Evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong Dies

by NeonMadman 8 Replies latest social current

  • NeonMadman
    NeonMadman

    This one took me completely by surprise. I've been following the antics of Garner Ted Armstrong since the 1960's. His father, Herbert W. Armstrong, lived to be 93.

    Evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong Dies Item 4437 • Posted: Tue, Sep. 16 2003 • Weblogged by Religion News Blog
    Permalink to this article (Click link to copy to clipboard)



    Associated Press (USA), Sep. 16, 2003
    http://www.foxnews.com

    TYLER, Texas — Evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong, who founded two independent ministries and was once the voice of the religious television program "World Tomorrow," died Monday of complications from pneumonia. He was 73.

    Armstrong died in a Tyler hospital, said his son Mark.

    Armstrong founded the Church of God International in 1978 after his father, Herbert W. Armstrong, founder of the Pasadena, Calif.-based Worldwide Church of God, excommunicated him after a dispute.

    He founded the Garner Ted Armstrong Evangelistic Association in Tyler in 1978, along with the Church of God International. He left the second body after allegations surfaced involving sexual abuse. Armstrong founded the Intercontinental Church of God in 1998.

    Mark Armstrong called the Intercontinental Church of God the "true" religion, with beliefs rooted in the Bible and the Ten Commandments. He said the church sought to eliminate pagan practices that had found their way into modern Christianity.

    "He unapologetically offended more religious people than just about anybody in the history of radio and television. But when he offended them enough, they would go to their Bibles to find the truth," Armstrong said in an interview Monday night with The Associated Press.

    Armstrong's work on the weekly "World Tomorrow" began in the late 1950s. The show was seen by millions of Americans on television, while the radio show was broadcast in five languages worldwide on more than 300 stations.

    After he left "World Tomorrow," Armstrong continued work on a TV program bearing his name.
    Armstrong is survived by his wife, three sons and five grandchildren.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Please refrain from shooting your guns in the air for at least 1 hour. Thank you.

  • ozziepost
    ozziepost

    "And another one bites the dust, yeah,

    Another one bites,

    and another one bites,

    and another one bites the dust."

    Remember that song? It went through my mind as I read this news!

    If only it were so simple to be rid of cults.

    Ozzie

  • Singing Man
    Singing Man

    I always loved this guy, he is the one that got me thinking more than the witness's ever did. I would stay up late just to listion to him when I was about 16. he had a way of describeing the "world tomorow" better and in such a way that it made chills on my back. Long live the brim stone preachers, and those who dare to say what they feel. God bless yeh Garner Ted...

  • Englishman
    Englishman

    Ahem..erm, Singing Man:

    I thought that your posting style seemed similar to Pepper's.

    Here's Pepper's IP number: IP: 3gIBWn23cf0L2Xlc

    Here's yours: IP: 3gIBWn23cf0L2Xlc

    Make up your mind, Matey.

    Englishman.

  • Holey_Cheeses*King_of_the juice.
    Holey_Cheeses*King_of_the juice.

    Englishman,

    It's good that pepper has personality - so he might as well have two too.

    cheeses.

  • Englishman
    Englishman
    It's good that pepper has personality - so he might as well have two too.

    Cheers, Cheeses!

    Umm...erm..nope! He hasn't got 2 personalities.

    He's actually got 3.

    There's "Skanky" too..

    Englishman.

  • NeonMadman
    NeonMadman
    I always loved this guy, he is the one that got me thinking more than the witness's ever did. I would stay up late just to listion to him when I was about 16.

    Same here. I started listening to GTA on The World Tomorrow as a teenager, and I always enjoyed his style, even when I was a JW. He did have a way of making his point, even though his point was often a long way from what the Bible actually said. It was fun watching his hijinks over the years, too - getting thrown out of one church after another, and starting yet one more.

    I don't consider him to have been a minister of God; his teachings and lifestyle were quite un-biblical. He was a cult leader. But as cult leaders go, I guess he was my favorite.

  • Big Tex
    Big Tex

    I remember Garner Ted. I can still remember his TV show and the tone and timbre of his voice. I used to run across Worldwide Church of God followers out in service. That was a hoot.

    Now was it Garner Ted or Herbert that stole some JW teachings? I used to know stuff like that, but I just can't remember now. Didn't they have some Society symbol on their magazines?

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