Literally!


The Pentecostal movement; considered to have begun at Azusa Street in Los Angeles but likely had much earlier roots; has been the subject of many research studies due to it's unique beginnings. Below is an excerpt from one such study completed by
David Daniel Kentie in partial fulfillment of his requirements for the degree of Master of Theological Studies at Tyndale Seminary. I don't personally know this individual, but I found his piece very interesting and worth a read.

Kentie titled his thesis "Kingdom Now: A Pentecostal Paradigm of Mission". It's a bit of a heady piece, as every thesis is, but he makes some very good points regarding "literalism" in his writings.  His thesis revolves primarily around those who adhere to "Classical Dispensationalism". Some Pentecostal adherents focus heavily on different dispensations of time, with a heavy emphasis on the end times and rapture. While the ABC does not perfectly fit this model, despite their heavy emphasis on the end times, they do share in many of the doctrines born out of the Pentecostal Movement and Latter Rain Revival movement that followed.

A true "Classical Dispensationalist" believes in the rapture, whereas the ABC teaches "believers" will be taken away for a time "into the wilderness" and will then return to meet Christ in the air, after the tribulation is over. As with all end times teachings, these outlooks are somewhat fluid and have changed over the years. A review of the ABC website shows they currently believe what could only be termed the "anti-rapture", where the  evil are scooped off the earth instead and the righteous remain behind.  A peek through the entire site shows an established doctrine heavy on dispensationalism but, to be fair, the scriptures themselves delineate different periods of dispensational history.

For the purpose of this post, I am strictly focusing on "literalism", not on the end times doctrines espoused by the ABC, or that of "Classical Dispensationalists". From my own perspective Revelation, and the other associated texts, are nebulous at best so I hesitate to make any prophecy or prediction on when the end of mankind will be.  Some who came before me have made various predictions, which then became a moving target as dates passed. The dates left unfulfilled were of necessity pushed forward to another target date. 

For ease of reading I have removed some of the more scholarly segments of text. If one wants to read the entire thesis, without edit, it can be found here: Kingdom Now A Pentecostal Paradigm of Mission The excerpt below is from Chapter 3, Section 2, Subsection 2. 

This strict biblical literalism is the result of an extremely high view of Scripture...They observe Scripture as firmly inerrant, and historically have behaved militantly towards those who oppose their...perspective.129  ...all Scripture, including prophecy, is to be interpreted as plainly written. There is no room for allegory or metaphor.130 Those who oppose this high view of Scripture are often deemed “willfully blind to the plain teaching of the Word of God, and thus apostate.”131  Most perplexing about the extremism present within th(is) brand of biblical literalism is the utter disregard for linguistic context. For instance...Thomas Holdcroft argues that the “words of the Bible should be taken to mean just what the same words would mean in any normal context.”133 A glaring problem presents itself here: what defines the “normal context” of meaning? In terms of Scripture, the words that we receive in English are, in fact, interpretations of more ancient languages, influenced and shaped by those respective cultures and time periods. There is no normal context of meaning that remains constant across a millennia of cultural transition. This is not to say that no Scripture can ever truly be grasped. Certainly one can receive impressions, general concepts, and rudimentary instructions through Scripture, but there is apparent assumption...that they have the “true” and normal interpretation, even when it defies basic historical...principals of contextualization. In other words, (one) cannot come objectively to the text and declare their interpretation of Scripture as the normal and definitive interpretation being themselves products of contextual influence.

129 Thompson, Kingdom Come, 26.130 Bass, Backgrounds to Dispensationalism, 22.
131 Thompson, Kingdom Come, 27.
132 Bass, Backgrounds to Dispensationalism, 22.
133 L. Thomas Holdcroft, Eschatology: A Futurist View (Abbotsford: CeeTec Publishing, 2001), 50.

 

One of the difficulties with literalism is filling in the gaps that occur when we don't have enough information. It is not possible to put pen to paper and tell an entire story so we, as human, tend to paint the rest of the picture in our mind based on our own perspective. This diversity is how God created us, we need to respect that diversity and we must be humble in our understanding of all things. This is where true "reasoning together" plays a role. 

There will always be gaps. When we read a novel, the author hopes the reader can fill in those gaps from the slight nuances in the tone of the character. The scriptures are no different. When we read scripture, we must interpret the meaning best we can, based on the information provided, knowing the information at hand is quite incomplete. We then fill in the gaps with conjecture and reasoning. 

Per ABC teaching, put forward by Gilbert Larson, the earth was created in six human day lengths, with one human day of rest directly after. Thus we have a seven day week but this was not always so. The seven day week was a Babylonish invention in about 700 BCE based on the phases of the moon. The rest of all earth eternity began on the eighth day per the most common Christian teaching. But this is the story of the creation of Earth, not the universe. Prior to the moon and the sun, there was no earth time, just infinity and cosmic motion.

By the time we get to the "end of days" story, Gilbert Larson now teaches each one of God's days are equivalent to one-thousand human years. Creation, per ABC teaching, is based on human days but Revelation is now based on God's days. If God does not change, how then do we go from human days in Genesis to one thousand years per day  in Revelation? Why do we even try to restrict God to human days?  Certainly the geologic and cosmic evidence around us does not point to earth being created in just six human days. We have physical evidence of eons of chaos during the formation of the earth. Time is irrelevant to a God that is infinite, is it not?

