Notes From A Retired Preacher

Entries from September 2007

Hillary Clinton and her “Religion”

September 25, 2007 · 26 Comments

Contrary to her party’s past history, Clinton and maybe the rest of her group have discovered that “religion” sells to the uninformed in the political arena.

Unfortunately, most nominal Christians or those who label themselves as “of faith Christians” are woefully ignorant of basic Biblical principles of the Christian behavior and thought process. Therefore, unless we Bible believers educate ourselves on our basic Bible Doctrines, we will be swept into electing some candidate who might bring this country to a point where believers cannot preach the Bible and the glorious message of our wonderful salvation in Jesus Christ alone. Christians, let us become Biblical Bereans.

Acts 17:10-11 “And the brethren immediately sent away Paul and Silas by night unto Berea: [....] These were more noble [...] in that they received the Word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so. “

From an article in Front Page Magazine Online, the author illustrates Clinton’s “faith.” He has some good things to say from his point of view but he also points out some things of which Christians, Jews and Conservatives should be aware.

Excerpts:

Hillary Clinton is a very smart politician, and following the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections, she quickly grasped that it was the religious-moral “values voter” who twice elected George W. Bush.”

[...]

“[Hillary] hired Burns Strider, a leading Democratic Party strategist on advising candidates how to reach out to pro-life evangelicals.”

[UPDATE info from The Grenada Mississippi The Daily Star. Burns Strider is quite ecumenical. He is a former Nazarene and now with the United Methodist Church, has been "faith" adviser to Roman Catholic Nancy Pelosi -- adviser to Baptist AlGore and African Methodist Episcopal Congressman James Clyburn,]

[...]

As Hillary seeks to run for president, as maybe the most religious Democrat since Jimmy Carter, someone needed to examine what she believes.”

[...]

…the media will applaud her, as it did when she campaigned in 27 churches in the two months before the November 2000 vote—including six appearances on Election Day—sometimes with literally a pool of reporters in the front pew singing and cheering, and in one case with the minister comparing her opponent to Satan.

[...]

Conservative Christians should prepare themselves to be sickened by the bracing double standard they are about to witness from the mainstream press.”

[...]

On the negative, readers will see that a major theme of the book is the total disconnect between her faith and her stridency on abortion. She is not simply pro-choice but fanatically pro-choice. She will not compromise on any matter of abortion policy, from banning partial-birth abortions to supporting funding for ultrasound machines to backing legislation to protect babies injured in the womb by outside parties. She’s to the left of everyone on this issue, including even her husband, who pro-lifers dubbed ‘the Abortion President.’

“By the way, as a ‘pro-choice Christian,she points to the lead of her denomination, the United Methodist Church, which is a member of the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice. The author of Roe v. Wade was a Methodist, and was invited to address Hillary’s congregation by her pro-choice [pro-abortion] pastor at the historic Foundry United Methodist Church in Washington in 1995.”

I beg all of you to know for whom you vote, whether you are Christian or not. Don’t jeopardize our our Republic by an uninformed vote.

See my post, Your Candidate’s Religious Belief for details on Clinton and all other candidates.

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Patriotism · Religion

Pray For Ray – and Egypt

September 24, 2007 · 5 Comments

Forty three years ago this December, my dear friend, Dr. A. Ray Stanford made the Gospel so crystal clear and understandable to this former atheist that I accepted that Bible truth and made the decision to trust Jesus Christ as my personal Savior.

Today, Monday, 9/23/07, Ray is in the hospital in Florida, undergoing an operation that he prays will slow his progressing cancer. One kidney is shut down, the other is in bad shape, metastasis has invaded his clavicle and ribs.

In true “Ray” fashion, he is concerned that this “minor” setback may cancel or delay his trip to Egypt (UPDATE – My Error, Lord willing, Ray is scheduled to leave for Egypt, November 19th.) where he will assist in growing the Bible seminary there. He is expecting to teach over 100 Bible believing native pastors how to present the Gospel of Jesus Christ clearly and then encourage them to be Biblical soul winners in a land of treachery.

