the Church during one of its most tumultuous periods.  A series of events took place in 1974 that were actually setting the stage for the legal action that we were to initiate in 1978. In 1974, over forty ministers and an estimated two thousand to three thousand members left the Church.  This was later to become known as the 1974 Rebellion.  This rebellion was actually the aftershock of a double crisis in 1972. Church members had for many years been told in sermons and in Good News, a publication only for church members, that they should be prepared to flee to a place of safety in 1972.  This place was to be the ancient and now uninhabited town of Petra, located in Transjordan, Petra is described in the Pictorial Bible atlas, as follows: “In the small basin of Petra was situated the famous Nabatean.  Impressive gorges and impregnable faulted walls of crystalline rocks rise into the southern Edom Mountains to over 5,000 feet.”  The entrance to Petra is a mile-long canyon with cliffs three hundred feet high. It was to this town in the wilderness that the entire Worldwide Church of God expected to go and live for three an one half years awaiting the return of Christ in 1975.

(pg 22)  During the late 1960’s, in anticipation of this flight to safety many members had put off important matters, such as  necessary dental care, home purchases, or any other long-term commitments, expecting that such things would not be necessary.  Of course, 1972 came and went, but there was no flight to Petra.

Armstrong wrote a co-worker letter, dated March 25, 1975, “Some years ago I saw factors indicating the possibility that our work might be completed in early 1972, and immediately followed by the Great Tribulation. I NEVER SET A DEFINITE DATE, I NEVER SAID IT WOULD DEFINITELY HAPPEN-but cautioned there were indications of the possibility.  Yet some misunderstood it as a definite prophecy for a definite date.”

Nonetheless, 1972 was a momentous year for the Worldwide Church of God. It was in that year that Herbert Armstrong announced to the church, in a letter dated April 25, 1972: “Last autumn I was dismayed to learn that my son had been overcome with personal emotional problems, that it led to conduct inconsistent with the high standards of the Work of the Church of God and the scriptural qualifications for a minister of Jesus Christ, and rendered him incapable of carrying on the duties of a minister, and of his responsibilities of Executive Vice-President.”
(pg 23) This event rocked the Church in 1972.  Garner Ted Armstrong had been for years the radio and television voice of the Church, and was known and respected as not just a great evangelist, but a man with tremendous insight and understanding regarding world affairs….There was much speculation at the time, and also allegations that Garner Ted Armstrong’s problem was one o f sexual infidelity.  I was to find out much later that whatever the depth of his emotional problems, it was amazing that he survived the ordeal at all, considering the constant struggle that he had been having with his father on some of the harsh doctrines of the Church.

The whole period of turmoil actually had its start around 1968, after the death of Herbert Armstrong’s wife Loma in 1967. It was at this time that Stanley Rader began to assume a more prominent position as an advisor to Herbert Armstrong.  Rader was a non-member and had been in the employ of the Church for approximately ten years as an accountant and legal counselor.  It was during this period, starting in 1968, when the massive building program was embarked upon, including the commitment for the elaborate Ambassador Auditorium.  This also marked the beginning of Herbert Armstrong’s visits to political leaders around the world, as part of what he called his ‘great commission.”  Garner Ted Armstrong’s disagreement with the direction his father was going, as well as the doctrinal differences, were one of the many causes of a complex emotional problem.

Three of the doctrinal points which seem to be of major contention (pg 24) were those concerning divorce and remarriage, healing, and make-up.  A fourth one, to a lesser degree, concerned birthdays.  On the matter of divorce and remarriage, the Church taught that a divorced person could not remarry, as to do so would be adulterous.  Even harsher was the part of the teaching which required one who had been divorced and remarried before entering the Church to dissolve the second marriage and return to the first mate.  If that was not possible, the remarried couple were to live apart from each other, since to continue together would be adulterous.  There was no scriptural basis for this teaching, and many lives were virtually destroyed by a forced adherence to this doctrine.

On the matter of healing, members were taught that to use doctors or medicine for anything other than “mechanical” repairs, such as fixing broken bones or repairing teeth, was a sin.  Members were to rely only on God for healing, and were to have a minister anoint them with oil and then pray over them for healing.  It is certainly true that God does heal and the He does perform many miracles, but He does expect us to do what we can physically as part of our reliance upon Him. Many members and, even more tragically, young children actually died as a result of the member’s fear to use a doctor of medicine.

Members were also forbidden to wear make-up as it was considered to be a sign of vanity and, according to Herbert Armstrong, something used by prostitutes. The celebration of birthdays was forbidden as being pagan, although there is no Biblical proof of this. 

The expenditures for Armstrong’s world trips in the Church owned Gulfstream II jet were also becoming a cause of dissension among many of the top officials…All of these various factors – the 1972 ouster and later return of Garner Ted Armstrong, serious doctrinal questions, and the massive expenditures of money on round the world trips – all combined to set the stage for serious discord within the ministry.  The final result of all this was the event that became known as the 1974 Rebellion.

Another point of serious concern among many of the top Church leaders was the growing influence of Stanley R Rader on Herbert Armstrong.  Rader, born in 1930 in New York, was not a Church member and had never been baptized.  He was first employed by the Church in 1956 as a certified public accountant and later became legal counsel to both the Church and to Herbert Armstrong.  He was a member of both the accounting firm of Rader, Cornwall and Kessler and of the legal firm of Rader, Helge and Gerson.  Both these firms represented the Church in a professional capacity.

Chapter 3 The Great Commission

(pg 34)  Armstrong said further, “One thing that has been a serious handicap, and caused me and my touring team no little embarrassment.  We have had to say that we represent either Ambassador College or Worldwide Church off God.

“I am regarded as an Ambassador of WORLD PEACE. But if I represent a CHURCH, immediately that shouts to them RELIGION.”
Somehow in Herbert Armstrong’s convoluted way of thinking he was convincing Church leaders that he could deliver the Gospel, a religious message, by not sounding religious and hiding behind a secular organization.  Most ministers kept this to themselves.  When it was mentioned in congregations, it was put forth in such a way that the people swallowed the whole story without even realizing what was going on.

(pg 38)  In contrast, our way of serving was to be one of supporting the Armstrong’s or as some call it, “Pray and pay!”

Only later did I come to realize that that was not the complete statement.  More accurately it was, “Pray and pay while the Armstrong’s play.” Herbert Armstrong was jetting around the world in the Gulfstream II visiting foreign dignitaries, while Garner Ted Armstrong was jetting across the country in his Falcon jet, on his way to hunting or fishing trip.  Still oblivious to so much of this, I said to Maceo Hampton one day, “How can I serve?  I want to serve.  I feel like just going to Church every Sabbath and being a (pg 39) member isn’t enough. What can I do?” To which Paula added, “What about me?  It seems that all the women do is have their ladies club.  If the Church were to have a Sabbath school for the kids, the women could certainly be much more effective and helpful!”  Hampton responded, “You two are really something!  You always want to help.  Don’t worry, just be patient. Your time will come.  I know that you will get your opportunity to serve, I can assure you of that.”

