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Herbert W. Armstrong
Herbert W. Armstrong
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Herbert W. Armstrong (July 31, 1892 – January 16, 1986) was an American evangelist who founded the Worldwide Church of God (WCG). An early pioneer of radio and television evangelism, Armstrong preached what he claimed was the comprehensive combination of doctrines in the entire Bible, in the light of the New Covenant scriptures, which he maintained to be the restored true Gospel.[3] These doctrines and teachings have been referred to as Armstrongism by non-adherents.

Key Information

Armstrong's teachings required observance of parts of the Mosaic Law including seventh-day Sabbath, dietary prohibitions, and the covenant law "Holy Days". He also proclaimed that behind contemporary world events loomed various Biblical prophecies, interpreted in light of British Israelism.[4] As founder and head of the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation, Armstrong and his advisers met with heads of governments in various nations, for which he described himself as an "ambassador without portfolio for world peace."[citation needed]

Early life

[edit]

Herbert Armstrong was born on July 31, 1892, in Des Moines, Iowa, into a Quaker family, the son of Eva (Wright) and Horace Elon Armstrong. He regularly attended the services and the Sunday school of First Friends Church in Des Moines.[1] At age 18, on the advice of an uncle, he decided to take a job in the want-ad department of a Des Moines newspaper, the Daily Capital.[5] His early career in the print advertising industry which followed had a strong impact on his future ministry and would shape his communication style.[6]

On a trip back home in 1917, he met Loma Dillon, a school teacher and distant cousin from nearby Motor, Iowa.[7] They married on his 25th birthday, July 31, 1917, and returned to live in Chicago.[8]

Within a month or two after their marriage, (the US had entered World War I on April 6) Loma had an unusual dream or vision. She was with Herbert, at a road intersection, where she saw in the sky, a banner of dazzling stars, appearing then vanishing twice-over. She was happy, but sad for others, and thought she was witnessing Christ's return. Angels then flew to them and said that Christ was not coming then, but would be "coming very soon". Saying that God was giving them an "important work" to do, preparing the way before Christ's second coming. At the time, Herbert was not at all religious and it was only in later years that he came to believe that the vision "really was a message from God."[9]

On May 9, 1918, they had their first child, Beverly Lucile, and on July 7, 1920, a second daughter, Dorothy Jane. In 1924, after several business setbacks, Armstrong and family moved to Eugene, Oregon where his parents lived at the time. While living in Oregon, they had two sons, Richard David (born October 13, 1928) and Garner Ted (born February 9, 1930). Armstrong continued in the advertising business despite the setbacks.[10]

Beginnings of ministry

[edit]

During their stay in Oregon, his wife, Loma, became acquainted with a member of the Church of God (Seventh Day), Emma Runcorn. Emma and her husband O.J. were lay leaders in the Oregon conference of the Church of God, Seventh Day, a seventh-day-keeping Adventist group that rejected the authority of Ellen G. White and her teachings. Loma became persuaded that the Bible taught Sabbath observance on Saturday, the seventh day, one of the beliefs of that church.[10] Her assertion of this to her husband was met with dismay and appeared to him to be "religious fanaticism."[11] She challenged him to find biblical support for Sunday observance. As his business was struggling against larger competitors, Armstrong had the time to take up this challenge. He began what would become a lifelong habit of intensive, lengthy Bible study sessions. He soon felt God was inspiring this, opening his mind to truths that historical Christian churches had not found or accepted. Shortly after, as related in his autobiography, Armstrong would take up a similar study on the topic of evolution of the species after a conflict with his sister-in-law.[12] His studies on Sabbath and evolution convinced him that his wife was right, and that the theory of evolution was false.

He was eventually baptized, along with his brother Dwight L. Armstrong, in the summer of 1927 by Dr. Dean, the non-Sabbatarian pastor of Hinson Memorial Baptist Church in Portland, Oregon.[13] It is unknown, however, if he ever joined this denomination.[14] He would later recollect over four decades later that he believed, "On being baptized I knew God then and there gave me HIS HOLY SPIRIT!"[15] Despite his own unique teaching on baptism his own account is noteworthy for the absence of any mention of the process of laying on of hands or a special prayer in the dispensation of the Holy Spirit, which were considered fundamental for membership in the Worldwide Church of God and reason for many a new convert's rebaptism.[16]

In 1931 Armstrong became an ordained minister of the Oregon Conference of the Church of God (Seventh Day).[13][17] The existence and history of this church became a significant factor in Armstrong's later beliefs.[18][19]

While a member of The Church of God (Seventh Day), Armstrong became acquainted with ministers John Kiesz and Israel Hager who began to suspect that Herbert was a little too arrogant and tended to go against church doctrine. They cited Armstrong's refusal to submit to the Church of God ministers to be baptized but went out to a local Baptist minister instead as a point. After his ordination, Armstrong allied himself with two other rogue ministers by the names of Andrew N. Dugger and C. O. Dodd, both of whom had written a book called A History of the True Religion, from 33 AD to Date, in which they claimed that the New Testament Church of the first century had secretly descended through history and eventually became the Sabbath-keeping Church of God (Seventh Day). Dugger also predicted that the apocalypse would occur in 1936. Eventually, this led to Dugger and Dodd's ouster and when they promised to make Armstrong an apostle in their new church, The Church of God (Seventh Day), he joined with them.[14]

After severing ties with the Church of God (Seventh Day) as the result of doctrinal disputes, he began to teach a form of British Israelism, which would later make up his book The United States and Britain in Prophecy.[20] His ministerial credentials with Dugger's church were revoked in 1938.[13] This, Armstrong believed, indicated God was now directing him in leading a revived work into the next "church era."[19]

Radio and publishing

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In October 1933, a small 100-watt radio station in Eugene, Oregon, KORE, offered free time to Armstrong for a morning devotional, a 15-minute time slot shared by other local ministers.[21] After positive responses from listeners, the station owner let Armstrong start a new program of his own. On the first Sunday in 1934, the Radio Church of God first aired.[22] These broadcasts eventually became known as The World Tomorrow of the future Worldwide Church of God.[23] Shortly thereafter, in February 1934, Armstrong began the publication of The Plain Truth, which started out as a church bulletin.[22] It was at this time that Armstrong began to make prophetic claims and among them were the claims that Hitler and Mussolini were the prophesied Beast and False Prophet of the Book of Revelation who would deceive the nations for a short time just before the return of Jesus Christ. This piqued the interest of his audience. The broadcast expanded to other cities, and in 1942 began to be broadcast nationwide from WHO of Des Moines Iowa, a 50,000-watt superstation.[23]

Critics point to statements in his early writings that proved to be inaccurate.[24] For example, a statement from a lead article in the February 1939 edition of The Plain Truth, about a coming world war, said this:

By way of brief review of previous articles, and radio messages, notice, first, that this war will involve ALL nations. It will be the first real world war. Secondly, it will center around Jerusalem....And thirdly, this war will END with the Second Coming of Christ![25]

From his new contacts in Los Angeles, Armstrong began to realize the potential for reaching a much larger audience. He searched for a suitable location and chose Pasadena, California, as being ideal as it was a conservative residential community. During this time, Armstrong also reflected on starting a college to aid the growing church, by teaching and training young men and women. Hence, in 1946 Armstrong moved his headquarters from Eugene to Pasadena and on March 3, 1946, the Radio Church of God was officially incorporated within the state of California.[23] He purchased a lavish mansion on Millionaires Row just off of the Rose Parade route on Orange Grove Boulevard, quickly acquired his own printing plant, and was broadcasting internationally in prime-time radio time slots. On October 8, 1947, his new college, Ambassador College opened its doors with four students.[citation needed]

International expansion

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During the 1950s and 1960s, the church continued to expand and the radio program was broadcast in England, Australia, the Philippines, Latin America, and Africa. In 1953, The World Tomorrow began to air on Radio Luxembourg, making it possible to hear the program throughout much of Europe.[23] The beginning of the European broadcast provides the context of a booklet published in 1956 called 1975 in Prophecy! In this book Armstrong put forward a controversial vision of what the world could look like by 1975—featuring vivid illustrations by noted comics artist Basil Wolverton of mass burials and tidal waves destroying cities.[26] Overall he thought that World War III and Christ's glorious return were at the doorstep and that world peace and utopia would follow. Armstrong believed that God had exciting plans for mankind that would see the end of such wars—though the message went far beyond an earthly utopia.[27]

Several books and booklets focused on the key events that would signal the imminence of Christ's return, and taught of a specific end-time prophecy to be fulfilled, manifested in the form of European peacekeeping forces surrounding Jerusalem, at which time God's Church would be taken to a place of protection, or "place of safety"—possibly Petra in Jordan.[13] World War III was predicted to be triggered by a "United States of Europe" led by Germany which would destroy both the United States and the United Kingdom.[28] From the place of safety they would continue the work and prepare to help Christ establish Utopia upon His return.

In 1952, Armstrong published Does God Heal Today?, which provided the details on his doctrine on healing and his ban on doctors. Among his tenets were that only God heals and that medical science is of pagan origin and is ineffective. He believed that most illnesses were caused by faulty diet and that doctors should prescribe proper diet rather than medicine. He taught that members are not to go to doctors for healing but must trust in divine healing alone.[29] This was his teaching despite his father's death in 1933 after "an all-night vigil of prayer."[30] This teaching has been the cause of much controversy as individuals influenced by such teachings came to die.[31]

The book The United States and Britain in Prophecy was published in 1954. It became the most well-known and requested church publication, with over six million copies distributed.[32] In this book, Armstrong makes the claim that the peoples of the United States, the British Commonwealth nations, and the nations of Northwestern Europe are descendants of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel.[33] This belief, called British Israelism, formed the central basis of the theology of the Worldwide Church of God.[34]

Franz Josef Strauss, a major politician in post-WWII Germany, became the target of the broadcasting and publishing media blitz that Armstrong unleashed upon Europe through the daily offshore pirate radio station broadcasts by his son Garner Ted Armstrong, The Plain Truth, and the Ambassador College campus at Bricket Wood in Hertfordshire, England. Strauss was portrayed as being the coming Führer who would lead a United States of Europe into a prophetic World War III against the U.S. and U.K. at some time between 1972 and 1975, and emerge victorious. In 1971, Strauss played along with the prophetic interest shown in him, as Herbert W. Armstrong recalled in a 1983 letter: "I entertained him at dinner in my home in Pasadena, and he spoke to the faculty and students of Ambassador College. I have maintained contact with him."[35] Strauss appeared in an interview on The World Tomorrow television program.

The volume of literature requests for material written by Armstrong continued to grow during the 1960s and 1970s, and the literature was translated into several languages and distributed to a worldwide audience. They were distributed for free "as a public service." The Plain Truth magazine continued to be published and circulated, eventually reaching a monthly press run of eight million.