Ray is determined to go to Egypt. Pray for the Lord’s will for Ray in his mission for the Lord, the lost souls in Egypt and especially pray for his concerned family.

Oh, by the way, Ray is 90 years old!

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Religion

Columbia University, Ahmadinejad , and Your Taxes

September 22, 2007 · 5 Comments

This Saturday morning on Fox News, an alum of Columbia University protested the anti-Israel, anti-Christian terrorist Ahmadinejad’s propaganda visit to Columbia University in Manhattan, NY.

Ahmadinejad, the Little Man who is a Koranic devotee and uber-terrorist with a big ego will, if left alone, wipe Israel off the map. His stated goal is to convert Christians (polytheists, he calls us) to Islam and if that is unsuccessful, then tax us exorbitantly. If  that is unsuccessful, he will seek his god, Allah to help and fight us. He is presently providing munitions to maim and kill our valiant soldiers in Iraq.

Now, in light of these few little gems, think on the fact that your personal TAX dollars support and pour into Columbia University at the rate of $400 Million per year. MONEY OUT OF YOUR POCKET goes to Columbia University to promote this anti-Christian, anti-Israel thug.

I understand Ronald Reagan refused to issue a visa to another IslamoFascist, Yasser Arrafat, terrorist extraordinaire. Why didn’t Bush do the same refusal for our country?

Fellow believers in Christ, discerning Jews and Conservatives — our beloved United States is in deep peril when we see institutes of higher learning take our money and promote Satanic doctrine.

Hey, but that’s old news, isn’t it? Our public schools are doing the same — and Hollywood — and TV — and National Public Radio — and on and on, ad infinitum.

Pray for our country!!

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Israel · Patriotism · Religion

Israel, “Evangelicals” and the President

September 18, 2007 · 20 Comments

The New York Slimes published a letter from a group of “Evangelicals” to President Bush, requesting that Bush continue his push for the land of Israel divided between the Palestinians and Israel. Often a person’s theology speaks loudly through their signature on letters and documents.

Do you wonder if your Presidential candidate would listen to these men?

You may know some of these “leaders.” I have included some of the more prominent.

Red Bold text is my emphasis.

________________

Ronald J. Sider, President
Evangelicals for Social Action

Don Argue, President
Northwest University

Gary M. Benedict, President
The Christian & Missionary Alliance

George K. Brushaber, President
Bethel University

Gary M. Burge, Professor
Wheaton College & Graduate School

Tony Campolo, President/Founder
Evangelical Association for the Promotion of Education

Daniel Grothe, Pastoral Staff
New Life Church (Colorado Springs)

Vernon Grounds, Chancellor
Denver Seminary
(WOW, this one surprised me!)

Stephen Hayner, former President
InterVarsity Christian Fellowship

Joel Hunter, Senior Pastor
Northland Church
Member, Executive Committee of the NAE

Jo Anne Lyon, Founder/CEO
World Hope International

Gordon MacDonald, Chair of the Board
World Relief

Albert G. Miller, Professor
Oberlin College

Richard Mouw, President
Fuller Theological Seminary

David Neff, Editor
Christianity Today

Glenn R. Palmberg, President
Evangelical Covenant Church

Earl Palmer, Senior Pastor
University Presbyterian Church Seattle

Victor D. Pentz, Pastor
Peachtree Presbyterian Church, Atlanta

Bob Roberts, Jr., Senior Pastor
Northwood Church, Dallas

Andrew Ryskamp, Executive Director
Christian Reformed World Relief Committee

Robert A. Seiple, Former Ambassador-at-Large,
International Religious Freedom
U.S. State Department

Luci N. Shaw, Author, Lecturer
Regent College, Vancouver

Jim Skillen, Executive Director
Center for Public Justice

Glen Harold Stassen, Professor
Fuller Theological Seminary

Richard Stearns, President
World Vision

Clyde D. Taylor, Former Chair of the Board
World Relief

Harold Vogelaar, Director
Center of Christian-Muslim Engagement for Peace and Justice

Berten Waggoner, National Director
Vineyard USA


Eternal Life in Christ is FREE

Categories: Christianity · Faith · Israel · Patriotism · Religion

What Is Your Candidate’s Religious Belief?