Little did any of us realize how significant his statement was to be.

Chapter 4 Crack in the False Facade

(pg 41) The first significant wedge to be driven into the crack developing in the façade of the Worldwide Church of God came in June of 1976 with the release of a publication called the Ambassador Review. The Ambassador Review was put out by a group of former Ambassador students, led by J. Timothy Nugent, John Trechak, and Leonard W. Zola.  In their opening statement they say, “The Ambassador Review is a journal by and for students, alumni, and friends of Ambassador College.  Its goal is to provide an open forum for those who have shared in the ‘Ambassador Experience.’  It has grown out of an increasing need for a response to censored and ideologically-controlled articles found in the official Ambassador College and Worldwide Church of God publications.”  This publication was a fifty-two-page magazine, and while it had a strong impact in the Pasadena area, it did not receive wide circulation.  I was unaware of it at the times, but did find out later that some people in our local congregation received copies in the mail.  Most of those copies were immediately given over to the ministers and destroyed.

Another article by Nugent states, “None of the ‘great purposes’ seem pertinent anymore.  Bricket Wood is gone, Imperial Schools is gone.  The Ambassador Press has been sold. The computer department is being phased out, The Ambassador Television Studio is being bartered off.  And it doesn’t help to be reminded (pg 42) that THE PLAIN TRUTH look starved for  content, while the pages of the once-again delayed HUMAN POTENTIAL are so bloated with content that it appears to be wallowing in its own galleys, perhaps never to see the arrival of a second edition. Yes, it’s hard to be optimistic.”

Referred to here as the College at Bricket Wood, England, which had been closed and was in the process of being sold.  The sale was finally consummated in 1978. The Imperial Schools were elementary schools in the Pasadena area which were operated by the Church.  It was becoming quite obvious to some that great sums of money were going into cultural endeavors and allegedly great humanitarian causes, while some of the very basic operations of the Church such as its schools, its colleges, and even its printing plants were being liquidated.

The selling of the printing plant is a case in point.  The Ambassador Press was one of the most modern color printing facilities on the West Coast.  In a short-sighted move to raise cash, the entire facility was sold to large magazine publishing company in an arrangement whereby the Church would then contract with the purchaser for the printing of THE PLAIN TRUTH and the GOOD NEWS magazines. Soon after the sale of the printing plant the buyer closed the facility due to insufficient business, as a result of the 1974-75 recession.  The same basic recessionary period that motivated the Church to sell the printing plant resulted in its total closing, with the presses being dismantled and sold off to some distant buyer.  This resulted in the Church being in the position of having to job-shop, or farm out, its major printing assignments.

One of the main points of Armstrong’s teaching was that of Church authority.  He would constantly remind the membership that he was God’s apostle and that God’s form of government was government from the top down. This meant that, he, Armstrong, was in charge of everything and in a sense, the only human capable of governing the Church.  He more than once made the statement, “God would never allow me to do anything or make any decision that would adversely affect the Church.” In this he even goes the Pope one better.  At least the Pope limits his claimed infallibility to matters of faith and morals; Herbert Armstrong, in a more subtle way, claims infallibility on any decision affecting the Church.

(pg 44)  Attention was also called to the fact that the accounting firm of Rader, Cornwall and Kessler didn’t operate exactly as an arm’s length auditor of the Church’s books.  Rader, of course, was on the payroll of the Church.  Henry Cornwall, a partner in the firm, was not a member of the Church.  Ambassador Review states: “Another individual worthy of note was Henry F Cornwall, long time friend and business associate of Stan Rader.  He holds the office of Secretary-Treasurer within the Foundation.  His position in the entire Worldwide Church of God empire is even more covert than Rader’s, but sources within the organization have revealed that Cornwall yields incredible power in the area of fiscal affairs. Cornwall, a Certified Public Accountant, has kept the financial records of the Church and College for years and reportedly acts as the sole ‘independent’ auditor of the corporate conglomerate.  From their office suite in Century City, Cornwall and Rader discreetly exercise almost absolute control over the purse strings.  It is they who authorize the ultra-extravagant expenditures by the AICF using Church monies.

Herbert Armstrong was taken strongly to task in another article entitles “Herbert W Armstrong, A legend in His Own Mind”.  One of the more shocking disclosures was the fact that the church conducted what were known as ‘tithe checks’ on members and especially employees. If a member was being considered for ordination as an elder or deacon, or if someone was being considered (pg 45) for promotion as an employee, a check of their tithing record would be made.

Ambassador Review further states: “The ministerial letter of January 28, 1969 emphasized once again that the ministers should check with headquarters to determine the loyalty of suspected brethren under their charge.”

Little did I realize that I was a member of a church that conducted  its operations more like a Communist police state, while Herbert Armstrong was running around the world telling people that God’s way is the way of love and man’s way is the way of get and selfish greed.  Which way was he practicing here?

…It is difficult to determine the effect the first issue of Ambassador Review hay have had.  While it may have caused some people to begin thinking critically about Church leadership, it appears that most of the people who received copies of the Review did the same thing as those in my Church area.  They turned them into their minister.

The interesting point in all of this was that they did not just throw out something that they did not consider worthy of their attention; because they did not want to be suspected of ever having such a think in their possession, most members turned them in as an outward show of loyalty to the Church and the Armstrong’s.  This is a perfect example of what can happen to someone’s thinking process after being conditioned with propaganda that Herbert Armstrong is an apostle of God, and as such could not be questioned.  For to question him is to question God, and to question God is to risk losing your eternal life and ending up in the lake of fire. 

(pg 51) Elbert atlas is one of the few black ministers in the Church and he only black area Coordinator  Unfortunately, he (pg 52) appears to very sensitive to this fact and ever-mindful of the feeling of some of the top officials in the Church.  He will probably never forget the statement, by Roderick C. Meredith, a top-ranking evangelist who was later to become Director of the ministry “that one of the signs of God’s displeasure with America was the fact that many blacks were ruling over us.”  And he called particular attention to the black mayor of Los Angeles [Tom Bradley]. He further stated that no black man should ever have authority over whites.

Chapter 5 The Apostle’s New Helpmate

(pg 55)  In the spring of 1977, Herbert Armstrong, after ten years a widower, remarried.  At age eighty-five, he married a woman in her late thirties, Ramona Martin.

Many members wondered about Armstrong marrying such a young woman at his age.  Again, this point was handled well by the (pg 56) ministry.  Picking up on Herbert Armstrong’s statements that his original wife could not have stood the rigors of travel, they told the members that God mercifully allowed her to die, so that Armstrong could conduct his world travels and bring the Gospel to other nations.  Because he needed a wife who could act as his hostess in various social functions, we were told that God provided him with his new young wife who was able to handle such heavy travel.  Could there be some further significance to this?  What about the fact that the new Mrs. Armstrong had been a secretary to the mysterious Osamu Gotoh and them later an assistant to Stanley Rader?  One wonders wither God really did send her to Herbert Armstrong or someone else made the arrangements.