When we view Genesis with literalism, based on very incomplete text, we  put God in a box bounded by human time. Time is a construct that helps us manage our days, but God is not restricted by this measurement of time. Every day we witness sunup, sundown but when we  move beyond the bounds of earth there is no sunup and sundown. Just blackness and pinpoints of light on into infinity. God does not see the universe through human eyes, only we do.

We read in Genesis, Adam and Eve were created then had two children, Cain and Abel. If I were to read this in a strictly literal sense, there are now just four people living on earth; Adam, Eve, Cain and Abel. However, when Cain impregnates his wife... 

Wait, Cain had a wife? Where did she come from?  How could Cain find a wife if there was only one female and three males living on earth at this time?  Well, I'll figure that out later. Back to the story. 

Cain's wife gives birth to Enoch in Ge. 4:17, while Cain is away building an entire city to be inhabited by whom? And who were his laborers that helped him build this entire city? At a time when Genesis tells us there were four people on earth. There is a huge gap of time, and knowledge, here in Genesis and the writer, assumed to be Moses, leaves it to us to fill in the blanks best we can. It is likely there was other assumed knowledge during this era, passed down verbally, so the writer just left that part out. 

The scriptures are a great resource handed down for many many centuries, but it is incomplete knowledge. I have heard the position that God intervened and assured the translation between languages was translated perfectly. I find no evidence to support this and , in fact,  languages were developed by God, per scripture, to keep us from communicating perfectly. Languages were intended to create a bit of mayhem so we couldn't try to reach into the heavens again. And even if it were translated perfectly, and literally, we all see the world slightly different in our brain and don't read things alike.

Some time back I purchased a tool made in China. On the outside of the box someone, in China apparently, translated literal Chinese into literal English:.  

What's Cheaper Than It is no as Good as it, what's Better Than It is not as Cheap as it  

I think they were trying to say "this is a good tool at a good price", but if I read that literally it says to me "this is cheap so it's not as good, if you wanted something good it's going to cost you" The tool was cheap and it was a worthless piece of junk.

When you read this text, you may read into it something entirely different than I do. I have no doubt that string of words in Chinese makes perfect sense and they are all correctly spelled English words, but since they are formatted incorrectly for the English speaking mind, they have completely lost their meaning. The ABC has many books which translate Greek to English, assumed perfectly, but these books do not interpret the syntax and flow of the words in sentences so they can never perfectly relate the mind of the author. What seems a perfect translation to us may not be if one has only defined individual words and not the actual concepts being related.

We are all diverse creatures and all have differing perspectives. Per scripture there was once only one language, but God intentionally broke up the languages so we would have difficulty communicating with each other. The goal was to prevent mankind from building a tower to heaven. I doubt the tower of Babel was high enough to actually reach into the heavens so, again, we are left to assume part of the story. This was obviously more than just trying to build a skyscraper. The world has plenty of those now, despite the language barriers, and God has not stopped them from being built. 

Even if we perfectly interpret words in other languages, we still have that huge barrier of cultural definition, syntax, metaphor, analogy and more to overcome. I, in the Northwest of the United States speak English in a much different way than someone speaking English in Boston Massachusetts, Atlanta Georgia or Gloucester Maine. We can communicate, but we have entirely different vernaculars based on our varied locale and culture so we will never communicate perfectly. 

If I were to take a literal view of Revelation there would be painted horses, dragons and mythical beasts roaming the earth at some point. We accept these things in Revelation as figurative, then fail to see other things in the scriptures are also analogous, figurative or metaphoric. From my view, the creation story may be translated figuratively as well, not simply historic. Days perhaps represent large segments of time, rather than a twenty-four hour human day. No one really knows. The story is compressed, into very few words, and is more of an outline than an actual story. There are huge gaps in the timeline, so not a great deal can be taken fully literally.

The ABC, and others who adopt a mostly literalist view of the scriptures, may be missing the cultural and language nuances that go beyond word definition or context. This can affect the true interpretation of the writing and there may have been errors in translation between languages as well. To be literalist is to be adamant, but we lack enough information to be adamant about anything. Below is a list of synonyms for adamancy. Do these terms speak "fruit of the Spirit" or do they say "work of the flesh"? You decide.  

And now for just a little fun with language.  Imagine yourself a non-native speaker as you read this below. I wrote this back in 2008.


CLICHES ARE OLD HAT

Plain speaking has always begged the question; Why must cliché’s wreak havoc on our language? Take it from me, the cliché is no longer what it’s cracked up to be and has simply become old hat. It’s high time we all step up to the plate and put the whole cliché kit and caboodle behind us…now! Trust me on this, if we don’t change, we are all going to pay the piper for the cliché’s overuse.

Most cliché’s are threadbare from overuse anyhow. They do nobody a world of good in getting any single point across. They, plain and simply, have been worked to death. Nearly all fly in the face of reason. I pity the poor soul who speaks a language other than our own and tries to follow these types of thoughts from start to finish. They are often forced to take a powder when those around take umbrage at their being a stickler for the rules of language, then read them the riot act when they don’t understand. What gives with that?