September 16, 2007 · 29 Comments

It is imperative that discerning Bible believers in Christ must know the religious beliefs of those whom they would nominate or elect as their favorite candidate for President of the United States. How many of these agree with your beliefs?

My personal belief is that a person of any faith cannot separate his faith from his character in the political arena.

I believe this is a complete list gleaned one candidate at a time for your perusal. Some information is from all over the net. The beliefs of their respective denominations are for the most part from their church’s statements of beliefs or positions.

My opinions, based on my research, are illustrated in color blocks.

Republican

Rudy Giuliani – Roman Catholic (Roman Catholic church teaches a works salvation) Roman Catholic Beliefs (Among other teachings, “All other churches are false churches”)

Divorced and remarried — Denied RC Communion because of church rules on divorce and remarriage. Social liberal – strong defense.

Fred Thompson – Church of Christ (Church of Christ teaches a works salvation) Divorced – remarried. Social and political conservative

Church of Christ teaches: (1) You must hear the gospel and recognize your condition; (2) You must have faith in God; (3) You must repent of your sins; (4) You must confess that Jesus Christ is the Son of God; (5) You must be baptized for the remission of your sins; and, (6) You must be faithful unto death. “If you are not in the Church [of Christ], then you are lost.”

From the Church of Christ Plan of Salvation


Mitt Romney – Mormon (The Mormon [LDS] Church teaches a works salvation)

Mormons teach the Book of Mormon supercedes the Bible as a final revelation from God. Book of Mormon and its false teaching. Also – Mormon False Statements about God. Sorta hard to read on issues.

John McCain – Episcopal (Episcopal Church teaches an ecumenical philosophy and a works salvation) Ecumenism You may be interested in searching their site to see their position on immigration and other teachings. Strong Military - Weak on Social policies, weak on immigration
UPDATE - Today 9/17/07 in South Carolina, McCain says he is a Baptist, (for the last 15 years). See Baptist on other candidates

Divorced – remarried

Sam Brownback – Roman Catholic (Roman Catholic church teaches a works salvation) Social and Political Conservative. Roman Catholic Beliefs (Among other teachings, “All other churches are false churches”)

Alan Keyes – Roman Catholic (Roman Catholic church teaches a works salvation) Social and political Conservative. Roman Catholic Beliefs (Among other teachings, “All other churches are false churches”)

Duncan HunterBaptist (Baptist Church generally teaches Faith in Christ alone for salvation, however, some teach one must turn from sin to have eternal life). Southern Baptist Statement of Faith Social and Political Conservative.

Mike Huckabee - Baptist (Baptist Church generally teaches Faith in Christ alone for salvation, however, some teach one must turn from sin to have eternal life). Southern Baptist Statement of Faith Social and political Conservative.

Ron PaulBaptist (Baptist Church generally teaches Faith in Christ alone for salvation, however, some teach one must turn from sin to have eternal life). Southern Baptist Statement of Faith

Admits to a Libertarian Philosophy – Against the War in Iraq

Tom Tancredo - Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC roots are in the Reformed theology of John Calvin). EPC Faqs

Strong on Conservative Social and Immigration positions.

_____________________________

Democrat

Mrs. Bill Clinton – Methodist – (United Methodist Church teaches a works salvation.)

The Doctrines and Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church 1888, Edited by Bishop MerrillDearly Beloved Brethren: We think it expedient to give to you a brief account of the rise of Methodism, both in Europe and America.
“In 1729 two young men in England, reading the Bible, saw they could not be saved without holiness; followed after it; and incited others so to do. In 1739 they saw, likewise, that men are justified before they are sanctified: but still holiness was their object. God then thrust them out to raise a holy people.” These are the words of John and Charles Wesley.
Methodists teach “free will” salvation but also one may lose one’s salvation by that same free will (Armenianism). Wesley Center Online

Social and political liberal.

