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The Wolverton Bible [2nd Printing - With Free Bonus Postcard Set]
Price:
$24.99
asil Wolverton, my father (who I will
respectfully refer to as Wolverton
throughout this book), was a unique
cartoonist and illustrator, known for
his extreme, otherworldly creatures,
spaghetti-like hair, smoothly sculpted faces and
figures and insanely detailed pen-and-ink work.
Born in Oregon in 1909, Wolverton pitched his
first comic strip to a syndicate at the age of 16. But
it was 13 years later before he would sell his first
comic features to the new media of comic books.
“Disk-Eyes the Detective” and “Spacehawks” were
published in 1938 in Circus Comics. in 1940,
“Spacehawk” (a different and improved feature)
made its debut in Target Comics. It would run for
30 episodes (262 pages) until 1942. “Powerhouse
Pepper,” Wolverton’s most successful humor comic
book feature was published in Timely, Marvel and
Humorama publications from 1942 through 1952
(76 episodes, 539 pages). Wolverton penned many
other features to produce a total of some 1,300
comic book pages. in 1946 he earned first prize for
his rendition of lower Slobbovia's ugliest woman,
Lena the Hyena. The contest, part of Al Capp’s
“Li'l Abner” newspaper strip, was judged by no
less than Boris Karloff, Frank Sinatra and Salvador
Dali. It won Wolverton fame (or notoriety), and
moved his career into the mainstream spotlight for
a few years, with features and caricatures appearing
in Life and Pageant magazines. At the peak of
his style in the early 1950s, he produced what
many regard as his best comic art in 17 episodes of
horror and science fiction, while, in the same general
time period, creating incredibly outrageous
work for the early MAD magazine.
Yet about this time, Wolverton was also
embarking on a body of biblical and religious
works that would occupy most of his efforts for
the next two decades. The artwork in this volume
includes nearly all of these illustrations — more
than 700 — created by Basil Wolverton for the
Worldwide Church of God and Ambassador
College corporations, from the years 1953 through
1974.
As longtime aficionados of Basil Wolverton
are aware, he was somewhat of a paradox. On one
hand he was a Christian minister — gentle, humble,
generous to a fault — morally and socially
conservative — always ready with a word of
encouragement or humor. On the other hand, he
created some of the most terrifying religious art
since Hieronymus Bosch. And much of
Wolverton's bizarre, frenetic secular work wasn't
any less shocking. Like Bosch (an excellent cartoonist
himself), the key to understanding
Wolverton is an understanding of his religious
convictions. The threads of Wolverton's creativity
and faith are inextricably woven together.
Wolverton was born in 1909 in Central Point,
Oregon (near Medford) to parents who had come
from Maine and new Brunswick to settle in
Sunnyvale, near San Francisco. Not long after the
earthquake of 1906, they moved to southern
Oregon. His father tried his hand at various jobs
and businesses (railroad construction foreman,
sign painter, sheep rancher), some more successful
than others. When Wolverton was about ten
years of age, his family finally settled in Vancouver,
Washington, just north of Portland, Oregon.
Wolverton’s parents were devout Christians and
they raised their children accordingly. Yet in the
mid-1920s when Wolverton was in high school,
his parents separated and his older sister died
unexpectedly. Wolverton became disillusioned
with religion. He would remain an agnostic (even
atheist) for the next 12–14 years—until he
encountered Herbert W. Armstrong.
Armstrong was a Chicago advertising and
marketing man who had experienced an economic
downturn in the early 1920s. Armstrong had
moved his family to Oregon, in search of greener
pastures. There, he joined a group of seventh-day
sabbatarians, and his personal studies led him to
believe that the Anglo-Saxon people were part of
the descendants of the "Lost Ten Tribes of the
House of Israel." A high-school dropout with no
formal theological education, Armstrong thought
he had discovered the lost key to all biblical
prophecy, and that the Great Tribulation spoken
of in the book of Revelation would shortly fall on
the United States and the nations of the British
Commonwealth.
Not unlike many evangelical preachers of the
early 1930s, Armstrong adopted a dispensationalist
paradigm, with a with a pre-millennialist,
literal interpretation of the apocalyptic sections of
scripture — albeit with his own particular spin.
The Bible, he taught, predicted imminent worldwide
calamities, followed by the return of Christ
and a happy Millennium, followed by the destruction
of the wicked, followed by the advent of new
heavens and earth.
As he launched his ministry in Eugene,
Oregon, Armstrong believed that God had chosen
him to bring a warning message to the world —
that he was the only true messenger of God in this
age. To proclaim his message, Armstrong began a
radio program, The World Tomorrow, and a magazine,
The Plain Truth (both launched in 1934). As
Armstrong's following grew, so did the threat of a
second world war. He believed this was it—the
Beast, the Antichrist, and the whole end-time
enchilada.
While Armstrong was by all accounts a pioneer
in religious broadcasting, his theology was regarded
as heretical by most Christians — not so much
because of his end-time prophetic constructs, but
because of his requirement that believers observe
selected Old Testament laws and regulations
(including the seventh-day sabbath, Hebrew festivals
and dietary practices) and his assertion that
humans could become God.
in the late 1930s, young cartoonist Basil
Wolverton was in the habit of surfing the radio as
he worked on “Disk-Eyes the Detective” and
“Spacehawks.” Armstrong's radio broadcast
caught his attention. Wolverton wanted nothing
to do with religion, but Armstrong’s newscasterlike
speaking style, devoid of churchy language,
both challenged and appealed to Wolverton. He
was not equipped to see the problematic aspects
of Armstrong’s theology and worldview. Beginning
in early 1940, he corresponded with Armstrong,
initially disputing his assertions about the existence
of God. But ultimately, over a period of a
year or two, Wolverton bought into Armstrong’s
theology and was baptized by Armstrong in the
Columbia River in 1941. Coincidentally,
Wolverton’s estranged father had also been corresponding
with and contributing to Armstrong,
but Wolverton did not find this out until later.
As Armstrong got to know Wolverton and his
wife Honor, he saw an energetic, young, professional
couple who could help him with his
mission. He ordained Wolverton an elder in 1943
and not long afterward appointed him to the
board of his Radio Church of God (later known as
Worldwide Church of God, or WCG). Although
Armstrong would have liked even more involvement
from Wolverton, these were Wolverton’s
most productive comic book years, with
“Powerhouse Pepper,” “Bingbang Buster,” “Mystic
Moot and His Magic Snoot,” “Culture Corner”
and many other features.
When Armstrong moved his growing operation
to Pasadena, California in 1946 to establish
his Ambassador College, he relied on Wolverton
to pastor a small congregation in the Portland
area. This was the same year Wolverton won the
“Lena the Hyena” contest. As the 1950s began,
Wolverton found himself preaching on the weekends
while creating his horror and science fiction
comic masterpiece stories, such as “Brain-Bats of
Venus” and “The Eye of Doom” during the rest of
the week.
In all this, Wolverton saw no conflict. One
realm was religious and the other secular. He
believed religious people needed to lighten up
and not take themselves so seriously. He also saw
that the biblical account was full of conflict,
pathos, tragedy, violence, bloodshed and horror.
It was, after all, a story of humanity — and in this
way, Wolverton’s comic horror work and his grotesquely
humorous drawings were consistent with
his theological understanding of the human condition.
His faith gave him hope, to be sure, but he
did not view the current world optimistically.
Dispensational theology in general, and that of
Armstrong specifically, views human beings as
fallen and destined to grow worse as time goes on,
until the return of Christ.
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