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'''Ambassador International Cultural Foundation (AICF)''' was founded by ], although it was mainly the product of his attorney ]. AICF was created to find a new direction for the ] following the failed prophecies of the church and sex scandals involving ]. | |||
==Brief history== | |||
'''Ambassador International Cultural Foundation (AICF)''' began life in the wake of two concurrent crisises for the ]: the failure of prophecies of the booklet ] (written by ] and illustrated by ], published 1956) to come to pass in a timely manner, and the revelations of sex scandals involving ]. | |||
===Cultural achievements=== | |||
AICF recast Herbert W. Armstrong as the ''Ambassador for World Peace without portfolio'' and instead of representing himself as an "American evangelist", he was now portrayed as a diplomat with a quasi-] message that had in reality been born as the headline of a ] magazine editorial headline called "A Great Unseen Hand from Someplace". The AICF concept of "God" as delivered by Herbert W. Armstrong, was as this "Great Unseen Hand" who taught two ways of life: ''the way of giving'' versus ''the way of getting''. Herbert W. Armstrong was repackaged as the giver who delivered expensive art works as gifts to kings, queens, presidents, prime ministers and other notable persons, in order for him to deliver this new message from the "Great Unseen Hand". | |||
Some of the cultural gifts bestowed by AICF included the funding of the ]-winning controversial movie '''Paper Moon''' (] won ''Best Supporting Actress''); the acclaimed concert series at ] (which was hailed as the ''Carnegie Hall of the West'') and located on the campus of ] in ], ] and the slick ], which was supported by paid subscriptions and advertising and which shared editorial offices with the AICF '''Everest House''' book publishing company at 1133 Avenue of the Americas in ]. | |||
===Clash of cultures=== | |||
The motto of the Ambassador Colleges which had been founded by the Worldwide Church of God, was "''Recapturing True Values''", but '''Paper Moon''' was stressed a message of how to rear a child as a confidence trickster; the Ambassador Auditorium was being used to promote a secular culture that the church often denounced, and ''Quest'' magazine featured values based upon wealth and secularism. | |||
In addition, while Herbert W. Armstrong tried to portray his visits around the world in the company of the many famous people, they were the very sort of people that he had denounced as an evangelist. His message was so watered down from any connection with ] that it had more in keeping with a ] message of peace than anything else. In the end this clash of cultures caused more rifts within the church to the point that its growing defections meant that the church could no longer afford to finance the lavish and ambitious plans of the AICF. One by one these activities were curtailed until the AICF itself ceased functioning. | |||
Stanley Rader who had created the Ambassador International Cultural Foundation, eventually retired with a "''golden handshake''" from the Worldwide Church of God. | |||
==External Sources== | |||
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Latest revision as of 22:20, 19 November 2016
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