Barack Hussein Obama (Corrected) – United Church of Christ (Muslim family heritage). See my article explaining Obama’s church affiliation here – with comments.

Social and political liberal.

John Edwards – United Methodist (See Mrs. Clinton above)

Social and political liberal.

Joe Biden, Chris Dodd, Dennis Kucinich, Bill Richardson – Roman Catholic (The Roman Catholic church teaches a works salvation) Roman Catholic Beliefs (Among other teachings, “All other churches are false churches”)

Social and political liberals all.

Mike Gravel – Unitarian – (Believe anything you wish)

Unitarian Universalists include people who identify as Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, Pagans, Atheists, Agnostics, Humanists, and others. As there is no official Unitarian Universalist creed, Unitarian Universalists are free to search for truth on many paths.. Beliefs of Unitarian Universalists

Social and political liberal.


What we believe and how to have eternal life.

Categories: Christianity · Faith · Patriotism · Religion

Remember 9/11 And Those Who Did It.

September 10, 2007 · 6 Comments

REMEMBER 9/11 – REMEMBER 9/11

FLY YOUR FLAG! . . . a-flag.gif

I was a teen during World War II, and every patriotic American, without shame, and with fervor shouted “Remember Pearl Harbor!

Let us not be ashamed to support our wonderful United States our sacrificing Military who fight today for your and my freedom.

REMEMBER 9/11

FLY YOUR FLAG!

Visit my friend Always On Watch for an excellent post on 9/11–

Never Forget What Our Enemies Are.

Visit Wrong Side Of The Tracks for Jack’s strong 9/11 post. Never Surrender!

Click here to be sure of Heaven.

Categories: Patriotism

AARP Sponsors Socialist Anti-Christian Groups?

September 8, 2007 · 30 Comments

AARP members, look where your money goes.Been doing some Internet research and:

We always knew that AARP is and always has been liberal. It should not be a surprise to most knowledgeable Conservative Christians that AARP is also connected with and promotes organizations who proudly proclaim themselves against Conservative Christians. What a wide and wicked web they weave.

Just a little background. I am sad to admit — I am an involuntary member of AARP – only because I live in an area where insurance companies will not insure homes except through a terrible, limited state sponsored insurance program. My home and auto insurance company for years has been The Hartford, which is just one of hundreds of other big money cash cows for AARP. My effort to use The Hartford without AARP has proved impossible due to Hartford’s contract with AARP. The Hartford will not independently insure me. If I stop my AARP membership I loose my longtime Hartford insurance that I need in this hurricane prone area. An independent insurance agent recently told me, “In spite of AARP’s leftist positions, keep your Hartford insurance — you can get nothing anywhere near as adequate where you live.” And I don’t live in a stilt shack in the middle of Biscayne Bay, but in a pleasant inland suburb area, 12 or more feet above sea level and five miles from the Bay.

AARP, the “benevolent charity” group of people 50 and over, is not your Grandmother’s benign little group of “old folks.”

AARP has initiated a new political action group named “Divided We Fail.org.” On their web site they brag that Julian Bond, radical leftist Chairman of the NAACP has signed on to the radical leftist program. They proudly claim that National Urban League President and CEO Marc Morial also signed up.

AARP’s Business Roundtable along with Service Employees Union (SEIU) launched a front group, Divided We Fail to “engage” the American people.

The AARP Web  site  happily advertises the leftist group SEIU, The Service Employees International Union, a union of 1.9 million “working people and 50,000 Retired folks.” SEIU President Andy Stern blogs on the extreme leftist Huffington Post and spoke on your tax supported, leftist NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday. AARP is obviously trying hard to convince us they are LIBERAL while they try to hide it!

Now. all of you Conservative Christians — read this carefully

The SEIU, AARP supported web site, in turn, advertises a program, “State of Belief Radio” broadcast on extreme leftist Air America Radio sponsored by Interfaith Alliance and features Rev. Dr. C. Welton Gaddy, Pastor of Northminster Baptist Church in Monroe, LA.

