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Franklin Graham Doesn’t Believe COVID-19 Vaccine Passport Microchip Is the Mark of the Beast

Franklin Graham
Matt Johnson from Omaha, Nebraska, United States, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Franklin Graham posted on Facebook yesterday saying that COVID-19 is here to stay, but also that he doesn’t believe that COVID-19 vaccine passport microchips are the mark of the beast.

A few days before Christmas, ChurchLeaders released an article detailing how a Swedish company has developed a rice-sized microchip containing vaccine information that can be implanted into a person’s hand or arm just below the skin.

The vaccine microchip would be used as a passport of sorts, allowing people to be scanned to prove that they’ve been vaccinated in order to attend mass gatherings, eat at restaurants, or travel to places where governments have placed COVID-19 restrictions on citizens and tourists.

RELATED: New Microchip Vaccine Passports Stir Fear About the ‘Mark of the Beast’

Conspiracy theorists have speculated that this type of microchip could be the mark of the beast the Apostle John describes in Revelation 13:15-17.

Graham doesn’t believe this is the case. The world-renown evangelist explained that although there will be a one world system in the end-times, as prophesied about in Scripture and which could usher in a time where people will have to choose to take a mark in order to buy and sell, he doesn’t believe this vaccine passport microchip is that mark.

“I personally do not think this particular chip is the mark the Bible talks about,” Graham said. “But it does make you think how close we may be. Christians around the world are wondering if COVID-19 is being used as a way to condition the world population to accept a mark like this, whatever form it may take.”

The son of Billy Graham said he has witnessed a lot in his 69 years of life, and, despite the fact Graham doesn’t believe this microchip is the mark of the beast, this type of technology could make it just a few short steps away.

Nevertheless, Graham encouraged those who have put their faith and trust in Jesus Christ that they have no need to be afraid. Yes, the news of this microchip and what it could lead to “may sound frightening,” he said but continued, “We should not live in fear. God told us what was coming in His Word. Make sure that your name is written in the Lamb’s Book of Life by repenting of your sins and putting your faith and trust in Jesus Christ.”

RELATED: Franklin Graham Has Heart Surgery to Treat Pericarditis

Samaritan’s Purse’s President and CEO has been a strong proponent for the the COVID-19 vaccines and applauded former President Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, which accelerated the development, manufacturing, and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

Christian Leaders Respond to Ghislaine Maxwell’s Guilty Verdict; Express More Work to Be Done

Ghislaine Maxwell
Ghislaine Maxwell, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

On Wednesday (December 29), Ghislaine Maxwell (60), the former British socialite connected to the charged sex trafficking offender and successful multi-millionaire financier Jeffery Epstein, was found guilty of luring teenage girls to Epstein to be sexually abused.

Epstein died by suicide in his jail cell in 2019, a month after he was indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.

The jury found Maxwell guilty on five of the six counts she was charged with. The charges included sex trafficking minors, transporting a minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, and the three counts of conspiracy, and bring a maximum prison sentence of 65 years.

Annie Farmer was one of four accusers who testified against Maxwell. All four of Maxwell’s accusers were under the age of 18, with some being as young as 14 when they were groomed by Maxwell. Farmer told “Good Morning America” that Maxwell’s guilty verdict was “a tremendous relief,” expressing that she wasn’t sure “that this day would ever come.”

RELATED: Florida Pastor Accused of Molesting Two Teens Dies by Suicide

“I am so relieved and grateful that the jury recognized the pattern of predatory behavior that Maxwell engaged in for years and found her guilty of these crimes,” Farmer said. “I hope that this verdict brings solace to all who need it and demonstrates that no one is above the law. Even those with great power and privilege will be held accountable when they sexually abuse and exploit the young.”

Farmer was 16 years old when she was groomed by Maxwell and brought to Epstein. As a psychologist, Farmer now helps others who have experienced similar circumstances.

Activist, abuse survivor, and attorney Rachael Denhollander said, “This is a critical step in the fight for justice and cultural change around the issue of sexual assault.” Denhollander is a former gymnast and was the first woman to step forward publicly and accuse former USA Gymnastic doctor Larry Nassar of sexual abuse. Her courage led to hundreds of other abuse survivors coming forward and testifying against Nassar in 2018. Although the former doctor denied the allegations, he later pleaded guilty under a plea agreement which has put him behind bars for the rest of his life.

RELATED: Rachael Denhollander Shares the Backstory of Her Abuse

“What was on display in this trial was the rebuttal, yet again, of the most common rape myths that cripple our societal response to abuse,” Denhollander wrote on Twitter. “1. The idea that memories of abuse are easy to implant and frequently inaccurate or manufactured. 2. The oft-repeated trope that survivors come forward because they are motivated by money and fame. 3. An in-depth portrayal of how grooming and trafficking really happens, and why so many survivors don’t ‘just fight back.’ This is a critical reality we need to understand. 4. And yet again, a painful reminder of what survivors face when they do speak up.”

Actor Chris Tucker Turned Down $12 Million to Return for ‘Friday’ Sequel Due to His Christian Convictions

Chris Tucker
Canadian Film Centre from Toronto, Canada, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Once the highest paid actor in Hollywood, Chris Tucker is well known for his roles in movies like “The Fifth Element” and the Rush Hour franchise. Yet while Tucker portrayed the character “Smokey” in the popular 1995 film “Friday,” he was notably absent from the sequels in 2000 and 2002. 

