FINAL WARNING: Setting the Stage for Destruction
Conference of Faith and Order, at Lausanne in 1927. Eventually, it
developed into the World Council of Churches (WCC) at Amsterdam
(the Netherlands) on August 23, 1948, when representatives from 147
churches in 44 countries met. The banner over the stage said: “One
World-One Church.”
Six co-Presidents were appointed to run the organization, including an
American, G. Bromley Oxham, who was a 33rd degree Mason, and Vice-
President of a communist-front organization known as the Methodist
Federation for Social Action. In the 1945 book Labor and Tomorrow’s
World, he wrote: “The workers of Russia speak. They say that the
American demand for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness can
never be realized until it is complemented by the universal obligation
to work in a society in which the means of production are owned by
the people, and the fruits of the production go to the people...”
Another co-President, T. C. Chao, was the Dean of Yenching
University’s School of Religion in Peiping (known as the ‘Harvard of
China,’ which was partially funded by the Rockefellers). When the
Communists were taking over China, Chao and his students welcomed
their actions, and he was later given an official position in the Red
Chinese government. Josef L. Hromadka, from Prague
(Czechoslovakia), a founding member of the WCC’s Central
Committee, was a Communist Party member, and said in a January,
1959 speech: “Communism is no embodiment of evil, no ‘murder of
souls’ as some people in the West believe. It is our task to
demonstrate that this view is mistaken. Communism has grown out of
the humanitarian efforts of many philosophers and poets who desired
to create a more just and happy human society.”
According to its members, the WCC is a “fellowship of churches which
confess the Lord Jesus Christ as God and Savior according to the
Scriptures and therefore seek to fulfill together their common calling to
the glory of the One God, Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” However, the
facts seem to point to a much different agenda. The Founding
Assembly of the WCC, at their first meeting in 1948, approved and sent
to its member churches, a report called, The Church and the Disorder
of Society, which said:
“The Christian Church should reject the ideologies of both