Thursday, May 21, 2026

Jeffrey Edward Fowle: The Ohio Man Who Risked Everything to Smuggle a Bible into North Korea

 



Jeffrey Edward Fowle, a municipal worker from Miamisburg, Ohio, entered the global spotlight in 2014 after his arrest in North Korea for leaving a Korean-English Bible in a public restroom. His solitary act of faith—intended to reach the country’s persecuted underground Christian community—resulted in nearly six months of detention. Fowle’s story illuminates the extreme dangers faced by Christians in one of the world’s most repressive regimes and the quiet resilience of North Korea’s hidden believers. Early Life, Faith, and MotivationBorn in 1958, Fowle grew up in a religiously divided household. His father, Edward, immersed the family in the Worldwide Church of God. This contrasted with his mother’s Episcopal faith. Fowle attended services as a child but drifted away around age 12. A spiritual turning point came in his early 20s during a revival on an Ohio farm, where he experienced a profound sense of divine calling. 
As an adult, Fowle worked for the Moraine street department, married Tatyana (originally from Russia), and raised three children. A “child of the Cold War,” he developed a deep interest in communist states, studying Russian and reading about North Korea’s 1990s famine and human rights crises. In 2014, inspired by news of detained missionary Kenneth Bae, he booked a $3,900 tour with Koryo Tours. While preparing, he purchased a turquoise Korean-English study Bible on Amazon, inserting family photos, his name, address, and contact details. 
Fowle later explained his intent: “I was motivated by the stories of the suppression of the underground Christians. I felt compelled to do that to aid the underground church in some small way... I saw my job as leaving the Bible there and let God do the rest.” His wife warned against it, but he proceeded, viewing the trip as both tourism and a personal mission. North Korea’s Underground Church: A Hidden Network Under Extreme PersecutionNorth Korea ranks as the world’s most dangerous place for Christians, topping Open Doors’ World Watch List for decades. The regime views independent Christianity as a direct threat to the Kim family’s cult of personality, treating it as treason. Official “churches” in Pyongyang serve mainly as propaganda for foreigners; genuine faith operates in extreme secrecy. 
Estimates suggest 100,000 to 400,000 secret believers exist, mostly in tiny family units or small groups meeting in homes, fields, or hidden spots. Worship is nearly silent: prayers whispered under blankets, hymns memorized, and Scriptures handwritten or committed to memory to avoid detection. Bibles are extraordinarily rare and precious—possessing one can lead to execution, life imprisonment in political prison camps (kwanliso), or punishment extending to three generations of a family. Underground networks rely on smuggling via borders with China, balloons, boats, USB drives hidden in everyday items, and radio broadcasts. Believers share single copies among trusted contacts, often at great personal risk. Defectors report intense surveillance, informants, and brutal crackdowns; recent reports indicate intensified campaigns have pushed organized underground services “almost to disappearance,” leaving many in solitary, private faith. Despite this, the church persists through whispered prayers, memorized verses, and quiet evangelism, embodying remarkable resilience. 
Fowle hoped his Bible would reach such a network in the remote northern city of Chongjin, far from the capital’s oversight.The Act, Arrest, and CaptivityFowle arrived in North Korea on April 29, 2014. In Chongjin, he left the Bible under a trash bin in the restroom of the Chongjin Sailors’ Club (a venue for foreign sailors). A staff member discovered it, and authorities traced it back to him. He was detained around May 4 as his tour group prepared to depart Pyongyang. 
North Korean state media announced the detention on June 6, accusing him of “hostile acts” and proselytism. He joined Kenneth Bae and Matthew Miller as one of three detained Americans. During captivity in a Pyongyang guesthouse, Fowle reported respectful treatment: “I’ve been treated well... never physically abused, always had enough, usually had too much to eat,” with meals including rice, vegetables, soup, and meat. 
In monitored interviews with CNN and AP in September 2014, he admitted guilt and sought forgiveness while pleading for U.S. help.Release and ReflectionFowle was released on October 21, 2014, after 170 days, facilitated by Swedish diplomats and efforts including former Ohio Congressman Tony Hall. He returned home via U.S. government jet. 
Back in Ohio, he resumed work with restrictions on future risky travel. In interviews, he reflected: “At the time, I thought it was a mission from God... But God had other plans.” He acknowledged he would not repeat the act with his current knowledge but expressed no regret for his intentions, hoping the Bible aided underground believers. Legacy and Broader ContextFowle’s case underscores the perils of individual activism against North Korea’s total control and highlights the underground church’s desperate need for Scripture. 
Organizations like Open Doors, Voice of the Martyrs, and others continue smuggling efforts, supporting believers through networks in China and beyond. His story remains a testament to personal conviction amid one of history’s harshest religious persecutions. 
Key Quotes:
  • Fowle on motivation: “I felt compelled to help... I knew it was a risk... but I felt once I left the Bible somewhere that God would take it the rest of the way.” 
  • On underground Christians: His actions were driven by awareness of their suppression. 
  • A North Korean secret believer (via Open Doors): “Despite these dangers, the underground church in North Korea is alive. It worships not with sound, but with whispered prayers and memorised Scripture.” 
Fowle’s solitary gesture, though it cost him freedom, shone a light on a faith community that endures in silence and shadows.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Armstrongism: Endless Excuse Making, Cognitive Dissonance, and Lack of Biblical Standards