Earlier this week, “Friday” co-star Ice Cube revealed a little known fact as to why Tucker did not return for the sequel: his Christian convictions. 

In a tweet thread on Wednesday, Ice Cube responded to accusations that members of the “Friday” cast were underpaid and that Tucker quit the franchise because of money. Ice Cube said that Tucker didn’t return for the sequel because he didn’t want to portray a character known for cussing and smoking weed.

Set in South Central Los Angeles, a main plot point of “Friday” centers on a pair of unemployed friends coming up with money for a drug supplier who demanded payment by the end of the day, or else he was taking his product back—product which Tucker’s character had already smoked.

“We were ready to pay Chris Tucker $10-12m to do Next Friday but he turned us down for religious reasons,” Ice Cube said. “He didn’t want to cuss or smoke weed on camera anymore.”

While Tucker does not speak about his faith publicly very often, he did confirm in a 2014 interview that he is a Christian. 

RELATED: ‘Don’t Play With God’: Denzel Washington Preaches During NY Times Interview

“Being a Christian helps me in comedy. I have to talk about other stuff. Normally, most comics talk about stuff that’s easy—maybe cussing or saying something raunchy,” Tucker told the Georgia Straight. “I have to dig deeper to find something that’s still funny and not raunchy. It’s harder. I like the challenge.”

“Everybody’s doing raunchy comedy,” Tucker went on to say. “I go to comedy clubs and it’s like, ‘All right, how raunchy can you get?’ And it’s really not that funny to me. What’s funny to me is being creative and talking about stuff that I wouldn’t have thought about.”

In November, Tucker confirmed to All Urban Central that his decision not to return to the Friday franchise had nothing to do with money. Tucker, who earned $25 million to portray Detective James Carter in “Rush Hour 3,” expressed gratitude for the opportunity to play a role in “Friday,” which helped increase his popularity. Nevertheless, he was ready to move on from the character.

Alabama Pastor’s Wife Shot and Killed During Bible Study

Grace Carter
screenshot via NBC 15 News.

Grace Carter was killed by a stray bullet during a Tuesday night Bible study at Everlasting Life Holiness Church in Prichard, Alabama. Carter’s homicide is the third in Prichard since Christmas. 

Prichard Police told a local CBS affiliate that they arrived on the scene shortly after 7 p.m. and began performing CPR on Carter. After an investigator noticed a bullet hole in the door of the church, the emergency medical services personnel began searching Carter for a bullet wound and discovered that she had been shot in the upper right chest. 

Carter and her husband, Cecil Carter Sr., were longtime members of Everlasting Life Holiness Church, and Cecil is set to begin a pastorate at another church next month. According to Cecil, the Bible study group heard a loud pop, which the pastor of Everlasting Life, Joseph Simmons, thought came from a speaker. When Simmons looked toward Grace Carter, she was bleeding from the mouth. It was then that Simmons called 911. 

Grace Carter was 65 years old. Cecil and Grace had been married for 35 years. 

“It’s not safe in the church no more. People running around with guns and just shooting and carrying on with no regards. Stray bullet don’t know anybody,” Cecil told WPMI.

Speaking about his wife, Cecil said, “She would do anything she could for anyone. She’s a kind woman, and I believe she’s gone home to live with the Lord. I miss her. I love her.”

Prichard Police do not believe the shooter directly targeted Carter, but the investigation is ongoing. Mobile County Sheriff’s Office is assisting in the investigation. 

RELATED: Punches Thrown in Front Row During Pastor’s Sermon; Church Commits to Walking Alongside Assailant

Four days earlier on Christmas Eve, 40-year-old Quincy Kemp was shot and killed in Prichard, and his girlfriend, Shanda Sashington, remains in critical condition from several gunshot wounds. A trumpet player for the Olympia and Port City brass bands, Kemp’s family described him as non-confrontational, saying, “If anyone tried to confront him or try to fight, he was always the type of guy to talk you out of it. He was just a great guy. He really was.”

Kemp’s family has expressed frustration with the investigative team, urging the police to release more information about the case. 

RELATED: Man Commits to Stand Guard Outside Church Where ‘Church Mother’ Was Murdered Inside

The Redemptive-Historical, Patriarchal Blessing

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Christians sometimes struggle to discern whether some aspect of an Old Testament narrative is merely descriptive of a historical event in the life of the biblical character or whether it has theological meaning for us today. Such has been the case with the patriarchal blessings in Genesis 27:26–29 and 48:1–49:28.

Some religious groups have perverted the meaning of these unique redemptive-historical events. For instance, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints adheres to a ritual of patriarchal blessing that is equivalent to fortune telling. Each Mormon receives a blessing from his or her bishop that “contains personal revelation and instructions from Heavenly Father.” Mormon “patriarchal blessings” are deeply legalistic and superstitious. Sadly, many Mormons have lamented making major life decisions based on the personal “blessing” they received.

Unlike such self-referential and superstitious incantations, the patriarchal blessings in the book of Genesis are covenant blessings in redemptive history; therefore, they anticipate the fulfillment of the spiritual blessings in the coming of the promised Redeemer, Jesus Christ. A consideration of the New Testament’s teaching about them will help us understand their place in redemptive history.