Gaddy is president of the national leftist “nonpartisan” grassroots and educational organization, The Interfaith Alliance web site in turn advertises a link “Make a Difference. Fight the Religious Right.” Gaddy claims that “the religious right is wrong—wrong for America and bad for religion.”

There is more — but, almost becoming sick in my stomach, I ran out of time and patience.

Conservative Christians, our Biblical faith is being attacked directly and indirectly by those whom we support financially — and some of us find it impossible to extricate ourselves from it.

There, I got it off my chest! What do you think?

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Patriotism · Religion

Emerging Further

September 4, 2007 · 11 Comments

As I scanned over Dan Kimball’s comment on my Blog below, I was sidetracked and waded through some of the links and side-bar advertising he’s promoting. These items for sale include a quartet album with Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins and Johnny Cash.

These men are not heroes of the Faith. To be promoting and advertising these four singers is not my idea of a Biblical promotion of the faith.

Kimball also advertises an album by Roy Orbison, who is considered to be the father of Rock and Roll. Some of Orbison’s more memorable works are “Ooby Dooby,” “Only The Lonely,” “In Dreams,” “Oh, Pretty Woman,” “Crying,” “Running Scared,” and “You Got It.” Draw your own conclusions about how these songs fit in with a Biblical Church ministry.

Kimball includes, on most of his web pages, a photo image of Ersel Hickey – a rockabilly/pop singer from the late 1950’s. He seems obsessed with non-Christian Rock music.

Our conclusion must be that the ECM methods are superficial, shallow and are degrading our Biblical faith by trying to mold the “church” into a part of the pop culture. Disheartening to say the least.

ECM is shallow and superficial.. yet attractive to the youth of the world.

1 Timothy 1″19 “Holding faith, and a good conscience; which some having put away concerning faith have made shipwreck”

In the interest of full disclosure, back when I was Pastor of my church, we held a regular Tuesday “Ranch Meeting” night in a church member’s homes. We encouraged our young people to bring their Bibles and their lost friends. Some of our kids played guitars and we sang:

  • “Can You Hear the Savior Calling You?”
  • “Precious Lord”
  • “Where Could I Go But to The Lord”
  • “Just a Little Talk With Jesus”
  • “Christ Is All I Need”
  • “Amazing Grace”
  • “My God is Real”
  • “I’d Rather Have Jesus”

And many. many more. These young people loved the music and the message.

We would give a good clear Gospel message and encourage them to trust Christ as their Savior.

The young people, saved and unsaved were excited and we saw hundreds and hundreds of them trust Christ as their Savior. We then encouraged new and old believers to attend a good Bible believing, preaching Church.

However, when Sundays and Wednesdays came around, our regular services were normal preaching, teaching services with singing of the old-time hymns. These youth learned to love the Lord, our fellowship, our hymns and our church.

Many of them joined our church. A large number of them graduated high school and then enrolled in Bible College.

We never let our church services devolve into a youth magnet, but they loved the fellowship of our believers!

A Church does not need rockabilly bells and whistles in the services to be a scriptural fellowship of believers.

1 Cor. 14:40 “Let all things be done decently and in order.”

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Religion

The Emerging Emergent Church

September 3, 2007 · 21 Comments

From The Berean Call newsletter, September 2007 issue is an article on “Weaning Evangelicals Off the Word – Part 3” It is interesting in that it names names and organizations who are involved in the “Emerging Church Movement” and enumerates the errors that are “emerging.” This is almost the article in its entirety however there is a link at the end so you may go and check out the full content and footnotes. I highly recommend that, while you are visiting The Berean Call, you will subscribe to their excellent, accurate and informative email Newsletter for the discerning Christian.

I apologize for the length of this article but it is well worth the read. My emphasis is in bold text.


UPDATE: The more I contemplate these errors of the Emergent Church, the more it appears that the ECM’s progression into liberal theology will translate into a liberal political mindset. This, in turn, has or will impact the foundation of our wonderful America, which was formed on the Judeo-Christian ethic of an all powerful God Who has spoken..

