Hi Tom,
Right On! Not one to indulge in wagering or cards nevertheless I'll match your 6 points, flush Tim Geftakys' 4 anchors & raise you 4 Spiritual Laws (I was saved through the witnessing of another student at Fullerton college 6 years before the Assembly's mothership ever landed on that campus). I think my broad range of Christian experience helped me to make the break from Brother George unlike those who never had any sense of context apart from their assembly experiences.
Permit me a little elaboration on your 6 points:
1. Yes, there were florescent stars painted on the ceiling of my room. They were there before I moved in. Since the house was originally a heroin distribution center in Garden Grove it's anybody's guess what those stars on the ceiling were all about.
2. Cheryl Allenson (maiden name) was my girlfriend. I recruited her from her home in Brisbane, CA and she wound up marrying one of the assembly's leading brothers. I have no idea of whatever became of her. She was a nice lady but we all moved on.
3. Ken Keneman (sp ?), a Captain with the L.A. fire department, was brought into the house for weekly teaching when another elder, Terry Shepherd, was ordained by the Assembly of God denomination and went to plant churches in Canada. TS was charismatic/ Pentecostal. I was not. I invited KK in to provide sound doctrinal teaching. He favored the old Scofield Bible and a number of the young people were into the Dakes translation (can we politely say "hogwash!?"). Keneman gave a wonderful 2-sides of the coin Biblical teaching on eternal security vs temporal security, predestination vs free will, etc. He was killed in a warehouse firefight and a number of us went to his funeral at a Baptist Church in Garden Grove. As memory serves me that would have been in 1970. This left an opening for a gifted teacher at the House of Christian Love as I was trying to keep the program going seven nights per week. And then one night in walked a smirking student from Fullerton named Tim Geftakys.
4. I find your take on this particularly enlightening and a confirmation of what I heard from others even praying for my death (although not able to be verified). As far as the misappropriating of funds was concerned I can only say 38 years later I have never been confronted, charged or convicted by any court of law or Christian ministry of any legal wrongdoing. That's both a matter of public record and a clear conscience.
You have no need of apologizing or asking for my forgiveness. For a season I believed in Brother George as dearly and as deeply as anyone (I still use the discipline of chapter summaries in studying my Bible although I' m a little more inclined to give the credit to Dawson Trotman, founder of the Navigators, rather than George). The great strength of this man (George) was his ability to look into our eyes, genuinely listen to us and make us feel that we were a part of something big and special for God and we could all be great Christian leaders and if those aspirations were wrong I must plead guilty. At the beginning I thought his teaching was sound and judging from the posts on this board so did hundreds of others. And even now on the other side of it all I still am reduced to trembling and tears by those old majestic hymns of our faith.
5. "For Real" was a monthly youth publication put out by a Christian-conservative think tank based in Buena Park, the Christian Economic Foundation (CEF). It was part of the J. Howard Pew empire until the time of his death in 1971 when doors were closed and the building adjacent to Knotts Berry Farm was demolished. I was co-editor and drew a part-time salary. The paper espoused the 4 Spiritual Laws, film and music reviews and conservative economic commentaries. Great fun.
6. If only that table could talk. It would tell of people who sat at it who trembled and could not hold their utensils while eating because of what dope had done to them. It would tell of being covered by Bibles of young people who really sought the mind of Christ on a daily basis. It would tell of Godly sisters and brothers who served meals and sacrificed for others. It was a waterlogged bunch of planks that table and those benches from the tears of us all. The House of Christian Love story was also documented in a book published by David C. Cook and authored by then assistant editor Edward Plowman entitled "The Jesus Movement (formerly The Underground Church) pages 61-62. It was published in 1971. In retrospect I must say 1971 was a very pivotal year in the economy of God's perfect storms!
And what have I been up to? Permit me to address that another day.
Dave Kirby
kirbside@dslextreme.com