As Isaac and Jacob came to the end of their lives, they pronounced blessings over their children. In Genesis 27:27–29, Isaac pronounced a divine blessing on Jacob with language reminiscent of the language of the blessing God proclaimed to Abraham (Gen. 12:1–3). Jacob, in turn, pronounced divine blessings on each of his grandsons (Gen. 48) and sons (Gen. 49:1–28). The dying blessings of Isaac and Jacob find their way into the pages of the New Testament, when the writer of Hebrews explains: “By faith Isaac invoked future blessings on Jacob and Esau. By faith Jacob, when dying, blessed each of the sons of Joseph, bowing in worship over the head of his staff” (Heb. 11:20–21). The writer of Hebrews sees in the patriarchal blessings an act of faith.

Every act of faith is built on the previous word and promises of God. Isaac and Jacob were pronouncing covenant blessings in light of the previous promises God made to Abraham. Jacob’s blessing his sons and the sons of Joseph “by faith” is particularly instructive. Here, at the end of a difficult and challenging life, Jacob continues to cling to the covenant promises of God. As John Owen explained, “Notwithstanding all the trials and conflicts which he had met withal, with the weaknesses and disconsolations of old age, he abode firm in faith.” What enabled Jacob to hold on to the promises despite the trials and tribulations he experienced throughout his life was his expectation of God’s fulfillment of the promises He gave to Abraham.

The gospel is the foundation of the patriarchal blessings. Isaac and Jacob believed the promises of God regarding the coming Redeemer and His redemptive blessings when they pronounced their blessings on their children. There would be no way to make sense of these patriarchal blessings if we detached them from the person and saving work of Jesus Christ. Interestingly, Jesus pronounced the ultimate patriarchal blessing on His disciples as He went to lay down His life for His people. In his Notes on Scripture, Jonathan Edwards tied the dying blessings of Isaac and Jacob to Christ’s promise to send the Holy Spirit to His people as He also approached His death. Edwards wrote:

Isaac’s and Jacob’s blessing their children before their death, and, as it were, making over to them their future inheritance, may probably be typical of our receiving the blessings of the Covenant of Grace from Christ, as by His last will and testament, the final [administration of the] Covenant of Grace represented as His testament. Christ in the 14th, 15th and 16th chapters of John, does as it were make His will, and conveys to His people their inheritance before His death, [in] particular the Comforter, or the Holy Spirit, which is the sum of the purchased inheritance.

How to Make 2022 Your Best Children’s Ministry Year Ever

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In just a few more turns of the clock, it will be a new year—2022.

Praise God for everything He did last year, amen! Think about all the victories He helped you accomplish. All the prayers He answered. For the many lives that were changed in your ministry.

But we can’t dwell there too long—because it’s about to be a new year and God has so much more for you in this coming year.

How would you like to have your best children’s ministry year ever in 2022? Here are some things you can do to see it come to fruition.

Take a hard look at what you are doing. Is there anything you are doing that you need to stop doing? Is there anything that needs to be tweaked or adjusted? Just because it worked in the past, doesn’t mean it will work in 2022. Hold everything with open hands.  Change is a good thing when done properly.

Vision. Have a simple, powerful, engaging vision that you are pointing people toward. This will help them remember why they are serving. And don’t forget, vision leaks. It’s not a one and done. You have to constantly keep it in front of people.

Plan out your ministry year. If you haven’t done so yet, get 2022 planned out. Get your key dates on the church calendar. Work with other ministries and plan your calendars together. This will help you and the other ministries to not have conflicting events or programs.

Focus on building your volunteer team. This must be a top priority. 2022 will rise or fall on the strength of your volunteer team. Remember…your job is not to do the ministry.  Rather it is to equip volunteers to effectively do the work of the ministry. It’s not about what you can do, it’s about what you can empower volunteers to do.

Make sure you have a board of directors. What do I mean by “board of directors?” I mean have 3-4 people that you will hold you accountable. People who you can bounce ideas off of.  People that you can go to for advice in difficult situations. People who will challenge you.  People who pray for you. People who have your back.

Do something that is outside of your comfort zone. What have you been thinking about trying, but you just haven’t gotten the courage yet to try it? Remember, nothing grows in your comfort zone. It’s when you think outside the box and push yourself, that you will see amazing things happen. Are you fearful about trying it?  That’s okay. Try it,  even if you are afraid. Have you gotten so comfortable that you have the ministry on “cruise control?”

Pro Church Website Tips For New Church Webmasters

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So you’ve been named your church’s new website master? Part of my work includes providing quality information on building church websites, so I’ve reached out to experts in the field of church websites and asked for some helpful church website tips for those that are new to being a webmaster. Here is a list of tips that I think you will find extremely helpful as you start your journey of being a church website webmaster.

7 Extremely Helpful Church Website Tips From The Pros

Rob Laughter – Churchly – specializes in a WordPress plugin to use with the Divi Theme. He shares these church website tips.

  • Have a written plan for keeping your site content up to date.
  • Few things about a church website reflect more poorly on your ministry than having outdated content.
  • As a general rule, try to minimize any time-sensitive content on your site, and consolidate the info that is necessary.
  • For example, rather than listing the staff that is involved in a ministry on that ministry’s page, have a single staff directory that lists all of your staff, including ministry area and position, so you only have a single place to update when staff transitions.
  • Same with events — rather than including lists of upcoming events all over your site, have a single events section that you maintain on a regular basis.

Steven Gliebe – ChurchThemes.com specializes in WordPress themes and plugins at Church Themes. Church Themes is one of the premier providers of WordPress themes for churches. He has these church website tips.

