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What will life be like after the church wars?
By Brian Knowles

MONROVIA, Calif.--I enjoy movies, or at least I used to. They're not making many of my kind of movies these days. One film that left an indelible impression on me was the original version of On the Beach, starring Fred Astaire, Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner and Anthony Perkins.

The movie centered on a U.S. nuclear submarine that had survived a nuclear exchange that destroyed most of the northern hemisphere. Slowly but surely, radiation drift was killing off the human race.

In a memorable scene the sub docks in San Francisco Harbor. The once-populated streets of San Francisco are devoid of people. Not a soul is seen. A toxic wind blows papers around.

The city is a giant tombstone for a once-vibrant population.

Quite a number of after-the-war films have been made since 1959, when Stanley Kramer directed this adaptation of a Neville Shute novel. The Mad Max series comes to mind.

Then there were Steel Dawn and a few others. In most of these after-the-war scenarios, at least some people survive. They may live underground. Their offspring may have mutated as a result of radiation exposure. The strongest among them cling to power, often functioning as warlords, controlling some vital factor such as water, food or weapons.

A way of viewing the Pod

I sometimes think of the Worldwide Church of God Pod as a miniature after-the-war scenario.

By Pod, I mean all of the churches and individuals that have somehow been spun off the original parent church, which has now incrementally metamorphosed into something quite different from the original.

Even the name is largely gone and will soon change to something else. Systematically, virtually every vestige of the memory of the old WCG is being stamped out of existence. Something new is emerging in its place. The chimeras of the Armstrongs are being relentlessly exorcised from the new ecclesiastical entity.

Meanwhile, the landscape is littered with the bodies of spin-off organizations, home churches, fellowships and individuals who turned out to be casualties of Der Schplit.

More than 300 organizations, small and smaller, have formed, and in some cases deformed, in the wake of the miniwar.

The largest of the small groups are run by ecclesiastical warlords who cling tenaciously to the Armstrongian legacy, having made it their own.

Each Armstrongian group claims to be the true inheritor of the Armstrong mantle: the true Philadelphian "era" of The Church. All others are deemed Laodicean, pagan, false or satanic or worse.

Scattered home groups and smaller congregations under the leadership of disenfranchised maverick pastors seek to find their way amid the blowing dust of ecclesiastical warfare.

Thousands have given up on Christianity altogether. Most have lost confidence in leadership and seek to find their own path to God on the basis of independent study and personal preference. Some have become cynical atheists, agnostics and humanists, as I once had. (I got over it!)

Point is: The Pod landscape is bleak indeed. It is analogous to one of those after-the-war movies. The Journal continues to function as the sole reliable news source for what's going on in the Pod--what's left of it. It is a chronicle of war and its aftermaths. Shepherds have been smitten and sheep scattered. What's a sincere Christian to do?

Strategies for spiritual survival

Let me share with you some things that have helped me negotiate my way through the bleak after-the-war landscape of the Pod.

Pump primed

I could add many more points, but this article has already run overlong. If you do the things listed above, you'll have the pump well primed.

We don't have to see the Pod landscape as bleak, battle-scarred and inhospitable. God is wherever His people are. He is as near to us as the next prayer.

Paul said of God to the Athenian philosophers: "He is not far from each one of us. For in him we live and move and have our being" (Acts 17:27-28).

No matter how divided and subdivided we Christians may have become humanly and organizationally speaking, there is only one Body of Christ. It is the Holy Spirit that makes us a part of it (1 Corinthians 12:13).

As long as we have the Holy Spirit, we are never spiritually alone. The Holy Spirit is God's comforting presence in our lives (John 14:16, 26).

Church leaders and organizations will always have their wars. Christians will always be caught in crossfires of withering rhetoric between ecclesiastical warlords who covet the tithe and the power to control lives.

This is petty. It is spiritual children playing king of the mountain in the sandbox here below.

God and Christ are above all that. If we draw near to God, He will draw near to us (James 4:8), and when we're with Him that's all that really matters.

ŠAssociation for Christian Development
Used with permission.

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