C
CelticWarlord
Guest
From 1974 to 1996 I was a member of the Worldwide Church of God, founded by Herbert W Armstrong in 1934. There is plenty of info available on the church and the founder, along with the dozens of splinter groups which have arisen both before and especially since Armstrong’s death in 1986.
The WCG was not as extreme as Scientology or the Jim Jones bunch. We were not sequestered in remote compounds and awakened at midnight to hear the wisdom being preached. We were imprisoned by our own minds and the belief that God was speaking primarily through a single individual. Rejecting the individual or the church he founded was tantamount to rejecting God. This was what held the average church-goer prisoner. The monthly letters from Armstrong were filled with exclamation marks, capital letters, and huge fonts, taking the rants straight to the heart of the matter. And that “matter” was usually demands for more and more money. If Jesus had not yet returned, spoke Armstrong, it was because we, the church, were not ready, were not holy enough, were in fact entirely to blame. Only greater tithes and offerings could help the leadership take the gospel to the world.
It was a fun two decades and I still take daily anti-depressants for panic attacks. If anyone would like to know more, ask away.
The WCG was not as extreme as Scientology or the Jim Jones bunch. We were not sequestered in remote compounds and awakened at midnight to hear the wisdom being preached. We were imprisoned by our own minds and the belief that God was speaking primarily through a single individual. Rejecting the individual or the church he founded was tantamount to rejecting God. This was what held the average church-goer prisoner. The monthly letters from Armstrong were filled with exclamation marks, capital letters, and huge fonts, taking the rants straight to the heart of the matter. And that “matter” was usually demands for more and more money. If Jesus had not yet returned, spoke Armstrong, it was because we, the church, were not ready, were not holy enough, were in fact entirely to blame. Only greater tithes and offerings could help the leadership take the gospel to the world.
It was a fun two decades and I still take daily anti-depressants for panic attacks. If anyone would like to know more, ask away.