Religion That Sends You To Hell! – Paul Washer

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Directions to the Unconverted – Joseph Alleine

7:00 – Begin

Read along

Joseph Alleine was a street preaching friend of John Westley, the grandpa of John Wesley.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Mortification of Sin – John Owen

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

His Voice Was Not Heard in the Streets?

He shall not strive, nor cry; neither shall any man hear His voice in the streets.
–Matthew 12:19

Some people think that this means Jesus didn’t do any street preaching; and that, because Christians are to imitate Christ, that they should not do any street preaching or open air preaching either. Whoa! No, that’s not what this is referring to!

John Wesley spent much of his life street preaching, and in commenting on this verse, he says, “That is, He shall not be contentious, noisy, or ostentatious: but gentle, quiet, and lowly. We may observe each word rises above the other, expressing a still higher degree of humility and gentleness.” The word “voice” in the Greek is usually translated as “voice” in the New Testament, but occasionally this word has been translated as “noise” or “blast,” which would indicate to me from the context a paraphrase like this, “Jesus shall not fight, nor cry out; neither shall any man hear Him screaming violently in the streets.” The expectation among many of the Jews of the first century was that Christ would be like Judas Maccabeus, a violent political revolutionary who would conquer the Roman Empire. But this prophecy of Christ suggests the opposite; He would not fit the description of a war-mongering, battle crying, war chief. He would be no Zealot; He would not be responsible for rousing violent, angry mob uprisings against the government; so in this sense, He would not be the type of person, like Barabbas was, who stirred up violent mobs in the streets, issuing forth rebellious and seditious political speeches, calls for revolution against Rome, or guerrilla warfare attacks on Roman soldiers. Jesus would not be like that; on the contrary, when “Jesus, knowing that they intended to come and make Him king by force, withdrew again to a mountain by Himself” (John 6:15). Jesus was not a fighter, not a warrior, not a soldier; He was a friend of the Roman centurion with faith (Matt. 8:5-13). “He shall not strive,” shall not fight or go to battle, although He did debate with Pharisees on some points, He was soon to escape from them afterwards; the Gospel of John is full of Jesus rebuking and debating with the Pharisees; Jesus did not “strive” or physically fight or engage in war; Jesus did not do this, but rather said to Pilate, “My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, My servants would fight to prevent My arrest by the Jewish leaders” (John 18:36); He did not “cry” out with violent and war-inspiring speeches, as leaders of revolutionary movements do, to stir up the violent passions of young men, to enlist them to join the army of the revolutionary; “neither shall any man hear His voice in the streets” giving Zealot-like revolutionary speeches, arousing the rebels against the Romans, for the purpose of violent uprisings, and promoting civil unrest and discord, for the overthrow of Herod and the Romans.

Adam Clarke had his share of open air preaching. Commenting on this verse, he says, “The Spirit of Christ is not a spirit of contention, murmuring, clamour, or litigiousness. He who loves these does not belong to Him. Christ therefore fulfilled a prophecy by withdrawing from this place, on account of the rage of the Pharisees.” Argumentative rebuking is not what Jesus is about; however, He did not shrink from this in the Gospel of John, nor on certain occasions with the Pharisees and Sadducees. Petty nitpicking and heated meaningless arguing is of the flesh and is not of the Holy Spirit. Strong rebukes in agreement with the holy Word of God are sometimes in order, when great outrageous rebellions against God are committed in God’s name; these are things that Jesus seems free to argue with on occasion (especially the false teachings and blasphemies of bad church leaders). But the litigious man will search in vain to find Jesus just sitting there arguing with people to no great purpose. Jesus was not a contentious, annoying gnat, not a obnoxious jerk who just argued about this and that petty little matter, making mountains out of molehills, and picking fights with people. Any street preacher (and I would say the “confrontational evangelism” guys do) who carries on like this, is not carrying on in the Spirit of Christ and the Gospel. Hecklers, if they do pressure you to be litigious with them, must be handled gently, firmly, lovingly, and patiently.

Matthew Henry says this at length concerning Matthew 12:19:

“He should carry on his undertaking without noise or ostentation. He shall not strive, or make an outcry. Christ and His kingdom come not with observation, Luke 17:20-21. When the First-begotten was brought into the world, it was not with state and ceremony; He made no public entry, had no harbingers to proclaim Him King. He was in the world and the world knew Him not. Those were mistaken who fed themselves with hopes of a pompous saviour. His voice was not heard in the streets; “Lo, here is Christ;” or, “Lo, he is there:” He spake in a still small voice, which was alluring to all, but terrifying to none; He did not affect to MAKE a NOISE, but came down silently like the dew. What He spake and did was with the greatest possible humility and self-denial. His kingdom was spiritual, and therefore not to be advanced by force or violence, or by high pretensions. No, the kingdom of God is not in word, but in power.”