  • Make sure your church’s location and service times are immediately clear. People don’t hang around a website very long when they can’t find critical information.
  • Ideas: Show location and times on your homepage, in the header or footer, create a page with these details and link to it from your homepage and menu.
  • Create a prominent “What to Expect” or “I’m New Here” page to help make potential visitors comfortable about stepping through your door.
    • What are services like?
    • How long are they?
    • What is your style of worship?
    • What is a typical attire?
    • How does childcare work?
  • Show a few Sunday morning photos. Bonus for creating a welcome tour video.

Andrew Peters – The Reach Company specializes in church website design at The Reach Company. He offers these church website tips to make your websites more effective.

  • The first few seconds REALLY matter. Focus on a call to action that engages visitors and funnels them to where you want them to be (whether it be a plan your visit page or a sermons page, whatever communicates best what you’re like) without using ‘ain’t we something’ undertones.
  • Get rid of sliders (because they stopped working like 4 years ago) and focus on accurate pictures/video and a headline that stirs the feelings you want stirred in website visitors.

Jason Alexis is the administrator of the Facebook group WordPress for Churches. He gives some great tips about church website security.

  • Fair or not, Internet surfers who find a website that ‘turns them off’ or is ‘turned off,’ almost never visit that website again.
  • So, it is obvious that all church websites need to take steps to reduce their chances of being hacked.
  • Here are some ways to do that with your existing website… Is Your Church’s ‘Underwear’ Dirty? Find Out in 30 Secs!

Michael Terndrup from the WordPress for Churches group on Facebook gives this church website tip.

  • A picture of the church must be on the front page do not make the website about the pastor. Also, make sure the menu bar has everything in the right order

Joe Campbell – Founder – PraiseOn, a Christian lifestyle website gives these tips about image optimization.

Dan Newman – DL Church Website Design gives these church website tips for beginning designers.

  • I think the number one question a new church webmaster should keep in mind is, does the website reflect your church? It is very important for the website visitors get a feel for what they will be experiencing when they physically visit the church.
  • Make sure as much as possible to include actual church pictures – not stock photos.
  • Are the things that are most important to your church prominent on the home page?

My Personal Tip For Church Websites

Whatever you do, don’t use a free website builder like WordPress.com, Blogger.com, Wix.com, or Weebly.com. These sites may be free, but the tradeoff is that they have control of what is put on your website.

They may put inappropriate ads on your web pages. They may decide at some point that your content does not comply with their “community standards” according to their terms of service. Your pro-life event might violate their so-called standards, and your website will be deleted without recourse.

So, don’t out cheap yourself. You paid for a yellow pages ad back in the day. Spend the money to have a great church website so that you have full control.

I hope that these church website tips have helped you have a more effective online ministry for your church. I suggest you read our other article on how to make your church website work for you.

 

This article originally appeared here, and is used by permission.

5 Small Group Questions to Ask for the New Year

communicating with the unchurched

Albert Einstein said: “If I had an hour to solve a problem and my life depended on the solution, I would spend the first 55 minutes determining the proper question to ask, for once I know the proper question, I could solve the problem in less than five minutes.” I love Albert Einstein’s thinking! So helpful. Here is my best shot at five small group questions to ask as 2019 begins!

5 Small Group Questions to Ask for the New Year

1. Did you establish “wins” for the strategies you used last year?

If so, how did you do? Did your plans succeed or fail? If you didn’t establish wins, plan on adding this very important ingredient in 2022. Andy Stanley’s 7 Practices of Effective Ministry is an excellent resource for this.

2. Have you moved closer to the preferred future?

Or simply prevented slippage? If you haven’t developed a refined preferred future, it is time and you need to do it.

3. Are you ending 2021 with a solid plan for 2022?

Even if you developed an annual calendar for 2018-2019 (i.e., September to August), it’s a good idea to recalibrate for the start of the new year. What changes or adjustments do you need to make?

4. What have been your key learnings?

What have you learned is true in your setting that you didn’t know before? What have you learned is actually an outdated assumption?

5. What aspects of your design need to be carefully examined?

Remember, “your ministry is perfectly designed to produce the results you are currently experiencing (Andy Stanley).” If you want different results, you need to develop a different design. Doing the same things again and again and expecting different results is the definition of insanity (Albert Einstein). Using the same strategy after you know it is ineffective is irresponsible and poor stewardship.

 

This article on small group questions originally appeared here.

Sunday School Lesson on Prayer: Accept God’s Invitation to Chat!

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Use this Sunday school lesson on prayer with kids of all ages. It’s from the popular book Kids’ Travel Guide to the Lord’s Prayer.

Children will go on a journey through the Bible to discover why God invites us to communicate with him. They’ll also explore various ways to pray. And they’ll be challenged to daily accept God’s invitation to interact.

Enjoy this Sunday school lesson on prayer!

Travel Itinerary for a Sunday School Lesson on Prayer

God desires to have a relationship with each of us. And an important part of any relationship is communication. God established prayer as a way for us to communicate with him. Through prayer, we can praise God and ask for forgiveness. We also thank God for all he’s done and share requests with him. Prayer lets us open our hearts to God and tell him our thoughts and desires.

Children are eager to communicate with anyone who will listen. But they often feel as if adults don’t care about their concerns or opinions. Use this Sunday school lesson on prayer to teach children that God wants us to talk to him. God gives us many examples of prayer in the Bible. Celebrate with kids the joy of communicating with God!

