Gentile Ministries. Scholarship: a Lost Cause?

 by Les Aron Gosling, Rebbe (e-mail: info@biblicalresearchinstitute.com.au, of:

Copyright © BRI 1996
All Rights Reserved Worldwide

In view of the fact that some of our BRI's talmidim (students) are great fans of the prophetic writings of Steve Rider, Willard Cantelon and the late, infamous Herbert W. Armstrong (judging from the number of booklets that continue to turn up on our doorstep), we would like to demonstrate briefly the lack of scholarship contained in some of these works.

Cantelon, for one, notes concerning the ancient city of Babylon:

"Of all the cities that should have remained, Babylon should still be in existence...[Yet]...Travellers report that Babylon is totally without habitation even by Bedouins. Some say that superstitions among Arabs prevent them from pitching their tents there, and the soil is such it will not produce suitable pastures for the flocks of the shepherds" (New Money or None? 1979,221).

Similarly, regarding Tyre, he writes:

"When Alexander the Great came, long after Ezekiel had uttered [his prophetic words] he broke down the walls and towers, exactly as predicted, and scraped the rubble into the sea. The rocks on which the city had been built were left so completely bare, the fishermen used the site as a place to spread their nets. It remains this way still today" (220).

Not to be left out, of New Tyre Armstrong wrote,

"Alexander the Great, after demolishing the buildings of New Tyre, demolished this huge sea wall which had reclaimed the lowland space on which the actual city of New Tyre had been built...God turned the ocean upon the city, and the deep waters cover it to this very day. New Tyre has remained from that day to this like the top of a rock!"

Armstrong had claimed on numerous occasions that the existence of God would be disproved were the city of Babylon again to be rebuilt or even inhabited (The Proof of the Bible,38). The present lecturer has in his possession a copy of an early Seventh-day Adventist publication entitled Prophecy Speaks from which much of HWA's booklet seems to be derived. It certainly makes similar claims.

Let us consider the facts about Babylon and Tyre's present situation.

And of Tyre:

Says Willard Cantelon of himself: "In my youth I was absorbed by history" (Money Master of the World, 1976,69). Well, I don't know what history books he read, but they didn't teach him much! It's a pity these "theological masterminds" have spent their time reading what religionists write of history rather than history. Further, Cantelon bores us with this little momento of his sincerity, and his past.

"You have been a student of prophecy for a long time, dad."

"Most of my life."

"Does it ever disturb you when some suggest conflicting things under the name of prophecy?"

"Not too much...When men follow the rules of study, and this is essential...they speak the same thing" (Money Master,100).

Perhaps after perusing our sixteen points concerning Babylon and Tyre, some honest religious historians and theologians (and they must exist, somewhere) will rewrite their tomes or perhaps care to answer each of the sixteen points in detail.