 


Why Armstrongism Members Rarely Hold Leaders Accountable for Failed Prophecies
The Bible sets an embarrassingly clear test for anyone bold enough to play mouthpiece for God on future events. Deuteronomy 18:20-22 (NKJV) lays it out without wiggle room: “But the prophet who presumes to speak a word in My name that I have not commanded him to speak... when a prophet speaks in the name of the Lord, if the thing does not happen or come to pass, that is the thing which the Lord has not spoken; the prophet has spoken it presumptuously; you shall not be afraid of him.”
Pretty straightforward—except, apparently, in Armstrongism, where this verse gets treated like an optional suggestion. Matthew 7:15-20 warns of wolves in sheep’s clothing known by their fruits (spoiler: perpetual failure isn’t great fruit). Jeremiah 23:16-17, 25-32 rips into prophets peddling homemade visions and false hope. Ezekiel 13 calls out the “foolish prophets” busy whitewashing their own disasters. The New Testament piles on: test everything (1 John 4:1), reject false teachers (Titus 1:9-13Romans 16:17), and don’t let the deceivers fool you (Matthew 24:11, 24).Failed Prophecies in Armstrongism — The Never-Ending SequelHerbert W. Armstrong got the ball rolling with 1975 in Prophecy!, strongly implying the Great Tribulation, a European nuclear smackdown on the U.S. and Britain, and Christ’s return right around 1972–1975. When reality declined to cooperate, the booklets quietly vanished and the spin doctors emerged with “misinterpretation” and “progressive revelation.” Classic.
The splinters have turned this into performance art:
  • David C. Pack (Restored Church of God) deserves a special award for prophetic persistence. In his endless “Greatest Untold Story!” sermon marathons, he has nailed down dates like Av 10 2025, October 6 2025, December 19 2025, February 1/2 2026, March 18 2026, May 1 2026, and May 24 2026 — only to reset the calendar with the confidence of a man who has never been wrong (in his own mind). He insists he’s not “setting dates” while setting more dates than most people set alarms. Impressive commitment to the bit.
  • Bob Thiel (Continuing Church of God) has cornered the market on dream-based prophecy, self-anointings, and tying current events to end-time checklists. When the timelines slip, the dreams apparently get new footnotes. Nothing says “reliable prophet” like constantly updating your own predictions.
  • Gerald Flurry (Philadelphia Church of God) has built an entire empire around being “That Prophet” and delivering Malachi’s Message as the modern fulfillment. Highlights include declaring Barack Obama the last U.S. president, Jesus Christ returning in 2020, and forcefully insisting Donald Trump would remain president after the 2020 election because a Biden term would contradict Bible prophecy. Additional gems: Trump as “Jeroboam,” the U.S. being destroyed during Trump’s time, and various dramatic geopolitical fulfillments that quietly faded away. When things didn’t pan out, the usual “new understanding” adjustments followed. 
  • Gerald Weston (Living Church of God) keeps the Meredith tradition alive with urgent “any minute now” warnings about Europe rising and tribulation hitting. Less hyper-specific than Pack, but the decades-long “three to five years left” loop still delivers the same reliable disappointment on schedule.
These men prefer titles like “apostle” or “evangelist” or "Chief Overseer"— anything to dodge the pesky “prophet” label while sounding exactly like one. Cute loophole.Cognitive Dissonance: The Psychological Glue Holding It All TogetherCognitive dissonance — that lovely mental gymnastics routine where reality and belief refuse to match — explains why members keep showing up. Leon Festinger nailed it in When Prophecy Fails:
A man with a conviction is a hard man to change... We have all experienced the futility of trying to change a strong conviction, especially if the convinced person has some investment in his belief.
And the kicker:
Suppose an individual believes something with his whole heart... finally, suppose that he is presented with evidence, unequivocal and undeniable evidence, that his belief is wrong: what will happen? The individual will frequently emerge, not only unshaken, but even more convinced... Indeed, he may even show a new fervor about convincing and converting other people.