The previous two parts of th[e] series made some observations that should be of great concern to those who consider themselves Bible-believing Christians. Paul warned that there would come a time when “sound doctrine” (2 Timothy 4:3,4) would give way to what “seemeth right unto a man” (Proverbs 14:12) in determining what is true. There will be apostate “teachers” who advance an experiential mode that panders to the lusts of the flesh, promoting self-serving “fables” or myths. Furthermore, these “deceitful workers” and lying “ministers of righteousness” (2 Corinthians 11:13,15) would draw upon the teachings of “seducing spirits, and doctrines of devils.” (1 Timothy 4:1) Paul certainly had such teachers in mind as he warned the Ephesian elders that after his departing “grievous wolves” would enter among them and teach “perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.” (Acts 20: 29,30) There is no doubt that these verses are being fulfilled in our day.

Although there are far too many examples of apostasy influencing the church today to cite in this brief series of articles, there is one spurious trend that encompasses nearly all of what the above verses address. It’s called the Emerging Church Movement (ECM). The ECM is a development among evangelicals that appears to have some worthwhile goals: 1) It professes to speak to today’s culture about the relevancy of Christianity and the value of the gospel of Jesus Christ; and 2) It desires to keep young evangelicals continuing in the faith. The movement involves a number of churches (mostly non-denominational), some supportive ministries and parachurch organizations, and the support of a number of prominent evangelical leaders and authors.

The ECM has no official organization or leadership, although some of its adherents have “emerged” as recognized leaders and spokesmen. For many of those helping to promote the movement, their motivation to “try something different” grew out of the frustration of their own very limited success in evangelizing and discipling young people. Some of the leaders were in seeker-sensitive and purpose-driven churches, and they saw firsthand that their church-growth marketing schemes were not effective for drawing those in their late teens, 20s, and early 30s. The main fare of most consumer-driven churches features contemporary music with shallow, repetitive choruses, topical 30-minutes-or-less sermons (mostly psychology-based), a host of social programs to attract the lost (and the fleshly nature of Christians), and “Bible studies” that address everything but the Bible (see “Consumer Christianity I & II”, TBC, 2/05 , 3/05 ). For a surprising number of young adults, that was a spiritual turnoff.

In his book The Emergent Church (with contributions and endorsement by Rick Warren), Dan Kimball relates his own breakthrough in overcoming the frustrating experiences in trying to motivate the young people in the evangelical church where he was youth pastor. He tells about watching a concert on the youth-oriented MTV network late one night that was a candlelit, all-acoustic performance. Recognizing that MTV certainly knows its audience and the youth culture, he refashioned his church’s youth room into a subdued, “catacombish,” candlelit environment and had the worship band use acoustic guitars, forgoing their usual flashing light show and loud electric music. He was delighted by the reaction of one usually unresponsive teen who said, “I like this. This was really spiritual.”

That was an epiphany for Kimball. As he expanded the service with what he considered more “authentic Christian” elements and liturgy, it attracted hundreds, young and old alike. He is convinced he’s found what the church of today needs: “As the emerging church returns to a rawer and more vintage form of Christianity, we may see explosive growth much like the early church did.”

On the contrary, the “explosive growth” in the early church came from an approach that is almost nonexistent in the ECM. Peter’s confrontational address to the crowd on Pentecost in Acts chapter 2 is directly at odds with the modus operandi of the emergent leaders. In the power of the Holy Spirit, Peter’s preaching brought conviction of sin, repentance, and belief; 3,000 came to Christ that day. Kimball’s “vintage form of Christianity,” featuring rituals, ceremony, candles, incense, prayer stations, and images to create a spiritually experiential atmosphere for evangelicals is “vintage” only in the sense that it is an imitation of the later unbiblical Eastern Orthodox and medieval Roman Catholic liturgies. The early New Testament church knew nothing of this idolatrous and sense-oriented worship.

