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Grace Communion International

Grace Communion International (GCI), formerly named the Radio Church of God and the Worldwide Church of God, is a Christian denomination based in Charlotte, North Carolina, USA.[1]

According to the organization's website, the denomination has 30,000 members in 550 churches in 70 countries,[2] is structured in the episcopal model[2] and is a member of the National Association of Evangelicals.[2]

Founding edit

In 1934, Herbert W. Armstrong, a former advertising agent turned radio- and televangelist, founded the Radio Church of God, a radio ministry[3] in Eugene, Oregon. Armstrong's biography states that he had formerly been ordained in 1931 by the Oregon Conference of the Church of God (Seventh Day), an Adventist group, but split with them in 1933. On January 7, 1934, Armstrong began hosting a broadcast on a local 100-watt radio station KORE in Eugene.[citation needed] The program was essentially a condensed church service on the air, with hymn singing featured along with Armstrong's message. Armstrong later named his program The World Tomorrow, perhaps inspired by the theme of the 1939 World's Fair, "The World of Tomorrow". To facilitate the work of the growing church, Armstrong incorporated it on March 3, 1946, as the Radio Church of God. Although his views were rejected by the local congregation, he gained a following through his World Tomorrow broadcasts and The Plain Truth magazine.[citation needed]

In 1947, Armstrong incorporated his California ministry,[4] relocated the church's headquarters to Pasadena, California, and founded Ambassador College as the denomination's educational arm. The broadcast of The World Tomorrow went into Europe on Radio Luxembourg on January 7, 1953. In 1968, the movement was renamed the Worldwide Church of God (WCG).[5]

Under Herbert W. Armstrong (1934–1986) edit

The Worldwide Church of God adhered to the teachings of its founder, Herbert W. Armstrong, until his death. Armstrong practiced a blend of Christian fundamentalism with some tenets of Judaism and Seventh-Day Sabbath doctrine.[4] Armstrong preached that Britain and the United States were populated by descendants of two "lost tribes" of Ancient Israel. Armstrong's doctrine included strict observation of the Saturday Sabbath, annual festivals and holy days described in Leviticus Chapter 23; the distinction between the flesh of ritually clean and unclean animals listed in Leviticus Chapter 11;[6] the forbidding of medical interventions,[7] and the required payment of three tithes to the church.[8][9] Armstrong rejected what he regarded as pagan practices and beliefs that had been absorbed into mainstream Christianity. These included the idea of the holy Trinity,[10] and the celebrations of Christmas, Easter, Halloween, and birthdays.[11][12] Members were encouraged to follow a dress code during services.[13] Armstrong's doctrine strictly opposed divorce and remarriage, and encouraged members who had divorced to seek reconciliation with their former spouses, even if they had remarried.[14] These practices are still observed in several of the Church's remaining branches.[citation needed]

Armstrong explained that those "called" by God, who believed the gospel of the Kingdom, and received God's Spirit upon full-immersion baptism, became part of the true, biblical, 'Church of God'. Ministers were obligated to "disfellowship" any in their congregations who caused trouble or division. Such "disfellowshipments" were announced at services before the assembled congregation.[citation needed]

In 1956, Armstrong published 1975 in Prophecy!, a pamphlet that predicted catastrophic draught, famine, and epidemic disease in the United States between 1965 and 1972, as well as an upcoming nuclear world war instigated by underground German Nazis, the subsequent enslavement of Christians in Europe, concluding in the return of Jesus Christ.[15] Armstrong predicted that these events would take place for three-and-a-half years, and would conclude by 1975.[15] Because of Armstrong's emphasis on these prophetic dates, the church grew quickly in the late 1960s.[citation needed] On January 5, 1968, the church was renamed the Worldwide Church of God.[16]

By the mid-1950’s, Armstrong had his son Garner Ted Armstrong take over as host of the radio and television versions of The World Tomorrow. By the late 1960’s, Garner Ted was executive vice president of the church, vice-chancellor of Ambassador College (which by then had two more campuses in Texas and the United Kingdom), and executive editor of church publications including Tomorrow’s World, Good News, and The Plain Truth.[17]

Armstrong's first wife Loma died in 1966.

1970s: Scandal and conflict edit

By the early 1970's, the church began to splinter. Members were disappointed that the events predicted by Herbert Armstrong had not occurred. Because church literature such as The Wonderful World Tomorrow, 1975 in Prophecy!, and many others had attempted to pinpoint the date of Christ's return, members continued to wait anxiously for the Second Coming. Some of Armstrong's evangelists, such as Gerald Waterhouse, had presented detailed, step-by-step accounts of the Second Coming in their sermons, which included Armstrong himself as one of two witnesses of the Book of Revelation.[18]

In an article in the May 15, 1972, edition of Time magazine, Herbert Armstrong was reported to have ousted Garner Ted from his leadership roles in the church, on the grounds that Garner Ted was "in the bonds of Satan."[17] When questioned about the specifics of his accusation, the elder Armstrong responded, "Look up I Timothy, Chapter 3, first five or six verses and Titus, Chapter 1, verse 6.". The article surmised:

Both passages make two points in common: that a bishop or church elder must be faithful to his wife and rule strictly over believing children. Had handsome Garner Ted succumbed to an old and common temptation? His father was cryptic: "The fault was spiritual, not moral."

In 1972, the Elder Armstrong declared Garner Ted repentant and named him the divinely ordained successor in the church after the latter signed a letter stating "I have sinned against my wife, the children and the church", though neither specified what Garner Ted's transgression had been.[19] While some congregants speculated adultery, others guessed that father and son had disagreed on the format of their radio and television programs, or on some tenets of the church, such as the Elder Armstrong's vocal support for racial segregation.[20] By March 1974, multiple ministers had quit or been ousted as dissidents, with several citing the church's unfairly lax response to Garner Ted's violations, denouncing elements of Armstrong's doctrine, and founding offshoot churches. Thirty-five ministers formed the Associated Church of God in Washington, D.C.[19] Texas Minister Barry Chase sent an open letter to church members signaling his departure, citing "monumental immorality in the highest echelons of this church."[21] Alfred Carozzo, former WCG director of ministers in the western US, sent an open letter to WCG members denouncing the church's tithe system, the Armstrongs' lavish lifestyle and expenditures, Armstrong's positions on divorce and remarriage, and alleging that Armstrong had treated Garner Ted leniently compared to church members accused of similar trespasses. Carozzo incorporated his own offshoot, the 20th Century Church of God.[21] More departures followed, some retaining the Church of God component in their names based on Armstrong's assertion that this is the name God calls the Church in the Bible.[citation needed]

In 1977, Herbert Armstrong married Ramona Martin, a woman nearly fifty years his junior, and moved to Tucson, Arizona while recovering from a heart attack. During this time, Armstrong administered and guided church affairs through Stanley Rader, the church's general counsel, and the church administration.[citation needed] The church continued to be headquartered in Pasadena.

