Restored Church of God

Restored Church of God
Classification Church of God
Leader David C. Pack
Region International
Headquarters Wadsworth, Ohio
Founder David C. Pack
Origin 1999
Separated from Worldwide Church of God, Global Church of God

The Restored Church of God (RCG) is one of the many churches to form following major doctrinal changes in the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) which was founded by Herbert W. Armstrong. RCG claims to retain the tenets, style, and structure of the earlier WCG before Armstrong's death in 1986. It is one of the Sabbatarian Churches of God that emerged following WCG's major schism in 1995.

Foundation

RCG was formed in May 1999, in the midst of ongoing upheaval in the wake of a departure from WCG's established beliefs. It is based in Wadsworth, Ohio.

RCG's founder and leader is David C. Pack (born 1948). As Pastor General of the Restored Church of God, David C. Pack oversees the operations of the church. He attended Ambassador College and entered WCG's ministry in 1971. Following the 1995 schism in WCG, Pack became a minister in the Global Church of God, but was fired on May 3, 1999, and established his own church. Since then, he has established over 50 congregations, authored more than 20 books, written hundreds of booklets and articles,[1] and appeared on The History Channel.[2] The church attendance is claimed to be in the thousands,[3] but no reliable numbers have been published.

Doctrines

RCG's doctrines are very similar to those of WCG before Armstrong's death, adhering to what critics often refer to as Armstrongism, which includes belief in the impending Apocalypse followed by the millennial reign of Jesus Christ on Earth, along with Old Testament dietary provisions, tithing, observance of seventh-day Sabbath, bans on holidays and festivals with pagan roots like Christmas and Easter and most of Herbert W. Armstrong's other teachings.

The Church also considers birthday celebrations and festivities such as St. Patrick's Day to be against the Bible.

Media projects

RCG's flagship magazine is The Real Truth, of which Pack is editor-in-chief. Pack hosts the program The World to Come. Additionally, Pack has written a two-volume Biography, and a booklet titled Here Is The Restored Church of God, which explains more about his church. RCG's literature and programs are offered free of charge to the public.

Schools and camps

RCG runs Ambassador Center, a two-year institution to train RCG's future ministers and leaders, modeled after WCG's Ambassador College. The church also runs Ambassador Youth Camp, an annual summer camp for its teenagers.

Wadsworth headquarters

RCG started construction on its world headquarters in Wadsworth, Ohio, in 2012, modeled in part on Armstrong's Ambassador College campus in Pasadena, California. The church's plans for the project include a four-level Hall of Administration building; a 450-seat auditorium; an educational training center; a studio; and a mail-processing building.[5] The project broke ground on May 10, 2012,[6] and the administration building officially opened June 21, 2013.[7][8]

See also

References

  1. "Who is David C. Pack?". David C. Pack. The Restored Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  2. Pack, David C. "David C. Pack Appears on the History Channel". RCG. The Restored Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  3. "RCG Fruits — Obvious Fingerprints of God!". David C. Pack. The Restored Church of God. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
  4. "A Look Inside the Restored Church of God". David C. Pack. The Restored Church of God. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  5. Jenkins, Colette M. "Church plans world headquarters in Wadsworth.". Ohio.com. Akron Beacon Journal. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  6. "Restored Church of God holds groundbreaking for new complex". The Post. wadsworthpost.com. Retrieved 15 September 2012.
  7. "Restored Church of God's new world headquarters is open". The Akron Beacon-Journal. ohio.com. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  8. "Restored Church of God opens new headquarters". The Post. Retrieved 8 July 2013.

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