On April 15, 1967, Armstrong's wife Loma died, three and a half months before their 50th anniversary. Before she died he sent a co-worker a letter that has often been criticized for its harsh tone to "failing" members and for its calls for more money.[citation needed]

Worldwide Church of God

[edit]

On January 5, 1968, the Radio Church of God was renamed the Worldwide Church of God.[36] Shortly before, the church began to broadcast a television version of The World Tomorrow.[23] The program would eventually expand to 382 U.S. television stations, and 36 television outlets internationally, dwarfing televangelists Jerry Falwell, Jimmy Swaggart, Oral Roberts, and Jim Bakker.[37] By this time, Garner Ted Armstrong, the son of Herbert W. Armstrong, was the voice and face of the program. It was speculated that with his charisma and personality, he was the logical successor to Armstrong, but doctrinal disagreements and widespread reports of extramarital sex led to his suspension in 1972.[13][38] After initially changing his behavior he returned, but these issues resurfaced, coupled with his challenging his father's authority as Pastor General, resulting in him being permanently "disfellowshipped" (the church's term for excommunication) in 1978.[39]

Ambassador International Cultural Foundation

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With the assistance of church accountant and adviser Stanley Rader, Armstrong created the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation in 1975. The foundation was funded by the church.[13] The foundation's efforts reached into several continents, providing staffing and funds to fight illiteracy, to create schools for the disabled, to set up mobile schools, and for several archaeological digs of biblically significant sites.[40] These humanitarian projects led to Armstrong receiving a series of invitations to meet with prominent heads of state, including (among others) Margaret Thatcher, Emperor Hirohito of Japan, King Hussein of Jordan, and Indira Gandhi. Armstrong was also internationally recognized as Ambassador for World Peace.[40][41]

Final years

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In 1977, Armstrong, a widower in his 80s, married Ramona Martin, then 38, a long-time member and church secretary who had a 15-year-old son from a previous marriage.[42] The controversial marriage would last for only a few years. The Armstrongs separated in 1982, with Herbert Armstrong returning to live in Pasadena full-time, and the marriage finally ended in divorce in 1984.[43] During pre-trial proceedings in the divorce case, Armstrong's lawyers had sought to limit evidence of "prior incestuous conduct with his daughter for many years," but his wife's attorneys said "it was crucial since the church leader alleged Mrs. Armstrong had breached an agreement of love and fidelity."[44]

In his latter years, Armstrong stated that he did not know whether or not Christ would return in his lifetime but did know, based on the sequence of events in the Bible, that the Lord's return was approaching. He had long written of his belief that the primary sign to look for would be some sort of dissolving of the Eastern Bloc alliance under Soviet control, followed by those nations' subsequent incorporation into an eastern leg of a United States of Europe.[26] In August 1985, Armstrong's final work, Mystery of the Ages, was published. He wrote that "time may prove this to be the most important book written in almost 1,900 years"[45] and called it a "synopsis of the Bible in the most plain and understandable language." It was more or less a compendium of theological concepts, as articulated by Armstrong, which included the notion that God deliberately coded the bible "so that it would not be understood until our modern time".[46]

In September 1985, with his failing health widely known, Armstrong delivered his final sermon on the Feast of Trumpets in the Ambassador Auditorium. He spent his final days confined at his home on the college campus in Pasadena, California, on South Orange Grove Boulevard.

Almost until his final days, there was uncertainty about who would succeed Armstrong in the event of his death. The church's Advisory Council of Elders, acting on a clause in church by-laws added in 1981, was to select a successor after his death,[47] yet Armstrong reportedly worried about the ramifications if certain individuals were selected, such as his son Garner Ted or evangelist Roderick Meredith.[48][49] Finally, Armstrong opted to select the next Pastor General personally.[48] Armstrong told the Church's Advisory Council of Elders of his decision to appoint evangelist-rank minister Joseph W. Tkach on January 7, 1986.[50] Tkach had worked closely with former church executive Stanley R. Rader prior to Rader's retirement from active service with the Church, and had been ordained to the ministerial rank of evangelist along with Rader and Ellis LaRavia in 1979.

Armstrong died shortly before 6:00 a.m. on January 16, 1986, only nine days after naming Tkach as his successor. He was 93.[51] Approximately 4,000 people attended his funeral, including a number of political figures from other countries. He was buried in Altadena's Mountain View Cemetery, between Loma and his mother, Eva Wright Armstrong. Evangelist Herman L. Hoeh, a long-time church member and one of the first graduates of Ambassador College, officiated at the graveside service, and Tkach gave the closing prayer.

In the years after his death in 1986, WCG leaders came to the conclusion that many of Armstrong's theological arguments were not biblical, causing the church to reject his teachings as "aberrant" and to completely rewrite its doctrines.[52] The vastly changed organization has come into full agreement with the statement of faith of the National Association of Evangelicals. In April 2009, in light of the major doctrinal shifts made, the church also changed its name to Grace Communion International (GCI) to better reflect its new teachings.

Theology and teachings

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  • Worldwide Church of God (WCG) members viewed Herbert W. Armstrong as having the Church rank of "apostle". Armstrong taught that God works only through "one man at a time" and that he was God's selected representative on earth.
  • Armstrong taught a form of Sabbatarianism, explaining that; by creating the Sabbath (on the seventh day of creation, through resting – not working) God "HALLOWED the seventh-day of every week (Ex. 20:11)" and therefore made "future TIME holy!" Resting on the Sabbath day is thus commanded for all mankind and should be kept holy from Friday sunset to sunset on Saturday.[53] The Worldwide Church of God conducted its worship Services during that period, accordingly, on Saturdays. Armstrong further explained that Christ is "Lord of the Sabbath" (Mt. 12:8) for it is He who 'made' it for mankind, thus it is a "blessing... to be ENJOYED, to spiritually REFRESH, in blessed fellowship and communion with CHRIST!"[54] He believed that the observance of Sunday as the "Lord's Day" was a papal and/or satanic corruption introduced without authority from God or the Bible.[55]
  • Armstrong adhered to a form of British Israelism which stated that the British, American and many European peoples were descended from the so-called Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, using this belief to state that biblical references to Israel, Jacob, etc., were in fact prophecies relating to the modern day, with literal application to the US, Britain, and the British Commonwealth. In the course of this teaching, he also accepted the concept of an Assyrian-German connection and often made identifications of other nations in "Bible prophecy", such as Russia and China.[56]
  • As a result of this, Armstrong believed that a unified Europe (identified by him as a "revived Roman Empire" and as the first-mentioned "beast" of Revelation 13) would oppose Jesus at his second coming in the battle at Armageddon. Furthermore, he stated repeatedly that a unified Europe would have previously defeated and enslaved the American and British peoples.[57] He often pointed to the European "Common Market"[58] or European Community as its precursor, but tended to refer to it as "a kind of United States of Europe." Splinter groups who were previously members of the Worldwide Church of God usually identify the European Union as the unified Europe to which Armstrong devoted much writing.
  • Armstrong taught that God's purpose in creating mankind was to "reproduce Himself", and that the process of being "born again" was not instantaneous — that the believer (as a result of baptism by immersion) was only "begotten" until reborn as a spirit being at the return of Jesus.[59] These "begotten" believers were referred to as being "firstfruits" of a divine harvest and "true Christians" of the existing age. The birth of those spiritually "begotten" occurring at the time of Christ's return, at the "first resurrection." As Christ is "the FIRST born from the dead" (Col. 1:18), Armstrong concluded that many other "sons" (begotten by God's Spirit) would also be brought "to glory" (Heb. 2:10) at that "first resurrection" (Rev. 20:5). Those 'begotten' will then be instantaneously 'born anew' (John 3:3) but not again, "a second time", as "perishable" flesh and blood mortals (1 Cor. 15:53) but as "imperishable", immortal Spirit 'God' beings. He concluded that; "Until the resurrection, therefore, we cannot see, enter into or inherit the Kingdom of God. WE CANNOT BE BORN AGAIN UNTIL THE RESURRECTION!"[60]
  • Armstrong preached that Jesus Christ will return to earth to "rescue" humanity from the brink of self-annihilation, resulting in the establishment of "God's government" upon earth, during a 'Millennium' period, under the rulership of Christ and first-resurrected saints. After His return, those surviving the "great tribulation" will be given the chance to voluntarily accept "God's way of life."[61] Christ is in heaven "until" the "times of restitution" (Acts 3:19–21) when God's government, world peace and utopian conditions shall be restored to this earth.[62]
  • Armstrong did not accept the concept of eternal judgment in this life. He believed that those who die as unbelievers prior to the return of Christ, exist in a state of "unconsciousness" (see Soul sleep) until after the 'Millennium' at the second resurrection, during which they will be offered the choice to submit to God's government.[63] All those incorrigibly wicked, those who refuse to accept God's government and laws being judged guilty of rebellion against God to rise in a third resurrection, & thrown into 'Gehenna' fire. Including persons who had committed the "unpardonable sin". Such persons suffering eternal death. Armstrong identified such as being the "second death" mentioned in the Book of Revelation.[64]
  • In Armstrong's view, the scourging of Jesus prior to crucifixion "paid the penalty" for physical disease and sickness, allowing the option of divine healing.[65]: 33  The crucifixion itself was considered to be the act which enabled God to allow humanity into the three-tiered resurrection scheme, as Jesus had paid the initial death penalty for breaking the Law.
  • Armstrong did not accept Trinitarianism, believing it to be a doctrine of satanic authorship as part of a "counterfeit Christianity" (which he identified as the Roman Catholic Church). Armstrong taught that the Father and the Word were co-eternal, but that the Holy Spirit was not an actual person. He believed that the Holy Spirit was part of God's essence, a power emanating from him that suffused all creation, and especially believers, and through which God was omnipresent and able to act at all places and at all times.
  • Because of his teachings identifying both the primacy of Sabbath and the "identity of modern Israel", Armstrong would come to accept that the Mosaic Law had not been "done away." Although he excluded certain segments he regarded as "already fulfilled", "ceremonial" or otherwise unfit, he taught adherence to the Levitical food regulations and the observance of the "Holy Days" of the Mosaic Law.[66] The Worldwide Church of God taught seven 'Festivals of God' (Passover, Days of Unleavened Bread, Pentecost, Feast of Trumpets, Day of Atonement, Feast of Tabernacles, Last Great Day) and regarded such to be 'worship' days including Sukkot or "Feast of Tabernacles." The latter was practiced by setting up church "conventions" in various cities worldwide to which their various congregations had to attend, leaving homes and booking into hotel-type accommodation. For many, this eight-day festival was a 'highlight' of the year.
  • As part of a larger paradigm in which common observances were often discarded, Armstrong rejected traditional holidays such as Christmas, Easter, Halloween and the celebration of birthdays, stating that all of these were of pagan origin. A similar principle extended also to the display of crosses and depictions of Jesus.
  • Armstrong placed much emphasis on faith in God for healing and taught against the medical practice, except in the case of "repair" (setting of broken bones, cleansing of wounds, etc.).[67] Medical intervention was consequently frowned-upon, there were consequently numerous controversial incidents involving death of members or member's children due to lack of medical attention. Armstrong spoke highly of principles of good diet (outside of the Levitical food regulations) and proper living, and members of the Worldwide Church of God as a result tended to gravitate towards whole grains, home-grown vegetables etc., although such acts were not an express tenet of faith.
  • Armstrong taught against fornication, masturbation, adultery, homosexuality, and other practices he viewed as aberrations, authoring the book God Speaks Out On The 'New Morality (later retitled The Missing Dimension in Sex) on the subject. As a result of this fundamentalist view on morality, he also taught against the use of cosmetics, long hair on men, and other matters of personal appearance.
  • Armstrong and the Worldwide Church of God viewed Revelation 2 and 3, (which contains seven messages to seven churches in Asia Minor at the time of its writing), to also be descriptive of seven "church eras" to pass, in chronological order. He stated that the "Sardis" era ended with his severance from the Church of God (Seventh-Day) and that the "Philadelphia" era officially began in October 1933. "Laodicea" would follow wherein lukewarmness would be the "dominant Church attitude at the end." His great concern was that they, "undoubtedly of the Philadelphia era", were "in serious danger of BECOMING also the Laodicean era."[68] He apparently modified such era teaching from an earlier version preached by a previous Church of God, Seventh Day minister, G. G. Rupert.[69] This concept has assumed greater importance among WCG splinter groups, as those that practice Armstrong's teachings tend to view the modern Worldwide Church of God (and sometimes other splinter groups) as "Laodicean" or entirely Protestant.[70]
  • Armstrong instituted a three-tiered annual tithing process for his followers. The first tithe (10% of member's gross household income) went to the Worldwide Church of God organization, which viewed itself as the "Melchizedek priesthood" with Jesus Christ as the High Priest with the rank of Melchizedek, which priesthood superseded the Levitical priesthood, and thereby entitled to support by tithes. The second tithe (a second 10% of member's gross household income) was saved by members and used as individual support during the "Feast of Tabernacles." The third tithe (a third 10% of members gross household income), which was paid every three years per member, was used to support widows and other members in need.[71] The church did not overtly solicit funds from outside but did accept donations from "co-workers" and commonly sent "co-worker" letters that often called for money to be sent.[72]

