You may be right.
My own thinking is that as goes our assessment of George Geftakys, so goes our assessment of the assemblies.
You really cannot separate them in my view.
If we accept your line of reasoning, it would justify their continuation without him.
I think what happened there was far more serious than just the wrong man at the top.
Verne
Yes, you are right on that point. I think the Assemblies become George incarnate taking on his personality and paranoia. If I lived in Fullerton and Placentia I might venture a visit just to see old friends, but I wouldn't consider trying to keep the thing alive.
My point is more along this lines: Chuck Smith and George Geftakys started movements about the same time and both movements had some similar characteristics. Chuck's evolved into a major Christian denomination and has been a great blessing to many over TV, radio, stadium outreaches, Christian music, etc. George's movement, well . . .
If at the very beginning, Chuck started the Assemblies and George stated Calvary Chapel, the blessings and cursing would be reversed because, as you say, the fruit of these individuals.
I'm not saying that if a new leader took over the Assemblies now that it would suddenly flourish. It's too late for that.