That year, six former students of Ambassador College published a pamphlet alleging that the church misused funds and violated church members' civil rights. The pamphlet asserted that the church's tithing system reduced members to poverty, costing up to 40% of their income, to support the Armstrongs' lavish lifestyle, including multiple homes, expensive cars, and a gulf stream jet.[22]

By 1978, Armstrong had disfellowshipped Garner Ted and ousted him from the church permanently.[23][24] Garner Ted began his own church in 1978 in Tyler, Texas, called the Church of God International. Herbert and Garner Ted Armstrong remained estranged for the remainder of the elder Armstrong's life.[25]

About this time the gap between father and son was set when Garner Ted threatened to expose the secret of Herbert's molesting his sister in the later 1930s.[citation needed]

Despite the scandals of 1972, the church continued to grow in the 1970s.[citation needed] Armstrong began to preach around the world, with the help of some public relations aides and King Leopold of Belgium.[citation needed] He met with many world leaders to whom he would present expensive gifts, then preached to them simplistically that there were "two ways" of life: one of giving and the other, the way of getting.[citation needed]

Ambassador International Cultural Foundation edit

During the 1960s, "Armstrong had sought to put into stronger action what he later termed God's way of give",[26] which was said to include "the way of character, generosity, cultural enrichment, true education: of beautifying the environment and caring for fellow man." He began undertaking humanitarian projects in underprivileged locales around the world, which led to the creation of the church-run Ambassador International Cultural Foundation (AICF) in 1975. The Foundation worked in several countries, providing staffing and funds to fight illiteracy, create schools for disabled people, set up mobile schools, and conduct several archaeological digs at significant biblical sites. The church auditorium hosted, at highly subsidized ticket prices, hundreds of performances by noted artists such as Luciano Pavarotti, Vladimir Horowitz, Bing Crosby, Marcel Marceau, and Bob Hope.[27] Armstrong used church tithe money to pay for these performances without informing his congregation of how "God's holy tithe" was being spent.

Quest periodical was published monthly by AICF from July 1977 to September 1981. Originally named Human Potential, the project was directed by Stanley Rader as a secular outreach of the church-funded AICF. Quest publishers hired a professional staff unrelated to the church to create a high-quality publication devoted to the humanities, travel, and the arts. The periodical was created in the aftermath of Armstrong's poorly received 1975 in Prophecy!, a publication which caused accusations of false prophecy to spread like wildfire. (The use of the year 1975 was defended by church ministers as a device to explain biblical prophecy, by contrasting it with the scientific world's declaration of 1975 as the year of technological "Utopia").

The AICF become secular in its approach and thinking and the church began to cut back on its funding. Eventually it was discontinued by Armstrong and its assets were sold to other interests.

Receivership crisis edit

Several members in good standing with the WCG prompted the State of California to investigate charges of malfeasance by Rader and Herbert W. Armstrong. A coalition of six ex-ministers brought accusations of misappropriation of funds against Herbert W. Armstrong and Stanley Rader to the Attorney General of California, contending that the two men were siphoning millions of dollars for their personal indulgences. In 1979, California Attorney General George Deukmejian placed the church campus in Pasadena into financial receivership for a half year.[28] The State of California went through the church's records.[citation needed]

The matter gained the attention of Mike Wallace who investigated the church in a report for 60 Minutes. Wallace alleged that there had been lavish secret expenditures, conflict of interest, insider deals, posh homes and lifestyles in the higher ranks, and the heavy involvement of Stanley Rader in financial manipulation.[citation needed] No legal charges were leveled against Herbert W. Armstrong, Stanley Rader, or the WCG. Wallace invited Rader to appear on 60 Minutes on April 15, 1979. Wallace showed Rader a secret tape recording in which Herbert Armstrong clearly stated to C. Wayne Cole, who was made temporary acting head of the church by Herbert Armstrong, that Rader was attempting to take over the church after Armstrong's death, reasoning that the donated tithe money was the incentive and quite a "magnet" to Stan Rader. Rader abruptly ended the interview.[29] This tape was made during a conversation about Stanley Rader by Herbert W. Armstrong, and C. Wayne Cole. Wayne Cole gave the tape to 60 Minutes for use in its exposé of Rader.

In the meantime, Herbert W. Armstrong switched the WCG Inc. corporations to "corporate sole" status, making him the sole officer and responsible party for the affairs of the corporations. All income, tithes and checks were then made payable to the personal name of Herbert W. Armstrong and sent to his home in Tucson, Arizona.

In referring to the investigation of the California Attorney General, Rader wrote Against the Gates of Hell: The Threat to Religious Freedom in America in 1980, in which he contended that his fight with the Attorney General was solely about the government's circumventing religious freedoms rather than about abuse of public trust or fraudulent misappropriation of tithe funds.

The California Second Court of Appeals overturned the decision on procedural grounds and added as dicta, "We are of the opinion that the underlying action [i.e., the state-imposed receivership] and its attendant provisional remedy of receivership were from the inception constitutionally infirm and predestined to failure."[30]

Stanley Rader left his positions within the church in 1981. While remaining a member, he left the public spotlight as an attorney, retired, but continued to receive payments from the WCG on his lifetime contract, $300,000 per year, until his death from acute pancreatic cancer on July 2, 2002.

Analysis of Armstrongism edit

Walter Martin, in his book The Kingdom of the Cults, (1965) devoted 34 pages to the group, claiming that Armstrong borrowed freely from Seventh-day Adventist, Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormon doctrines.[31] Armstrong said that all Church doctrine could be proven simply and effectively through the Bible.