Church members were told in letters from Herbert Armstrong that he had gone to this clinic [Otopeni Clinic] to rest up after a grueling trip.  Yet Garner Ted Armstrong in a public speaking engagement in Hackensack, New Jersey, in September 1978 was to say something quit different.  He said, “My father, before marrying this younger woman, went to a clinic in Romania where they give these special treatments for sexual rejuvenation, and it didn’t do any good.”Again, one must wonder where a lot of heard –earned donations had (pg 57) been going.  Had it preached the Gospel, or to pander to every whim and desire of the self-appointed apostle?

Garner Ted Armstrong was to state in an interview, regarding his father’s marriage to Ramona Martin, “I felt that every woman over fifty in the Church would be outraged.”  He stated further that he strenuously objected directly to his father and through intermediaries regarding his father’s interest in Ramona Martin during the entire two-and-a-half-year courtship.  Garner Ted said that he was told that his father would drink too much at dinner in some of the fanciest restaurants throughout the world, and in his inebriated condition pound his fist o the table, making public spectacle of himself as he proclaimed his anger against his son and his love for Ramona.

Garner Ted was so opposed to his father’s marriage that he says, “As I was walking through the front door of my father’s Tucson home, I was saying to my wife Shirley, “No, I will not perform (pg 58) this ceremony. It’s not right, it’s not good.  I won’t do it.  She kept begging me, all the way up the steps.  I won’t do it.  But when I opened the door and walked in there and I saw him surrounded by all these strangers, my heart went out to my father.  Suddenly, the family tie was there, and I said, ‘I can’t do this, I’m Garner Ted Armstrong, the executive vice-president and the person right next to my father and in the position at the top.  How can I let an insignificant young, new pastor of a little tiny church, whom I  had know since the time he was a baby boy, perform the wedding of the Chairman of the Board and the President of the Church and the Founder of the Church and the College and so on, when he is my father.  I walked over to my dad and asked him if I can perform the ceremony. He broke down and threw his arms around me and just almost with a weeping voice said, “O Ted, that’s the greatest wedding present you could have ever given me.”

“Stan walked in and my father said, “Stan, isn’t it wonderful Ted has consented to perform the ceremony.’ Stan’s face blanched and he looked at me like he would like to have me disappear on the spot.  He was furious.  My wife saw it, I saw it, we felt it, it was just blazing anger, you couldn’t believe how angry he was.  And it was unreasonable. Because he saw me suddenly winning, he thought it was political of me.  It wasn’t political. It was totally accidental. Nothing political about it.  It was just a heartfelt feeling that I had had.”

What very few people know, was that the events leading up to the marriage of Herbert and Ramona Armstrong, over Garner Ted’s constant violent objections, were setting the stage for a crisis in the Church such as had not been seen before.  It was during this same period of time that Garner Ted had been having some disagreements with Stanley Rader and had also become increasingly suspicious of Rader’s motives and increasing wealth.  When Garner Ted observed Rader’s blazing anger at the fact that he was going to perform his father’s wedding ceremony, it became fully apparent to Garner Ted that this marriage had a great significance to Stanley Rader.

(pg 59)  Strangely enough, this woman, whom Herbert Armstrong married, suddenly had better things to do, than to accompany him on his trips.  This, in spite of the fact that Herbert Armstrong made a major point of the fact that a young wife would be able to stand the rigors of travel, whereas had his first wife Loma lived, she would not have had such endurance.

Shortly after his marriage, Armstrong was to embark on another international trip.  Ramona, however, could not travel with him in order to attend to matters of greater urgency.  She stayed home in Tucson, in order to oversee the landscaping project of their new home.

It seems strange that Church headquarters had no Sabbath school materials at all for use in the program.  All lesson materials had to be developed locally, and Harriet, with a group of assistants, did a fine job preparing a complete set of lessons.  What seems so strange was that in discussing the financial needs of the program with a minister, Harriet was told that (pg 60) there was no money in the budget from headquarters to fund a Sabbath school program.  All such funding had to be done on a local basis.  We had no idea, at the time that we were told this, that Garner Ted Armstrong, at about the very same time, was being instructed by his father to sign checks for tens of thousands of dollars worth of jewels and furs for his wife Ramona.  There was plenty of Church money for pearls of adornment, but no money to bring the pearls of great price to our little children.  Money for international trips and gifts for world leaders, but no money for Sabbath school lessons.

(pg 62) On the way out of the store, Mark (Armstrong) stopped by one of the shelves and pointed to a patent medicine, a well known brand of laxative with a bulking-type vegetable fiber in it.  He said, “Hey John, that’s the stuff that killed my grandma, she had bowel problems and used to live on that stuff.  While grandpa was preaching healing with no medicine, grandma was forever drinking that stuff.  One time it just got like cement in her bowels and she just couldn’t go.  Then grandpa wouldn’t have any doctors, and they kept praying for her, and she finally died.  That’s the stuff that did it, John.”  On the way out of the store, Mark kept talking, he said, “Now old Stan’s got my grandpa right where he wants him.  He’s got him married to that fat Ramona, and there ain’t a thing grandpa says or does now that (pg 63) Stan doesn’t know about.”  While I was still getting over the shock of these statements, Mark continued, “I know grandpa would like to go back to the old doctrines of no doctors again, and stop having people celebrate birthdays, but I guess there is not much he’ll do about the divorce doctrines now, because he’s married to a divorcee.  Well, I guess as the apostle he can find even his way around that if he wants to.” It was quite a shock to hear such statements about Herbert Armstrong, not just from an employee of the Church, but from his very own grandson.

The Ambassador Report (pg 67)

In September, or perhaps early October, 1977, the Ambassador Report bombshell hit, it was a ninety –two-page magazine, slick, professionally produced.  A new name was listed among the publishers, that of Robert Gerringer, a former Ambassador student and form employee of the Church.  The front cover carried a photograph of Bobby Fischer and the legend “Bobby Fischer Speaks Out! – Exclusive Interview-his 15 Years in Armstrongism.”  Below that a photograph of Garner Ted Armstrong with the legend “In Bed With Garner Ted, America’s Playboy Preacher.”  This publication cost more than $10,000 to produce and was financed by some of the publishers, who actually took out second mortgages on their homes to raise the cash.
My first knowledge of the new Ambassador Report was as a result of an announcement at Sabbath services.  Richard Frankel announced, ‘”Brethren, Satan is again trying to destroy God’s Church through the Ambassador Report, a vicious publication put out by former members of the Church.  It contains noting but vicious attacks on God’s Work.  Many people are receiving this poison unsolicited in their mailbox.  Don’t even look at it. To do so will poison your mind. If you receive a copy, turn it in to one of the elders immediately without even looking at it.

“Mr. Rader has said that the material was scurrilous and much the same as reported in other places in other times and with no (pg 68) foundation in fact. Brethren, we have been advised by headquarters that our legal department is going to sue these people who have sought to destroy the Church.  They won’t get away with it.  If anyone wants to show you a copy of this poison, have nothing to do with them, and I want to know the name of any person who may be spreading such vicious slander about.”

At the next Sabbath there were members turning in their Ambassador Reports. They were assuring elders that they did not look at it.  It’s amazing how people will resort to blind obedience out of a distorted fear of God that is just driven into them by an autocratic ruler.  This is nothing more than modern day book-burning.

The Ambassador Report was apparently having quit an impact on the Church and resulted in numerous newspaper articles throughout the country.  Although I did not receive a copy in the mail, I was able to obtain one from one of the few thinking members of the Church, Elder Walter Scull.

This report was well researched and comprehensive.  Again there was a review of some of the doctrinal aberrations, such as the failure of the Church to have to flee for safety in 1972; the Church’s position of total reliance on God without medical help for healing; and the teaching against the use of make-up.  It appears that Armstrong, like the Pharisees of old, spend more time and effort fabricating self-righteous doctrines to keep people in his control, than he did on just preaching the truth about the Scriptures.

In the article called, “Computer Snooper,” the fact that the Church used the computer system to monitor tithing records was well documented.  The editors quoted from a ministerial letter dated, January 28, 1969, “Also, we are beginning to look into the tithing situation. Up until we had out computer, it was very slow and difficult (pg 69) to check the tithing record of brethren. We still don’t intend to do this all the time and try to ‘catch’ people at as some denominations apparently do.  But, we are going to male spot-checks in certain church areas from time to time.”

Even more like 1984 are the revelations about the Ambassador College Manpower Committee. This committee was supposedly for the purpose of determining the employment potential of Ambassador College graduates within the Church or college.  The article states, “Before any discussion of a student began, his picture is projected on a screen.  Then, as the members of this ‘spiritual jury’ stared at the student’s image, each one of them divulged information – often given them confidentially in private counseling sessions – gathered of the student.  This information often included a student’s background, racial and genetic heritage, sex and dating problems, attitudes and physique in addition to biased personal assessments of a student’s worth to the organization.

Then followed excerpts from minutes of these meetings: “Like most Negroes he is reserved, timid and not as warm and spontaneous as he could be – Most of our Negro leaders are partially white and don’t have the normal dull mind of the average Negro.”; “He is starry eyed, has a glassy stare when speaking, is hard to listen to because of his poor eye contact – this may be the result of excessive masturbation in the past.”; “He does confess to mentally fornicating with girls every day of his life.  Before he came into the Church, he used to masturbate twice a day – he is a sexual pervert in his mind.  He has had demon problems.”; “The Manpower Committee saw no objections to a marriage sometime in June.”; “Mr. Armstrong just recently made an ironclad rule that any senior who wants to marry a freshman is automatically out of the college and if he doesn’t take that in the right attitude is out of the Church.”; “Now Y is over there and she is getting romantically involved with a weak student named X.  His stock is weak.  If we were cattle raisers we would not begin to allow such mating to take place.  Breeding is important.”; “Mr. Armstrong could see no reason why they should not get married, his future is already mapped (70) out for him.”; “She had a breakdown in Mr. Buzzard’s class the other day – she couldn’t stop crying. We don’t want ‘odd’ people – people obviously demon influenced.  We should not hesitate to kick her out at the end of the semester, unless there is a drastic change.”; “Mr. Ted Armstrong said there are still security leaks in our Manpower Committee that must be stopped.  Word got back to X that we were discussing him in a recent Manpower meeting.  But what he heard was fifth or sixth hand, perverted, warped and only small percentage correct.”

It is difficult to imagine how a group of men who called themselves ministers of Jesus Christ could engage in such an activity under the guise of evaluating people for employment.  What is evident here is an attitude on the part of these Church leaders that they must have total control over every aspect of an individual’s life.

Chess Champion Bobby Fisher had quite a lot to say about the Armstrong’s.  In an interview with the Ambassador Report editor, Fischer said, “I was trying to buy God.”  From 1967 through 1974 he gave a total of $94,315 to the Worldwide Church of God.  In 1972, the year he won his championship defeating Soviet champion Boris Spassky, he donated $61,200 to the Church. He said, “This idea of Herbert’s that you can't trust your own thoughts – that’s the key doctrine that I think has to be blasted out. I would say that if there’s one thing that is the whole essence of Armstrongism, that is it.  That’s how he screws up your mind, that’s how he hangs on to people.

(71) “You know, from reading his stuff and listening to his sermons, you’d think he was very interested in God.  But when you meet him personally, there is nothing there at all.

“I find Armstrong to be an egomaniac. He sitteth in the temple of God saying great things as if he were God. He apparently wants to leave his permanent mark on all he comes in contact with and can bring into submission. He is simply a madman who would love to rule the world.”

Some of the most shocking disclosures regarding the handling of finances were made in an article entitled “Fleecing the Flock.”  In this article John Trechak opens with an account of his own experience as a ministerial student visiting Herbert Armstrong’s home.  The account reads, “It was February 18, 1970.  A small group of ministerial students were spending an evening with Herbert W. Armstrong, the founder of the Worldwide Church of God. Those of us who had been invited were given a glimpse of a life-style which is today’s world only a very few are able to afford.  At his home, a small mansion on Pasadena’s South Orange Grove Boulevard, (once nicknamed “Millionaires Row”), we were surrounded by rare antiques, expensive paintings, and Steuben crystal. The carpets were luxurious; a Steinway Grand stood in the corner of the drawing room.

“The gourmet cuisine served at dinner was excellent as were the European wines – all four of them.  We had been shown a large number of expensive paintings and objects d’art and, as was his custom, Herbert would relate what he had paid for each and what they were now worth.  That theme carried over into the conversations at dinner.  Then, as the servants began to clear the table, he turned to one guest and said, “What do you think all these beautiful things on the table are worth?”  Of course, none of us had even the slightest idea.  And so, he was able to proudly proclaim “Over $125,000!”

I’ve’ heard stories similar to this repeated many times by others who had been to Herbert Armstrong’s home.  Much of the art was (72) of an erotic nature and Herbert Armstrong was very proud of this. Frequently, part of his performance for the senior guests from the college would be a lengthy dissertation on sex.  It has been reported that Armstrong would give his apostolic advice to the seniors regarding their conduct and performance on their wedding night.  Rather than go into details regarding what he did say at those times, let it suffice that the reports were that the guests were most embarrassed by Armstrong’s conduct and especially his references to his own marital relations and his first wife’s various hang-ups and inhibitions.

Also revealed in the same article was Herbert Armstrong’s obsession for buying paintings.  He has so many paintings that many are in storage still with the price tags on them.  A conservative estimate of the value of these paintings is over half million dollars and in fact would probably be considerably higher than that.

According to a recent statement by Garner Ted Armstrong about (73) a year after publication of the Ambassador Report, ‘My father loves paintings of horses by one particular artist.  He must have just about every painting the guy has ever made.  Why, when he’s in London, part of his routine is to be driven up to Harrods’s in his Rolls Royce, and wouldn’t you know they’re all primed and ready for him.  The manager of that place just bows and scraps before my father and by the time it’s all over they’ve emptied his pockets again.  The only thing is, its Church money.”

But then one must wonder what Ted is really complaining about. Continuing in the same article in the Ambassador Report, John Trechak recalls a time when he was working as an instructor in the Church camp at Orr, Minnesota during the summer of 1973.  He states, “I can vividly recall how each week, Garner Ted would pass through from Californian.  He was not at all involved in teaching, counseling or the administration of the camp, nor did he normally give sermons or a lecture to the campers.  The purpose of the trip was purely for pleasure.  Each Thursday or Friday, Ted and his guests would fly a smaller plane north into Canada to Ted’s private fishing camp.  On Monday they would come through Oregon on their way back to California.  Now who do you think paid for all of this?  The jet referred to here by the way was the Church –owned Falcon Jet, which Garner Ted is licensed to fly.

One of the biggest spenders in the Church was the mysterious Japanese man, Osama Gotoh.  An article entitled “The Incredible Story of Mr. Mission Impossible, Ambassador College’s Illustrious Professor Gotoh” detailed some of his activities. Gotoh, apparently drawn to Ambassador College by its opulence ad great show of wealth, came on the scene in Pasadena in the mid-sixties.  He claimed to have been a Christian minister in Japan and had been (74) speaking on an obscure Japanese-language radio station on the West Coast.  After flunking out of Ambassador College in 1967, Gotoh incredibly, was named the head of the newly created Japanese department.  Apparently he had sold Herbert Armstrong on his ability to arrange connections and introductions in Japan.

“An A.C. Financial Affairs official reported that Gotoh had a lavish expense account which eventually exceeded $100,000.”  While Gotoh was being highly praised by Herbert Armstrong as being the man God was using to open doors for him in Japan, it appears as though Gotoh was also actively engaged in less Christian pursuits such as smuggling. Ambassador Report stated, “On June 6, 1975 Gotoh was apprehended at the L.A. International carrying a substantial undeclared amount of jewelry.  This information came from the Department of the Treasury in San Pedro, Californian, which commissioned an agent compile a case against Gotoh.  According to an official spokesman of the government agency, Gotoh, if tried by a jury and convicted of the crime, could have received up to five years in jail and a $50,000 fine.”

Soon after this Gotoh was out of the United States and out of the reach of Federal agents. He also then left his position on the Ambassador College faculty.  After the Federal pressure seemed to subside, Gotoh was again actively engaged by the Church.  Then, early in 1977, he was again released for what were at the time rather obscure reasons as far as official statements to the membership were concerned.

Regarding Gotoh’s problems with the Department of the Treasury, Ambassador Report stated further, “He is now free to enter and leave the U.S. as the Department of the Treasury is no longer after him.  Their spokesman, however, admitted that the Department had been under ‘pressure from above’ to lay off Gotoh.  He would not elaborate any further.”

It had been reported that as a result of the pressure to lay off Gotoh, all of the records regarding his case (75) and activities have been sealed, and if Gotoh were the only one involved in illegal activity, one must wonder why Herbert Armstrong would state that they prefer to clear customs at Salt Lake City, as they don’t get any problems there.

One article entitled “Southern Exposure” contained an interview with Holly Ruiz, who for eighteen years had been married to Enrique Ruiz, the director of he Mexico City office of the Church.  She was divorced from her husband in 1965.  She detailed various visits by both the Armstrong’s as well as many other top Church officials to both Mexico City and Acapulco. She told how they ate in the best restaurants and had private dinners in the finest hotels.  In response to the question, “Did Herbert ever behave immorally?” she answered, “Not like Ted, but he used to talk about sex a lot.  In fact he was obsessed with sex.  He told me once that he knew more about sex than anyone else.  A few years ago, Herbert told me that he had a crush on a young Philippine girl.  He brought her over from the Philippines and set her up in a really nice apartment.  However, when he found out that she had another boyfriend, he sent her back. He also had a crush on one of his young secretaries.  He wanted to marry her, but Ted would not allow it.”

“I went to Ted after I broke up with my husband not only to get help financially but also because I was concerned about the effect our separation would have on the Church members in Mexico. Ted told me not to worry about that and that he understood how I felt.  He explained that he too had similar problems, but that his father had forced him to (76) remain married and that he didn’t feel it was fair.  He told me that he had taken off with one of his stewardesses to Colorado.  Then he asked me if I’d ever committed adultery at all, and I said no and that I didn’t intend to. He seemed rather taken aback by that statement.

In another article entitles, “Son of the Legend,” Ambassador Report went into considerable detail regarding Garner Ted’s 1972 exile, claiming that the real reason was definitely a matter of adultery.  Referring to the summer of 1971, the article stated, “By this time, word of Ted’s sexual improprieties had begun to filter through the ministry. For at least a year Ted had been having an affair with his stewardess.    Ted was ready to leave his wife.

This article went further to state that from Garner Ted’s return later in 1972 through 1972, many of the ministers began to be aware of he real reasons for his exile.  This along with the various doctrinal problems led to the event known as the 1974 rebellion.

A report on a meeting in Richmond, Virginia in February 1974 quotes Albert Portune and David Antion, brother-in-law of Garner Ted, speaking before a group of Eastern ministers as follows: “I don’t know how many times, I just don’t know.  But whether its 25 or 225, I don’t know.  Somewhere between those two points” This was in reference to the number of illicit relations that Garner Ted (78) had had.

“I would say here that a lot of it was not outright adultery – a lot of it was flirtation, a lot of it was necking, making a pass and so forth.

“He needs to feel attractive.  He likes to know that he’s handsome.  He likes to know the girls will go for him and all that.  And I think there’s a psychological need, personally, when I analyze it, rather than just a great need for just sex, you know.”

The forth and final article regarding Garner Ted was written by Al Carrozzo, a former minister and regional director of the Western portion of the United States. His article was entitled “The Profligate Son.”  Carrozzo starts his article, “Al, lets get one thing straight.  I’m a no good fornicating, adulterating son of a bitch’” these highly emotional words initiated a private conversation between Garner Ted Armstrong and me at 10:15 A.M.  on Wednesday, May 16, 1973 in the seclusion of his television studio office.”