If you read Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John it will soon become obvious by a natural reading of the stories that Jesus preached in houses, synagogues, and outdoors (by the lake, on the mount, in the temple, outside the temple, and in the streets). Jesus did His share of street preaching as He visited certain towns healing the sick and casting out demons, as crowds surrounded Him. So did His apostles. We see them continuing to street preach in various places outdoors in the Book of Acts.

Matthew 12:19 is not an anti-street preaching verse. It’s a verse against nitpicking, it’s against picking fights, it’s against contentious and litigious argumentation in the streets. It’s a strong rebuke to those street preachers who follow the “confrontational evangelism” teaching.

So the Great Commission is not overthrown! Mark 16:15: “GO INTO ALL THE WORLD and preach the Gospel to every creature!” That means go street preaching, open air preaching, anywhere: into all the world, where preaching to creatures is possible. Do it!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Will the REAL Creationists Please Stand Up? – Creation Magazine LIVE!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

How Theistic Evolution Affects Christian Theology – Creation Magazine LIVE!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

A Theological Case Against Evolution – Martin Ricquebourg

Originally from here.

We all like science. In fact, we couldn’t live without it. Science has helped us put man on the moon, put the Internet in our pockets, see 14 billion light-years into space, and unveil a universe of microbiological machines within each living cell. Science has given us life-saving vaccines against polio, smallpox and measles. Yet science owes an incredible debt to theology.1 History repeatedly demonstrates that where men have built their epistemic foundations upon Scripture, their science has flourished.2 But subsequent to the “Age of Enlightenment” (c. 1650–1800), science has ascended to the throne, happily usurping the Scriptures in every place she can. As Michael Bauman puts it, “Theology, the Queen of the Sciences, has been banished to the back of the bus by her own bigoted descendants.”3 We need to remember that man is fallible, and as the history of science has repeatedly shown, so is science. One of the most audacious and specious theories to fall under the broad umbrella of ‘science’ in the last 200 years is the notion that everything evolved over billions of years. The theory suffers from innumerable theological, philosophical and scientific problems. But in this article I would ask you to consider the following theological problems created by maintaining an evolutionary account of origins.

    1. It makes death our friend instead of our enemy. Theistic evolutionists, in an endeavour to embrace both Darwin and Moses, claim that God created all the original kinds of animals and plants through a process of natural selection (contra Genesis 1–2). Natural selection is indeed a recognised phenomenon at work on our planet, empowered by the reality of death. But according to Genesis 3, death came as a result of Adam’s disobedience and God’s curse upon this earth.4 When we reject this history, we are compelled instead to view death, bloodshed, violence, disease and the general struggle for survival as the God-given blessings of a perfect world. Yet this makes little sense of 1 Corinthians 15:26, and construes the God of creation to be a moral monster.

History repeatedly demonstrates that where men have built their epistemic foundations upon Scripture, their science has flourished.