Now mind you, the use of cliché’s is no skin off my nose personally but, in the grand scheme of things, are we not creating a no-win situation when we overuse cliché’s? To put it even more simply; plain speaking grinds to a halt when we interject clichés that ride roughshod over reason. I propose we bring down the curtain on cliché’s, let them rest in peace once and for all. It really is high time we go back to the drawing board and start from scratch on this one.

I have plans to review my own cliché habits with a fine tooth comb and eliminate these pesky devils from my own speech. I think I am well on my way already. Once I am fully successful, the population at large will be able to follow my train of thought in one fell swoop. I’ll find no  more need to explain my ridiculous cliché’s which have been gumming up the works. Undoubtedly my speaking in public will grind to a halt, at first, while I rethink my choice of words, but with fast and furious thought I will simply put my best foot forward and now speak plainly. Yes, from here on in I am putting my foot down on clichés, putting my money where my mouth is, putting my shoulder to the wheel, my nose to the grindstone and ridding myself, once and for all, of the offending cliché.

Oh mind you, I expect my position will not be popular at first. As every schoolboy knows, cliché’s ring hollow and mean not what they say. With all due respect, they have left our language in a shambles. Please forgive me if I sound like I am beating a dead horse but, after all, it is the squeaky wheel that gets the grease. As I stated before, cliché’s are a tough row to hoe for the non-native. To them we sound as if we speak nonsense already. When we begin to use cliché’s they  likely think we have bats in our belfry. At the minimum, they probably think we have heads full of rocks. Sure, it seems simple for us, the native speaker, but it is they, the nonnative speaker, who bears the brunt of interpretation. We may even go full circle in explaining our cliché, but they will still think our brains are on the fritz. I propose from here on out we make sure we have both feet firmly planted on the ground and speak only plainly, without the use of cliché’. Even if our words end up sounding as dull as dishwater, we will have been polite and hit the nail on the head, whenever we speak. It should really be our mission to no longer muddy the waters with our ridiculous cliché’s.

Like it or lump it, the cliché death knell is now tolling. It is just a matter of time and we will be off and running; forging ahead in a new direction of plain speaking. You can mark my words on that. I see a new day dawning for all of us. There is a light at the end of the tunnel. Speaking plain and succinct will be our trump card, our ace in the hole if you will. Finally, the cliché will no longer be our own worst enemy. In the long run, as we change our speech patterns, these clichés will no longer be on the tip of our tongue, waiting to spring the trap on unsuspecting foreigners. It is truly in our own best interest to go whole hog in this new direction…right now! You can bet your bottom dollar the non-native will be eternally grateful, to all of us, when we finally initiate this change. No longer will they think of ways to give us a dose of our own medicine or lead us down the garden path too! It will be a brave new world I tell you.

By now a few are thinking my ideas are not worth a plug nickel. Some perhaps even feel I can’t see beyond the nose on my face and are just trying to make the fur fly. There are probably even those that think I am trying to take all of us to hell in a hand-basket with my crazy ideas. Others will even draw a line in the sand, insist language has always played fast and loose. They'll ask who am I to go off half-cocked, sowing my apples of discord. But let me bend your ear just a minute longer on this subject. I am normally a man of few words, and I may sound like a stuffed shirt right now, but cliché’s simply are meant to string the other person along , while saying absolutely nothing of value. I am not alone in my hue and cry. I am quite certain Noah Webster was a man cut from the same cloth as I. Over the years I have grown to respect Noah and his letter perfect dictionary. This is a man who knew which side his bread was buttered on. I hold forth he is probably spinning in his grave right now the way the cliché has taken our language by storm. Why, if he were alive today he would take up the cudgels and knuckle down to the task of eliminating cliché’s from our speech and writings. Regardless of how much we huff and puff; we would find it impossible to take the wind out of his sails. There would be no resting on our laurels in his company. He was no slouch when it came to the jot and tittle of language perfected. To go against his grain would be to meet your Waterloo and, in no uncertain terms, you would be toast! Don’t even go there!

Let me put in one last parting shot about the use of cliché’s. Perhaps, since I brought it up, I should be the one to pave the way for this change. Perhaps I should dish up a serving of humble pie for myself. After all, I am probably guilty in perhaps some small way of using cliché’s. So, as of right now, I pledge that soon you will see neither hide nor hair of cliché in my speech or writings. I, in fact, entertain high hopes for all of us that we can bear this burden together, in the heat of the day, and once and for all lay the cliché to rest. And I don’t mean maybe. We are all in the same boat here. If we do an about face now, take this slow, and not bite off more than we can chew, I know we can change. I tell you, it will be a grand and glorious day when our dear foreign friends no longer need to beat a retreat at our mixed-up words. Are we up to the challenge? Can we run the gauntlet and run these clichés to ground? Let the chips fall where they may. We can’t let this opportunity slip through our fingers. The time is now to get the show on the road, rout out the cliché from every nook and cranny of our speech and writing. We need no longer let the rest of society lead us by the nose. I urge you to return with me to the fold of cliché free speech. It will be a red letter day for all of us if we can get our act together, this very minute. Let's get on the ball and finally nail this puppy to the wall. Then we can all shout in unison. “Way to go!” 

