One of the first major Armstrong doctrines to be invalidated by Tkach was that going to doctors was no longer considered a sin. The Church had formerly taught that going to the doctor was a lack of faith.
I. Group Profile
Name: Philadelphia Church of God
Founder: The Philadelphia Church of God is a sectarian
splinter group from Herbert W . Armstrong’s Worldwide
Church of God, founded by Gerald Flurry and John Amos.
Year Founded: The Philadelphia Church of God broke away
from the Worldwide Chruch of God in 1989. The United
States based Philadelphia Church of God was incorporated
on December 20, 1989. Since that time additional
churches have been established internationally.
Armstrong’s Worldwide Church of God was established in
1933.
Sacred or Revered Texts: The Philadelphia
Church of God looks to the Bible for all guidance and
believes that it is the full word of God. Although the
doctrinal founder, Herbert W . Armstrong published a
great deal of works that interpreted the Bible.
Armstrong’s last work, Mystery of the Ages, was his most
celebrated. In Gerald Flurry’s words:
“[it] was like
the magnificent SUMMARY OF ALL Mr. Armstrong’s work– THE
ACCUMULATED KNOWLEDGE OF HIS ENTIRE MINISTRY . This
book, more than any other piece of literature, was what
Mr. Armstrong and God’s Work were about during the
Philadelphia era.” In addition, the Armstrong empire
published many pamphlets, Bible lessons and letters.
These writings were used to supplement the Bible in that
they provide Armstrong’s own interpretations and
inspiration for the church.
About the PCG
Gerald Ray Flurry, a former WCG minister, leads
the most extreme of the major Armstrong splinter groups.
A spiritual autocrat who claims an angelic vision to
validate his authority, Flurry’s Philadelphia Church of
God is reportedly run with the rigor of a spiritual
concentration camp. Despite this – or perhaps because of
it – the Flurry cult has grown. In 2001 it reportedly
had around 6000 people in attendance on any given
Sabbath. Claiming to be the “Only True Church”, the PCG
resembles Armstrongism in the 1950’s and sixties. The
sect’s main mission appears to be republishing Herbert W
. Armstrong’s material, particularly Mystery of the
Ages, over which it was enmeshed in a legal battle with
the Worldwide Church of God, which held the copyright.
There is a high price to belonging to the PCG. Members
practice a strict tithing regimen, avoid medical
treatment, and must declare fealty to their spiritual
master, Herbert W . Armstrong (Elijah), as mediated to
them through Gerry (Elisha). Flurry has gone as far as
describing himself as Christ “in the flesh.” His book
“Malachi’s Message” is regarded as near-scripture, the
prophesied “little book” of Revelation. Attendance at
PCG services is by invitation only. PCG members are
forbidden to read anything sourced from other Armstrong
sects.
The PCG has created a “headquarters campus” in
Edmond, Oklahoma. This includes an unaccredited
educational institution, Imperial College, modeled on
the now defunct Ambassador College. Flurry’s son,
Stephen, widely regarded as monumentally under-qualified
for the task, has been appointed chancellor by his
father.
But all is not well in God’s Philadelphian
Work. The PCG has been smitten with a spate of
defections, and the Great Helmsman has been apprehended
by local police officers, drunk and disoriented. At the
end of 2002 numbers were believed to be in decline, and
the sect’s Key of David television show was removed from
most television outlets with the exception of WGN,
ostensibly so the PCG could fund further legal moves in
their quest to distribute HWA material.
Generous Gerry
My father was one of
the 12 charter members of PCG when it was founded, and
gave Gerald Flurry his VW van when WCG took back his
company car, leaving him without transportation. For the
last eight years Vyron Wilkins served as a minister in
PCG, pastoring the Lawton OK. church, and was also a
senior editor of the Philadelphia Trumpet. He took no
pay during that time, and in fact paid tithes to PCG on
his retirement income.
On September 28, 2001, at the
age of 71, he died of heart failure. During the two and
a half days he was in the VA hospital in Oklahoma City,
no PCG minister, and only one PCG member (other than family) visited him in the hospital. The VA
hospital is less than 20 miles from “headquarters” in
Edmond OK.
During his tenure at PCG, Stephen Flurry
was named as the editor of the Trumpet. My father
continued with the actual editing, and as Stephen Flurry
could not open email attachments or operate a fax
machine, he would demand that this elderly man with a
heart condition drive the hard copies of edited articles
from Norman, OK. to Edmond OK., a distance of some 45
miles each way. Often, this drive was made as late as
midnight on Sunday nights. This caused additional strain
on a dangerously weak heart. When my father was
discharged from the military in 1978, he was found to be
100% disabled. His condition only worsened after that.
All of this was done by Vyron Wilkins for no pay.
Presumably, Stephen Flurry was paid for his efforts
though. There is no explanation why Stephen Flurry could
not have made the drive to retrieve the edited articles,
other than the obvious one, that is. The callousness and
arrogance of doing this to an elderly man on a regular
basis, gives a pretty clear picture of the Flurry family
values. Less than a week after my father’s death, PCG
informed my mother that she is not eligible for any sort
of widow’s benefits from their church, either as an
indigent widow, or as the widow of a minister. I had
approached Barbara Flurry at the funeral (she stopped
by, and did not stay for the service), and advised her
that I expected a pension to be offered to my mother, as
she is 71, in poor health, and has only the widows benefit
left from my father’s military pension. Barbara
explicitly assured me that they would be giving her a
pension, and that it had been promised to her already,
the weekend after my father died. Less than three days
later, Barbara called and told my mother that she wasn’t
eligible, and that my father wouldn’t have wanted her to
take a pension anyway. Presumably PCG still collects
third tithe for widows and the indigent, however it
appears that their practice is to talk those same widows
out of taking those funds. That this was done to a widow
less than a week after her husband’s death is appalling
even by secular standards.