After Armstrong (1986–2009) edit

Armstrong's death and doctrinal changes edit

On January 16, 1986, Herbert Armstrong died in Pasadena, California. Shortly before his death, on January 7, Armstrong appointed Joseph W. Tkach Sr. to succeed him "... as pastor general, in the difficult times ahead". Joseph W. Tkach took on leadership of the denomination. Tkach and other ministers came to the conclusion that a great many of their doctrines were not biblical.

Changes under new leadership edit

As early as 1988, Joseph W. Tkach Sr. began to make doctrinal changes, at first quietly and slowly, but then openly and radically. The changes were presented as new understandings of Christmas and Easter,[32] Babylon and the harlot,[33] British Israelism,[34] Saturday Sabbath,[35] and other doctrines.

Tkach Sr. directed the church theology towards mainstream evangelical Christian belief, against the wishes of some of the membership. This caused much disillusionment among the membership and another rise of splinter groups. While the church admitted that its changes had brought about "catastrophic results," they stood by their belief that the changes were for the best.[36] During the tenure of Joseph Tkach Sr., the church's membership declined by 80%.

All of Herbert Armstrong's writings were withdrawn from print by the WCG, though they are still made available by other denominations. In the 2004 video production Called To Be Free, former dean of WCG's Ambassador College Greg Albrecht, declared Herbert Armstrong to be both a false prophet and a heretic.[37]

In 1995, Tkach Sr died of cancer and his son, Joseph Tkach Jr., became the leader of the WCG. Tkach, Jr. affirmed his father's reforms within the church, and continued to make changes. As a result, many members and ministers left and formed other churches that conformed to many of the teachings of Armstrong.[citation needed]

In 2009, the WCG changed its name to Grace Communion International.[2] In October 2018, Joe Tkach Jr. retired and installed Greg Williams as the President of GCI.[38]

Contemporary beliefs and practices edit

Teachings edit

Much of GCI's current doctrine follows mainstream Protestant beliefs that faith in Jesus is the only way to receive salvation and that the Bible is the divinely inspired and the infallible word of God.[39]

Women's ordination edit

In 2007, the WCG decided to allow women to serve as pastors and elders.[40] This decision was reached after several years of study.[40] Debby Bailey became the first female elder in the WCG in 2007.[41]

Name change to Grace Communion International edit

According to the organization's press release regarding their name change, the name Grace Communion International was chosen to "precisely describe" the denomination as "an international community, bound together by God's grace.”

The name change was revealed in 2009 during a conference of over a thousand ministers and their spouses that had gathered from around the world. The theme of the conference was “Renewed in Christ” and reflected the importance of the changes that had occurred within the church.  The new name for the church was seen to truly reflect the nature of the church as it had been transformed in past years. GCI felt that these changes had come about by pastors being led by the Holy Spirit with a close examination of scripture.[42]

Grace Communion Seminary edit

Grace Communion Seminary (GCS) originated from Ambassador College. Classes are delivered in an online format. Accredited graduate programs include courses on the Bible, theology, church history, and ministry.[43]

Structure edit

International edit

Grace Communion International has a hierarchical polity. Its ecclesiastical policies are determined by the Advisory Council of Elders. Members of the Advisory Council are appointed by the President. The President, who also holds the title of Pastor General, is chief executive and ecclesiastical officer of the denomination. A Doctrinal Advisory Team may report to the Advisory Council on the church's official doctrinal statements, epistemology, or apologetics. The President may pocket veto doctrinal positions he determines to be heretical. However, the President is also a member of the Doctrinal Advisory Team, and so he is aware of and involved in the activities of that committee.[44] Historically, Presidents, as chairmen of the board of directors, have appointed their own successor. This and the President's power to appoint and remove members of the Advisory Council have remained areas of concern even among those who applaud the church's doctrinal changes.

The Church maintains national offices and satellite offices in multiple countries. Membership and tithe income originate primarily from the eastern United States.

Regional and local edit

In the United States, denominational contact with local assemblies or local church home small group meetings, i.e., cell churches, is facilitated by district superintendents, each of which is responsible for a large number of churches in a geographical region (such as Florida or the Northeast) or in a specialized language group (such as Spanish-speaking congregations).

Local churches are led by a senior pastor, pastoral leadership team (with one person designated as a congregational pastoral leader), each of which is supervised by a district pastoral leader. Some senior pastors are responsible for a single local church, but many are responsible for working in two or more churches. Salary compensation for the paid local church pastor, if available, is determined by the local church.

Finances edit

The early WCG used a three-tithe system, under which members were expected to give a tithe or 10% "of their increase", usually interpreted as a family's income.

  • The first tithe, 10% of a member's total income, was sent to church headquarters to finance "the work", which was all operations of the church, as well as broadcasting and publishing the church's message.
  • The second tithe was saved by the individual member to fund the member's (and his family's) observance of the annual holy days, especially the 8-day-long Feast of Tabernacles. Unlike the first tithe, these funds were not sent into the church but retained by the member.
  • A third tithe was required in the third and sixth years of a personal seven-year tithing cycle, and it was also sent to headquarters. The third tithe was used to support the indigent, widows, and orphans – distribution was decided privately at the discretion of the ministry.

In contrast to many other churches' religious services, the practice of the WCG was not to pass around offering plates during weekly church services but only during holy day church services (seven days each year). These funds were considered "freewill offerings" and regarded as entirely separate from regular tithes. The church also gathered funds in the form of donations from "co-workers," those who read the church's free literature or watched the weekly TV show but did not actually attend services.

Under Joseph W. Tkach Sr., the mandatory nature of the church's three-tithe system was abolished, and it was suggested that tithes could be calculated on net, rather than gross, income. GCI headquarters were subsequently downsized. The denomination sold much of its property, including sites used for festivals, camps built for teenagers, college campuses, and private aircraft.[citation needed] They discontinued publishing all the books, booklets and magazines published by Armstrong.

To further economize, the church sold its properties in Pasadena and purchased an office building in Glendora, California. That building was sold in 2018 and the home office was moved to Charlotte, North Carolina. Formerly, the church's membership – meeting in rented halls on Saturdays such as public school buildings, dance halls, hotels and other venues – sent all tithe donations directly to the denomination. Under the new financial reporting system, local churches typically use the majority of funds locally for ministry, including buying or constructing local church buildings for use by the congregations with around 15% going to the denominational office; depending on how the congregation is affiliated with the denomination.[citation needed]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Roberts, Andrea Suozzo, Ken Schwencke, Mike Tigas, Sisi Wei, Alec Glassford, Brandon (2013-05-09). "Grace Communion International Usa Hq – Nonprofit Explorer". ProPublica. Retrieved 2023-06-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b c d "About Us". Grace Communion, International. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  3. ^ Albright, Mary Ann (2 July 2011), "Cartoonist drawn to sharp views", The Columbian, retrieved 30 June 2016
  4. ^ a b Times, Special to the New York (1986-01-17). "HERBERT ARMSTRONG, 93, DIES; EVANGELIST AND A BROADCASTER". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  5. ^ Tucker, Ruth (1996), "From the Fringe to the Fold", Christianity Today
  6. ^ Mcclain, Dylan Loeb (11 February 2011). "Book Review – Endgame – Bobby Fischer – By Frank Brady". The New York Times.
  7. ^ Prytz, Anna (22 May 2011), "Former Neighbours actor pens cult book", Manningham Leader
  8. ^ "Doctrinal Aftershocks". Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  9. ^ "A Short History of Grace Communion International – Grace Communion International". Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  10. ^ Kellner, Mark A. (16 June 1997). "Worldwide Church of God Joins NAE". Christianity Today.
  11. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (1970). The Plain Truth About Christmas (2nd ed.). USA: Ambassador College.
  12. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (April 1950). "Easter is Pagan!". The Plain Truth. XV (3).
  13. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (May 21, 1979). "How You Dress For Church – Could it keep you out of the Kingdom?". The Worldwide News. VII (10): 1.
  14. ^ Armstrong, Herbert W. (1973). Marriage and Divorce. Pasadena, CA: Ambassador College. pp. 17, 91–92.
  15. ^ a b Armstrong, Herbert W. (1956). 1975 in Prophecy!. Pasadena, CA: Radio Church of God. pp. 7, 10, 14–20, 27–31. Retrieved June 6, 2023.
  16. ^ "1968 Certificate Of Amendment Of Articles Of Incorporation Of Radio Church Of God". The Radio Church of God. The Painful Truth. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  17. ^ a b . Time. 15 May 1972. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  18. ^ God, In dedication to Herbert W. Armstrong by Mark J. Mincy, former member of the Worldwide Church of. "Was Herbert W. Armstrong the Final Elijah?". Retrieved 15 April 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ a b "35 Ministers and Lay People Leave Armstrong Church in Rift". The New York Times. 1974-03-16. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  20. ^ "Religion: Garner Ted Returns". Time. 1972-07-10. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  21. ^ a b "Religion: Trouble in the Empire". Time. 1974-03-04. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  22. ^ "6 EX‐STUDENTS ASSAIL ARMSTRONG'S CHURCH". The New York Times. 1977-11-06. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  23. ^ "Religion: Strong-Arming Garner Ted". Time. 1978-06-19. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  24. ^ Times, Robert Lindsey Special to The New York (1978-07-02). "Church Founder Excommunicates His Son, Garner Ted Armstrong". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  25. ^ Times, Special to the New York (1986-01-17). "HERBERT ARMSTRONG, 93, DIES; EVANGELIST AND A BROADCASTER". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-07.
  26. ^ Flurry, Stephen (October 30, 2006). Raising the Ruins: The Fight to Revive the Legacy of Herbert W. Armstrong. Philadelphia Church of God. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-0-9745507-1-8.
  27. ^ Flurry, pp. 25–26
  28. ^ "First Amendment Center | Freedom Forum Institute" (PDF).
  29. ^ "Stanley Rader on "Sixty Minutes" with Mike Wallace". 60 Minutes. The Painful Truth. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  30. ^ People ex rel. Deukmejian v. Worldwide Church of God, 127 CA3d 547 (Court of Appeals of California, Second Appellate District, Division Two December 9, 1981b).
  31. ^ Tucker, Ruth. "From the Fringe to the Fold". 7/15/1996. Christianity Today. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  32. ^ "A Call for Tolerance on Christmas and Easter". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  33. ^ "Who Is "Babylon"?". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  34. ^ "Anglo-Israelism and the United States & Britain in Prophecy". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  35. ^ "Is Leviticus 23:3 a Command to Have Worship Services on the Weekly Sabbath?". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  36. ^ "Armstrongism". Apologetics. Ankerberg Theological Research Institute. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  37. ^ "Called To Be Free". YouTube. (video, point 61:57) by Living Hope Video Ministries
  38. ^ "Our Leadership". Grace Communion International. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  39. ^ "The GCI Statement of Beliefs". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  40. ^ a b . Religioustolerance.org. Archived from the original on 2006-12-15. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
  41. ^ "News of The Churches of God". Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  42. ^ "What's in a Name?". Grace Communion International. Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  43. ^ "Mission – Grace Communion Seminary". Retrieved 2021-06-07.
  44. ^ "U.S. Church Administration Manuals". Grace Communion International. Worldwide Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.

Sources edit

  • Frank S. Mead, Samuel S. Hill, and Craig D. Atwood, Handbook of Denominations in the United States. Abingdon Press, 2001. ISBN 0-687-06983-1.
  • J. Michael Feazell, The Liberation of the Worldwide Church of God. Zondervan, 2003. ISBN 0-310-25011-0.
  • Gerald Flurry, Malachi's Message to God's Church Today. "A thorough explanation of how and why the Worldwide Church of God rejected Herbert Armstrong's teachings, and how to hold fast to Herbert Armstrong's teachings."
  • Walter Martin, The Kingdom of the Cults. Revised and Updated Edition, Bethany House, 2003. ISBN 0-7642-2821-8. See Appendix A, pp. 471–494.
  • Larry Nichols and George Mather, Discovering the Plain Truth: How the Worldwide Church of God Encountered the Gospel of Grace. InterVarsity Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8308-1969-X
  • Joseph Tkach, Transformed by Truth. Multnomah Publishers, 1997. ISBN 1-57673-181-2
  • Tarling, Lowell R. (1981). "The Armstrong Churches". The Edges of Seventh-day Adventism: A Study of Separatist Groups Emerging from the Seventh-day Adventist Church (1844–1980). Barragga Bay, New South Wales, Bermagui South, NSW: Galilee Publications. pp. 41–62. ISBN 0-9593457-0-1.