Criticism and controversy

[edit]

Armstrong's teachings and the church he created have been the subject of much criticism and controversy.[73] Armstrong's theology and teachings are defended by his followers,[74] but face criticism from ex-followers[75][76] and the greater Christian community.[77] Common points of criticism and controversy include:

Theological

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  • Salvation: Armstrong believed that repentance, faith and the indwelling of God's Holy Spirit enables true and full obedience to God's law, but stressed that keeping God's law (and repentance upon having sinned) is a requirement for salvation.[78][79] Critics state that Armstrong taught salvation as being legalistic obedience to God's law, including such laws as Sabbath keeping, dietary laws, and other laws kept by Ancient Israelites but not typically kept by 'mainstream' Christian denominations.[77][80]
  • The Covenants: Armstrong taught that the New Covenant is an 'amplification' of the Old Covenant, and that certain laws (excluding temple and unenforceable ancient civil laws) from the Old Covenant are still in effect for Christians. This included laws such as literal Sabbath keeping, 'Clean and Unclean' meats and Holy Day observances.[81] He believed that the New Covenant was yet future, to be finalized as a marriage covenant between Christ and the Church and that Christians currently existed 'between' the two Covenants.[82] Critics say that Armstrong confused the two Covenants and selectively picked which aspects of the two Covenants to keep.[83]
  • Gospel of the Kingdom: Armstrong taught that a reason for Jesus Christ's presence on earth was to proclaim the Gospel message of a literal Kingdom of God that will be established on earth at Christ's 'second coming', and that the message of the Kingdom should be the focus of the gospel rather than the person of Christ.[84][85] Critics indicate that this represents a diminishment of the person and importance of Christ, through whom salvation is attained, and that this represents a flawed understanding about the nature of the Kingdom.[86] Armstrong taught that – the gospel "of" Christ – began to change to – a gospel "about" Christ – around twenty to thirty years after the founding of the Church in 31 A.D. He made the extraordinary claim that the gospel Christ brought (of the Kingdom) had "not been proclaimed to the world" for about 1,900 years "until the first week in 1953" when he began preaching it again on Radio Luxembourg.[62]
  • Prophetic predictions: Proponents believe that Herbert Armstrong was inspired by God and had the gift to understand prophecy. They believe that many of his predictions were inspired.[87] Armstrong was considered gifted with spiritual understanding also and that, through him, God was revealing the true meaning of parts of the Bible which, till his time, had remained locked or sealed (so could not be correctly understood). That desire for understanding had been with Armstrong since he was a small boy, "always wanting to know 'why?' or 'how?' That obsession for understanding was to have a great influence on founding the Plain Truth magazine and Ambassador College in later years."[88] According to critics, Armstrong's predictions were rife with speculation and remain mostly unfulfilled.[89]
  • British Israelism: Armstrong taught a form of British Israelism, which is the belief that those of Western European descent, notably England (Ephraim) and the United States (Manasseh), are direct descendants of the ancient northern Kingdom of Israel. This theory is inconsistent with the findings of modern research on the genetic history of Jews. It is commonly criticized for poor standards of research,[90][91] and general inconsistency with archeological, anthropological and linguistic research.[92][93][94][95]

Personality, personal conduct, and governance

[edit]

Armstrong was often criticized for having lived in extravagant wealth in comparison to a few church members. Personal luxuries enjoyed by Armstrong included a personal jet, the finest clothing, furniture and other conveniences.[96][97][98][99][100][101]

Teachings inferred from the Bible

[edit]

Armstrong taught that the observance of principles that he believed could be inferred from biblical intent.[102] Examples of these teachings include:

  • Women were not allowed to wear makeup because it was believed that this was not pleasing to God. Armstrong stated

God's Church, the now imminent Bride of Christ, is not going to rise to meet the returning Christ in the air with painted faces and plucked and repainted eyebrows! How cleverly, without our suspecting it, did Satan influence leading ministers to derail the Church in many ways!...Now JESUS CHRIST, through His chosen apostle, is going to RULE on this question once and for all!...How did it get into our mid-and-latter 20th century society? FROM PROSTITUTES!...Women do not use makeup to PLEASE GOD today – for I can tell you ON HIS AUTHORITY it is NOT pleasing to HIM![102]

  • The use of medicine and doctors was discouraged because members were expected to place their faith in God for healing.[65] Armstrong stated:

Here's God's instruction to YOU, today, if you are ill. If we are to live by every Word of God, we should obey this Scripture. God does not say call your family physician...He does not say, call the doctors and let them give medicines and drugs, and God will cause the medicines and drugs and dope to cure you.... Instead God says call GOD'S MINISTERS. And let them PRAY, anointing with oil (the type and symbol of the Holy Spirit). Then GOD PROMISES He will HEAL YOU![103]

  • Various members suffered discomfort and even death due to reluctance to resort to medical help, yet Armstrong made use of doctors and medicine later in his life.[104]
  • Author and literature professor Jerald Walker, who grew up in Armstrong's church, wrote about Armstrong's views that segregation was to be enforced on earth as it was expected to be enforced in heaven. In Armstrong’s view, black people were to serve white people.[105]
  • Divorce was strongly discouraged. At times this was strictly enforced by requiring members that had previously divorced and remarried to divorce their new spouses so that they were not "living in adultery".[106] Armstrong acknowledged that this belief caused significant hardship for many members but argued that this hardship was the consequent result of the earlier 'sin of divorce'.[106] This policy was changed by Armstrong at a later time. Interracial marriage was also discouraged as Armstrong emphasized requirements for Ancient Israelites (who, according to British Israelism, became Western Europeans) to remain racially and religiously separate from other nations.[107]
  • As the Bible teaches that "the body is the temple of God's Spirit," Armstrong believed that it should therefore be kept in good health and presented in a manner glorifying to Christ. Members were consequently expected to conform to strict dress codes.[108][109] Long hair and piercings were not allowed for men, whereas makeup and short hair were frowned upon for women. Members were expected to dress conservatively and modestly, and required to do so for church. Smoking was considered to be a spiritual sin[110] and was grounds for a minister to refuse baptism. Critics contend that these requirements base salvation on the 'teachings of men' rather than the grace of God or the instructions of the Bible.[111]
  • Armstrong concluded that a third resurrection would take place, in which the incorrigibly wicked and those who had been converted (baptized members of WCG) but had 'fallen away' (left WCG) and who also had not repented in the "Great Tribulation" would be resurrected and sentenced to eternal death in the 'lake of fire.' Critics reject this interpretation.[112]

Honors

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  • Order of the Sacred Treasure, from the Japanese government[113]
  • King Albert I A watch (one of four specially commissioned by King Albert, after the armistice, to be made from an iron cannonball), presented by His Majesty Leopold III of Belgium in November 1970, for most significant contribution toward world peace;[114] Armstrong was also a founding board member of the King Leopold III Foundation for the Conservation of Nature[115]
  • Presidential Merit Medal, presented by President Marcos of the Philippines in 1983 in the Manila Presidential Palace[116]
  • Commander of Our Most Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand[117]
  • The Cross of Constantine, presented by the Patriarch of Jerusalem Diodoras in 1982 in Jerusalem[118]
  • Honorary Doctorates in Humanities from both Iloilo University and Angeles University in the Philippines[119]
  • Herbert W. Armstrong Professor of Constitutional Law Emeritus from the University of Southern California (1983)[120]