©May 9, 2008, Scott J Haas

 

I assure you, a non-native speaker, with one hundred dictionaries and thesauruses at hand, could never decipher this mishmash of clichés through interpretation of each individual word. Culture and nuance count. 

 

TO MAIN SITE 

oK,oK,oK

 



On my western fence is a tree considered an invasive species.  I have removed this tree four times. Each time it just grows back. Each time it grows back it sends up even thicker trunks and the branches form an even more chaotic pattern. This tree provides me no shade, it shows no fruit, and it has never produced a single blossom. Yet, it is still a tree, it is still life, and it is still a part of nature. It's just not a useful part of nature. This tree saps the water and nutrients from the soil around it, which then starves the roots of plants more useful to me.  

I once rented a root grinder and ground out the root of that invasive tree deep below the surface. It took  longer to grow back, but soon there was an even thicker set of multiple trunks, and an even greater chaos of green leaves.

I have two other trees near this invasive that provide me shade and keep my house cool. These two trees pull moisture from deep in the soil then expel this moisture out into the air through their leaves, giving comfort to the garden surrounding it. All three trees I mention are of a different variety, but they all have one thing in common. They have roots.

Luke, in his gospel, says Christ spoke of trees which bear both good fruit and bad. Immediately after, He then speaks of digging down deep to lay a solid foundation. The foundation of any tree is its root structure and everything above is just a result of that root. A tree with a solid root is able to stand for a thousand years without attention from any man. What man builds only remains if it is continuously tended to and there is an entire TV show which illustrates what happens to man's creations when they lack the attention of maintenance. Complete decay.

Blessed is the man that trusteth in the LORD, and whose hope the LORD is. For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall not see when heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall cease from yielding fruit.

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For a good tree bringeth not forth corrupt fruit; neither doth a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. For every tree is known by his own fruit. For of thorns men do not gather figs, nor of a bramble bush gather they grapes. A good man out of the good treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that which is evil: for of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaketh.

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“For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.” 

There is only one true tree, an olive tree, and this tree is planted by living waters. If we have been grafted into that one single tree, we are  then nourished by these living waters. It is possible to put one's complete faith in, and be grafted into, a religious movement, rather than into that true olive tree. 

The letter to the Romans juxtaposes the salvation of Israel with the salvation of those who followed after Christ:

But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, although a wild olive shoot, were grafted in among the others and now share in the nourishing root of the olive tree, do not be arrogant toward the branches. If you are, remember it is not you who support the root, but the root that supports you.

When the scripture tells us to “examine ourselves whether we be in the faith” this is exactly what it refers to. We must ask ourselves, "Have we been grafted into that true olive tree, or have we been grafted in elsewhere?" That tree in my yard may put out many chaotic green leaves, and seem alive and fresh, but it is a non-fruitful tree and a burden to all the vegetation surrounding it. Look carefully at where you have been grafted. See if that tree you are attached to provides you with nourishment from living water and bears fruit. Look to see if that tree is perhaps invasive and is drawing it's life from those around it, instead of drawing deep water which nourishes the air with a cooling mist. If the  fruit is not there, it is time to reexamine.

The doctrines of the ABC have been drawn from the teachings of Ramon A Haas, my father. His teachings were derived from other sources, over a period of many years, and this has given the ABC multiple roots. The tap root, the primary root, I will show, sinks directly into the doctrines of William Marion Branham and the “Latter Rain Revival” movement, as formulated and adopted at the Sharon Orphanage in Canada and was then passed along through James A Watt and others. These doctrines of the ABC are partially rooted  in the doctrines of other men, and movements, that came before it's creation. Some of these men and movements that came before were later proven to be formulated for earthly gain, or esteem, and did not grow out of that true olive tree.

Despite my father’s assertion one should not listen to “Christian Radio” he listened in frequently. He, at  times, used premises given by radio preachers to formulate some of his own teachings. I was in the car with him the day he listened to a man teach on “Wells”. He then adapted this into a teaching for the ABC. The same for the “Horns of the Altar” teaching. Both of these teachings were derived from men he listened to on Christian radio. 

Many other teachings in the ABC were derived in this same manner. The “Mystery Babylon” teaching came straight from a booklet produced by an individual associated with the Sharon Orphanage, as well as a teaching by Bill Branham. The Foundation Principles doctrine came straight from the teachings of Derek Prince, James A Watt, and a team of other persons associated with Broadway Tabernacle in Seattle and in Canada. 

Other doctrines had root in the Sharon Orphanage. The men at the Sharon Orphanage were greatly influenced by William Branham at a revival meeting in Vancouver BC. Most of these men, who created these teachings, have passed on now, but there are still many references found online.

There is nothing new under the sun. I take no issue with the fact these teachings were passed from one person to another. This is knowledge, some sound, some not so much, and this is how knowledge is passed between generations. However, the ABC presents these teachings as being indigenous to them alone. They are not. My father drew them from many different sources and one need only Google search “Foundation Truths, Prince” to find the source of just a few of these principal teachings. The “Foundation Truths" teaching can be found in book form, written by Derek Prince, and  easily available for purchase on Amazon for about fifteen dollars. 