    1. It calls into question the meaning of “good” because God called a world typified by death, disease, pain and strife, “good”. This has a direct bearing on how we think about God who is, in Himself, the ultimate standard of goodness (Mark 10:18) and how we construct our theodicy5—one of the greatest challenges in apologetics. Without the historicity of the fall of man and its ramifications on creation, the distinction between good and evil is lost.
    2. It calls into question the authority of Scripture. An obvious contradiction exists between the record of our origins in Genesis and the popular story of evolution:
      1. The source of Creation.
        1. God created the world (Genesis 1:1). This is in contradiction to atheism and philosophical naturalism, one of the major premises inspiring the idea of evolution. Thus Dawkins writes, “Although atheism might have been logically tenable before Darwin, Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.6” Similarly, Peter Lawrence writes, “In this vital mission to discredit the supernatural, nothing has proved more important than The Origin of Species.”7
      2. The order of Creation.
        1. God created the earth before the creation of the solar system (Genesis 1:1 & 1:14–18).
        2. God created light before He created the sun (Genesis 1:3, 16).
        3. God created the plants before the creation of stars, moon and sun (Genesis 1:11).
        4. God created the birds before the creation of land-dwelling animals (Genesis 1:20).
      3. The mechanism of Creation.
        1. God created all things out of nothing—not using pre-existing material (Hebrews 11:3).
        2. God created all the plants and animals according to their kinds, instead of a single organism which evolved from one kind into another, and then into everything else (Genesis 1:12, 21, 24).
        3. God created man directly from the dust of the earth, not from another animal (Genesis 2:7).
        4. God created man in His image and gave Him dominion over the animals, thereby making Him distinct from the animals (Genesis 1:26).
      4. The time of Creation.
        1. God created the world in six days8 as opposed to vast ages/epochs of time (cf. Genesis 1, Exodus 20:11).
        2. God created man at the beginning of time, not the end of time. Jesus claimed in Mark 10:6, “from the beginning of creation, ‘God made them male and female’” … as opposed to at the end of creation. According to the evolutionary timescale, mankind appears only as an appendix at the end of billions or years of evolutionary struggle. So the real question is, “Was Jesus wrong?” (Other NT references to mankind being created at the beginning not the end of creation include Luke 11:50–51 and Romans 1:20). This has led some, like the prominent theistic evolutionist, Francis Collins, to write: “If Jesus as a finite human being erred from time to time, there is no reason at all to suppose that Moses, Paul, and John wrote Scripture without error. Rather, we are wise to assume that the biblical authors expressed themselves as human beings writing from the perspectives of their own finite, broken horizons.”9 If true, this would bring into question everything else spoken by Jesus and would undermine the inspiration and infallibility of Scripture10.
      5. The completion of Creation.
        1. According to God’s Word, the creation of the universe has been completed (Genesis 2:3 and Exodus 20:11). God is no longer creating the cosmos. Yet on evolutionary terms, the universe and everything in it are still evolving.
      6. The goodness of Creation.
        1. As already mentioned, death, disease, cancer, pain and suffering came after the fall of man, not before. Evolution, via the uniformitarian interpretation of the fossil record, places all these fallen elements before man even appears on the scene. If God intended animals to kill each other in a perfect world, why does he describe the new heavens and new earth using language like: “The wolf and the lamb shall graze together; the lion shall eat straw like the ox, and dust shall be the serpent’s food. They shall not hurt or destroy in all my holy mountain” (Isaiah 65:25). It also makes no sense of Romans 8:20–22 and Revelation 21:4.
    3. It sets a hermeneutical precedent. Two millennia worth of commentaries on the book of Genesis bear witness to the fact that the orthodox interpretation has been the straightforward, literal approach to the text, taking the creation narrative as history.11 But today there are many competing interpretations of Genesis. It is worth noting, therefore, that the framework hypothesis, day-age theory, gap-theory, analogical days theory, Genesis-as-myth, progressive creation and theistic evolutionary theories all find their origin in the 19th and 20th centuries. As Hall has observed, “It is a very difficult task to reproduce pre-1800 Christian literature that both employs rigorous exegetical methodology and that defends something other than a literal interpretation of Genesis 1–11.”12 If we allow popular opinion to preside over the interpretation of the first book of the Bible, what stops us from butchering the other 65? If we’re going to put on naturalistic glasses to resolve the question of origins—is there anything to stop us taking that framework of interpretation elsewhere? Floating axe heads, the virgin birth, water turning into wine, the multiplication of loaves and fishes, Jesus walking on water and the resurrection of the dead are not even remotely feasible according to ‘science’. So should we let ‘science’ dictate here also? One compromise leads to another.

When Christians capitulate to canonizing popular opinion over the Word of God, non-Christians sit back and laugh because their suspicions are once again confirmed, i.e. science holds all the cards, not Scripture.