Bibliography

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See also

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Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Armstrong 1967, Chapter 1
  2. ^ "Who Was Herbert W. Armstrong? How is He Viewed Today?". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  3. ^ Tkach 1997, Chapter 7: What we Believed.
  4. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. The United States and Britain in Prophecy.
  5. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 2, Heading "Learning Important Lessons".
  6. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 3, Heading "Learning Effective Ad-Writing".
  7. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 9, Heading "I Meet Two Pretty Girls".
  8. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 10, Heading "The Wedding Day".
  9. ^ Brethren and Co-worker letter, November 28, 1956
  10. ^ a b Armstrong 1967, Ch 15
  11. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 15, heading "Religious Controversy Enters".
  12. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 16
  13. ^ a b c d e f Tkach 1997, chapter 12
  14. ^ a b Bruce Renehan, Daughter of Babylon, ch.15, (Interview with John Kiesz)
  15. ^ ""The Good News", August 1969, page 4" (PDF). Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  16. ^ "Field Guide: Herbert W Armstrong: Was He or Wasn't He?". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  17. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch 24, Heading "ORDAINED Christ's Minister".
  18. ^ Hoeh, Herman L. (1959). A True History of the True Church. section titled "The Gospel Goes to All the World".
  19. ^ a b Armstrong 1985, Ch 6: Mystery of the Church.
  20. ^ Nickels 1996, Appendix A – Technical Notes.
  21. ^ Nickels 1996.
  22. ^ a b Boston 2002, p. 237.
  23. ^ a b c d e Boston 2002, p. 238.
  24. ^ "A Treasury of Famous Prophecies". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  25. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W (February 1939). "Where and How the World War Will Start" (PDF). The Plain Truth. Vol. IV, no. 2. pp. 1–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2023. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
  26. ^ a b Armstrong, Herbert, W (1956). 1975 in Prophecy (PDF). pp. 10–28. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. The Incredible Human Potential. pp. 29, 24–29, Headings "Incredible Human Potential Revealed", "Outer Space–Planets Now Dead".
  28. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (1956). 1975 in Prophecy (PDF). pp. 4–10. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  29. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (1952). Does God Heal Today?. Pasadena, CA: Radio Church of God.
  30. ^ Armstrong 1967, Ch. 28
  31. ^ Trechak, John (1977). "Modern Moloch-Human Sacrifice in the Armstrong Church". Ambassador Report.
  32. ^ Flurry 2006, p. 3.
  33. ^ Armstrong 1976, p. 44.
  34. ^ Tkach 1997, chapter 9..
  35. ^ "Memories of Pasadena, by J. Orlin Grabbe". Archived from the original on May 10, 2008. Retrieved September 28, 2009.
  36. ^ "1968 CERTIFICATE OF AMENDMENT". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  37. ^ Flurry 2006, p. 2.
  38. ^ Chandler, Russell (January 17, 1986). "Armstrong, 93, Founder of the Worldwide Church, Dies". Los Angeles Times (Home ed.). Section 1, Page 3. Archived from the original on October 19, 2008. Retrieved August 13, 2008.
  39. ^ Nickels 1996, Heading "About the Author".
  40. ^ a b Flurry 2006, p. 25.
  41. ^ Rader 1980, inset photographs after pg 128.
  42. ^ "Bride in Work 15 years" (PDF). The Worldwide News. V (9): 1. April 25, 1977. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 28, 2007. Retrieved August 21, 2007.
  43. ^ "Welcome To Ambassador Report". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  44. ^ "Lakeland Ledger – Google News Archive Search". Retrieved April 15, 2017.[permanent dead link]
  45. ^ Armstrong 1985, p. xii.
  46. ^ Armstrong 1985, p. 6.
  47. ^ Flurry 2006, p. 34.
  48. ^ a b Flurry 2006, p. 35.
  49. ^ Tkach 1997, Chapter 6.
  50. ^ Flurry 2006, p. 36.
  51. ^ Flurry 2006, p. 16.
  52. ^ "A Brief History of Grace Communion International".
  53. ^ Armstrong 1976, Chapter 2.
  54. ^ Armstrong 1976, Chapter 8.
  55. ^ Herbert W. Armstrong, Where Is The True Church? 1984, p.24
  56. ^ Plain Truth magazine, February 1985
  57. ^ Herbert Armstrong, The United States And British Commonwealth In Prophecy (1972), p.217
  58. ^ Armstrong, Herbert (June 1967). "Jews Take Jerusalem!". Plain Truth. p. 2.
  59. ^ Bob Larson, Larson's New Book of Cults, p. 470
  60. ^ Armstrong, Herbert. "Just What Do You Mean Born Again?" circa 1972
  61. ^ Armstrong 1985, pp. 344–345.
  62. ^ a b Armstrong 1985, Chapter 7 "Mystery of the Kingdom of God".
  63. ^ Armstrong 1985, p. 352.
  64. ^ Armstrong 1985, p. 354.
  65. ^ a b Armstrong, Herbert (1979) [1977]. The Plain Truth About Healing (PDF). Worldwide Church of God. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved January 31, 2023.1979 edition in HTML. This book was first published serially in Plain Truth magazine. PDF copies of this serial publication are available from herbert-armstrong.org starting with the July 1977 issue
  66. ^ Herbert W. Armstrong, Pagan Holidays – Or God's Holy Days – Which, p.26
  67. ^ Chambers 1988, p. 32.
  68. ^ Armstrong, Herbert. "Good News magazine, August 1979. "Personal" p. 27
  69. ^ "Worldwide Church of God: Daughter of Babylon Chapter 13". hwarmstrong.com.
  70. ^ Flurry, Gerald (1999), Malachi's Message, p. 6
  71. ^ Chambers 1988, p. 20.
  72. ^ "Herbert W Armstrong Misc. Articles and Co-Worker Letters 1934–1986". Archived from the original on March 6, 2016. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  73. ^ "The Painful Truth: Books Written about Herbert W. Armstrong and the Worldwide Church of God". Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  74. ^ Flurry 2006.
  75. ^ "The Painful Truth: A collection of Facts, Opinions and Comments from survivors of Herbert W. Armstrong, Garner Ted Armstrong, The Worldwide Church of God and its Daughters". Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  76. ^ "Exit and Support Network: Aiding those spiritually abused by Worldwide Church of God, Philadelphia Church of God and all affiliated high-demand offshoots". Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  77. ^ a b Martin, Walter. The Kingdom of the Cults. Bethany House Publishers.
  78. ^ Armstrong, Herbert (1961). What do you mean... Salvation? (PDF). Pasadena, California: Ambassador College Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  79. ^ Armstrong, Herbert (1948). All About Water Baptism (PDF) (1972 ed.). Pasadena, California: Ambassador College Press. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  80. ^ Arnn, Phillip (1989), "Galatia Revisited: Salvation under the Government and the Law", Watchman Expositor, vol. 6, Watchman Fellowship ministry, retrieved March 28, 2012
  81. ^ The New Covenant: Does it Abolish God's Law (PDF). United Church of God. 2007. pp. 94, 112, 118, 138, 142, 144, 148. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 10, 2007.
  82. ^ Armstrong, Herbert. "The Plain Truth about the Covenants" (PDF). The Good News. No. December 18, 1978. pp. 1, 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  83. ^ Tkach 1997, 7: What we Believed: How should we handle the Old Covenant?.
  84. ^ Armstrong, Herbert (1955). What is the True Gospel (PDF) (1972 ed.). Pasadena, California: Ambassador College. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2009. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  85. ^ The United Church of God. "The Gospel of the Kingdom" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 24, 2009. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  86. ^ Martin, Walter (October 2003). The Kingdom of the Cults. Bethany House Publishers. ISBN 0764228218.
  87. ^ "The Philadelphia Trumpet: He Was Right" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 2, 2008. Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  88. ^ Armstrong 1967, Chapter 1.
  89. ^ "The Painful Truth: Ambassador Report: A Treasury of Famous Prophecies". Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  90. ^ Parfitt, Tudor (2003). The Lost Tribes of Israel: The History of a Myth. Phoenix. p. 61.
  91. ^ Orr, Ralph (1995). "The United States and Britain in Prophecy: An Analysis of the Biblical Evidence".
  92. ^ Greer 2004, pp. 55–60.
  93. ^ Parfitt, Tudor (2003). The Lost Tribes of Israel: The History of a Myth. Phoenix. p. 62.
  94. ^ Lounsbury, T (1906). History of the English Language. pp. 1, 12–13.
  95. ^ Greer 2004, pp. 74, 83–84.
  96. ^ "I survived Armstrongism: Reminisces and Ruminations on Armstrong and WCG". Archived from the original on January 30, 2009. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  97. ^ "The Painful Truth: A collection of Facts, Opinions and Comments from Survivors of Hebert W. Armstrong, Garner Ted Armstrong, The Worldwide Church of God and its Daughters". Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  98. ^ "Living Armstrongism: Resources on HWA's Incest". February 2009. Retrieved February 7, 2009.
  99. ^ Hopkins, Joseph. The Armstrong Empire: A Look at the Worldwide Church of God Empire. p. 183.
  100. ^ McNair, Marion. "1 & 4". Armstrongism: Religion or Rip-Off? : An Expose of the Armstrong Modus Operandi.
  101. ^ "Stanley Rader with Mike Wallace". Retrieved February 7, 2009.
  102. ^ a b Armstrong, Herbert (November 16, 1981). "How subtly Satan used MAKEUP to start the Church off the track". The Worldwide News: 1, 4–5.
  103. ^ Armstrong, Herbert (1952). Does God Heal Today?. Pasadena, California: Radio Church of God.
  104. ^ Tkach 1997, 8.
  105. ^ Walker, Jerald (2016). The World in Flames: A Black Boyhood in a White Supremacist Doomsday Cult. Boston: Beacon Press. pp. 57–58. ISBN 9780807027509.
  106. ^ a b Armstrong, Herbert. "Divorce and Remarriage" (PDF). pp. 8–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2009. Retrieved January 17, 2009.
  107. ^ Armstrong 1985, pp. 149, 151, 173.
  108. ^ Tkach 1997, 7: What we Believed: A stroll through past headlines.
  109. ^ Armstrong, Herbert. "HOW YOU DRESS FOR CHURCH – Could it keep you out of the KINGDOM?" (PDF). The Worldwide News (May 21, 1979): 1. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 31, 2023. Retrieved January 31, 2023.
  110. ^ Leap, Dennis. "Is Smoking Sin?". Archived from the original on August 25, 2008. Retrieved January 18, 2009.
  111. ^ Tkach 1997, 7: What we Believed: What is the Church?.
  112. ^ Tkach 1997, 7: What we Believed: What does the future hold?.
  113. ^ "Articles L'ORDRE DU TRÉSOR SACRÉ (JAPON) – 88 autres titulaires, Jean-Marie Thiébaud". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  114. ^ AMBASSADOR FOUNDATION Presents Herbert W. Armstrong – Ambassador for World Peace pg. 4 (1983)
  115. ^ "Princess Esmerelda's Admiration for Herbert W. Armstrong". The Trumpet.
  116. ^ AMBASSADOR FOUNDATION Presents Herbert W. Armstrong – Ambassador for World Peace pg. 20 (1983)
  117. ^ AMBASSADOR FOUNDATION Presents Herbert W. Armstrong – Ambassador for World Peace pgs. 30 and 31 (1983)
  118. ^ "Herbert W. Armstrong Awarded Cross of Constantine in Jerusalem". Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  119. ^ "Herbert W. Armstrong, 1892–1986". Good News Magazine. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  120. ^ "USC Search: herbert w. armstrong professor of constitutional law". Archived from the original on April 16, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2017.