Derek Prince was a major influence for James A Watt at Broadway Tabernacle in Seattle. My father then adopted everything James A Watt created, after he was forced out of the Broadway Tabernacle church and started his own church. First on San Juan Island, then at the Wilcrest Apartments in Seattle, later in Snohomish County and beyond. This, after abandoning nearly half of his family.

The scriptures say in every house there are articles that are precious and those that will burn. My father was no exception. He was incorrect in many of the things he spoke. Many of his notions were wood, hay and stubble that would not survive the fire, but there are still some things that can be gleaned from the things he taught.

Humans are born, are given a life, and the scriptures tell us we can be born anew. That is only possible by being grafted into that true olive tree. If we have been grafted into another tree, with a different root, we are not truly born anew.  This is not to say an organization can have no value. We are social creatures. An organization, if it is functioning correctly, can build a person up and fill the air with life. If it is not functioning correctly, it tears down and, like my chaotic tree, saps life from the plants around it instead of gives.  It is possible to find good fellowship in an organization, but if one grafts themself to that  organization, as the source of their salvation, they are misguided. That organization can never impart life. To find life we must be “grafted in” to that living tree, with a living root which feeds from living waters.

Some point to past abuses of the ABC and say, “we’ve changed now”, "that was then and this is now", "we've grown since then".  I have heard this many times, over many decades, yet the turmoils reappear again and again.  Each time I cut down that invasive tree in my yard, the landscape changes, looks fresh and new, and there is no sign left of the ugliness of that invasive tree. However deep below the surface that root is still active and it will once again push to the surface in a chaotic display of branches and leaves that have no value and are robbing the valuable greenery around it of peace and safety. People can change, people can grow, but institutions and corporate bodies see little change because they are as immovable as stone and not rooted where the living waters flow. Only people, not organizations, can be grafted in.

Early on in the history of the ABC, one of my siblings, also an “elder” in the ABC at the time, watched in horror as the events unfolded in Jonestown on November 18, 1978. This is the day many hundreds died at a religious compound operated by Jim Jones in Guyana.  This event would become known as “The Jonestown Massacre”.  More than nine-hundred individuals either took their own lives that day, by drinking poison Kool-Aid, or were murdered by Jim Jones if they refused to drink. Jim Jones too committed suicide once most others were dead. A tiny handful escaped to tell the story. This is the origin of our expression “drank the Kool-Aid”.

In the aftermath of the Jonestown Massacre, my sibling reviewed the path of the ABC, and that of Jim Jones, the leader of Jonestown, and saw too many parallels to the path the ABC was following. He walked away. This is not to say the ABC is currently a suicide cult intent on moving its members to a commune in the jungle to drink kool-aid. There was never a time in the history I experienced this as an issue. However, I cannot know who will guide the ABC in the future. Given the parallels, under new leadership, anything is possible. Just like "The People's Temple", Jones' church, there is a root of being secretive in the ABC as well.

There is actually a dotted line connection between the ABC and Jim Jones. It's a dotted line connection in that there was no direct collaboration between the two during the forming of each church, however they grew on parallel tracks. A solid line connection exists between Jim Jones and William (Bill / Brother) Branham. Both churches sprang from similar doctrines laid down by Branham and the "Latter Rain Revivalists" at Sharon Orphanage. There are other similar connections, but it is not possible to list them all here. I will give resources later that spell out some of those connections.

Branham is a man my dad spoke of often. He had enough respect for him that he placed one of his tapes top of the list in the ABC library. (See Illustration).

One of the stories of Branham told repeatedly was of Branham being able to use "the power of God" to tame a bull.  Rev. Lens Jones in  Australia recounts this same story in 1954:

"One day he was crossing an open field when a ferocious bull rushed him. There was no tree to climb and no fence to get through, for he was in the center of the field. There was no hope but God. He said a strange peace possessed him, and he knew the animal could not hurt him. The bull pawed the ground for a time and then charged him at great speed. There he stood, helpless, in the middle of the field, with a charging bull coming toward him. All that he did was to stand there and quietly say, as the bull got closer and closer, "You can't hurt me, and I don't want to hurt you-now just go over there and lie down." On the bull came, until it was within three feet of him, when it just stopped in its tracks and did exactly as he said. Our minds went back to Daniel in the lion's den.

Branham told many such stories of miracles, always without any witness. Multiple investigations by reporters and even the U.S. Government either disproved these stories or could find no evidence.

There is a great deal of information regarding Branham in books, and on the web. I list below just a few. At the end of this post I will list a few more references but this is still but a small bit of what is available. I encourage the reader to read up on Jim Jones and Branham. This  post is not able to discuss this subject in full detail because, to do so, would run on for hundreds of pages. Identifying the direct link between Branham and my father, and the parallel track between Branham and Jim Jones,  will identify some of the roots that supported the ABC during its initial forming. This is critical information. 

These are two books that give excellent background:

Jim Jones, The Malachi 4 Elijah Prophecy. ISBN 978-1548102630

Preacher behind the White Hoods.  ISBN 978-1735160900

There is also extensive research on Bill Branham, his connection to Sharon Orphanage, and James A Watt on the web at:

 https://william-branham.org/   

This is an enormous site, still a work in progress, and it carries the tale of Branham’s roots all the way back to a man named Frank Sandford. For our purposes, we don’t need to research that far back to get a flavor for the character, and doctrines, of Branham and those who came before and after him. More on that later.