Pathway Point: God wants us to talk to him.

In-Focus Verse: “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God” (Philippians 4:6).

Departure Prayer (up to 5 minutes)

How can we teach children about prayer without actually taking time to pray? If you don’t have enough time to pray, you don’t have enough time to teach! Fight the temptation to dive into the lesson without asking God for wisdom. Spending a few minutes in prayer can make the difference between wasting your time and watching it produce much fruit. God will give you the wisdom to teach as you ask him for it (James 1:5).

Before you pray, remind children they can talk to God as they do their best friends. God wants to hear what each person has to say. Invite each child to thank God for one good thing that happened in the past week.

Then pray: Dear Lord, thank you for loving us and hearing us when we pray. Help us learn to talk to you every day, in every situation. Thank you for answering our prayers and helping us please you. We love you and praise you for all you’ve done. Amen.

1st Stop Discovery (15 minutes)

An Invitation

This activity emphasizes God’s love and his desire to communicate with us.

Items to Pack

  • construction paper
  • crayons or markers
  • bright, colorful stickers

Borrow a book of sample invitations from a stationery shop. Let children see all the fancy invitations for inspiration as they make their own.

The 20 Most Popular Articles on ChurchLeaders in 2021

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The year 2021 is drawing to a close, and for many of us, it has been another challenging season. The most popular articles on ChurchLeaders from 2021 reflect a year of controversy and tragedy for ministry leaders. Yet some of these stories clearly highlight the work of God in people’s lives.

As we look toward the beginning of another new year, we at ChurchLeaders hope that even the brokenness reflected in our top news articles will lead you to ponder the depths of God’s grace and the importance of clinging to Christ above all.

Most Popular Articles on ChurchLeaders in 2021

Here are the top most popular news articles on ChurchLeaders from 2021 based on what our readers have clicked.

20. Lecrae Reacting to Billy Graham Clip About Jesus’ Skin Color Goes Viral

lecrae popular articles 2

The not-so “churchy” Christian hip hop artist and Grammy Award-winner Lecrae posted a Billy Graham video on TikTok that received over 477,000 views and 11,000 comments at the time of publication and continued to grow.


19. Pastor Greg Locke Tells CNN They ‘Will Burn in Hell’

greg-locke-cnn popular articles 2
Screen grab from Twitter: @AllisonLHedges

Pastor Greg Locke was featured in a news brief on CNN for telling his church not to wear masks or get vaccinated. So he told CNN they will burn in hell for threatening him.


18. Beth Moore Calls Out Unvaccinated, Unmasked Christians; Greg Locke and Sean Feucht Respond

beth-moore-unvaccinated popular articles
Screen grab from Twitter: @BethMooreLPM

Beth Moore called out Christians who politicize the virus in a tweet that has gone viral, receiving reactions from outspoken pastor Greg Locke and “Let Us Worship” leader Sean Feucht.


17. UPDATE: Ed Young Thanks Church for Support After Death of Daughter, LeeBeth, at Age 34

ed-young-update popular articles

LeeBeth Young, daughter of Texas megachurch pastors Ed and Lisa Young, passed away Monday, Jan. 18, at the age of 34. Ed and Lisa expressed their appreciation to a standing ovation from their Fellowship Church in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area.


16. He Was One of the Top Five Male Porn Stars in the World. Now He’s a Pastor

joshua-broome-popular articles
Screen grab from YouTube: @Joshua Broome

Joshua Broome was once one of the top five male porn stars in the world. Now, he is a husband, father, and pastor who wants people to know the depth of God’s mercy and kindness.

John MacArthur Calls Pastors to Take a Stand on Biblical Sexual Morality

Bill C-4 John MacArthur
IslandsEnd, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

On Tuesday, John MacArthur alerted his Twitter followers to an “urgent matter” regarding biblical sexual morality. Grace Community Church’s pastor asked “faithful pastors” to commit to preaching about biblical sexual morality on Sunday, January 16, 2022.

In a statement called “A Stand on Biblical Sexual Morality,” MacArthur called on pastors to sign their names as a commitment to take “a stand for the truth of the saving gospel” by dedicating the January date to preaching on biblical sexual morality in solidarity with their Canadian brothers.

“On December 22, I received an email from Pastor James Coates of GraceLife Church of Edmonton in Alberta, Canada,” MacArthur wrote. Coates and his church has been in the news for disobeying government COVID-19 rules and restrictions regarding gathering limits and church closings during the pandemic. As a result, Coates was arrested and GraceLife Church was seized by authorities for almost three months. Coates is a graduate of MacArthur’s The Master’s Seminary.

Coates’ letter to MacArthur gave him insight into Bill C-4, which was recently passed by the Canadian government. Coates said the bill “directly comes against parents and counsellors who would seek to offer biblical counsel with respect to sexual immorality and gender.” Coates shared that the bill could be used to make evangelism a criminal offense.

MacArthur‘s statement also included a letter from Pastor Andrew DeBartolo, teaching elder at Encounter Church in Kingston, Canada. DeBartolo shared that not “a single dissenting vote was cast by any member of the conservative party,” and that Bill C-4 will become law after January 8, 2022.

RELATED: James Coates’ Wife, Erin: My Husband Is in Jail Because He Obeyed the Lord Jesus Christ

Bill C-4 bans conversion therapy and will criminalize “causing another person to undergo conversion therapy; promoting or advertising conversion therapy.”