References

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Further reading and video resources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Herbert W. Armstrong (July 31, 1892 – January 16, 1986, corresponding to the 6th of Shevat, 5746 in the Hebrew calendar) was an American evangelist and religious broadcaster who founded the Worldwide Church of God, initially organized as the Radio Church of God in 1933. Armstrong pioneered large-scale radio starting in with his program The World Tomorrow, which expanded to television and reached international audiences, complemented by the circulation of his magazine that grew to millions of subscribers without paid advertising. He established in , in 1947 to train ministry personnel and promoted a emphasizing seventh-day observance, biblical holy days over mainstream Christian holidays, dietary laws, and —the doctrine positing that the British and American peoples descended from the biblical lost tribes of . Under his leadership, the church developed into a multimillion-dollar with approximately 120,000 members at its peak in the , funding global operations through member tithes and offerings. Armstrong's ministry drew controversy for his authoritarian control, including the 1978 disfellowshipping of his son Garner Ted over doctrinal and moral disputes, allegations of financial mismanagement, and unfulfilled end-times prophecies, such as the anticipated onset of the between 1972 and 1975. After his death, successor Joseph Tkach led doctrinal shifts toward evangelical orthodoxy, prompting schisms and the church's rebranding as , which rejected core Armstrong teachings like and as unbiblical.

Early Life and Pre-Ministry Career

Birth, Family, and Upbringing

Herbert W. Armstrong was born on July 31, 1892, in Des Moines, , to parents Horace Elon Armstrong, aged 28, and Eva Wright Armstrong, aged 26. The family resided in a modest cottage on West Harrison Street near 14th Street, with Armstrong's paternal grandparents living in a nearby two-story house. His father had been born in before the family relocated to . Armstrong's lineage traced to Quaker roots, with ancestors who had emigrated from to alongside William Penn's early settlers. His parents, described in his own account as respected and upright individuals of solid Quaker stock, instilled fundamental moral values emphasizing , temperance, and opposition to practices such as alcohol consumption, tobacco use, and dancing. The family included at least one sibling, a sister named . During his formative years, Armstrong received religious instruction through regular attendance at the First Friends Church in Des Moines, including and worship services, which formed the basis of his early exposure to Christian principles within the Quaker tradition of plain living and . This upbringing emphasized ethical conduct and community involvement, though Armstrong later reflected that it lacked deeper doctrinal engagement with biblical specifics.

Education, Business Ventures, and Early Influences

Armstrong attended public schools in , including North High School, where he enrolled around 1908 and was an average student who excelled in final examinations, scoring between 95% and 98%. He dropped out in late 1910 at age 18, opting against on the advice of his uncle, Frank Armstrong, who emphasized self-education through books and experience over formal institutions. Instead, Armstrong pursued rigorous self-study starting around 1915, focusing on practical fields such as , , , , , , , and writing; he read trade journals like Printer's Ink and Advertising & Selling, as well as works by authors including , , and . Business associates, such as Arthur Reynolds of the Reynolds Jewelry Company, later regarded this self-directed learning as equivalent to a due to its depth and applicability. His early career involved diverse roles in and , beginning in late 1910 as a want-ad solicitor for the Des Moines Daily Capital, earning $6 per week and soon promoted to ads at $8 per week. From to 1915, he wrote display advertisements and conducted editorial trips for the Merchants Trade Journal in Des Moines, starting at $10 per week and rising to $20 per week before resigning; during this period, he also served briefly as a timekeeper and for the Finkbine Lumber Company in Wiggins, , in early , a six-month stint ended by his contraction of . In 1915, Armstrong worked as assistant secretary for the South Bend on commission, attempted in (with no achieved), and solicited for the Northwestern Banker in Des Moines and , transitioning to a publishers' representative role by fall. His Chicago-based publishers' representation from 1917 to 1920 yielded high earnings—$7,300 in 1918, $8,700 in 1919, and over $11,000 in 1920—highlighted by a record $3,500 commission on a J.I. Case , though the collapsed amid the 1920-1921 depression. After relocating to Oregon in 1924, Armstrong engaged in merchandising surveys, such as a $500 contract for the Ames Daily Tribune in 1923, and served as a merchandising specialist for the Vancouver Columbian at $100 per week for six months in late 1924. He launched a cooperative laundry advertising service with R.H. Hughes in 1924-1926, grossing about $1,000 per month by fall 1926 before its failure due to opposition from the Laundryowners National Association; other ventures included a failed retail lumber business in Eugene pre-1931 and a 1929 clay mine partnership in Skamania County, Washington, which collapsed with the stock market crash. These efforts, marked by initial successes in advertising followed by multiple failures, honed his skills in promotion and sales, which later informed his media-based ministry. Early influences stemmed primarily from family and professional networks; raised by Quaker parents in a modest , Armstrong absorbed a Protestant ethic but rejected in , adopting a materialistic . Uncle Frank, a successful traveling salesman, served as a key mentor from , counseling and practical knowledge over academia, with the adage, "Education comes from study—from books." Professional contacts in , including executives at J.I. Case and trade journal editors, shaped his emphasis on empirical success and persuasive communication, while self-study exposed him to secular and literature that reinforced a focus on tangible results over abstract ideals.

Religious Awakening and Ministry Foundations

Personal Crisis, Bible Study, and Conversion

In the mid-1920s, Herbert W. Armstrong faced mounting financial and personal difficulties that culminated in a profound . After relocating to , on June 16, 1924, his advertising business for laundries disintegrated amid economic downturns, leaving him in near by 1926 with family struggles including unpaid rent, lack of groceries, and utility shutoffs. These setbacks followed earlier failures, such as the collapse of his independent advertising agency in around 1920–1922, which forced temporary reliance on his father-in-law's farm in . By 1928, his income had dwindled to approximately $50 per month, exacerbating marital strain with his wife, Loma, amid repeated business losses that eroded his self-confidence. The crisis deepened in autumn 1926 when Loma, influenced by Sabbath-observing teachings from Mrs. Ora Runcorn in , began keeping the seventh-day and urged Armstrong to investigate the to refute these ideas. Initially skeptical and intent on disproving what he viewed as erroneous doctrines, Armstrong embarked on an exhaustive self-directed study, agnostic toward and motivated by intellectual challenge rather than . From fall 1926 through early 1927, Armstrong devoted 12 to 16 hours daily to research, spending 6 to 8 hours at the Portland Public Library—from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.—and continuing at home until 1 a.m., totaling about six months of immersion. His inquiries targeted core topics, including the commandment in Exodus 20, annual holy days, the versus evolutionary theory, the inspiration of Scripture, by immersion, divine , and the relationship between and grace as in Romans 3:20, 31 and 7:12. He examined historical and archaeological references, ultimately rejecting , affirming God's active rule over creation, and concluding the 's authority through what he described as undeniable proof. A pivotal influence was Loma's reported in early August 1927, which prompted deeper study into faith and miracles. Armstrong's conversion unfolded gradually amid internal resistance, culminating in spring 1927 when, after six months, he acknowledged the and related truths as biblically mandated, stating, "Finally, after six months, the TRUTH had become crystal clear. At last I KNEW what was the truth." He underwent by immersion that summer, marking formal acceptance of Jesus Christ as Savior following a "life-and-death struggle" of surrender: "I was brought, by a process of being CONQUERED, to surrender, to WANT to surrender, and to DO what I had all my life been refusing to do!" By early 1928, he had fully embraced these convictions, including rejection of observance in favor of the seventh-day , setting the foundation for his later ministry.

Initial Preaching and Local Church Formation

Following his in 1927 and affiliation with the Church of God (Seventh Day), Armstrong began delivering informal talks and contributing articles to The Bible Advocate, but his formal public preaching commenced in 1930 with addresses to small crowds in . In late 1930, the Oregon Conference of the Church of God formed near Jefferson, , with G. A. Hobbs as its first president, providing a regional structure loosely tied to the denomination's headquarters in Stanberry, . Armstrong's initial evangelistic efforts included meetings in Harrisburg, , requested by the Oregon Conference, where he baptized four converts and faced reprimand for acting without a . He received a ministerial from the Oregon Conference around 1931 and was ordained in June of that year by conference leaders, including Robert L. Taylor, in a rural setting near Jefferson. These activities emphasized Sabbath observance, , and other doctrines diverging from mainstream Church of God teachings, leading to tensions with Stanberry authorities. The formation of his first independent local congregation occurred in August 1933 in Eugene, Oregon, organized as the Church of God with 19 charter members following an evangelistic campaign. This group, which Armstrong later identified as the parent body of the Worldwide Church of God, consolidated scattered adherents from prior efforts and marked his separation from the Oregon Conference amid doctrinal disputes. By October 1933, Armstrong launched the Radio Church of God from Eugene, initiating broadcasts that supported the nascent congregation, with weekly programs formalized on January 7, 1934. The Eugene church held its first services in a dedicated building on June 1, 1935, reflecting modest early growth.

Media Expansion and Institutional Growth

Launch of Radio Broadcasts and The World Tomorrow

In October 1933, Herbert W. Armstrong began his radio ministry with a 15-minute trial broadcast on KORE, a station in , which provided free airtime for a morning devotional slot. The station's manager later extended this to a weekly half-hour program at a nominal cost of $2.50 per week, prompted by positive listener response. Regular weekly broadcasts launched on January 7, 1934, under the name Radio Church of God, airing as a condensed that included musical contributions from a quartet. Operating from KORE's modest 100-watt transmitter, the program initially reached a limited regional audience but relied on listener offerings for continuation amid financial strains. By 1935, it had attracted an estimated 10,000 weekly listeners, enabling gradual expansion to stations in Portland and . In mid-April 1942, the program underwent a significant reorientation, renaming to The World Tomorrow and shifting format to emphasize prophetic topics for a general audience rather than simulating a traditional service. This change coincided with broader reach, including national airing on WHO in , and a debut on KMTR, boosting its audience to over 100,000 weekly by 1940 and further to 0.5–0.75 million by 1944. The broadcasts served as the primary vehicle for Armstrong's teachings, drawing co-workers through response cards and laying groundwork for institutional growth despite early logistical hurdles like signal limitations and doctrinal isolation from mainstream denominations.