Ironically, emergent churches around the world, in their attempt to “reconstruct” the church, are passing each other like ships in the night. Kimball’s efforts at spiritual stimulation by introducing to young evangelicals the liturgical bells and smells of Catholic, Orthodox, Lutheran, and high-church Episcopal and Presbyterian rituals, stands in contradiction to some European cathedrals and churches going emergent. Europeans are trying to revive their congregations, deadened by centuries of imagery and ritual, by covering their gothic interiors with decorated drapery, exchanging the organ and traditional hymns for electric guitars and contemporary choruses, and adding throw pillows for comfortable seating to create a seeker-friendly environment. These churches are abandoning the very things that are “spiritually” alluring to American emergent evangelicals. Regarding both sensual approaches, Scripture tells us, “the flesh profiteth nothing.”

In reading the works of the ECM leaders, we would agree with many of their criticisms of current Christianity. There is plenty to oppose as apostasy and the abandonment of the Word increases in Christendom. The ECM’s corrections, however, rather than having restorative value for the church, are just as contrary to the Scriptures. Even worse, they go far beyond subtly “weaning evangelicals off the Word” to rendering the Bible and its doctrines as the enemy when it comes to drawing the world in general and, specifically, our postmodern culture, to the love of Jesus.

The Emergent Church Movement claims to desire—above all things—to show the love and life of Christ to a culture that is distrustful of the Christianity it perceives as oppressive and absolutist. We’re assured by ECM writers that “numbers of postmoderns are attracted to Jesus but detest His church” and can therefore be reached by the emerging church approach. It professes to be more amenable to the culture, more viable in its practice of Christianity, and truer to what Jesus had in mind for His church on earth.

Admirable—but let’s see how true it is to the Scriptures. As Isaiah exhorted, “To the law and to the testimony [i.e., God’s Word]: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them” (Isaiah 8:20).

First of all, one has to wonder what a postmodern—a person characterized chiefly by his or her general disdain for authority and absolutes, particularly those dealing with moral issues and religion—thinks about this “Jesus” to whom he or she is supposedly drawn. The critical question is “Jesus who?” Is it the biblical Jesus they like, the one who declared absolutely, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father but by me” (John 14:6)? What about the authoritarian Jesus, who announced, “If ye keep my commandments, ye shall abide in my love” (John 15:10)? His words weren’t referring only to the Ten Commandments but rather to every instruction He gave. Is that the Jesus a postmodern desires? What about the Jesus who gave mankind an ultimatum: “He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him” (John 3:36)?

The biblical Jesus certainly does not accommodate postmodernism, which is one more example of humanity’s rebellion against its Creator. The good news is that Jesus offers deliverance from the delusion of postmodernism, as well as all the other man-centered isms: “If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free” (John 8:31,32). The bad news is that the emerging church approach attempts to accommodate Jesus and the Scriptures (actually “another Jesus” and a corrupted and emasculated Word) to our postmodern culture.

Although some regard the Emerging Church Movement as nothing more than a passing spiritual fad among young evangelicals, its potential for shipwrecking the faith of our next generation (should the Lord not yet return for His saints) is staggering. Here are just a few of the faith-destroying beliefs as espoused in the writings of the emergent leaders. First of all, foundational to the ECM is the subversion of the Bible. It’s akin to Satan’s scheme to destabilize Eve’s trust in what God commanded: “Yea, hath God said…?” (Genesis 3:1). They give lip service to the importance of God’s Word while undermining its inerrancy, authority, and sufficiency.

Rob Bell writes in Velvet Elvis, following 22 pages of weakening the authority of the Bible (making statements such as “It is possible to make the Bible say whatever we want it to, isn’t it?” and “With God being so massive and awe-inspiring and full of truth, why is his book capable of so much confusion?”): “[L]et’s make a group decision to drop once and for all the Bible-as-owner’s-manual metaphor [i.e., God’s specific instructions for mankind]. It’s terrible. It really is….We have to embrace the Bible as the wild, uncensored, passionate account it is of experiencing the living God.”1 No! “Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost” (2 Peter 1:21).

