FINAL WARNING: A History of the New World Order

(Dana P.) #1

FINAL WARNING: Setting the Stage for Destruction


The largest U.S. Church donors to the WCC had been the Presbyterian
Church (USA), United Methodist, Disciples of Christ, Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America, United Church of Christ, Episcopal, and
the American Baptist Churches.

Other ecumenical organizations are: National Association of
Evangelicals (1950), and its parent organization, the World Evangelical
Fellowship (1951); the American Council of Churches (1941), and its
parent organization, the International Council of Christian Churches
(1948).

The National Council of Churches

The National Council of Churches of Christ in America (NCC), the
American subsidiary of the WCC, is an interdenominational group
founded on November 29, 1950, after fourteen interdenominational
organizations merged. Actually, it was just a reorganization of the pro-
communist Federal Council of Churches (FCC), that was founded in
1908 (consisting of 31 major American denominations) by Dr. Walter
Rauschenbusch (a Baptist, and the leading spokesman of socialist
Christianity, who called for “a new order that would rest on Christian
principles of equal rights and democratic distribution of economic
power.”) and Dr. Harry F. Ward, a top communist. The founding
document of the National Council of Churches was adopted from
Ward’s “The Social Creed of Churches,” which said that the Church
must stand for “the most equitable division of the product of industry
that can ultimately be devised.” This was a subtle way of advocating
the communistic principle of the confiscation of private property.

In 1927, Rep. Arthur M. Free introduced a resolution in the House that
identified the FCC as a “Communist organization aimed at the
establishment of a state-church...” In 1936, they were identified by the
Office of Naval Intelligence, as being one of the several organizations
which “give aid and comfort to the Communist movement and Party,”
and said they were “one of the most dangerous, subversive
organizations in the country.” Later that year, Admiral William H.
Standley, Chief of Naval Operations, publicly accused the Federal
Council of Churches of collaborating with the Communists. The
Congressional Record (December 9, 1987) quoted from an FBI report
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