Development of The Plain Truth Magazine and Publishing Empire

The Plain Truth magazine originated as a modest, mimeographed newsletter launched by Herbert W. Armstrong on February 1, 1934, with an initial print run of approximately 250 copies, consisting of eight pages produced using a rented mimeograph machine in his home. Armstrong personally authored all content, drawing from his Bible studies and radio broadcasts, and distributed copies primarily to supporters and radio listeners, as the publication was offered free of charge and funded through voluntary contributions. Circulation reached 106 subscribers by early 1935 but was suspended after the July issue due to financial constraints and Armstrong's relocation; it resumed on January 1, 1938, with 1,050 copies, benefiting from expanded radio outreach. Growth accelerated post-resumption, tied directly to the expanding audience of The World Tomorrow , reaching 2,000 copies by March 1940, 3,000 by November 1940, 5,000 by mid-1941, 35,000 by 1944 (primarily in English-speaking ), and 75,000 by 1946. By 1951, circulation exceeded 50,000, and in November 1958, it hit 175,000, prompting an upgrade to a 32-page, two-color format printed professionally. The magazine's content emphasized Armstrong's interpretations of biblical , observance, and critiques of mainstream , often expanding on radio topics to attract and retain listeners as subscribers. By the 1960s and 1970s, achieved massive scale, with an estimated 2.5 million readers by 1967 and circulation surpassing 3.2 million by June 1973, including international editions. It passed 5 million copies monthly by September 1982, peaking at 8.2 million in seven languages by 1986, distributed via mail and newsstands without subscription fees, supported by the Worldwide Church of God's tithes. This expansion necessitated dedicated printing facilities in , after the founding of in 1947, which provided administrative and editorial support. Parallel to the magazine, Armstrong developed a broader empire through dozens of booklets and books, many originating as serialized Plain Truth articles or radio transcripts, covering doctrines such as , end-times prophecy, and dietary laws. Key titles included and Britain in Prophecy (initially a booklet in the , later expanded) and Which Day Is the Christian Sabbath?, with over 50 booklets produced by the 1970s, printed in multiple languages and mailed freely to inquirers. This output, totaling millions of copies annually by the , formed the core of the church's evangelistic literature, reinforcing 's role as the flagship while building a self-sustaining distribution network unbound by commercial advertising.

Organizational Development of the Worldwide Church of God

Formal Founding and Membership Expansion

The Radio Church of God, the precursor organization to the Worldwide Church of God, was organized as a on October 21, 1933, in , with its first official meeting held on October 31 of that year. This marked the formal establishment of Armstrong's independent ministry, distinct from prior affiliations with Church of God groups. The organization was legally incorporated for the first time on March 3, 1946, in , coinciding with the relocation of its headquarters from Eugene to accommodate growing operations and the establishment of . In 1968, the Radio Church of God was renamed the Worldwide Church of God to signify its expanding international presence, including radio broadcasts reaching since 1953 and missions in other regions. Membership expansion accelerated post-incorporation, driven by the synergy of The World Tomorrow , The Plain Truth magazine circulation, and personal . From a core group of several dozen in the mid-1930s, the church grew to approximately 12,000 members by 1960. Annual growth averaged 30 percent through the 1950s and 1960s, fueled by media outreach that distributed literature globally and established congregations across and abroad. By the early 1970s, total adherents, including baptized members, children, and spouses, numbered around 150,000, with roughly 89,000 baptized adults. The church reached its peak membership of about 120,000 under Armstrong's leadership in the 1980s, supported by administrative centralization in Pasadena and tithe-based funding that enabled further evangelistic efforts.

Administrative Structure and Global Missions

The Worldwide Church of God under Herbert W. Armstrong maintained a centralized, hierarchical administrative structure modeled as a , with Christ as the ultimate head and Armstrong serving as the Apostle and General, the sole top authority responsible for doctrinal, administrative, and ministerial decisions. Ministers were appointed rather than elected, forming a ranked that included evangelists, pastors, elders, and associate pastors, with authority flowing downward from in . An Advisory Council of Elders provided counsel to Armstrong but lacked independent decision-making power, reinforcing the top-down governance that emphasized obedience to leadership as reflective of divine order. This structure, which evolved from the church's origins as the Radio Church of God in the 1930s, prioritized unified control to prevent doctrinal deviation, though critics noted its authoritarian tendencies in local congregations. Global missions expanded significantly after the church's renaming to the Worldwide Church of God on January 5, 1968, reflecting its ambition for international outreach through radio broadcasts, printed materials in multiple languages, and ministerial assignments abroad. By the , the organization established regional offices and congregations in over 50 countries, supported by church-sponsored travel; for instance, Armstrong and key aides logged 290 days of overseas trips in to meet foreign dignitaries and promote the church's message. Ministerial conferences facilitated ordinations and rank advancements to staff these efforts, with 34 new ordinations and 26 rank raises reported in one year, enabling the growth to approximately 146 churches worldwide by the late 1970s. These missions focused on tied to Armstrong's prophetic teachings, including distribution of and establishment of sabbath-keeping fellowships, though financial resources for such expansion derived heavily from member tithes and offerings.

Educational and Cultural Initiatives

Establishment of Ambassador College

Ambassador College was established by Herbert W. Armstrong in Pasadena, California, in 1947, following his relocation of the Radio Church of God headquarters from Eugene, Oregon, to the area that year. Armstrong acquired and consolidated multiple residential lots within a four-block area, including historic mansions such as Ambassador House, to serve as the initial campus facilities, fulfilling his vision for an educational institution aligned with the church's mission. The college formally opened its doors on October 8, 1947, beginning operations with a small inaugural cohort of four students and eight faculty members, totaling 12 individuals including Armstrong himself. Despite initial challenges, including no prior student applications, the institution was founded with the explicit purpose of training a ministry for the Worldwide Church of God, emphasizing a that integrated liberal arts with biblical principles and practical preparation for ecclesiastical roles. From its inception, Ambassador College functioned as the administrative and educational hub of the church, expanding rapidly to support doctrinal instruction, administrative training, and global efforts under Armstrong's direct oversight as founder and president. The establishment reflected Armstrong's belief in the need for higher education tailored to the church's unique theological framework, prioritizing the development of leaders committed to its teachings over conventional academic .

Ambassador International Cultural Foundation and Philanthropy

The Ambassador International Cultural Foundation (AICF) was founded in 1975 by Herbert W. Armstrong as a nonprofit extension of the Worldwide Church of God, aimed at humanitarian and cultural outreach to demonstrate biblical principles of service while amplifying the church's global witness. Funded primarily through church tithes and offerings, the organization pursued charitable projects worldwide, emphasizing aid without regard to religious affiliation, though aligned with Armstrong's theological emphasis on proclaiming the coming Kingdom of God. A core focus of the AICF involved sponsoring archaeological excavations in , building on Armstrong's earlier personal interest initiated in 1968. The foundation contributed funding—covering approximately half the costs—for the dig led by Hebrew University professor Benjamin Mazar from 1968 to 1976, which uncovered artifacts from the First Temple period and involved student participants from . Subsequent AICF support extended to Yigal Shiloh's City of David excavations from 1980 to 1985, where church donations and student volunteers aided in unearthing remains, and to digs at Tel Zeror in northern , yielding evidence of ancient Philistine and Israelite interactions. These efforts, totaling millions in contributions over nearly two decades, enhanced scholarly understanding of biblical while fostering diplomatic ties with Israeli officials. Beyond , the AICF engaged in direct , including provisions for widows, orphans, the elderly, and handicapped individuals, as detailed in its 1977 promotional materials. Projects spanned continents, from relief in and the to support in and the , reflecting a "way of give" philosophy rooted in Armstrong's interpretation of Christian reciprocity. These initiatives, while church-directed, occasionally intersected with secular , positioning Armstrong as an unofficial envoy who met to discuss and cultural exchange. The foundation's operations ceased after Armstrong's death in 1986 amid the Worldwide Church of God's restructuring.

Core Theological Framework

Doctrine of God, Christ, and Salvation

Armstrong's doctrine of God rejected the traditional Trinitarian formulation, positing instead that God constitutes a divine family composed of the Father and the Son, Jesus Christ, with the Holy Spirit understood as the power or active force emanating from them rather than a distinct person. He argued that the Trinity doctrine, originating from post-biblical councils, artificially limits God to three co-equal persons and obscures the biblical revelation of God as a growing family into which humans are called to enter as spirit-composed members. This view aligned with a binitarian emphasis on the Father as the supreme head and the Son as the begotten heir, both sharing divine essence but with hierarchical roles, drawing from passages like John 1:1-14 and Romans 8:14-17 to support the familial structure over a triune unity. Regarding Christ, Armstrong taught that Jesus was fully divine as the Word who existed with the from , became through miraculous begetting in Mary's womb, lived sinlessly, and served as the sacrificial Lamb to atone for humanity's sins. He emphasized Christ's and role in creation but rejected co-equality with the in , viewing the Son's submission as voluntary and reflective of divine order rather than inferiority in nature. Christ's initiated the process of new creation, enabling believers to receive the as the earnest or down payment toward their own transformation into divine beings at the . Salvation, in Armstrong's framework, was not merely forensic justification by faith alone but a process of deliverance from sin's penalty and power, culminating in literal participation in the God family through obedience and spiritual rebirth. It required repentance, water baptism by full immersion, the laying on of hands for receiving the Holy Spirit, and ongoing faithfulness evidenced by law-keeping, including Sabbath observance and holy days, as works integral to justifying faith rather than optional. Believers were considered "begotten" in this life via the Spirit but not fully "born again" until the resurrection, when mortal bodies would be changed into immortal, God-composed spirit bodies, sharing the Father's divine nature as co-heirs with Christ. This eschatological transformation rejected eternal torment in hell, positing instead conditional immortality where the unsaved face annihilation after judgment.

Sabbath, Holy Days, and Dietary Laws

Herbert W. Armstrong taught that the commandment requires observance on the seventh day of the week, from sunset to sunset , as a perpetual sign between and His , unchanged by the or early church history. He argued that Christ Himself made the during creation and observed it, rejecting claims that it was altered to by Constantine or apostolic authority, viewing such shifts as pagan influences contrary to scripture. Members of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) were instructed to abstain from work, secular activities, and commerce on this day, dedicating it to , study, and rest, with services held in church halls or homes. Armstrong emphasized the annual holy days outlined in Leviticus 23 as divinely ordained shadows of of salvation, mandatory for Christians rather than abolished rituals fulfilled in Christ alone. These included (observed with footwashing, unleavened bread, and lamb or symbols thereof, commemorating Christ's sacrifice), the seven-day Feast of , (marking the church's founding), Feast of Trumpets, Day of Atonement (with and affliction of soul), seven-day Feast of Tabernacles, and the Last Great Day. The WCG held large-scale convocations for the Feast of Tabernacles, gathering tens of thousands at sites worldwide for sermons, fellowship, and temporary dwellings to symbolize the , beginning personal observance in 1927 with . Holy days commenced at sunset, with prohibiting work akin to the weekly . On dietary laws, Armstrong maintained that distinctions between clean and unclean meats in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14 remain binding health and obedience statutes, not ceremonial types nullified by Peter's vision or Christ's declarations. Unclean animals—such as pigs, rabbits, camels, , and —were prohibited due to their anatomical traits (e.g., lacking cloven hooves and cud-chewing for mammals, or fins and scales for ) and inherent unhealthiness, as designed digestion for clean varieties like , sheep, , and certain . WCG adherents avoided these foods lifelong, preparing meals accordingly, with Armstrong linking violations to physical ailments and spiritual defilement, though post-1986 WCG reforms under successors abandoned these as non-essential.