His view, common to most emergent writers, is that the key to the authority of Scripture is one’s interpretation, and that is most authoritative when the interpretation takes place in a community and validated by a “group decision”: “Community, community, community. Together with others, wrestling and searching and engaging the Bible as a group of people hungry to know God in order to follow God.”2

Although we find thousands of times throughout the Bible clear, direct, and absolute commands prefaced by phrases such as “Thus saith the Lord” and “The word of the Lord came to me,” we’re now told that understanding and obedience to what God said are subject to a community’s interpretation. Consequently, ECM churches disdain preaching and authoritative teaching, yet they delight in discussion, causing some to dump the pulpit in favor of a dialogue-led Starbucks environment. As the goals of the community change, we’re told the interpretation may also change.

The claim that the ECM approach has not jettisoned sound doctrine is either a delusion or an outright deception. This becomes clear when one asks for a biblical position on an issue. Kristen Bell acknowledges in a Christianity Today emerging church article, “I grew up thinking that we figured out the Bible…that we knew what it means. Now I have no idea what most of it means, and yet I feel like life is big again—like life used to be black and white, and now it’s in color.”3 Brian McLaren, the most prominent of the emergent leaders, echoes Bell’s “doctrine” of avoidance regarding what the Bible says about homosexuality:

Perhaps we need a five-year moratorium on making [doctrinal] pronouncements. In the meantime, we’ll practice prayerful Christian dialogue, listening respectfully, disagreeing agreeably. When decisions need to be made, they’ll be admittedly provisional. We’ll keep our ears attuned to scholars in biblical studies, theology, ethics, psychology, genetics, sociology, and related fields. Then in five years, if we have clarity, we’ll speak; if not, we’ll set another five years for ongoing reflection.4

TBC has received numerous letters from parents and evangelical pastors who find their young people seeking out emergent churches for the “new” experiences, which they offer in abundance: religious art (primarily impressionistic images of “Jesus”), “biblical” films, rituals based upon Catholic/Orthodox liturgy, community, personal relationships, contemplative spirituality and mysticism (some include yoga), Bible dialogues, ecumenical interaction with “people of faith,” a social gospel, plans to save the planet, restore the kingdom, and so forth.

Regarding the seductive nature of such things, few evangelicals, young or old, have a defense. Too many function as biblical illiterates, meaning they know some things about the Bible and are capable of reading it but simply haven’t made any effort, outside of following along with their pastor’s teaching on Sundays. They are the spiritual con man’s delight.

Satan’s seduction of Eve began subtly, “Yea hath God said?” It was a confusion tactic, setting her up to believe his lie and reject what God had said: “And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die.” That was his punch line to destroy the human race. Eve fell for it; Adam went along.
One finds a strikingly similar approach in the writings of the ECM leaders in regard to destroying faith in the gospel: Brian McLaren leads with doubts about what God had said:

The church latched on to that old doctrine of original sin like a dog to a stick, and before you knew it, the whole gospel got twisted around it. Instead of being God’s big message of saving love for the whole world, the gospel became a little bit of secret information on how to solve the pesky legal problem of original sin.5

He says elsewhere, “I don’t think we’ve got the gospel right yet. What does it mean to be saved?…None of us have arrived at orthodoxy.”

British emergent leader and Zondervan author Steve Chalke delivers the punch line that unabashedly rejects the essential gospel belief that Christ paid the full penalty for the sins of mankind necessary to satisfy divine justice. Incredibly, he condemns that doctrine as a form of “cosmic child abuse” and a “twisted version of events morally dubious and a huge barrier to faith.”6 This is where these emergent pied pipers, wittingly or unwittingly, are seductively leading our youth.

Hopefully, the above will move you to prayer and action regarding the biblical strengthening of your own children and the youth in your fellowship. If you need more motivation (this brief article allowed me to give you only the tip of the “emerging” iceberg), see our TBC Extra page (page eight) with multiple emergent leaders’ quotes helpfully compiled in Roger Oakland’s latest book Faith Undone: The emerging church…a new reformation or an end-time deception?

[The Berean Call, -- Weaning Evangelicals Off The Word]

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Categories: Christianity · Faith · Religion