  1. It makes a mockery of Christ and Christianity. Genesis is effectively relegated to the status of a ‘just-so’ story. When Christians capitulate to canonising popular opinion over the Word of God, non-Christians sit back and laugh because their suspicions are once again confirmed, i.e. science holds all the cards, not Scripture. Consider the claims of the 19th century skeptic, George Foote, who wrote, “And if man himself has descended, or ascended, from lower forms of life; if he has been developed through thousands of generations from a branch of the Simian family; it necessarily follows that the Garden of Eden is a fairy tale, that Adam and Eve were not the parents of the human race, that the Fall is an oriental legend, that Original Sin is a theological libel on humanity, that the Atonement is an unintelligible dogma, and the Incarnation a relic of ancient mythology.”13
  2. It deprives us of real answers concerning origins, and leaves the biggest argument for naturalism, atheism or agnosticism unchallenged. Without evolution, these worldviews are entirely bankrupt. When we decide not to discuss or debate on matters of origin, we effectively leave the pagan world unchallenged. It becomes the Achilles’ heel of our apologetics. To leave the origins discussion merely at the “something or someone did it” level is entirely unhelpful because most of the world believes that a thing or a being made this universe. This is not where the debate is at. Even Dawkins14 and Hawking15 have recently conceded that aliens could have done it. The real problem here is the authority of God’s Word versus the evolutionary story of origins. It’s only when people submit to Scripture that they will find Christ. They won’t find Christ in science, although a careful reflection upon the magnificence of God’s creation might lead them to Scripture. Therefore, in order to effectively address the question of origins in a way that is relevant and helpful to people, we need to let the Bible speak (Romans 10:17)! If we are not prepared to accept the inspired eye-witness testimony of someone who was there at the beginning, who actually made it all and told us how He did it, we lose the only answers we have in this world to help the millions of people today who are asking those kinds of questions. For example, Marcus Dods (1834–1909), writing only a decade after Darwin, exhorted his readers, in the opening paragraph of his commentary on Genesis with: “If any one is in search of accurate information regarding the age of this earth, or its relation to the sun, moon, and stars, or regarding the order in which plants and animals have appeared upon it, he is referred to recent text-books in astronomy, geology, and palaeontology. No one for a moment dreams of referring a serious student of these subjects to the Bible as a source of information.”16 Why do we so readily defer to the speculations of men on our origins when they were never there in the beginning to observe it? The only authority we have on the subject of creation is God—not man. Questions about origins are primarily theological (and historical), not scientific. If we disregard the Bible in our investigation we lose the only authoritative data we have! 
  3. It robs God of His glory. Evolutionists claim that this world is not the product of creative intelligence, but instead the result of a fantastic fortuitous fluke. Any theistic synthesis with evolution does little to improve upon this robbery. The claim that God made this world using a brutally wasteful, mindless, random process over billions of years undermines the infinite wisdom and creative brilliance employed in the careful construction of our universe. We give credit to artists, inventors, architects and engineers for their intelligent designs. Why do we rob God of the credit He deserves? Consider Psalm 19.

To conclude with the words of Robert Jastrow, “For the scientist who has lived by faith in the power of reason, the story ends like a bad dream. He has scaled the mountains of ignorance; he is about to conquer the highest peak; as he pulls himself over the final rock, he is greeted by a band of theologians who have been sitting there for centuries…”17

Will you be with those at the top of the mountain?

Related Articles

Further Reading

References

  1. Stark, R., For the Glory of God: how monotheism led to reformations, science, witch-hunts, and the end of slavery, Princeton University Press, New Jersey, 2003, p. 123. Return to text.
  2. Most notably during the period of the Protestant Reformation which sparked the Scientific Revolution. For more on this subject see Modern science owes much to straightforward understanding of Scripture. Return to text.
  3. Bauman, M., Between Jerusalem and the Laboratory: a theologian looks at science, 1997, p.21. Return to text.
  4. Cf. Romans 5:12. Prior to the fall, animals did not kill and eat each other, they ate plants (Genesis 1:30). Return to text.
  5. Theodicy: justifying the goodness of God in the presence of evil. Return to text.
  6. Dawkins, R., The Blind Watchmaker, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York, 1996, p.6 Return to text.
  7. Berry, A., Cobb, M., Morris, S.C., Coyne, J., Hoekstra, H., Lawrence, P., May, R., Nüsslein-Volhard, C., Ptashne, M., Ridley, M. & Zuk, M., (Re)Reading The Origin. Current Biology 19(3):96–104, 2009, p. 98; http://download.cell.com/current-biology/pdf/PIIS0960982208016898.pdf. Return to text.
  8. For further discussion on the days of Genesis see How long were the days of Genesis 1? Return to text.
  9. Collins, F., After Inerrancy: Evangelicals and the Bible in a Postmodern Age., 2010; http://biologos.org/blog/after-inerrancy-evangelicals-and-the-bible-in-a-postmodern-age-part-4 Return to text.
  10. Wieland, C., Jesus on the Age of the Earth, 2010. Return to text.
  11. Berkhof, L., Systematic Theology, The Banner of Truth Trust, Edinburgh,1976, p. 153. Return to text.
  12. Hall, D.W., A Brief Overview of the Exegesis of Genesis 1–11: Luther to Lyell, (In Mortenson, T. and Ury, T.H., (eds.) Coming to Grips with Genesis: biblical authority and the age of the earth, Master Books, pp. 53–78.), 2008, p. 54. Return to text.
  13. Foote, G., Darwin on God, Progressive Publishing Company, London, 1889, p. 5. Return to text.
  14. Expelled DVD, An interview between Ben Stein and Richard Dawkins, 2008, transcript: http://www.conservapedia.com/Ben_Stein_Interview_with_Richard_Dawkins Return to text.
  15. Stephen Hawking, S., Humans should Fear Aliens, 2010; http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/04/25/stephen-hawking-aliens_n_551035.html Return to text.
  16. Dods, M., The Book of Genesis, A.C. Armstrong and Son, New York, 1890, p.1. Return to text.
  17. Jastrow, R., God and the Astronomers, W.W. Norton and Co., New York, 1978, p. 116. Return to text.
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Under the Spell of Harry Potter – Stephen Dollins

Strong Biblical rebukes to the Harry Potter series, by an ex-satanic high priest!