External links edit

  • Official website Grace Communion International
  • Statement of beliefs
  • Archive of the Ambassador Report publication published from 1975 through 1999
  • Exit & Support Network – aiding those spiritually abused by Worldwide Church of God and offshoots
  • God's Work NOW Holding fast to the teachings of Herbert W. Armstrong
  • by Greg Albrecht, World Publishing (2004),ISBN 0-529-11954-4
  • The Journal: News of the Churches of God independent non-denominational monthly newspaper
  • Word of His Grace Ministries Support and Biblical Backing for ex-'Armstrong' members
  • "Called to be Free" Documenting how the doctrinal changes in WWCG occurred after Armstrong's death, from the point of view of current WWCG leadership

grace, communion, international, this, article, contains, wording, that, promotes, subject, subjective, manner, without, imparting, real, information, please, remove, replace, such, wording, instead, making, proclamations, about, subject, importance, facts, at. This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information Please remove or replace such wording and instead of making proclamations about a subject s importance use facts and attribution to demonstrate that importance January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Grace Communion International GCI formerly named the Radio Church of God and the Worldwide Church of God is a Christian denomination based in Charlotte North Carolina USA 1 According to the organization s website the denomination has 30 000 members in 550 churches in 70 countries 2 is structured in the episcopal model 2 and is a member of the National Association of Evangelicals 2 Contents 1 Founding 2 Under Herbert W Armstrong 1934 1986 2 1 1970s Scandal and conflict 2 2 Ambassador International Cultural Foundation 2 3 Receivership crisis 2 4 Analysis of Armstrongism 3 After Armstrong 1986 2009 3 1 Armstrong s death and doctrinal changes 3 2 Changes under new leadership 4 Contemporary beliefs and practices 4 1 Teachings 4 2 Women s ordination 4 3 Name change to Grace Communion International 4 4 Grace Communion Seminary 5 Structure 5 1 International 5 2 Regional and local 6 Finances 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksFounding editIn 1934 Herbert W Armstrong a former advertising agent turned radio and televangelist founded the Radio Church of God a radio ministry 3 in Eugene Oregon Armstrong s biography states that he had formerly been ordained in 1931 by the Oregon Conference of the Church of God Seventh Day an Adventist group but split with them in 1933 On January 7 1934 Armstrong began hosting a broadcast on a local 100 watt radio station KORE in Eugene citation needed The program was essentially a condensed church service on the air with hymn singing featured along with Armstrong s message Armstrong later named his program The World Tomorrow perhaps inspired by the theme of the 1939 World s Fair The World of Tomorrow To facilitate the work of the growing church Armstrong incorporated it on March 3 1946 as the Radio Church of God Although his views were rejected by the local congregation he gained a following through his World Tomorrow broadcasts and The Plain Truth magazine citation needed In 1947 Armstrong incorporated his California ministry 4 relocated the church s headquarters to Pasadena California and founded Ambassador College as the denomination s educational arm The broadcast of The World Tomorrow went into Europe on Radio Luxembourg on January 7 1953 In 1968 the movement was renamed the Worldwide Church of God WCG 5 Under Herbert W Armstrong 1934 1986 editMain article Armstrongism The Worldwide Church of God adhered to the teachings of its founder Herbert W Armstrong until his death Armstrong practiced a blend of Christian fundamentalism with some tenets of Judaism and Seventh Day Sabbath doctrine 4 Armstrong preached that Britain and the United States were populated by descendants of two lost tribes of Ancient Israel Armstrong s doctrine included strict observation of the Saturday Sabbath annual festivals and holy days described in Leviticus Chapter 23 the distinction between the flesh of ritually clean and unclean animals listed in Leviticus Chapter 11 6 the forbidding of medical interventions 7 and the required payment of three tithes to the church 8 9 Armstrong rejected what he regarded as pagan practices and beliefs that had been absorbed into mainstream Christianity These included the idea of the holy Trinity 10 and the celebrations of Christmas Easter Halloween and birthdays 11 12 Members were encouraged to follow a dress code during services 13 Armstrong s doctrine strictly opposed divorce and remarriage and encouraged members who had divorced to seek reconciliation with their former spouses even if they had remarried 14 These practices are still observed in several of the Church s remaining branches citation needed Armstrong explained that those called by God who believed the gospel of the Kingdom and received God s Spirit upon full immersion baptism became part of the true biblical Church of God Ministers were obligated to disfellowship any in their congregations who caused trouble or division Such disfellowshipments were announced at services before the assembled congregation citation needed In 1956 Armstrong published 1975 in Prophecy a pamphlet that predicted catastrophic draught famine and epidemic disease in the United States between 1965 and 1972 as well as an upcoming nuclear world war instigated by underground German Nazis the subsequent enslavement of Christians in Europe concluding in the return of Jesus Christ 15 Armstrong predicted that these events would take place for three and a half years and would conclude by 1975 15 Because of Armstrong s emphasis on these prophetic dates the church grew quickly in the late 1960s citation needed On January 5 1968 the church was renamed the Worldwide Church of God 16 By the mid 1950 s Armstrong had his son Garner Ted Armstrong take over as host of the radio and television versions of The World Tomorrow By the late 1960 s Garner Ted was executive vice president of the church vice chancellor of Ambassador College which by then had two more campuses in Texas and the United Kingdom and executive editor of church publications including Tomorrow s World Good News and The Plain Truth 17 Armstrong s first wife Loma died in 1966 1970s Scandal and conflict edit By the early 1970 s the church began to splinter Members were disappointed that the events predicted by Herbert Armstrong had not occurred Because church literature such as The Wonderful World Tomorrow 1975 in Prophecy and many others had attempted to pinpoint the date of Christ s return members continued to wait anxiously for the Second Coming Some of Armstrong s evangelists such as Gerald Waterhouse had presented detailed step by step accounts of the Second Coming in their sermons which included Armstrong himself as one of two witnesses of the Book of Revelation 18 In an article in the May 15 1972 edition of Time magazine Herbert Armstrong was reported to have ousted Garner Ted from his leadership roles in the church on the grounds that Garner Ted was in the bonds of Satan 17 When questioned about the specifics of his accusation the elder Armstrong responded Look up I Timothy Chapter 3 first five or six verses and Titus Chapter 1 verse 6 The article surmised Both passages make two points in common that a bishop or church elder must be faithful to his wife and rule strictly over believing children Had handsome Garner Ted succumbed to an old and common temptation His father was cryptic The fault was spiritual not moral In 1972 the Elder Armstrong declared Garner Ted repentant and named him the divinely ordained successor in the church after the latter signed a letter stating I have sinned against my wife the children and the church though neither specified what Garner Ted s transgression had been 19 While some congregants speculated adultery others guessed that father and son had disagreed on the format of their radio and television programs or on some tenets of the church such as the Elder Armstrong s vocal support for racial segregation 20 By March 1974 multiple ministers had quit or been ousted as dissidents with several citing the church s unfairly lax response to Garner Ted s violations denouncing elements of Armstrong s doctrine and founding offshoot churches Thirty five ministers formed the Associated Church of God in Washington D C 19 Texas Minister Barry Chase sent an open letter to church members signaling his departure citing monumental immorality in the highest echelons of this church 21 Alfred Carozzo former WCG director of ministers in the western US sent an open letter to WCG members denouncing the church s tithe system the Armstrongs lavish lifestyle and expenditures Armstrong s positions on divorce and remarriage and alleging that Armstrong had treated Garner Ted leniently compared to church members accused of similar trespasses Carozzo incorporated his own offshoot the 20th Century Church of God 21 More departures followed some retaining the Church of God component in their names based on Armstrong s assertion that this is the name God calls the Church in the Bible citation needed In 1977 Herbert Armstrong married Ramona Martin a woman nearly fifty years his junior and moved to Tucson Arizona while recovering from a heart attack During this time Armstrong administered and guided church affairs through Stanley Rader the church s general counsel and the church administration citation needed The church continued to be headquartered in Pasadena That year six former students of Ambassador College published a pamphlet alleging that the church misused funds and violated church members civil rights The pamphlet asserted that the church s tithing system reduced members to poverty costing up to 40 of their income to support the Armstrongs lavish lifestyle including multiple homes expensive cars and a gulf stream jet 22 By 1978 Armstrong had disfellowshipped Garner Ted and ousted him from the church permanently 23 24 Garner Ted began his own church in 1978 in Tyler Texas called the Church of God International Herbert and Garner Ted Armstrong remained estranged for the remainder of the elder Armstrong s life 25 About this time the gap between father and son was set when Garner Ted threatened to expose the secret of Herbert s molesting his sister in the later 1930s citation needed Despite the scandals of 1972 the church continued to grow in the 1970s citation needed Armstrong began to preach around the world with the help of some public relations aides and King Leopold of Belgium citation needed He met with many world leaders to whom he would present expensive gifts then preached to them simplistically that there were two ways of life one of giving and the other the way of getting citation needed Ambassador International Cultural Foundation edit During the 1960s Armstrong had sought to put into stronger action what he later termed God s way of give 26 which was said to include the way of character generosity cultural enrichment true education of beautifying the environment and caring for fellow man He began undertaking humanitarian projects in underprivileged locales around the world which led to the creation of the church run Ambassador International Cultural Foundation AICF in 1975 The Foundation worked in several countries providing staffing and funds to fight illiteracy create schools for disabled people set up mobile schools and conduct several archaeological digs at significant biblical sites The church auditorium hosted at highly subsidized ticket prices hundreds of performances by noted artists such as Luciano Pavarotti Vladimir Horowitz Bing Crosby Marcel Marceau and Bob Hope 27 Armstrong used church tithe money to pay for these performances without informing his congregation of how God s holy tithe was being spent Quest periodical was published monthly by AICF from July 1977 to September 1981 Originally named Human Potential the project was directed by Stanley Rader as a secular outreach of the church funded AICF Quest publishers hired a professional staff unrelated to the church to create a high quality publication devoted to the humanities travel and the arts The periodical was created in the aftermath of Armstrong s poorly received 1975 in Prophecy a publication which caused accusations of false prophecy to spread like wildfire The use of the year 1975 was defended by church ministers as a device to explain biblical prophecy by contrasting it with the scientific world s declaration of 1975 as the year of technological Utopia The AICF become secular in its approach and thinking and the church began to cut back on its funding Eventually it was discontinued by Armstrong and its assets were sold to other interests Receivership crisis edit Several members in good standing with the WCG prompted the State of California to investigate charges of malfeasance by Rader and Herbert W Armstrong A coalition of six ex ministers brought accusations of misappropriation of funds against Herbert W Armstrong and Stanley Rader to the Attorney General of California contending that the two men were siphoning millions of dollars for their personal indulgences In 1979 California Attorney General George Deukmejian placed the church campus in Pasadena into financial receivership for a half year 28 The State of California went through the church s records citation needed The matter gained the attention of Mike Wallace who investigated the church in a report for 60 Minutes Wallace alleged that there had been lavish secret expenditures conflict of interest insider deals posh homes and lifestyles in the higher ranks and the heavy involvement of Stanley Rader in financial manipulation citation needed No legal charges were leveled against Herbert W Armstrong Stanley Rader or the WCG Wallace invited Rader to appear on 60 Minutes on April 15 1979 Wallace showed Rader a secret tape recording in which Herbert Armstrong clearly stated to C Wayne Cole who was made temporary acting head of the church by Herbert Armstrong that Rader was attempting to take over the church after Armstrong s death reasoning that the donated tithe money was the incentive and quite a magnet to Stan Rader Rader abruptly ended the interview 29 This tape was made during a conversation about Stanley Rader by Herbert W Armstrong and C Wayne Cole Wayne Cole gave the tape to 60 Minutes for use in its expose of Rader In the meantime Herbert W Armstrong switched the WCG Inc corporations to corporate sole status making him the sole officer and responsible party for the affairs of the corporations All income tithes and checks were then made payable to the personal name of Herbert W Armstrong and sent to his home in Tucson Arizona In referring to the investigation of the California Attorney General Rader wrote Against the Gates of Hell The Threat to Religious Freedom in America in 1980 in which he contended that his fight with the Attorney General was solely about the government s circumventing religious freedoms rather than about abuse of public trust or fraudulent misappropriation of tithe funds The California Second Court of Appeals overturned the decision on procedural grounds and added as dicta We are of the opinion that the underlying action i e the state imposed receivership and its attendant provisional remedy of receivership were from the inception constitutionally infirm and predestined to failure 30 Stanley