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==International expansion== During the 1950s and 1960s, the church continued to expand and the radio program was broadcast in England, Australia, the Philippines, Latin America, and Africa. In 1953, ''The World Tomorrow'' began to air on [[Radio Luxembourg (English)|Radio Luxembourg]], making it possible to hear the program throughout much of Europe.{{sfn|Boston|2002|p=238}} The beginning of the European broadcast provides the context of a booklet published in 1956 called ''[[1975 in Prophecy!]]'' In this book Armstrong put forward a controversial vision of what the world could look like by 1975—featuring vivid illustrations by noted comics artist [[Basil Wolverton]] of mass burials and tidal waves destroying cities.<ref name="1975in">{{cite book |last=Armstrong |first=Herbert, W |title=1975 in Prophecy |pages=10–28 |year=1956 |url=https://www.herbert-w-armstrong.org/Books%20&%20Booklets/1975%20in%20Prophecy%20(1956).pdf }}</ref> Overall he thought that [[World War III]] and Christ's glorious return were at the doorstep and that world peace and utopia would follow. Armstrong believed that God had exciting plans for mankind that would see the end of such wars—though the message went far beyond an earthly utopia.<ref>{{cite book|last=Armstrong |first=Herbert W. |title=The Incredible Human Potential |pages=29, 24–29, Headings "Incredible Human Potential Revealed", "Outer Space–Planets Now Dead" }}</ref> Several books and booklets focused on the key events that would signal the imminence of Christ's return, and taught of a specific end-time prophecy to be fulfilled, manifested in the form of European peacekeeping forces surrounding Jerusalem, at which time God's Church would be taken to a place of protection, or "place of safety"—possibly [[Petra]] in Jordan.<ref name="Tkach12"/> World War III was predicted to be triggered by a "[[European Federation|United States of Europe]]" led by Germany which would destroy both the United States and the United Kingdom.<ref>{{ cite book |last=Armstrong |first=Herbert W. |title=1975 in Prophecy |pages=4–10 |year=1956 |url=https://www.herbert-w-armstrong.org/Books%20&%20Booklets/1975%20in%20Prophecy%20(1956).pdf }}</ref> From the place of safety they would continue the work and prepare to help [[Christ]] establish [[Utopia]] upon His return. In 1952, Armstrong published ''Does God Heal Today?'', which provided the details on his doctrine on healing and his ban on doctors. Among his tenets were that only God heals and that medical science is of pagan origin and is ineffective. He believed that most illnesses were caused by faulty diet and that doctors should prescribe proper diet rather than medicine. He taught that members are not to go to doctors for healing but must trust in divine healing alone.<ref>{{cite book |last=Armstrong |first=Herbert W. |title=Does God Heal Today? |publisher=Radio Church of God |location=Pasadena, CA |year=1952 }}</ref> This was his teaching despite his father's death in 1933 after "an all-night vigil of prayer."<ref>{{harvnb|Armstrong|1967|loc=[http://www.cgca.net/pabco/v1c28.htm Ch. 28]}}</ref> This teaching has been the cause of much controversy as individuals influenced by such teachings came to die.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Trechak |first=John |magazine=Ambassador Report |date=1977 |url=https://gavinru.tripod.com/families.htm |title=Modern Moloch-Human Sacrifice in the Armstrong Church}}</ref> The book ''The United States and Britain in Prophecy'' was published in 1954. It became the most well-known and requested church publication, with over six million copies distributed.{{sfn|Flurry|2006|p=3}} In this book, Armstrong makes the claim that the peoples of the United States, the [[British Commonwealth]] nations, and the nations of Northwestern Europe are descendants of the [[Ten Lost Tribes]] of Israel.{{sfn|Armstrong|1976|p=44}} This belief, called [[British Israelism]], formed the central basis of the theology of the Worldwide Church of God.{{sfn|Tkach|1997|loc=[https://archive.gci.org/articles/the-central-plank-cracks/ chapter 9].}} [[Franz Josef Strauss]], a major politician in post-WWII Germany, became the target of the broadcasting and publishing media blitz that Armstrong unleashed upon Europe through the daily offshore [[pirate radio]] station broadcasts by his son [[Garner Ted Armstrong]], ''[[The Plain Truth]]'', and the [[Ambassador College]] campus at [[Bricket Wood]] in [[Hertfordshire]], England. Strauss was portrayed as being the coming [[Führer]] who would lead a United States of Europe into a prophetic World War III against the U.S. and U.K. at some time between 1972 and 1975, and emerge victorious. In 1971, Strauss played along with the prophetic interest shown in him, as Herbert W. Armstrong recalled in a 1983 letter: "I entertained him at dinner in my home in Pasadena, and he spoke to the faculty and students of Ambassador College. I have maintained contact with him."<ref>{{cite web |title=Memories of Pasadena, by J. Orlin Grabbe |url=http://www.aci.net/Kalliste/Pasadena_memories.htm |access-date=September 28, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080510214304/http://www.aci.net/kalliste/Pasadena_memories.htm |archive-date=May 10, 2008}}</ref> Strauss appeared in an interview on [[The World Tomorrow (radio and television)|''The World Tomorrow'']] television program. The volume of literature requests for material written by Armstrong continued to grow during the 1960s and 1970s, and the literature was translated into several languages and distributed to a worldwide audience. They were distributed for free "as a public service." ''The Plain Truth'' magazine continued to be published and circulated, eventually reaching a monthly press run of eight million. On April 15, 1967, Armstrong's wife Loma died, three and a half months before their 50th anniversary. Before she died he sent a co-worker a letter that has often been criticized for its harsh tone to "failing" members and for its calls for more money.{{Citation needed|date=April 2014}}
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