Bill C-4 also says that the idea that “heterosexuality, cisgender gender identity and gender expression that conforms to the sex assigned to a person at birth” are to be “preferred over other sexual orientations, gender identities and gender expressions” is a “myth.”

DeBartolo explained that the new law will be able to be used against preachers and elders who speak against homosexuality or transgenderism. Counseling someone toward a biblical understanding of sexuality and marriage would be in violation of the law and could result in imprisonment.

“Everyone who knowingly causes another person to undergo conversion therapy, including by providing conversion therapy to that other person—is guilty of an indictable offense and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than five years,” Bill C-4 says.

The Bill also explains that “everyone who knowingly promotes or advertises conversion therapy is guilty of an indictable offense and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than two years.”

‘Many Incarnations’ of Jesus? NASA Enlisted Theologians to Study Faith Implications of Alien Life

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News recently broke that NASA hired religious experts to ponder spiritual implications of discovering extraterrestrial life. From 2016 to 2017, the U.S. space agency earmarked $1.1 million for a nine-month study at Princeton’s Center of Theological Inquiry (CTI). Recruited to research “The Societal Implications of Astrobiology” were 24 theologians, including the Rev. Dr. Andrew Davison, an Anglican priest and biochemist from Cambridge. He recently described his role in the study and has a forthcoming book titled “Astrobiology and Christian Doctrine.”

Will Storrar, CTI’s director, says NASA’s goal was to have “serious scholarship being published” about the “profound wonder and mystery and implication of finding microbial life on another planet.”

Andrew Davison: Have There Been ‘Many Incarnations’ of Jesus?

On a blog for Cambridge divinity faculty, Andrew Davison details his role in the study. He focused mainly on Christology but also pondered topics such as creation and the dignity of human life. Davison sums up his research as “a survey of the main topics in Christian belief—what is sometimes called ‘systematic theology’—from the perspective of life elsewhere in the universe. I am thinking about its bearing on the doctrines of creation, sin, the person and work of Jesus, redemption, revelation, eschatology, and so on.”

“The most significant question there is,” writes Davison, “is probably whether one would respond theologically to the prospect of life elsewhere in terms of there having been many incarnations [of] Jesus.” He also is pondering “the doctrine of creation, especially in terms of how it deals with themes of multiplicity and diversity.” Calling creation a “generous gift” from God, he says “that would apply equally to…whatever other life there might be in the universe.”

Davison notes, “Perhaps the main discovery I would report on to date is finding just how frequently theology-and-astrobiology has been a topic in popular writing for at least a century and a half: in monthly magazines for instance.”

Religion Will Help People Process Discovery of Aliens

In his upcoming book, Andrew Davison writes that “nonreligious people…seem to overestimate the challenges that religious people…would experience if faced with evidence of alien life.” If such proof is found, he predicts that earthlings will “turn to their religions’ traditions for guidance” to grapple with various implications for “the standing and dignity of human life.” Whether we detect extraterrestrial life “in a decade or only in future centuries or perhaps never at all,” he writes, “it will be useful to have thought through the implications in advance.”

Desmond Tutu’s Family Gathers in South Africa for Cape Town Funeral

Desmond Tutu
People take selfies at a mural by artist Brian Rolfe depicting the late Anglican Archbishop Emeritus, Desmond Tutu in Cape Town, South Africa, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021. The funeral service for Tutu, who died Sunday at the age of 90, will be held on New Years Day. (AP Photo/Nardus Engelbrecht)

CAPE TOWN (AP) — Desmond Tutu‘s family members gathered at his Cape Town home on Tuesday in preparation for his funeral this weekend as South Africans honored his life.

The Nobel Peace Prize-winning activist for racial equality and LGBT rights died Sunday at the age of 90.

Tutu’s wife Leah is being joined by the couple’s four children, grandchildren and other family members.

“Mommy is maintaining … She is being surrounded with love,” daughter Nontombi Tutu told The Associated Press in front of the family home in the Milnerton area of Cape Town.

“In a time like this, there are times where we are laughing, sharing stories, and there are times where we are crying, as we come to terms with life without daddy,” she said.

“He has not quite left us and yet he has left us. And so as a family we are supporting one another,” she said. “We are loving one another, we are fighting one another, as families do. And we are feeling the love and support from people all over the country and all over the world.”

The period when Tutu will lie in state at St. George’s Anglican Cathedral in Cape Town has been extended to two days, Thursday and Friday, to allow all mourners to pay tribute by filing past his coffin, his trust announced Tuesday.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa has announced that Tutu’s requiem Mass Saturday will be a Special Official Funeral Category 1. His ashes will later be interred at the cathedral’s mausoleum, according to Tutu’s instructions.

“The archbishop was very clear on his wishes for his funeral. He wanted no ostentatiousness or lavish spending,” the Tutu trust said in a statement. “He asked that the coffin be the cheapest available and that a bouquet of carnations from his family be the only flowers in the cathedral.”

Tutu’s supporters have left flowers at the Cape Town cathedral and also in front of Tutu’s historic home in Soweto, Johannesburg. Prayers were said and candles lit at St. Mary’s Anglican Cathedral in Johannesburg Tuesday evening.

An interfaith service will be held in the capital, Pretoria, on Wednesday and the City of Cape Town is also planning to hold a service in honor of Tutu. Cape Town’s landmark Table Mountain, the Cape Town Civic Center, and an arch at the cathedral are all being lit up each night this week in purple in honor of Tutu’s purple bishop’s robes.