The ABC teaches they have a perfect baptism because my father had a perfect baptism by a Spirit-Filled Believer and this was then the catalyst that began the ABC. This is simply not true. My father was baptized in the late forties, or early to mid fifties, then remained in several mainstream churches for quite a few years teaching a "sinner's prayer / personal savior" salvation. No one knows for certain who  baptized my father, or what doctrine this person taught. No one knows if this was a baptism of Repentance, or one to receive the Holy Spirit. It is only assumed it was correct, per ABC standards, because no one ever questioned him to find out.

I inquired of my father several times on who baptized him. I got several different answers, none definitive, and so, over the years, I repeatedly asked. Most times he would mention a man named "Brother White" who was connected, in some manner, to the Branham inspired Neo-Pentecostal movement which then forged the "Latter Rain Revival" movement at the Sharon Orphanage. James A Watt, from Broadway Tabernacle, a man who would later be a large presence in my dad's life, was a principal player at the Sharon Orphanage. More on that later.

I discovered a man named "Brother Wyatt", in Portland Oregon, who was connected directly to the Branham movement. This may be the person my dad referenced and I may have just heard “White” instead of “Wyatt”. I can't say for certain. 

Wyatt was the pastor of the "Wings of Healing Temple" in Portland Oregon and worked closely with George Hawtin. Hawtin was a man my father knew personally and would call on occasion. Wyatt traveled across the globe, holding revival meetings for Branham, so it is very likely he would have traveled the few hours north from Portland to Tacoma to hold meetings there as well. There are enough connections between my father and this man Wyatt I can reasonably assume he was the man who baptized my father. But, there is no way to know for absolute certain.  

Branham was the inspiration for, but not one of the direct founders of, the Sharon Orphanage. His teachings, in Vancouver BC, inspired a group of men to start this new Pentecostal movement. These men would return to Saskatchewan and begin the “Latter Rain Revival” movement at the Sharon Orphanage. There is more to be said about the beginnings of the Orphanage and this can be found in the books mentioned above.

One of the principal players in the “Latter Rain Revival”, at Sharon Orphanage, was James A Watt. Watt would leave Canada, at the behest of Derek Prince in Seattle, and continue his ministry in Seattle by way of the Broadway Tabernacle church. This church had just been vacated by Prince who went on to start a "tape ministry". My father would join Watt in his efforts at Broadway Tabernacle then later take all of Watt's work to use as his own creation in order to start a new church movement, originally called just "the group", then later named "The Assembly of the Body of Christ".

My father and Watt were close friends and spent a great deal of time together. The ABC adopted, in its entirety, the study method used by Broadway Tabernacle, including the “Daily Reading Card”. Many assumed this was the work of my father, but it can be entirely credited  to James A Watt.

Not long prior to his passing, Watt was still prophesying the Latter Rain Revival would come, beginning first in Canada, then to the US, then to the rest of the world. He passed away before that prophesy was ever fulfilled.  

To verify the doctrine alleging the ABC has a baptism superior to all others, we must track the lineage of my father’s baptism back at least a few steps. We must examine the persons in that lineage. Per ABC standards, it must be proven this person was filled with the Holy Spirit and was baptizing to impart the Holy Spirit in order for this baptism to be considered valid. While I can't be certain Wyatt was the man, I do know for certain the individual was directly connected to the Branham ministry and it was either at a revival in Tacoma or Portland. This was the one common thread anytime I inquired.  Below is an order from the Branham playbook.

Now, we believe in water baptism in the Branham Tabernacle, by immersing in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ, which is the apostolic teaching of the Bible. And may all members of us, or comers to the Branham Tabernacle, who desire such, may at any time (requesting to) be immersed, in the Name of the Lord Jesus. May he consult the pastor; if they have repented, and believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, the pastor will, as soon as possible, even at... then if he can, baptize them immediately. This does bring them into the fellowship of the believers. We believe that by water baptism we are brought into a fellowship. But by the baptism of the Holy Spirit, we are brought into the members, being members of the Body of Jesus Christ, which is all over the world.

I have traced individuals in this lineage back to the 1910’s, but we need only go back as far as a man named Roy E Davis and examine this man's life.  

Roy E. Davis is the man who baptized Bill Branham. This is recorded in the historical record in several places. Per my father’s statements, he was either baptized in Tacoma Washington, or Portland Oregon, after a revival meeting held by Branham. As I say, I asked multiple times but always got different answers. I don't hold that out as subterfuge. Memories can meld multiple events into one and it was many decades earlier he was baptized. 

Here are a couple quotes as shown on the William Branham Historical Research site.

"I am the minister who received Brother Branham into the first Pentecostal assembly he ever frequented. I baptized him and was his pastor for some two years. I also preached his ordination sermon, and signed his ordination certificate, and heard him preach his first sermon."  Rev. Roy E. Davis.