The fact that they do this
while building Imperial College is breathtaking in its
audacity. They don’t have funds to take care of long
time faithful members who have fallen on hard times, but
they do have money to build a self aggrandizing college
for Stephen Flurry (of the limited education) to become
dean. At the very least, I would urge all members to
withhold third tithe until a full accounting has been
made by PCG of where those funds are really going.
-Sharon Wilkins
Shades of David Koresh?
A former
PCG member posted this December 2001.
I think of all the people commanded to go to the
minister’s house to x his roof, x his car, till his
garden, mow his lawn, the list is endless, and the
little widows in the church couldn’t get help from those
deacons who were too busy sucking their way up the
ladder to deal with the little people anymore,
especially the ones who had already given every dime to
the church…
I wasn’t in the WCG for very long before
I was lured away into the PCG… I think there may be a
good possibility that Flurry will self-destruct and take
a lot of people with him. I think, with as much absolute
certainty as I ever could have, that he will use that
compound/college for something awful. Another
Waco/Jonestown thing. I’ve thought that could happen,
since I first heard that the location was chosen because
they could enlarge an existing lake to supply water in
case of an emergency, since I first heard that they were
building a swimming pool to also be used as an emergency
water supply, since I first heard they were installing
their own elaborate sewage treatment facility, since I
first heard they thought the land could hold 7000 people
temporarily when the government/army comes after them,
since I first heard the land had an existing airstrip to
make it easier to leave when they are being chased by
the army, since I first heard they suspected people of
infiltrating as spies. This site was not chosen as a
lovely spot for a college, it was chosen to be an
out-of-the-way base of operations during a time of
siege.
At the current headquarters location in town,
the association that runs the whole complex of buildings
has been “given” many landscaping improvements at
negligible cost, because Flurry will get his followers
to do incredible amounts of work, unpaid. The men
assigned to such chores are doing it after hours, after
their own days of full-time work, all days on Sundays,
whatever it takes, even to neglecting their own homes.
Even in our local area, the men who are summoned to work
at the minister’s home, they do it at HIS convenience,
not their own.
Gerry is Christ “In the Flesh”
Excerpts from a posting on a PCG forum
… we were told
by Mr. Flurry, and later by S. Flurry, that this phrase
“in the flesh” refers to the single fleshly manifestation of
Christ on earth – a man heading the govt. of God on
earth. Mr. Flurry is the fulfillment of this now as he is
the only man through whom Christ is working…
Mr.
Flurry explained that the Last Hour doesn’t start until
“The Anti-Christ” is revealed. In the sermon, we were
told that anyone who does not recognize Mr. Flurry as
the single and only “Christ in the flesh” person at this
time, is one of many antichrists, or of the spirit of
anti-christ. (Laodiceans included.) It is “anti-Christ”
if one doesn’t admit that God directly leads the church
(through Mr. Flurry and only Mr. Flurry). “Antichrist is
anti one man govt. Anti Christ is anti- the revelations
through Mr. Armstrong. Especially Mystery of the Ages.”
Mr. Flurry then distinguished the many antichrists from “That Antichrist” of 1 John
2:18. He stated that since Mr. Tkach is against Mystery
of the Ages, he is “The Antichrist” – the single one
that we look for to identify the commencement of the
“Last Hour”.
It seems that the answer to all marital
problems is to re-read articles on leadership and
submission in marriage, and the old. D&R articles, that
were declared erroneous by Mr. Armstrong. When I
attempted to apply this in my marriage it just got
worse…
The official teaching by the WCG as well as the
PCG that use of the medical profession is a personal
decision, was developed in order to protect the church
from liability and to protect the public image… In fact
use of the medical profession is very strongly
discouraged, and based on Mr. Thompson¹s most recent
sermon on the subject, is a sin, can lead to eternal
death, and is against the Government of God…
I have
been uncomfortable with Mr. Flurry¹s statements about
the “blacks”. He stated that they would rise up and
riot, burning the cities after the OJ Simpson Trial.
This would be the beginning of Christ¹s “smiting” of
Israel. He taught that the plagues in Revelation could
be interpreted as the burning’s. He restated these fears
of a black uprising after the black man was dragged by a
pickup to his death in Texas. Recently, during the Last
Hour series, he re-stated this teaching that the blacks
are rising up and about to revolt and burn the cities…
I am similarly uncomfortable with the statements, also
repeated during the Last Hour series, about how Israel
should go out and pro-actively attack the Palestinians,
Egyptians, Syrians etc, based on their divine right to
live in the Holy Land. We teach that any attempt at
peace is just a waste of time. The PCG teaches that such
futile efforts toward peace or with the recent formation
of the coalition, reect a loss of pride in our Israel¹s
power and Gods blessing…
The article on Depression in
the “True Education” magazine, stated that drugs should
never be taken. It spoke of depression as a spiritual
condition, not a physical one. It was critical of
professionals who try to help. I was helped by a
professional, after Mr. Campbell said I could see one.
He put me on an “anti-depressant” and it did help me.
Some people are genetically predisposed to certain
conditions and I don¹t think it is wrong to restore the
right balance in the body. The article was not well
researched and was very dangerous in discouraging
professional help of all kinds…
1. Flurry,
Stephen. “Where We Have Been, Where We Are Going.” in
the February 1999 issue of The Philadelphia Trumpet.
Some of this article has been sourced from the
Ambassador Files, available here on the Painful Truth.