___

AP journalist Andrew Meldrum contributed to this report from Johannesburg.

This article originally appeared here.

Frank Barker, Founding Pastor of Briarwood Presbyterian Church, Is Dead at 89

Frank Barker
Frank Barker. Photo courtesy of Haddon Smith

(RNS) — The Rev. Frank Barker, whose 4,000-member Briarwood Presbyterian Church grew from a Birmingham, Alabama, storefront before he helped found a conservative branch of Presbyterianism, has died. He was 89.

Barker died Monday (Dec. 27), his daughter, Peggy Barker Townes, confirmed to the news site AL.com. He would have turned 90 in January.

“He was faithful to the last breath,” Townes told AL.com. “We have been as blessed as we can be.”

Barker led Briarwood Presbyterian Church from its founding in 1960 until his retirement in 1999. The church lasted only three years in its shopping center location. In 1988, Barker oversaw the construction of a $32 million hilltop campus, adding a $5.5 million expansion 10 years later.

Barker led the church through the creation of Briarwood Christian School in 1965 and the Birmingham Theological Seminary in 1972.

The Rev. Harry Reeder, who replaced Barker as senior pastor at Briarwood Presbyterian after his retirement, remembered Barker in a Facebook post on Monday as a “mentor in Gospel ministry” and as a “humble, godly, visionary friend and pastor.”

“He loved His Word, His Church, the lost and he loved living the Great Commandment and fulfilling the Great Commission,” Reeder wrote.

Barker, unlike many other megachurch pastors, was not a “dynamic orator,” his daughter recalled in a 2018 news story on The Gospel Coalition. “I had to train myself” to evangelize, he told the publication.

In 1973, Barker hosted the founding meeting of the Presbyterian Church in America, the second-largest Presbyterian denomination in the United States and, according to its website, “the largest Calvinist denomination in the United States.”

Five years later Barker helped found Campus Outreach, a network of interdenominational ministries targeting college students without faith in the U.S. and across the world, especially at schools too small to support their own ministries.

Campus Outreach today has 122 chapters from Minneapolis to Washington, D.C., and from New Zealand to Peru.

Though retired, Barker continued to serve Briarwood and Christians in Alabama until recently. “I was blessed to be in the last small group Bible Study he conducted which concluded just a couple of months ago,” said Bill Armistead, former chairman of the Alabama Republican Party, who described Barker as a mentor in a Facebook post Monday. “Rev. Barker was truly faithful to the end and he was anxiously anticipating the day he would be face to face with his Savior.”

This article originally appeared here.

Parents Outraged After Educator Refers to Evangelicals as ‘Kooks’ and ‘Bigots’ in Poem Recited at School Board Meeting

Leander
Pictured: Krista Tyler making remarks at Dec 16 meeting of the Leander ISD school board via Twitter.

Tempers have flared in Leander, Texas regarding a list of 11 books that have been removed from the Leander Independent School District curriculum after a year-long review that deemed them inappropriate for high school students. 

In response to the decision to remove these books, one educator wrote a Dr. Seuss style poem, which refers to evangelicals as “bigots” and “kooks,” and recited it at a December school board meeting. Parents of students in the district have responded to the poem with outrage. 

While the pulled books had not been required reading for literature courses, they were part of a list of texts that students could select from for required “book clubs.” Students were also allowed to select books that were not on the provided list. 

After parents complained about some of the books on the “book club” selected readings list, which included titles such as “The Handmaid’s Tale: The Graphic Novel” by Margaret Atwood and Renee Nault and “V for Vendetta” by Alan Moore, the Leander ISD assembled a committee to review them. The committee consisted of staff, parents, and community members, who eventually determined that 11 books should be pulled from the curriculum because of sexual content, sexual assault references, foul language, and graphic images.

RELATED: Christmas Display Featuring ‘Gender Queer’ Alongside Bible Removed by VA Library After Outcry

While many parents saw the removal of these books as a victory, a number of educators and advocacy groups decried the decision as an act of censorship. Jonathan Friedman, director of free expression and education at PEN America (a nonprofit organization that promotes literature), said, “The entire process has been unusual, opaque, and worrying—more about appeasing sensitive parents than serving student learners.”

“One cannot deny that the books on the chopping block all deal with LGBTQ+ issues, sex, and racism and that they were singled out because of these themes,” Friedman continued. 

Krista Tyler, who is a former instructional technology specialist at Grisham Middle School in the nearby Round Rock Independent School District (ISD), also expressed her concern about the decision to pull the books in a December 16 Leander ISD school board meeting, though in a decidedly less diplomatic manner. 

The Twitter account called “Libs of Tik Tok” posted a video of Tyler’s remarks, which were styled after Dr. Seuss’ “How the Grinch Stole Christmas.” 

RELATED: ERLC: Child-Care Proposal Threatens Religious Liberty

“Everyone in Leander liked reading a lot, but some evangelicals in Leander did not. These kooks hated reading, the whole reading season. Please don’t ask why; no one quite knows the reason,” Tyler said. “It could be perhaps critical thinking causes fright. It could be their heads aren’t screwed on just right. But whatever the reason, their brains or their fright, they can’t follow policy in plain black and white.” 