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

When Sharing the Reformed Arminian Gospel With…

SECTS WITHIN CHRISTIANITY
 
Catholics – tell them Jesus is the only mediator, not Mary (1 Timothy 2:5).
 
Calvinists – tell them about conditional security (Hebrews 6 and 10).
 
Antinomians – tell them the moral law remains (Romans 8:4).
 
Universalists – tell them the first commandment: Jesus is the only way (Exodus 20:3; John 14:6).
 
Wesleyan Perfectionists (Holiness) – tell them that sanctification is progressive; and glorification is after death (Php. 3:12; Heb. 6:1; 1 Cor. 15:53).
 
Finneyite Pelagians (Holiness) – tell them the nature of original sin is within the human body (Romans 7:23).
 
Charismatics – tell them the Holy Spirit empowers holy living; and not just tongues, visions, and healing (Romans 8).
 
Dispensationalists – tell them that preaching the Gospel is far more important than end-times theology (1 Cor. 9:16).
 
Cessationists – tell them that the promise of dreams and visions is for the last days (Acts 2:17).
 

WORLD RELIGIONS, CULTS, AND PHILOSOPHIES
 
Atheists / Agnostics – tell them it is plain and obvious the world is intelligently designed (Romans 1).
 
New Agers – tell them that God regards all occult practices as sins of rebellion (Deut. 18:9-12; 1 Sam. 15:23).
 
Hindus – tell them it is appointed unto men once to die; and then to face judgment (Heb. 9:27).
 
Buddhists – tell them that contemplating Jesus is unfathomably greater than nothing (Heb. 12:2).
 
Taoists – tell them that God has absolute standards of right and wrong: the Ten Commandments (Exod. 20).
 
Muslims – tell them that Jesus claimed to be the Son of God (Luke 22:70).
 
Jews – tell them Jesus accurately fulfilled many messianic prophecies (esp. Isa. 53; Ps. 22).
 
Pagans / Polytheists – tell them there is only one God (1 Cor. 8:6).
 
Christian Science – tell them it is bearing false testimony to deny the reality of sickness (Exod. 20:16).
 
Mormons – tell them there is only one God (1 Cor. 8:6).
 
Jehovah’s Witnesses – tell them that the Trinity appeared at the baptism of Jesus (Luke 3:22).
 
Seventh-Day Adventists – tell them keeping a Sabbath is a blessing, but not a matter of salvation (Heb. 4; Col. 2:16).
 
Further Reading
 
Walter Martin’s The Kingdom of the Cults
Josh McDowell’s Handbook of Today’s Religions
J. I. Packer’s Concise Theology
The Gospel of Jesus Christ
F. Leroy Forlines and Robert Picirilli, ed. Romans (Free Will Baptist / Randall House)
P. C. Nelson’s Bible Doctrines (AG / GPH)
Stanley Horton’s Systematic Theology (AG / GPH)
Myer Pearlman’s Knowing the Doctrines of the Bible (AG / GPH)
—. Through the Bible Book by Book, Part 4: Romans to Revelation (AG / GPH, 1935)
Robert Picirilli’s Grace, Faith, Free Will (FWB / Randall)
Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

My Favorite Arminian Books

1. John Wesley’s Calvinism Calmly Considered (vol 1, vol 2, Schmul) (IHC)

2. Randolph Foster’s Objections to Calvinism As It Is (Schmul) (IHC)

3. Thomas Oden’s The Transforming Power of Grace (United Methodist) – I think this should be seen as the primary book on lordship salvation from an Arminian perspective. Other than my book, The Gospel of Jesus Christ, I think this book by Oden should be seen as the primary Arminian counterpart to John MacArthur’s Calvinistic lordship salvation book: The Gospel According to Jesus. –5/19/16

4. Robert Shank’s Life in the Son (Church of Christ)

5. J. Matthew Pinson, ed. Four Views on Eternal Security (FWB and UMC)

6. Daniel Corner’s The Believer’s Conditional Security (holiness / Full Gospel)

7. F. Leroy Forlines’ Classical Arminianism (Free Will Baptist)

8. French Arrington’s Unconditional Eternal Security: Myth or Truth? (Church of God)

—–

potential book project: Calvin’s TULIP Plucked Apart: The Case for Biblical Arminianism

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment