Armstrongism, Atheism and Their Shared Predicate
“They never stop, these Stepford wives. They something something all their lives. Work like robots. Yes, that would fit. They work like robots all their lives.”
There is a striking commonality between Atheism and Armstrongism beyond the fact that they are both belief systems. Though they may be antithetical in their larger purposes, the intersection between these two systems is to be found in their shared anthropology. In short, both philosophies paradoxically deprecate the value of human beings. Their deprecation is paradoxical because atheists often tout an impoverished form of humanism. And Armstrongism is highly dependent on human resources for financial viability. Humans, the objects of their diminishment, are pivotal to both.
In Brief: The Atheistic Materialist Perspective on Humanity
Materialism recognizes nothing beyond the material realm. It is typical for atheists to adopt materialism as their explanation of reality. This seems to be a natural pairing. The Universe to the materialist is a place of physical objects and forces where the credo is written in terms from physics and chemistry and other hard sciences. Anything that transcends the physical is outside its purview and is denied.
Materialism diminishes human beings to an accumulation of atoms and molecules. Consciousness and thoughts, without any compelling rationale, are believed to be merely swarms of chemical reactions. Humans are thought to be biobots, a kind of biological machine - a pleonastic fallacy. And the frequent appeal to analogy is that the human mind is like a computer. This comparison is inapt because non-thinking computers are programmed and operated by human minds. If we are to go by the physical evidence alone, a comparison of our brain anatomy with that of our primate cousins would indicate that we should be only a little smarter than chimpanzees. Our excess of sentience is enormous.
But if a human is just a biological machine that means that he may be repaired, modified, corrected, repurposed and made to march to the drum of someone else’s intellectual pretensions. To the atheist who is truly committed to the purity of materialism, the faunal human has no dignity. If someone claims that atheism does not deprecate humanity, that person needs to recognize the impact of mechanistic materialism on society: racism, control of lives, brainwashing, sterilizations, eugenics, compassionless survival-of-the-fittest social principles and humans as an impersonal resource.
In Brief: The Armstrongist Perspective on Humanity
While Armstrongism does not present us with a documented systematic philosophy or a systematic theology, we may induce its attitudes towards human beings by examining practice in regard to the common lay member. For example:
1. Herbert W. Armstrong (HWA), based on his own words, had a low view of the lay membership of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG). HWA saw them, principally through tithing, as little impersonal moving parts of a great machine called “The Work.” He was the steersman of this great machine. For example, he one time told the congregations that if they did not help him in doing “The Work”, God would raise up stones to replace them (a mishandling of Luke 19:40). In other words, they were easily replaceable, like mechanical parts, and their humanity, salvation and theotic potential was not a concern.
2. Robots require programming or they will be inert. The programming imposed on church members included Old Testament regulations, New Testament regulations and denominational regulations and norms. This legalism was like a stringent set of internal programs that made the biobots function as desired and curtailed deemed undesirable behavior, all at the expense of their humanity.
3. The highly structured caste system of the WCG was also a means of diminishing people to the status of mechanistic modules. Each module plugged into a carefully defined port in the great machine. And each module recognized its immutable boundaries – the protocols for mechanistic operation and the attendant loss of human value.
Thesis and Antithesis
Armstrongism and atheism are alike and unalike. Unlike atheism, Armstrongism seeks to cloak itself in Christianity. Unlike Armstrongism, atheism seeks to cloak itself inaptly in the august nobility of the scientific method. Where they are both alike, the point of synthesis, is in their debasing humanity to the level of the utilitarian machine. In the case of Armstrongism this is done by treating people like “cogs in a wheel” to induce a backflow of money and in the case of atheism this is done by relegating people to the status of mindless biobots so they can be, I suspect, controlled. Whatever the purposes, whether apparent or inapparent, the dreadful impact is the same: the loss of the human and the formation of the soulless android.
“If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face—for ever.”