Festinger would have loved Armstrongism — deep investment, irrevocable commitments (hello, third tithe and shattered families), and plenty of group hugs to reinforce the coping mechanisms. Failed dates? Just “tests of faith,” “God’s merciful delay,” or “new understanding, brethren!”Why They Get Away With Endless LiesIt’s not magic. It’s a well-honed system:
  • Authoritarian Fear Factory: “One man rule” means questioning leadership equals rebelling against God Himself (see Korah, Numbers 16 — conveniently weaponized). Hebrews 13:17 gets quoted like a club; actual testing gets labeled “Satanic.”
  • The Rationalization Buffet: Unlimited servings of “progressive revelation,” “we never set dates” (wink), “spiritual fulfillment,” and “the big picture is correct.” Pack can reset his calendar monthly and members will call it bold new truth. Thiel dreams it up, Weston generalizes it — same menu, different chefs.
  • Sunk Cost + Isolation Special: After 10, 20, 40 years of tithing, isolating from family, and building your entire identity around “the one true church,” admitting it’s mostly smoke and mirrors is psychologically brutal. Better to double down than face the sunk-cost abyss. Festinger’s social support makes the group feel like proof itself.
  • Memory Wipe and Urgency Reset: Old failed prophecies? Never heard of them. New dramatic update drops? Time to get excited again!
Meanwhile, the Bereans (Acts 17:11) are over here actually checking Scriptures daily like chumps.
Armstrongism has perfected the art of prophetic failure without consequence — from HWA’s 1975 flop to Pack’s date-of-the-month club, Thiel’s dream diary, and Weston’s perpetual “soon” siren. Deuteronomy 18 sits there, clear as day, while cognitive dissonance and masterful excuse-making turn every miss into a faith-strengthening victory lap.
As Festinger showed, this isn’t shocking — it’s human nature on steroids in a high-control environment. But true faith doesn’t need an endless supply of whitewash and calendar resets. It survives honest scrutiny.

True faith endures scrutiny; it needs no perpetual defense against failed words. Loyalty to Scripture must supersede loyalty to men. As 1 Thessalonians 5:21 commands: “Test all things; hold fast what is good.” Members making excuses risk the deception warned against by prophets and Christ. Honest examination against the unchanging biblical standard offers the only path to clarity—and freedom from whitewashed foundations. 
Silent Pilgrim