“Well, I remember Dr. Roy Davis, a—a—a personal friend of mine, who baptized me the only time I've ever been baptized. And he said that John was meaning, I remember this in their school, he said, "John knowed that he had never been baptized, himself, so he... Jesus. John suffered Jesus to baptize him." Well, that, I—I different with the—the great doctor there. 20 Not for controversy, but for the sake of Truth I might say this. No, there was two men, the two leaders of the hour, the Messiah and His prophet met in the water. Branham, 63-0721 - He Cares Do You Care?”

Branham held regular meetings in Portland, Seattle and Tacoma in the late forties, as well as into the fifties and sixties. I was born in 1955 and, not long before I entered elementary school, my father attended seminary in Eugene, Oregon.  There were multiple meetings in all three cities conducted by Branham, with Wyatt present, during the mid-fifties so it is very likely they crossed paths. This is also about the same time we became connected to Noti Pentecostal Church. Prior to this, my dad attended a more staid denominational church in Tacoma Washington and worked as a youth pastor. I was very young, so I do not  know the exact details on how we left Tacoma and  became connected to Noti Pentecostal. This church was affiliated with the same faction of Pentecostalism as Branham so this may have been the influence. It was a very small, very rural, church so it is unlikely Branham ever visited personally.

As I mentioned at the beginning of this post, there is a parallel connection between the ABC and the Peoples Temple, founded by Jim Jones. I will illustrate this connection further, but it's important to first  look at the life of Roy E. Davis. It's important to determine if his doctrine, and his baptism, are sound. He is nearly for certain in the direct lineage of baptizers that preceded my father’s baptism. At the very least, those who followed Davis, and adopted his doctrines and theologies, would have baptized by the rules he taught. These rules were passed on to Branham when Davis fell out of favor. Or was arrested.

Roy E. Davis was born in 1890. In 1915 he became a leading founder of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) movement and was considered to be a National Imperial Wizard. He worked as one of their recruiters and  posed as a traveling evangelist. Davis' efforts increased the numbers of KKK members, and also increased their influence in politics and society, by melding the two roles; Wizard of the KKK and Pentecostal evangelist. He did this through an offshoot of the KKK he named  “Knights of the Flaming Sword”. This organization melded his racial hatred with highly emotional religion and by 1959, Davis had become the national leader of the KKK. At the same time he continued to hold Pentecostal revivals. 

I am grossly paraphrasing all of this history. More of this history can be found in Wikipedia, with references notated, or there is a short video here:  https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x87yg3l

Roy E. Davis is the man who baptized Branham, and “ordained” him, in 1929. Those who followed after Branham, or were "saved" at one of his revivals, like my father, were most often baptized by Branham, or a follower of Branham, that same night. In my father's case that may have been Wyatt.

Roy E Davis was not close to being a model citizen. Over the years he was charged with multiple frauds, thefts, forgeries, sex trafficking, cross burning and more. This is all confirmed in court records and he served several long prison sentences for these crimes. There is considerable research on the life of Roy E Davis and it can be conclusively proven his ministry was not in line with the words of Jesus, or a sense of decency or good moral character.

The Neo-Pentecostal religious fire begun by Branham ignited many other smaller "Neo-Pentecostal" fires around the globe. One of the largest was the Sharon Orphanage movement which, in turn, began the “Latter Rain Revival” movement. From there other movements were spawned, then disappeared, such as the Florida Five. Many of these groups, roots deeply embedded in Branhamism and "Latter Rain Revival" doctrines, like the ABC, still exist but take many different forms. Over the years there were multiple splits into factions, doctrines were abandoned, and none follow exactly the words of Branham now. Many, like the ABC, have reduced, cut, or deny the ties to  Branham and the "Latter Rain Revival" roots from which they sprang. Denial aside, the roots of these organizations are, in fact, deeply embedded in “Latter Rain Revival" theology, as well as Branham doctrine. They are just not openly labeled as such.

There is much that could be written about the start of the “Latter Rain Revival” movement at Sharon Orphanage, but that would make this post run quite long. There is a good encapsulation of this history told by James A Watt, one of the original seven present at the beginning, and a link below leads to a taped interview in which he briefly references Branham’s initial inspiration. There is much more to that story than is told in this interview and that information can be found in the book "Preacher behind the White Hoods.  ISBN 978-1735160900".  

Here is the link to that interview. It runs about thirty minutes.

https://lrm1948.blogspot.com/2018/03/jim-watt-recalls-lrms-earliest-history_26.html

Here is a link to a visual representation of the Chronology of the Latter Rain Revival movement:

https://lrm1948.blogspot.com/2014/01/the-chronology-of-latter-rain-revival.html

Below are links to information about just a few of the individuals my father either knew personally or followed after: 

When Jim Jones entered the religious scene, it was Branham who gave him his start. There is no direct connection between the ABC and Jim Jones, however they are connected in parallel because both my dad and Jim Jones were tutored in the same doctrines espoused by Branham in the the forties and fifties. Like many others, my father later abandoned some of the more unusual doctrines of Branham, but then still clung to others. One of the most egregious doctrines my father maintained for most of his life was the “serpent seed” doctrine. This doctrine stated persons descending out of black Africa were not fully human and so could not achieve salvation. My father abandoned this doctrine only after a black man visited a meeting, and asked to be baptized. The usual practice when one asked to be baptized was to immediately find a pool and baptize but, in this case, a meeting was held later to “determine if this man was human and could be baptized”. I was present, David North was present, and a few of the other men were present in San Diego at the Casa Grande. I was vocal in my contention a dark skin color did not indicate a person was "non-human". 