British Israelism, Prophecy, and End-Times Chronology

Armstrong's teachings on posited that the ten lost tribes of ancient migrated northward after around 721 BC, eventually forming the core populations of the , the , and related Northwestern European nations, distinct from the Jewish people descended from the . He identified the and as fulfilling the role of , receiving the promises of national wealth and population growth outlined in Genesis 48:19, while the corresponded to Manasseh, prophesied to become a great single nation. These identifications relied on interpretive links such as the transfer of the biblical from ancient to Joseph's sons, evidenced by the sudden rise of Anglo-American power around 1800–1803, including Britain's naval supremacy and the U.S. . Central to this framework was a 2,520-year "times of the Gentiles" punishment derived from Leviticus 26:18–28, calculating seven prophetic "times" (each 360 days, equating to 360 years) from Israel's in 721 BC to the restoration of blessings commencing circa 1800 AD, coinciding with the and colonial expansions that positioned these nations to control over two-thirds of global resources by the early . Armstrong argued this timeline empirically validated the doctrine, as no other peoples matched the scale of promised greatness to Abraham's descendants (Genesis 12:2–3, 17:5–6). However, the depends on unverified migrations and symbolic interpretations lacking corroboration from archaeological, linguistic, or genetic records, which instead trace Anglo-Saxon origins to Germanic and Celtic migrations unrelated to Semitic Israelite stock. In prophetic , Armstrong applied blessings and curses from Deuteronomy 28 and Leviticus 26 directly to these modern "Israelite" nations, interpreting post-World War II declines—such as the dissolution of the after 1945 and U.S. economic strains—as fulfillments of disobedience penalties, including loss of national prestige and vulnerability to enemies. This Anglo-Israelite lens unlocked, in his view, one-third of the Bible's prophetic content, primarily concerning end-time events affecting these powers more than any others. Prophecies in 5–7 and warned of invasion and captivity by a revived "Assyrian" power (identified as ), tied to failure to heed God's laws like observance, which Armstrong deemed a perpetual sign for true (Exodus 31:13–17). Armstrong's end-times chronology envisioned a sequence commencing with the reconfiguration of Europe into a ten-nation "Beast" confederacy (Revelation 17:12), resurrecting the Holy Roman Empire under German dominance as the "King of the North" (Daniel 11:40–41), culminating in the Great Tribulation—a 3.5-year period of Jacob's Trouble (Jeremiah 30:7; Daniel 12:1) involving nuclear devastation and enslavement of Anglo-American remnants. This would precede Christ's return to establish the Kingdom of God, with resurrected saints ruling from Jerusalem over a millennial restoration (Revelation 20:4–6; Isaiah 2:2–4). The timeline hinged on the "times of the Gentiles" ending in 1917–1918 with British capture of Jerusalem, shifting prophetic focus to obedience demands by 1936, after which non-compliance would accelerate curses. Specific predictions included the Tribulation igniting between 1972 and 1975, with one-third of humanity perishing from famine and war beforehand, as detailed in his 1954 booklet expanding to 1975 in Prophecy!. These dates derived from adjustments to earlier forecasts, such as a 1936 onset that passed without event, and built on the 2,520-year cycle projecting peak blessings into the mid-20th century followed by rapid decline. None of the anticipated cataclysms materialized by 1975, including no European Beast formation leading to Anglo-Saxon subjugation or global nuclear exchange, rendering the chronology empirically unfulfilled and prompting doctrinal reevaluations in successor organizations.

Leadership Practices and Governance

Hierarchical Authority and Decision-Making

The Worldwide Church of God (WCG) under Herbert W. Armstrong adhered to a theocratic form of government characterized by a strict pyramidal hierarchy, with authority descending from God the Father through Jesus Christ to the Apostle and ordained ministry, explicitly rejecting democratic or congregational models as incompatible with divine rule. Armstrong described this as "government from the top down," emphasizing that it could not operate on "government by the consent of the governed," but required submission to Christ's appointed leadership for unity and doctrinal purity. Initially, in the church's early years around 1939, Armstrong advocated minimal central organization, favoring local autonomy, but by the 1950s he enforced a rigid top-down structure to centralize control amid growth and perceived threats to doctrinal integrity. Armstrong positioned himself as the end-time and General, the sole holder of that office, chosen directly by to restore first-century church and direct all major decisions, including doctrinal interpretations derived from biblical study and personal . The ministerial ranks followed Ephesians 4:11, comprising apostles (exclusively Armstrong), prophets, evangelists, , and teachers, with appointments and ordinations performed by higher-ranking ministers based on scriptural qualifications such as those in 1 Timothy 3:1-7. While lower ministers could offer input on administrative or doctrinal matters—such as through projects like the 1976 effort—final authority rested with Armstrong, who retained power and ultimate doctrinal sovereignty, ensuring uniformity across the global membership peaking at over 100,000 by the . Decision-making processes emphasized faith in divine guidance over debate or voting, with the Pastor General issuing binding directives on , finances, and church works, implemented locally by pastors without member ballot. , including marking dissenters or disfellowshipping for unrepentant , invoked apostolic to maintain order, as in 1 Corinthians 5:1-5, often executed by regional evangelists or the central administration in . This centralized model, enforced through ministerial loyalty oaths and rapid response to perceived rebellions—like the 1970s ousters of key evangelists—prioritized rapid execution of prophetic commissions over internal , sustaining the expansion to over congregations worldwide by 1986.

Financial Management, Tithing, and Resource Allocation

The Worldwide Church of God, under Herbert W. Armstrong's leadership, instituted a mandatory system based on interpretations of statutes, requiring members to allocate a of 10 percent of their to the church for supporting the ministry and global evangelistic work. A , also 10 percent, was retained by individuals to finance personal attendance and expenses at the three annual holy day festivals, ensuring festival observance without reliance on church funds. Every third and sixth year in a seven-year cycle, members paid a of 10 percent through the church to assist widows, orphans, the poor, and Levitical equivalents in the ministry, resulting in an effective annual commitment of 20 to 30 percent of income depending on the cycle year. Collection of tithes and offerings was centralized at the church's Pasadena , where funds from members worldwide were pooled and managed by administrative leaders under Armstrong's oversight, with ministers receiving salaries and reimbursements from this pool rather than local collections. Armstrong emphasized as a covenant obligation yielding divine financial blessings and protection from economic hardship, framing non-compliance as disobedience risking curses, while faithful adherence promised as evidenced by members' reported testimonies of and income growth. The church periodically issued audited financial reports detailing transactions to promote transparency, though these were internal and not publicly filed as with secular nonprofits. Resource allocation prioritized the church's commission to preach the gospel globally, with the majority of funds directed toward media production and distribution, including millions of copies of The Plain Truth magazine printed annually in multiple languages and The World Tomorrow broadcasts aired on over 400 radio stations and television networks reaching audiences in more than 100 countries by the 1970s. Substantial portions supported educational initiatives, such as operating Ambassador College campuses in Pasadena, England, and Texas for ministerial training, and constructing facilities like the Ambassador Auditorium completed in 1974. Administrative costs, international missions, and relief efforts through affiliated foundations absorbed the remainder, sustaining operations that grew the church to approximately 120,000 members by the mid-1980s with an annual budget scaling to tens of millions of dollars amid expanding outreach.

Controversies, Criticisms, and Rebuttals

Theological Disputes and Prophetic Claims

Armstrong's prophetic interpretations, rooted in his advocacy of , asserted that the Anglo-Saxon peoples descended from the lost tribes of and were therefore destined for as outlined in Deuteronomy 28 for national disobedience. He claimed divine revelation in restoring "lost truths" obscured by a supposed "great false church" since the first century, positioning himself as an end-time fulfilling 4:5-6 by turning hearts toward God's covenants. Critics, including biblical scholars, contested this framework as reliant on unsubstantiated historical linkages and selective scriptural , lacking archaeological or genetic evidence for equating modern Britain and the with ancient Ephraim and Manasseh. Specific prophetic timelines drew sharp rebuke for non-fulfillment. In a 1953 Plain Truth article, Armstrong warned of the and Britain's "total collapse" within 14 years, citing unheeded prophetic warnings as the cause; by 1967, no such downfall occurred, prompting him to revise timelines in subsequent publications. He further projected in 1967 that atomic devastation and the would strike within "four to seven years," aligning with dual 19-year cycles purportedly ending around 1972-1975, yet these cataclysms failed to materialize, leading detractors to invoke Deuteronomy 18:22's test for false prophets. A forecast of global slaying one-third of humanity, followed by nuclear war claiming another third, similarly passed without incident. Theological contention extended to Armstrong's non-Trinitarian binitarianism, which denied the personality of the Holy Spirit and equated God as a family comprising Father and Son, diverging from Nicene orthodoxy and drawing charges of modalism or Arianism from evangelical analysts. His insistence on tithing as mandatory for salvation and rejection of eternal torment in favor of annihilationism further alienated mainstream denominations, who viewed these as works-based distortions contradicting sola fide. Supporters countered that such doctrines echoed primitive Christianity predating fourth-century councils, but empirical scrutiny revealed inconsistencies, such as reinterpreting failed dates without acknowledging error, undermining claims of prophetic authority.