Carrozzo then recounted some of the same events covered in other articles regarding Garner Ted’s adulterous activities and his 1972 exile. Regarding Garner Ted’s repentance, Carrozzo states, “Has Garner Ted changed? Did he really repent? One thing is sure, Ted repented many, many times.  He has been called the ‘professional repenter.’  He can cry on cue.”

The Church propaganda machine began to crank out constant attacks on the publishers of Ambassador Report characterizing them as dissident malcontents who were out to destroy God’s Church.  We were told that the Church legal department was going to take swift action against those people and sue them for all the false claims and charges that they had made.  After a while the furor began to die down and all seemed forgotten.

Strangely enough, or perhaps not so strangely, the publishers of Ambassador Report were never sued.  While the Ambassador Report did not have the effects that its publishers had hoped for, they did drive one more wedge into the ever-widening crack in the false façade of the Worldwide Church of God.

Regarding their blockbusting charges against the Church and its officials, Bob Gerringer was to tell me about two years after the massive 1977 issue was published, “Of course they never sued us.  They knew that if they did, we would get into document discovery proceedings and everything would come out.  They were just telling the Church people that they were going to sue, but all the while they knew they wouldn’t dare.  We didn’t publish one thing that we (80) couldn’t back up with proof.

More to come

Thursday, September 30, 2010

The Rapid Fall of HWA's Golden Boy (Updated)

The Painful Truth has a post up from a step daughter of Kevin Dean referring to his arrest on September 27th for 10 counts of child molestation and five counts for sexual battery.

Kevin Dean was one of HWA's highly favored confidants as was his brother Aaron Dean (UCG hierarchy).  When these two spoke the people in Pasadena jumped.  They first got their start with HWA as stewards on the church jet planes.  The female stewardess had been dumped because of GTA's sexually offenses against them.  They figured men serving as stewards would solve the problem.

Controversy has always swirled around Pasadena about Kevin.  When he was part of Imperial schools rumors were rampant about his dalliance's with students.  He ungraciously dumped his first wife for a girl from Imperial Schools.

Then we had heard he moved to Santa Barbara to get away from the rumors and accusations.

Booking photo
Otagosh blog also has a link about this story with some details on the arrests.

Myra McQueen  has info on her blog about the Dean Brother's shenanigans during the receivership.



It was very obvious now that Rader was calling the shots and that he had put the fear in HWA. He would continue to do so until the Dean bros (according to the AR) managed to tape a conversation between Rader and Ramona in which they were discussing placing HWA in a nursing home and taking over the church. Statements in the AR (Jan '83) read-"Those close to Ted, however, feel his distrust of Ramona was quite justified. Many observers are convinced she was more loyal to Stan Rader than to HWA. And as we reported in a previous issue, it was a secret tape recording of a Stan Rader-Ramona conversation taped by the Dean brothers [former stewards on the GII] that was responsible for the sacking of Stan Rader. Insiders claim that it was also that tape recording that was responsible for the Herbert-Ramona marriage going sour." This tape recording of the conversation between Rader & Ramona was first mentioned in AR #15 http://hwarmstrong.com/ar/AR15.html & later in AR #16 http://hwarmstrong.com/ar/AR16.html



Aaron Dean went on to become HWA's assistant, replacing Bob Fahey.


Actually, the recording would not have worked if the blackmail had still been in Rader's possession at the time the tape was played. To interject here-Rader had carefully placed college maintenance men in the highest ministerial positions after Ted's disfellowshippment AR 10-'79 http://hwarmstrong.com/ar/AR10.html) which included Tkach and Ellis LaRavia. Were they the only control over the ministry he could get? Most were not very well educated. Tkach did not even have a high school diploma and had been unable to pass any of his college academics at AC.


The Armstrong leadership was no longer in control of the Armstrongite ministry that had been trained by HWA. The regular evangelists, such as Rod Meredith, Herman Hoeh, etc. lost their high position in authority when Tkach was put in charge of the ministry in '79. Many were disfellowshipped (ie, Dave Antion, C. Wayne Cole, etc.).


This would not have happened if Ted had been under Rader's influence, because Rader did not seek the top religious position. He just wanted to be in control of the money. But with Ted gone, he knew that he had to place his myrmidons in positions of control, in order to maintain control of the money when HWA died. He obviously knew where every dime was in all those corporate soles that were scattered out to other states, as well as in the thirteen bank accounts listed under HWA's name.


According to Ted's booklet, HWA had been afraid of being "placed in a mental institution" ("Origin" pg. 67)"He was becoming paranoid about plots against him" (same pg). This accusation is also repeated in DLA's tape "'79 Disfellowshippments and Firings." along with the fact that C. Wayne Cole (the then head of the ministerial dept.) was consulted by HWA about how to go about firing Rader. Of course the loyal Cole tried to help HWA and was stabbed in the back as a result. This information is available on David Antion's taped message, "79 Firings and Disfellowshippments"

After the Dean bros. tape, HWA was able to fire Rader himself (with pay of course, because he knew too much to just get rid of him). But by this time Tkach (whom Ted refers to in his booklet as "one of our former gardeners, who had risen, for some unknown reason, to be in my father's circle of trusted confidants." Origin pg 56) apparently took charge of HWA's ministry and his empire. Did he steal the blackmail? Did the Dean bros?


One of Kevin's smear campaigns also led to the famous Kessler letter.

Monday, September 27, 2010

The Marson Report

The Marson Report
Concerning Herbert W Armstrong

by Richard Marson
Ashley-Calvin Press
Seattle Washington
1970




(pg 1) Preface

With newspaper in one hand and Holy writ in the other, Herbert W. Armstrong has been preaching the “soon coming-later than we think-downfall of he Untied States and British Empire” for nearly forty years.

Throughout Mr. Armstrong’s long career, the British and Americans have stood it seems, on the bare “last gasp, but eyed, choking” edge of the final and chaotic oblivion.  Final destruction was first slated for 1938; then 1969-1972 and, now, 1979 or 1980.

Possessing “definite knowledge” and “vital keys” this man and his son, Garner Ted Armstrong, utter foreboding omens of certain calamity and doom while expressing unmistakable confidence that their won personal brand of interpretation must be right.

In the mind’s eye, Mr. Armstrong sees most English speaking peoples as none other than the ancient Biblical house of Israel.  To him, Germany must be the historic Assyrian Empire and Italians descendants of the great Babylonian nation.

Many of the Biblical events of yesteryear leap to life before his mind to form a kaleidoscopic series of prophetic events. Mr. Armstrong insists that “one-third of the Bible is prophecy ninety-five percent of which has never yet been fulfilled.

Today, Garner Ted Armstrong carries on the work of his father. He expounds the same doctrines with the perfection of a Xerox machine.  Rare slips of the tongue result in moments of anxiety as he sits at his desk waiting for a phone call from Dad who often listens carefully.  “Ted,” a voice growls as he lifts the receiver, “What are you trying to do, ruin the work???”