Rader left his positions within the church in 1981 While remaining a member he left the public spotlight as an attorney retired but continued to receive payments from the WCG on his lifetime contract 300 000 per year until his death from acute pancreatic cancer on July 2 2002 Analysis of Armstrongism edit Walter Martin in his book The Kingdom of the Cults 1965 devoted 34 pages to the group claiming that Armstrong borrowed freely from Seventh day Adventist Jehovah s Witnesses and Mormon doctrines 31 Armstrong said that all Church doctrine could be proven simply and effectively through the Bible After Armstrong 1986 2009 editArmstrong s death and doctrinal changes edit On January 16 1986 Herbert Armstrong died in Pasadena California Shortly before his death on January 7 Armstrong appointed Joseph W Tkach Sr to succeed him as pastor general in the difficult times ahead Joseph W Tkach took on leadership of the denomination Tkach and other ministers came to the conclusion that a great many of their doctrines were not biblical Changes under new leadership edit As early as 1988 Joseph W Tkach Sr began to make doctrinal changes at first quietly and slowly but then openly and radically The changes were presented as new understandings of Christmas and Easter 32 Babylon and the harlot 33 British Israelism 34 Saturday Sabbath 35 and other doctrines Tkach Sr directed the church theology towards mainstream evangelical Christian belief against the wishes of some of the membership This caused much disillusionment among the membership and another rise of splinter groups While the church admitted that its changes had brought about catastrophic results they stood by their belief that the changes were for the best 36 During the tenure of Joseph Tkach Sr the church s membership declined by 80 All of Herbert Armstrong s writings were withdrawn from print by the WCG though they are still made available by other denominations In the 2004 video production Called To Be Free former dean of WCG s Ambassador College Greg Albrecht declared Herbert Armstrong to be both a false prophet and a heretic 37 In 1995 Tkach Sr died of cancer and his son Joseph Tkach Jr became the leader of the WCG Tkach Jr affirmed his father s reforms within the church and continued to make changes As a result many members and ministers left and formed other churches that conformed to many of the teachings of Armstrong citation needed In 2009 the WCG changed its name to Grace Communion International 2 In October 2018 Joe Tkach Jr retired and installed Greg Williams as the President of GCI 38 Contemporary beliefs and practices editTeachings edit Much of GCI s current doctrine follows mainstream Protestant beliefs that faith in Jesus is the only way to receive salvation and that the Bible is the divinely inspired and the infallible word of God 39 Women s ordination edit In 2007 the WCG decided to allow women to serve as pastors and elders 40 This decision was reached after several years of study 40 Debby Bailey became the first female elder in the WCG in 2007 41 Name change to Grace Communion International edit According to the organization s press release regarding their name change the name Grace Communion International was chosen to precisely describe the denomination as an international community bound together by God s grace The name change was revealed in 2009 during a conference of over a thousand ministers and their spouses that had gathered from around the world The theme of the conference was Renewed in Christ and reflected the importance of the changes that had occurred within the church The new name for the church was seen to truly reflect the nature of the church as it had been transformed in past years GCI felt that these changes had come about by pastors being led by the Holy Spirit with a close examination of scripture 42 Grace Communion Seminary edit Grace Communion Seminary GCS originated from Ambassador College Classes are delivered in an online format Accredited graduate programs include courses on the Bible theology church history and ministry 43 Structure editInternational edit Grace Communion International has a hierarchical polity Its ecclesiastical policies are determined by the Advisory Council of Elders Members of the Advisory Council are appointed by the President The President who also holds the title of Pastor General is chief executive and ecclesiastical officer of the denomination A Doctrinal Advisory Team may report to the Advisory Council on the church s official doctrinal statements epistemology or apologetics The President may pocket veto doctrinal positions he determines to be heretical However the President is also a member of the Doctrinal Advisory Team and so he is aware of and involved in the activities of that committee 44 Historically Presidents as chairmen of the board of directors have appointed their own successor This and the President s power to appoint and remove members of the Advisory Council have remained areas of concern even among those who applaud the church s doctrinal changes The Church maintains national offices and satellite offices in multiple countries Membership and tithe income originate primarily from the eastern United States Regional and local edit In the United States denominational contact with local assemblies or local church home small group meetings i e cell churches is facilitated by district superintendents each of which is responsible for a large number of churches in a geographical region such as Florida or the Northeast or in a specialized language group such as Spanish speaking congregations Local churches are led by a senior pastor pastoral leadership team with one person designated as a congregational pastoral leader each of which is supervised by a district pastoral leader Some senior pastors are responsible for a single local church but many are responsible for working in two or more churches Salary compensation for the paid local church pastor if available is determined by the local church Finances editThe early WCG used a three tithe system under which members were expected to give a tithe or 10 of their increase usually interpreted as a family s income The first tithe 10 of a member s total income was sent to church headquarters to finance the work which was all operations of the church as well as broadcasting and publishing the church s message The second tithe was saved by the individual member to fund the member s and his family s observance of the annual holy days especially the 8 day long Feast of Tabernacles Unlike the first tithe these funds were not sent into the church but retained by the member A third tithe was required in the third and sixth years of a personal seven year tithing cycle and it was also sent to headquarters The third tithe was used to support the indigent widows and orphans distribution was decided privately at the discretion of the ministry In contrast to many other churches religious services the practice of the WCG was not to pass around offering plates during weekly church services but only during holy day church services seven days each year These funds were considered freewill offerings and regarded as entirely separate from regular tithes The church also gathered funds in the form of donations from co workers those who read the church s free literature or watched the weekly TV show but did not actually attend services Under Joseph W Tkach Sr the mandatory nature of the church s three tithe system was abolished and it was suggested that tithes could be calculated on net rather than gross income GCI headquarters were subsequently downsized The denomination sold much of its property including sites used for festivals camps built for teenagers college campuses and private aircraft citation needed They discontinued publishing all the books booklets and magazines published by Armstrong To further economize the church sold its properties in Pasadena and purchased an office building in Glendora California That building was sold in 2018 and the home office was moved to Charlotte North Carolina Formerly the church s membership meeting in rented halls on Saturdays such as public school buildings dance halls hotels and other venues sent all tithe donations directly to the denomination Under the new financial reporting system local churches typically use the majority of funds locally for ministry including buying or constructing local church buildings for use by the congregations with around 15 going to the denominational office depending on how the congregation is affiliated with the denomination citation needed References editCitations edit Roberts Andrea Suozzo Ken Schwencke Mike Tigas Sisi Wei Alec Glassford Brandon 2013 05 09 Grace Communion International Usa Hq Nonprofit Explorer ProPublica Retrieved 2023 06 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b c d About Us Grace Communion International Retrieved 2021 06 07 Albright Mary Ann 2 July 2011 Cartoonist drawn to sharp views The Columbian retrieved 30 June 2016 a b Times Special to the New York 1986 01 17 HERBERT ARMSTRONG 93 DIES EVANGELIST AND A BROADCASTER The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Tucker Ruth 1996 From the Fringe to the Fold Christianity Today Mcclain Dylan Loeb 11 February 2011 Book Review Endgame Bobby Fischer By Frank Brady The New York Times Prytz Anna 22 May 2011 Former Neighbours actor pens cult book Manningham Leader Doctrinal Aftershocks Retrieved 15 April 2017 A Short History of Grace Communion International Grace Communion International Retrieved 15 April 2017 Kellner Mark A 16 June 1997 Worldwide Church of God Joins NAE Christianity Today Armstrong Herbert W 1970 The Plain Truth About Christmas 2nd ed USA Ambassador College Armstrong Herbert W April 1950 Easter is Pagan The Plain Truth XV 3 Armstrong Herbert W May 21 1979 How You Dress For Church Could it keep you out of the Kingdom The Worldwide News VII 10 1 Armstrong Herbert W 1973 Marriage and Divorce Pasadena CA Ambassador College pp 17 91 92 a b Armstrong Herbert W 1956 1975 in Prophecy Pasadena CA Radio Church of God pp 7 10 14 20 27 31 Retrieved June 6 2023 1968 Certificate Of Amendment Of Articles Of Incorporation Of Radio Church Of God The Radio Church of God The Painful Truth Retrieved 15 September 2012 a b Religion Garner Ted Armstrong Where Are You Time 15 May 1972 Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved 15 September 2012 God In dedication to Herbert W Armstrong by Mark J Mincy former member of the Worldwide Church of Was Herbert W Armstrong the Final Elijah Retrieved 15 April 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b 35 Ministers and Lay People Leave Armstrong Church in Rift The New York Times 1974 03 16 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 06 07 Religion Garner Ted Returns Time 1972 07 10 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2023 06 07 a b Religion Trouble in the Empire Time 1974 03 04 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2023 06 07 6 EX STUDENTS ASSAIL ARMSTRONG S CHURCH The New York Times 1977 11 06 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 06 07 Religion Strong Arming Garner Ted Time 1978 06 19 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2023 06 07 Times Robert Lindsey Special to The New York 1978 07 02 Church Founder Excommunicates His Son Garner Ted Armstrong The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 06 07 Times Special to the New York 1986 01 17 HERBERT ARMSTRONG 93 DIES EVANGELIST AND A BROADCASTER The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 06 07 Flurry Stephen October 30 2006 Raising the Ruins The Fight to Revive the Legacy of Herbert W Armstrong Philadelphia Church of God pp 23 24 ISBN 978 0 9745507 1 8 Flurry pp 25 26 First Amendment Center Freedom Forum Institute PDF Stanley Rader on Sixty Minutes with Mike Wallace 60 Minutes The Painful Truth Retrieved 15 September 2012 People ex rel Deukmejian v Worldwide Church of God 127 CA3d 547 Court of Appeals of California Second Appellate District Division Two December 9 1981b Tucker Ruth From the Fringe to the Fold 7 15 1996 Christianity Today Retrieved 15 September 2012 A Call for Tolerance on Christmas and Easter Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 Who Is Babylon Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 Anglo Israelism and the United States amp Britain in Prophecy Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 Is Leviticus 23 3 a Command to Have Worship Services on the Weekly Sabbath Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 Armstrongism Apologetics Ankerberg Theological Research Institute Retrieved 1 September 2012 Called To Be Free YouTube video point 61 57 by Living Hope Video Ministries Our Leadership Grace Communion International Retrieved 2021 06 07 The GCI Statement of Beliefs Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 a b When churches started to ordain women Religioustolerance org Archived from the original on 2006 12 15 Retrieved 2010 11 19 News of The Churches of God Retrieved 15 April 2017 What s in a Name Grace Communion International Retrieved 2021 06 07 Mission Grace Communion Seminary Retrieved 2021 06 07 U S Church Administration Manuals Grace Communion International Worldwide Church of God Retrieved 15 September 2012 Sources edit Frank S Mead Samuel S Hill and Craig D Atwood Handbook of Denominations in the United States Abingdon Press 2001 ISBN 0 687 06983 1 J Michael Feazell The Liberation of the Worldwide Church of God Zondervan 2003 ISBN 0 310 25011 0 Gerald Flurry Malachi s Message to God s Church Today A thorough explanation of how and why the Worldwide Church of God rejected Herbert Armstrong s teachings and how to hold fast to Herbert Armstrong s teachings Walter Martin The Kingdom of the Cults Revised and Updated Edition Bethany House 2003 ISBN 0 7642 2821 8 See Appendix A pp 471 494 Larry Nichols and George Mather Discovering the Plain Truth How the Worldwide Church of God Encountered the Gospel of Grace InterVarsity Press 1998 ISBN 0 8308 1969 X Joseph Tkach Transformed by Truth Multnomah Publishers 1997 ISBN 1 57673 181 2 https web archive org web 20080411223415 http etext lib virginia edu relmove nrms philcog html Tarling Lowell R 1981 The Armstrong Churches The Edges of Seventh day Adventism A Study of Separatist Groups Emerging from the Seventh day Adventist Church 1844 1980 Barragga Bay New South Wales Bermagui South NSW Galilee Publications pp 41 62 ISBN 0 9593457 0 1 External links editOfficial website Grace Communion International Statement of beliefs Archive of the Ambassador Report publication published from 1975 through 1999 Exit amp Support Network aiding those spiritually abused by Worldwide Church of God and offshoots God s Work NOW Holding fast to the teachings of Herbert W Armstrong Bad News Religion The Virus That Attacks God s Grace by Greg Albrecht World Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 529 11954 4 The Journal News of the Churches of God independent non denominational monthly newspaper Word of His Grace Ministries Support and Biblical Backing for ex Armstrong members Called to be Free Documenting how the doctrinal changes in WWCG occurred after Armstrong s death from the point of view of current WWCG leadership Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grace Communion International amp oldid 1172625456 Ambassador International Cultural Foundation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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