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  1. Oct 23, 1996 · (UNDATED) When Dennis Girouard joined the Worldwide Church of God 10 years ago, he accepted many of the doctrines that had caused evangelicals and others to label the denomination a cult.

  2. Authorities in California briefly turned the church over to a receiver following accusations of financial mismanagement, and critics branded it a cult. Joseph Tkach (died 1995), Armstrong’s appointed successor, became head of the Worldwide Church of God following the founder’s death.

  3. 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 ...

  4. Oct 12, 2019 · Haunted is back on Netflix with Season 2 and the episode Cult of Torture is the realest of them all. James Swift and his time in Herbert Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God is truly...

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

  6. In his latest column, international journalist Dan Wooding interviews the leaders of the Worldwide Church of God to get their unique insights on how their church changed from what some considered to be a cult, to find the “pIain truth” of the Gospel and emerge from the “fog” of legalism to a new-found freedom in Christ.

  7. The Worldwide Church of God owes its beginning to Herbert W. Armstrong, who like many cult leaders claims to be the only one capable of correctly interpreting scripture.

  8. Jul 15, 1996 · For most of a half-century, no book on cults was complete without a chapter on the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) and its founder, Herbert W. Armstrong.

  9. Jan 2, 2013 · The Worldwide Church of God was a largely American 20th century Christian sect (or new religious movement: NRM) with heterodox beliefs and practices. It was Sabbatarian, millenarian, British Israelite and legalistic.

  10. magazine.tcu.edu › summer-2024 › worldwide-church-god-cult-podcastLife on the Fringe - TCU Magazine

    Contrary to the stereotype of cult members as uneducated, lonely and desperate people secreted away in a compound, Jenkins viewed her fellow Worldwide Church of God members, for the most part, as normal people hidden in plain sight in the community.

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