(pg 2)Only since joining the work (as far as I know) has Garner Ted Armstrong expressed serious disagreement with his father. At that time, Herbert Armstrong immediately determined he would never again allow his son to speak on radio or television. Garner Ted quickly apologized, however, and today handles virtually all the radio and television broadcasting in the English language.

Whether or not Garner Ted Armstrong always agrees with his father he nonetheless continues to promote the same exact prophetic doctrines with plodding determination.

What about us?  Can we afford to accept the prophetic doctrines of this man without demonstrable proof?  It is high time the millions who hear Herbert W. Armstrong’s didactic prophetic messages had determined detailed analysis of this man’s concepts.

It is possible to prove when and where Herbert W Armstrong is right or wrong?  Yes!  The answer lies in some of his remarks.  All concepts and doctrines must go back to basic assumptions and foundations. Mr. Armstrong is no exception. We will examine his “vital keys” and find out where he gets his “definite knowledge.”

A copy of a personal letter to Mr. Armstrong follows.  As a former member of his group, I wanted to express in a more direct way some of my feelings concerning facts I have discovered.


(pg 6) Introduction

I became par t of Herbert W Armstrong’s group, now known as “The Worldwide Church of God,” in June 1960.

No doubt many people wonder how a person comes to be an Armstrongite.  Many readers of Mr. Armstrong’s literature do not fully grasp the fact that every article or book distributed by him is designed as a lure with which to lead its readers into his church.

Some of his articles and booklets question common Christian beliefs and practices in the light of Biblical example.  However, other literature is greatly concerned with future prophecy in the light of present-day world news.  Some of these news and prophetic type messages contain elements of fear psychology.

Some people who honestly desire to conform to the will of God or a God-like concept are led to believe Herbert Armstrong’s doctrines represent God’s will, and plan because they contain many plausible sounding arguments.

On the other hand, most who read Herbert Armstrong’s literature remain tranquil in spite of the fear psychology and eventually reach a conclusion that he is incorrect while others fail for one reason or another to seriously contend with the question at all.

For two decades or more, Mr. Armstrong’s church grew at about thirty percent per year.  In recent years, however, the growth rate has declined and present trends indicate a further shrinkage in membership growth. In October 1969, 54,000 members attended the group’s annual convention in the United States and Canada.  An additional 9,000 attended in other countries of the world.  Because attendance is demanded of all members this represents a fair estimate of the present size of (pg 7) the organization, a culmination of about forty years’ effort on Mr. Armstrong’s part.

A new member is rapidly and continually taught that he must not disagree with Mr. Armstrong or his representatives.  By the time a person is declared to be a member he is expected to have “proven” that Mr. Armstrong’s church represents the Almighty’s work on earth.  To expound any other concept to other members is heresy and is not tolerated.

One of the earliest booklets I received from Herbert Armstrong was entitles “1975 in Prophecy.”  This booklet was one of the most noticeable examples of fear psychology distributed by the Armstrong movement.  An approximate representation of some of the pictures contained in this booklet and other booklets are as follows:

The most horrible example of these pictures shows people in the foreground in the throes of stupefying expressions of abject horror!  The entire earth is crumbling around them in cataclysmic convulsions of an unbelievable earthquake.  Volcanoes are erupting everywhere.  Mile-long chasms open on all sides.  People, trucks, cars, buses and bridges are falling into these great yawning gulfs by the thousands.  The sky is black with soot, rocks and smoke as the earth erupts in one last great spasm of utter destruction.

In a second picture we see buildings burning everywhere; the result of a fiery sun seven times hotter than normal. People are dashing about holding their heads in fear and pain.  Bodies everywhere are covered with great blotches and welts the result of great plaques.

(pg 8) The third picture finds us looking at a scene of comparative quiet. People have been reduced to living, leering, vulture-like remains.  One in the foreground is a skeleton clothed in tight fitting skin. Eyes bug from the head, in vacant agony. The mouth, agape, displays missing teeth interlaced with cracked fragmented remains.  The head, perched as it were upon a gnarled, twisted rock like neck, is anchored precariously to the remains below.  One tree exists in the background shorn of all living evidence save two stub. All is in ruins.  A child lies dead in its mother’s grief stricken arms.  Some sit wanting for the final end while others barbarously attack the last morsel of food.

“1975 in Prophecy” has had a very definite effect on many people who have read it including me.  I well remember one person who had to be treated for mental disorders as a result of Mr. Armstrong’s literature.  The book “1975 in Prophecy” was the very first book read by my brother who is still a member of the group.

Today, in order to present a better image, Mr. Armstrong is becoming less vivid in describing future events as he sees them.  A short time ago members were ordered to destroy “1975 in Prophecy” was well as certain other booklets.  “1975 in Prophecy” was to be destroyed, members were told, because they were too prone to set dates for the downfall and destruction of the Untied States and British Empire.  As mater of fact, this booklet did leave one with an impression that the United States and Great Britain would be destroyed about 1972 and the end of the present world would come in 1975.  Due to the fact that these dates were approaching all too fast, Mr. Armstrong felt compelled to do something about it.  He has become increasingly desirous of playing down such dates.

(pg 9)  There is still one book which Mr. Armstrong widely advertises containing similar dating and fear psychology.  This booklet is called the Untied States and the British Commonwealth in Prophecy.” One could easily miss the dating evidence in this book because Herbert Armstrong uses non dated phrases similar to the following: A staggering turnoff world events will erupt in the next four to seven years.  To see when test four to seven years are to occur, one need only turn to the title page and find the words “Copyright 1967 Ambassador College.”  By doing so, it became clear that Herbert Armstrong meant 1971 to 1974 when he wrote the book.  I intend to expound on much of what Herbert Armstrong writes in that very book.

In some old Plain Truth articles, particularly in his magazine the Plain truth, Herbert Armstrong has been quite specific in dating prophetic events but has been quite emphatic in denying this fact in recent years.  Lately, Mr. Armstrong has begun to feel that there may be about nine more years before the United States and Great Britain are destroyed.  Is Mr. Armstrong correct in any of his prophetic interpretations?  At one time, he even felt the end of the present world would occur about 1938 to 1949.  Many events from the present world News are used by him in an effort to substantiate his predictions.  Do these vents prove him right?

(Pg 10) The Marson report is concerned with getting to the core of Herbert Armstrong’s convictions.  What are the basic concepts from which he develops his predictions?  If these basic foundations are proven wrong then the predictions on which they depend will fall with them.

Herbert Armstrong affected the lives of millions and is looked upon as the interpreter and guide to truth to tens of thousands, who believe he is right.  It is high time these members and the general public had a completely documented report expounding on Herbert Armstrong’s doctrines – a report determined to prove, once and for all, whether his concepts can stand the test of a determined, point by point examination.

