In yesterday's missive from Dave Pack he waxed eloquent about his new building and the things he plans on doing with the campus. His posting was in actuality one big press release. That press release was bought hook, line and sinker by Colette Jenkins with the Akron Beacon Journal. It was like reading Dave Pack's bullshit all over again.
She quotes this from Davey about his coming "explosion." Is it me or is much of Dave's hyperbole almost borderline sexual? Dave's "expanding" church is ready to "explode." I get the feeling as Dave writes this stuff his eyes are glazing over as he.......well....................you get the picture.

The 4,000-square-foot media center will include three studios, where
many of the Church’s video and audio productions and The World to Come
with David C. Pack program will be filmed and edited. The program, which
is designed to explain Bible prophecy by analyzing current world
events, is broadcast locally at 6:30 a.m. Sundays on ION Television
(WVPX) and at 3:30 a.m. Thursdays on The Word Network.
“These next
buildings allow us to expand, in fact explode, in size in taking the
gospel of the soon coming kingdom of God to a world in desperate need of
this good news,” said Pack, who does not use the title reverend. “We
hope in the fall to announce construction dates for the beautiful
Ambassador Center, a training facility for our ministers and leaders,
and also the crown jewel centerpiece — the magnificent Imperial
Auditorium.”
In her original report early this morning, she said the church meets on Sunday. Davey obviously corrected this heresy. This edition has the correct day but still shows how secretive Davey is:
The multipurpose room is also being used for Saturday worship services,
which are by invitation only and typically scheduled during the
afternoon. Plans are for worship services to move to a three-story
building with a 450-seat auditorium, once it is constructed.
Did you also notice how many seats Davey's new Imperial Auditorium will seat......450. These copycat mini-me church leaders like Flurry and Pack have to settle for second and third best. The Ambassador seated 1,262 people. Six Pack Flurry's auditorium seats 850 and poor Davey's will only seat 450! For the worlds biggest and best Church of God ever this certainly is a HUMILIATING circumstance to be in! Third best. Imagine that. THIRD BEST!
Perhaps we should start calling Davey - Third Place Dave.
Jenkins writes three paragraphs about Davey's connection with WCG. She fails to mention Dave was terminated by the WCG years ago and that he did NOT train at the feet of Herbert Armstrong. HWA had little contact with the guy during the time he was around Pasadena. Also notice that RCG
LIES about how much their members give. They claim only 12.5 percent. First tithe, second tithe, third tithe, tithe of the tithe, special offerings, building fund.....etc, etc, etc. does not come out to 12.5%.
The Restored Church of God is rooted in the tradition of the
Worldwide Church of God, founded in 1934 by Herbert Armstrong as a
religious broadcasting radio ministry (Radio Church of God). The
broadcast evangelist is often referred to as "God's End-Times Apostle,"
who prepared his followers for a utopia to be ruled by Jesus.
Although
Armstrong’s ministry has been criticized by some cult-watching
organizations, followers report that when Armstrong died in 1986, his
church was attracting 120,000 people to weekly services, with an annual
income of about $200 million. Circulation of its the Plain Truth
magazine was more than 8 million, and The World Tomorrow attracted one
of the largest religious television audiences in America.
Published
reports indicated that Worldwide Church of God members paid as much as
20 to 30 percent in tithes. Leaders of the Restored Church of God
dispute that, saying members have always paid an average of 12.5 percent
of their annual income.
You can read the reporters slobber fest over Dave Pack here:
Restored Church of God's new world headquarters is open in Wadsworth
Instead of reporting the truth about the abusive behavior of Dave, the lies he tells and the lives he has ruined, the reporter whitewashes Dave and his cult.