In the ABC, my father did not teach this doctrine using the term “Serpent’s Seed”, as Branham did, but rather referred to black people as “Beasts of the Field”. Not quite human, not quite animal. He was not sure a black man had a soul that could be saved. This "beast of the field" term is one my father picked up from a woman named Vivian  in Paradise California, a Branham Pentecostal follower by church affiliation, and not a member of the ABC.  I am not sure how they crossed paths but I drove my father to her house one weekend, at his request, and stayed the night. She was an excitable woman that sang church songs without a break. In between she spoke in tongues or would become somewhat trance-like as she praised Jesus. There were very few breaks from this continuous "praise". I had spent those years as a child in a "holy roller" Pentecostal church so I was familiar with her mannerisms. When we were at her house, she spoke of various doctrines she espoused. Her analysis of Genesis 2 and 3 is that God created man but he also created "beasts of the field; black man, as animals. This is a doctrine my father quickly adopted once again.  

Most of the players in the “Latter Rain Revival” movement, at the Sharon Orphanage, received their initial inspiration from Branham.  A good accounting of this can be found in the book Preacher behind the White Hoods.  ISBN 978-1735160900”.  

The Sharon Orphanage, Jim Jones, Ramon A Haas and, by extension, the ABC, all have roots in Branhamism and the "Latter Rain Revival" movement. This is never directly acknowledged, and I am not sure the current leadership has ever understood, or researched, these connections enough to know they even exist. I was unaware of these connections since childhood an only discovered them when I was ex-communicated for the last time. I can say for certain, the ABC has no official connection to the current Branham organization, but has many roots in the same theologies and doctrines.

There is a link below that will take you to research the connections between Branham, Jim Jones, the Sharon Orphanage and others. This extensive study was conducted by San Diego State University. The information is lengthy, but the only proof one need look for in this is the connection between Jim Jones and Branham. That connection is undeniable. 

Had circumstances not played out as they did in my father's life, with his adultery, followed by abandoning his family, and in turn losing favor with Jim Watt, Derek Prince, Philadelphia Bible College and others, it is likely his name would also appear in some of this research. For as long as I can remember he was intensely motivated to rise as far as he could in mainstream churches. He had many connections to Branham, the Sharon Orphanage descendants, Demos Shakarian and Full Gospel Businessman's Fellowship, and many other Pentecostal and Assemblies of God teachers, preachers and movements. It was only when he was rejected by these organizations, and was faced with starting his own church if he wanted to continue "in the ministry", did he choose to rent a church building on San Juan Island (shown below), completely isolated from the groups in Seattle he once affiliated with.

 


This church was ultimately not successful. Only afterward, is when he took his church movement mostly underground at the Wilcrest. This is a similar  path Jim Jones followed when his own movement ran into conflict. Here is the link:

https://jonestown.sdsu.edu/?s=Branham

So, back to my original point. The ABC relies on a “pure baptism lineage” to prove they have a better path to salvation than all others. If you look into the life, and doctrines, of the persons my dad followed, prior to the ABC beginnings as “the group”, in the late sixties, at the Wilcrest Apartments, there is no proof this “pure lineage” exists. 

Many, but not all, of the persons associated with the movements my father participated in, or followed, have been proven to be charlatans, liars, thieves, and scoundrels. There were a few who renounced the Branham teachings, and some of the "Latter Rain Revival" doctrines, then moved more toward a ministry built more on faith and tolerance. There can be no question, Branham, Roy E Davis, Jim Jones, and others used their “ministry” as a source of financial gain and power through deliberate deception and trickery. Others were more sincere in their intents.

There is not enough space to discuss these topics completely.  I encourage all readers to question, and examine, all of this evidence for yourself. Determine if you have grafted yourself into the ABC, or any other similar aberrant church, or directly to that true olive tree. If the organization you are involved with has a doctrine stating if one leaves it they are jeopardizing their salvation, this is proof one is grafted to an organization, not to that true olive tree.  A wander through the voluminous data at the links provided will prove what I say here conclusively. 

My thanks to John Andrew Collins for his incredibly extensive research on this subject, all found easily found online, and in his books on Branham and Jim Jones. His research is backed up by copies of letters, newspaper articles and the like. He continues to gather information and his work has allowed me to fill in  a lot of blanks from the time I was a child.

Collins was part of Branham's “The Message” cult since childhood. As an adult, like myself, he began seeing through some of the fallacies and myths. He has spent countless hours poring through newspapers, books, court records and the like to find the truth about Branham and the spiritual arson fires he sparked globally. The ABC is just one of those fires.

Additional resources:

https://freedomofmind.com/group-information-resource/the-message/ 

https://lisedwards.wixsite.com/lishistory/post/brother-branham-a-cult-leader-comes-to-london-on-podcast

https://en.believethesign.com/index.php?title=Roy_Davis_and_the_KKK

http://williambranham.weebly.com/the-chronicles-of-roy-e-davis.html

There are many other books available on this subject at Amazon.