Many Armstrongites are in for a real shock!

My Big Shock

During a period of time prior to leaving the group, I began to notice certain problems which seemed to exist between doctrines of Herbert Armstrong and Biblical example.  It became obvious to me that there was either error in the basic Bible writings or error in the Herbert Armstrong’s interpretation of the Bible or both.  I set about examining and making extensive notes on these matters with the thought of bringing them to the attention of the local group in Seattle and Mr. Armstrong.

(pg 11) Before I was able to do so I received a great shock.  One night, the local director brought a small group of members together, as he does from time to time.  My wife and I were included.  During the course of the conversation he began to say that he had doubts as to whether or not the Bible would be used in the world tomorrow because it contained inaccuracies.

At this point, my early warning radar sprang to life! Alarms sounded and my ears perked to attention like great searching antenna.  Just what was he trying to say?  In Mr. Armstrong’s church the Bible is supposed to be regarded, in its basic form, as being one-hundred percent the inspired word of God without error.

One of the ladies in the group began to question the local director. He did not seem anxious to pursue the subject.  His final statement was essentially this: whether or not the Bible was used in the world tomorrow was not important because Herbert Armstrong’s booklets and literature represented an understandable rewriting of the Bible.

I began to have little incentive for remaining a part of this organization. The time had come to conduct a careful investigation into every aspect of the group’s doctrines.  About a month later, I mailed a hasty report expounding on some of the concepts which I had begun to seriously question.  The report went to about one hundred of Mr. Armstrong’s members. I left the group at this time, whereupon they quickly slammed he door behind me – for sending the report-and forbid any member to see or talk to me.

Continuous investigation since then h as brought shock after shock. It is hard for me to believe how utterly deceived I had been.  In this report, I will present some of this vast evidence. Much more must be left for subsequent reports.

(pg 13) After joining that organization, I studied and believed all that was written or said.  At times, small questions would arise but we would seldom allow ourselves to question Mr. Armstrong feeling he must know best.  Many times we were reminded that Herbert Armstrong was supposed to be the Almighty’s top physical representative on earth today.  How could we question God?  Large questions and problems concerning the doctrines of this man failed to arouse me to the realization that much of his doctrinal foundation could be in error.

Eventually, I was used by his group to visit members as ahead of a two-man team under the local representative. I expounded his doctrines faithfully, can could not conceive or understand when others differed with him.

Some time later they ordained me (a) deacon. I was then assigned responsibility in taking care of certain physical functions of the local group area.  Bookkeeping and sound communications were my basic duties.

(pg 14)  Many would ask why I failed to question various doctrines before ten whole years had elapsed.  The answer is simple.  When a person enters this group he normally finds his time completely taken up.  Members are encouraged to study their Bibles but, in reality, seldom find time for the real searching effort needed to properly understand many little understood facts concerning it.

Many people realize the fact that Mr. Armstrong’s organization distributes large quantities of books, booklets, articles, study courses, etc.  Members are asked to study and restudy them as they have time. They must attend Saturday services each week and attend regular Bible Study meetings as often as possible.  There are also special Holy Day meetings plus resultant review notes they must study.  Many belong to local choir groups with rehearsals once or twice a week.  The groups conducts a speech club for men once a week plus the many extra-curricular activities associated with it including speech preparation, money raising activities, banquets, etc.

There are also many social activities which while good and of an excellent nature, are designed to devour spare time. Thus, this great use of time contributes to the fact that few members will question basic ideas once caught in the fold.  There is just not much time in which to become suspicious.

(pg 19)  Mr. Armstrong says in his book to “expect breathtaking surprises,” We are to be ready for “startling, amazing, eye-opening facts until now hidden from our eyes.”  We are told that these prophecies have not been understood or believed until now because the vital key which unlocks prophecy to our understanding has been lost.  At last, Mr. Armstrong stands ready to reveal those secrets to us! He asserts that the great lost key is none other than the proof of the identity of the United States and the British peoples in Biblical prophecy!  “The same key has been found” he says, and it is to be presented to “those whose unprejudiced eyes are willing to see it.”

It becomes obvious at once reading U.S. B.C.P. that this theory is pretend as being revealed knowledge to Herbert Armstrong from God. However, Garner Ted Armstrong has mentioned on the (pg 20) radio broadcast, from time to time, that U.S.B.C.P. was taken from another book. Which book he does not say. Some within the organization recognize the book mentioned as being Judah’s Scepter and Joseph’s Birthright. This book was written by JOHN Allen in 1917.

But, if this great “reveled” knowledge is not unique to with Herbert Armstrong…then neither is it unique with J.H. Allen.  In the preface to Mr. Allen’s book we receive a clue as to where the theory came from.  We will quote:  “Consequently, when, perchance, we found some prophetic utterance therein [the Bible], which we were forced to admit had not become a historic verity, and since this was the dispensation of the Spirit, we felt at liberty to give the reigns to our somewhat vivid imagination, and let it run unchecked through the verdant and fruitful fields of speculation…”  Who gave him this liberty? God?

Was the result of J. H. Allen’s “vivid imagination” really unique with him? No, not quite!  The ultimate invention of the concept originated with a man by the name of Richard Brothers. The Hastings Encyclopedia of religion and Ethics states: “Anglo-Israelism owes its modern success to Richard Brothers (1757-1824), a half-pay officer of eccentric habits in the English Navy. He described himself as ‘nephew of the Almighty’ and claimed descent from David.  Among his prophecies were those from the immanent restoration of Israel to the Holy Land and the elevation of himself as ‘Prince of the Hebrews’ and ruler of the world!  Richard Brother’s was confined as a lunatic, but succeeded in obtaining many admirers.”

(pg 21)  Mr. Armstrong’s book U.S.B.C.P.  Is a direct though modified, descendent of Richard Brothers’ Anglo-Israelism.  A good insight into the past history of this theory may be gained by reading J.H. Allen’s Judah’s Scepter and Joseph’s Birthright as it shows some of the revising used to get the concept into its somewhat modern form from which Herbert Armstrong obtained it.  One might also read The Delusions of British Israelism by Anton Darms.

A lesson well learned in studying the whole history of British Israelism is the fact that the theory grows around events of history, not Biblical example.

The main question is, of course, is not who invented the concept but whether or not there is any shred of Biblical truth in it.

The vast importance of knowing the truth regarding this theory becomes all too evident when one understands how it effects virtually all prophecy of the Bible in this latter day as interpreted by Herbert Armstrong.

(Marson the recommends that the ready take up a copy of the US&BC in hand and follow along.  He proceeds to debunk and disprove Armstrong’s various interpretations. 

Most books on Armstrong’s tend to attack the British Israel silliness.  This theory is the first obstacle they need to remove. Once you removed and debunked British Israelism, everything else in Armstrong’s House of Cards starts crumbling. )