Allegations of Authoritarianism, Lifestyle, and Family Conflicts

Armstrong's leadership of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) faced accusations of authoritarian governance, characterized by a top-down hierarchical structure where he held ultimate decision-making authority as the self-proclaimed apostle, with ministers required to enforce doctrines without deviation and members subject to disfellowshipping for dissent or non-compliance. In 1973–1974, complaints of autocratic rule contributed to the departure of approximately 40 ministers and 3,000 members, amid broader internal schisms triggered by doctrinal shifts and perceived over-centralization. Critics, including former insiders, alleged that this system suppressed questioning, with disfellowshipping used to maintain control, as evidenced by the practice's application to high-profile figures and ordinary members alike. Allegations regarding Armstrong's lifestyle centered on discrepancies between his personal expenditures and the financial demands placed on members, who were required to up to 30% of income on gross earnings, including multiple offerings. Reports highlighted luxuries such as a Gulfstream jet for international travel, multiple residences, and high-cost projects like the $11 million Ambassador Auditorium completed in 1974, funded partly by church revenues while some members faced economic hardship. A 1979 exposé detailed these claims, prompting a California state investigation in 1979 into allegations that Armstrong and associates had misappropriated millions in church funds for personal use, though no criminal charges resulted. Detractors argued this reflected , given Armstrong's teachings on , but supporters countered that such resources advanced global efforts. Family conflicts intensified scrutiny, particularly Armstrong's strained relationship with his son (GTA), who had assumed significant broadcasting and administrative roles. In 1972, GTA faced a four-month suspension from broadcasts due to accusations of , straining the father-son dynamic amid disputes over church operations and doctrines. Tensions escalated, culminating in 1978 when Herbert Armstrong publicly excommunicated GTA, citing rebellion and doctrinal challenges, an event covered contemporaneously as a major rift within the WCG. GTA subsequently founded the Church of God International, highlighting generational divides over authority and reforms. These familial disputes, intertwined with broader leadership critiques, were attributed by observers to power struggles rather than purely personal failings.

Supporter Defenses, Empirical Verifications, and Causal Analyses

Supporters of Herbert W. Armstrong maintain that his prophetic emphases, including the rise of a unified under German influence, received partial empirical verification through the formation of the in 1957 and its evolution into the , which Armstrong had forecasted as a revival of the . They argue these developments aligned with biblical warnings in about a "beast" power, providing causal evidence of divine foresight rather than coincidence, as geopolitical shifts toward continental integration accelerated post-World War II amid U.S. and British decline in relative power. While timelines for end-time events shifted with further study, defenders contend Armstrong never positioned himself as an infallible prophet but as an evangelist expounding Scripture, urging verification against the itself per 8:20, thus avoiding the Deuteronomy 18 test for self-proclaimed prophets. Regarding allegations of , adherents defend the church's hierarchical governance as a direct application of models, where Christ delegates authority through apostles and elders for doctrinal unity and efficient mission execution, as seen in 1 Corinthians 12:28 and Ephesians 4:11-12. This structure, they assert, causally enabled the Worldwide Church of God's rapid expansion from a few dozen members in to approximately 120,000 baptized adherents by , without early fragmentation, by centralizing decisions on media outreach and resource distribution that sustained broadcasts on over 380 television stations and hundreds of radio outlets worldwide. Supporters contrast this with decentralized denominations prone to doctrinal drift, attributing the church's debt-free construction of campuses, auditoriums, and educational institutions to disciplined under unified oversight, yielding tangible fruits like the system's training of ministers who facilitated global . On lifestyle criticisms, including Armstrong's use of a private jet and Pasadena residence, proponents justify these as pragmatic necessities for fulfilling :14's gospel proclamation mandate, enabling direct audiences with and efficient travel across continents in an era before commercial aviation's full globalization. They cite causal links to ministry outcomes, such as the magazine's circulation exceeding 8 million copies by the 1980s and the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation's funding of archaeological projects and aid to developing nations, all resourced through members' first-tithe contributions without or scandalous mismanagement. Family conflicts, while acknowledged privately, are framed by supporters as personal trials common to leaders under prophetic burdens, not disqualifying his apostolic role, with empirical longevity—Armstrong's survival to age 93 without alcohol-related health failures—countering exaggerated vice claims from adversarial sources. Overall, these defenses emphasize observable successes in media penetration and institutional stability as verifiable proofs of divine endorsement, outweighing interpretive disputes in a media landscape often biased against non-mainstream theological frameworks.

Final Years, Death, and Succession

Health Challenges and Late Ministries

In the mid-1970s, Armstrong experienced significant health setbacks, including a diagnosis of that began in his home, leading to a period of severe illness requiring medical intervention. He reported making exceptional recovery progress within four months, attributing it partly to divine healing consistent with his teachings on physical restoration through faith, though he continued under medical care. A serious heart attack in 1977 further weakened him, yet he resumed leadership of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG), maintaining his role as Pastor General and continuing public broadcasts and writings into the early 1980s. By August 1985, at age 93, Armstrong's condition deteriorated markedly due to advancing heart ailment and age-related frailty, confining him to limited mobility and causing severe pain with minimal physical strength. Despite this, he persisted in ministerial duties, recording his final two World Tomorrow radio broadcasts that month and taping an opening message for the Feast of Tabernacles shortly thereafter. In September 1985, he delivered his last major address to church members, emphasizing doctrinal continuity and end-times urgency amid his evident decline. These efforts reflected his commitment to oversight of the WCG's global operations, including publication of The Plain Truth magazine and Ambassador College activities, even as delegates handled day-to-day administration. Armstrong's health challenges prompted increased reliance on a hierarchical structure for governance, allowing him to focus on strategic directives and prophetic expositions rather than extensive or personal appearances, which had characterized earlier decades. His final months involved co-worker letters urging financial support and for recovery, underscoring causal links he drew between collective faithfulness and institutional vitality, though empirical outcomes showed progressive weakening without full restoration. This period marked a transition in his ministry from active to archival reinforcement of teachings, preserving influence through recorded media amid physical constraints.

Death in 1986 and Immediate Church Leadership Transition

Herbert W. Armstrong died on January 16, 1986 (the 6th of Shevat, 5746 in the Hebrew calendar), at 5:59 a.m. in his home, at the age of 93. Church spokesman David Hulme attributed the death to the effects of advanced age, noting that Armstrong's health had deteriorated since August 1985. In the days preceding his death, Armstrong, aware of his declining condition, named Joseph W. Tkach as his successor to the position of Pastor General of the Worldwide Church of God. Tkach, then 59, had served as director of church administration since 1980, overseeing operations for the church's approximately 80,000 members across 56 countries, as well as and media broadcasts. The appointment positioned Tkach as chief executive, with authority over the Council of Elders and church governance. Tkach assumed immediately upon Armstrong's , with no reported disruptions in church administration or operations. Church officials indicated that decisions on continuing Armstrong's pre-recorded telecasts would follow, but the core structure of authority transitioned seamlessly to Tkach, maintaining continuity in the church's hierarchical framework.

Enduring Legacy and Influence

Doctrinal Reformation in the Worldwide Church of God

Following the of Herbert W. Armstrong on January 16, 1986, Joseph W. Tkach Sr. assumed leadership of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) and began implementing doctrinal shifts, initially framed as clarifications on grace and church practices. In a March 18, 1987, Pastor General's Report, Tkach introduced the first major change by emphasizing grace over strict law observance, marking a departure from Armstrong's emphasis on legalistic adherence. These early adjustments, including relaxed rules on and , were presented by WCG leaders as biblical corrections but drew internal resistance from members and ministers loyal to Armstrong's interpretations. The reforms accelerated in the early , culminating in Tkach Sr.'s December 24, 1994, "Christmas Eve Sermon," which was recorded and broadcast to congregations on January 7, 1995, explicitly rejecting core Armstrong doctrines under a framework. Key abandonments included mandatory Saturday Sabbath observance, annual holy days, and dietary laws distinguishing clean and unclean meats, with Tkach declaring such practices non-binding for . The church also repudiated —Armstrong's teaching identifying Anglo-Saxon peoples as lost tribes of —by withdrawing his book The and Britain in Prophecy from circulation in 1991. Further, WCG adopted Trinitarian theology, affirming the deity of Christ and the as co-equal persons in the , reversing Armstrong's non-Trinitarian "God Family" doctrine. Under Tkach Sr.'s successor, Joseph Tkach Jr., who took over after his father's death on September 23, 1995, the WCG continued aligning with evangelical Christianity, gaining affiliations with groups like the by the late 1990s. These changes, totaling nearly 300 doctrinal revisions by some counts, were justified by WCG leadership as a return to historic based on reevaluated biblical , though critics from factions argued they constituted from verified prophetic truths. The reforms triggered significant membership attrition, with estimates of up to 50% loss by 1993 and a 35% income drop in 1995 alone, leading to widespread exits and the formation of independent Churches of God preserving Armstrong's teachings.

Splinter Groups, Ongoing Adherents, and Cultural Impact

Following the doctrinal reforms initiated by Joseph W. Tkach Sr. after Herbert W. Armstrong's death on January 16, 1986, the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) abandoned core Armstrong teachings such as , , and rejection of the , prompting widespread departures. By the early , up to half of the WCG's approximately 100,000 members had left amid these shifts toward evangelical . This fragmentation resulted in over 100 organizations by the mid-1990s, with many claiming fidelity to Armstrong's interpretations of biblical , , and church government. Prominent splinters include the (PCG), founded in 1989 by Gerald Flurry after his dismissal from the WCG; the (LCG), established in 1993 by Roderick C. Meredith following his exit from the Global Church of God; the (UCG), formed in May 1995 by over 100 ministers rejecting Tkach reforms; and the (RCG), started in 1993 by David C. Pack. These groups maintain Armstrong's emphasis on observing holy days, dietary laws, and prophetic timelines linking modern nations to ancient , often viewing the post-1986 WCG changes as a prophesied . Doctrinal variances persist among splinters, such as disputes over church governance and the timing of end-times events, leading to further divisions. Current adherents to Armstrong's doctrines number in the tens of thousands globally across these groups, with the LCG reporting about 11,300 U.S. members and 5,000 international as of recent claims. The UCG, one of the largest initial splinters, drew thousands from the WCG exodus but has seen subsequent attrition and sub-splinters. Smaller entities like the PCG and RCG sustain operations through media outreach echoing Armstrong's model, though exact figures remain opaque due to decentralized reporting and emphasis on "scattered" brethren. Adherents continue practices like three-tithe systems and avoidance of pagan holidays, sustaining communities despite legal disputes over WCG , such as Flurry's successful 1997 lawsuit for rights to Armstrong's writings. Armstrong's cultural legacy stems from pioneering mass-media evangelism, with The Plain Truth magazine reaching over 6 million subscribers by the 1980s and The World Tomorrow broadcasts airing on 382 stations across 82 countries. This infrastructure popularized —positing Anglo-Saxon peoples as descendants of the "lost tribes"—and apocalyptic forecasts, influencing fringe prophetic interpretations in broader evangelical and survivalist circles. (1947–1997) trained hundreds in journalism and diplomacy, contributing to Ambassador International Cultural Foundation projects like archaeological digs and aid efforts in regions tied to Armstrong's prophetic geography. While the original WCG's transformation into marginalized these elements, splinters perpetuate Armstrong's critique of mainstream Christianity as compromised by tradition, fostering ongoing discourse on and institutional authority.

References

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