California Man Gets Second Life Term for Synagogue Attack

John Earnest
FILE - Defendant John Earnest listens during testimony by witness Oscar Stewart during Earnest's preliminary hearing, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019, in Superior Court in San Diego. Earnest has been sentenced on Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021, to life in federal prison for killing a woman and injuring three others when he burst into a Southern California synagogue in 2019, adding to a life sentence he received three months earlier in state court. (John Gibbins/The San Diego Union-Tribune via AP, Pool, File)

SAN DIEGO (AP) — A 22-year-old white supremacist was sentenced Tuesday to life in federal prison for killing a woman and injuring three others in a shooting at a Southern California synagogue in 2019, adding to the life term he received three months earlier in state court.

John T. Earnest declined to speak in a courtroom full of victims, families and congregants. In state court, his attorney said he wanted to speak but a judge refused, saying he didn’t want to give a platform for his hate-filled speech.

Earnest’s attorney, Ellis Johnston III, said his client acknowledged his actions were “inappropriate,” a statement that was greeted with skepticism by prosecutors. Peter Ko, a federal prosecutor, said Earnest’s show of contrition came shortly after the shooting in a recorded phone call to someone else.

U.S. District Judge Anthony Battaglia said the federal and state life sentences would run one after the other instead of concurrently, acknowledging it was symbolic but that it was meant to send a strong message. The judge denied the defense attorney’s request to have Earnest stay in state prison.

“Obviously this is as serious as it gets,” Battaglia said.

Earnest was tied to restraints and looked straight ahead without expression during the two-hour hearing, which marked the end of legal proceedings against him.

He pleaded guilty to federal hate crimes in September after the Justice Department said it wouldn’t seek the death penalty. Defense attorneys and prosecutors recommended a life sentence, plus 30 years.

That same month, Earnest received another life term under a plea agreement with state charges that spared him the death penalty. His conviction for murder and attempted murder at the synagogue and arson for an earlier fire at a nearby mosque brought a life sentence without parole, plus 137 years in prison.

Minutes after the shooting on the last day of Passover, Earnest called a 911 dispatcher to say he shot up the synagogue to save white people. “I’m defending our nation against the Jewish people, who are trying to destroy all white people,” he said.

The San Diego man was inspired by mass shootings at the Tree of Life Congregation in Pittsburgh and two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, shortly before he attacked Chabad of Poway, a synagogue near San Diego, on April 27, 2019. He frequented 8chan, a dark corner of the internet, for those disaffected by mainstream social media sites to post extremist, racist and violent views.

Earnest legally bought a semi-automatic rifle in San Diego a day before the attack, according to a federal affidavit. He entered the synagogue with 10 bullets loaded and 50 more on his vest but fled after struggling to reload. Worshipers chased him to his car.

Earnest killed 60-year-old Lori Gilbert-Kaye, who was hit twice in the foyer, and wounded an 8-year-old girl, her uncle and Rabbi Yisroel Goldstein, who was leading a service on the major Jewish holiday.

Family members and other congregants spoke of how Gilbert-Kaye brightened their lives with extraordinary kindness and called Earnest a coward, an evil animal and a monster. Gilbert-Kaye paid for medications for people who couldn’t afford them. An Easter basket for a poor family she met was found in her trunk after she died.

Hannah Kaye, her daughter, said it was “beyond comprehension” how Earnest — an accomplished student, athlete and musician who was studying to be a nurse at California State University, San Marcos — “traveled down the rabbit hole” of violent anti-Semitism. She expressed willingness to meet with him at some point.

Earnest was also convicted of arson for setting fire to a mosque in the nearby suburb of Escondido about a month before he attacked the synagogue.

“All people in this country should be able to freely exercise their religion without fear of being attacked,” said U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland. “This defendant’s horrific crime was an assault on fundamental principles of our nation.”

Earnest’s parents issued a statement after the shooting expressing shock and sadness, calling their son’s actions a “terrifying mystery.”

“To our great shame, he is now part of the history of evil that has been perpetrated on Jewish people for centuries,” they said.

This article originally appeared here.

Beth Moore, Part 2—What It Was Like to Leave the SBC

communicating with the unchurched

Beth Moore is a Bible teacher with a speaking ministry that’s taken her across the nation, challenging thousands of people. She has written multiple best-selling books and Bible studies. Her latest, co-authored with her daughter, Melissa, is “Now That Faith Has Come: A Study of Galatians.” Beth lives in Houston, Texas, where she leads Living Proof Ministries and enjoys life with her husband, Keith.

RELATED: Beth Moore, Part 1: How Galatians Is ‘Astonishingly Relevant’ to American Christianity

Other Ways to Listen to This Podcast With Beth Moore

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Key Questions for Beth Moore

-How did writing a study on Galatians impact you personally?

-Earlier this year, you left the Southern Baptist Convention. What was that like for you?

-What advice would you give to people who are staying in denominations they find difficult?

-What gospel hope does Galatians offer to people bearing the weight of the law?

Key Quotes from Beth Moore

“Most writers would say that the pandemic made it extremely hard to write. You would think we were all home and it should have been the easiest thing. It’s not true. It was so burdensome, so, so worrisome.”

“Where I landed was true to my convictions in Christ as I understand the Word and as I seek in a very wobbly way to walk with the Lord Jesus day to day. But in the midst of those things, will I get a ton of things wrong? Yes, absolutely I will. But where I felt like I was landing on some of these things, Galatians was very affirming and it was like, stand and don’t let go and don’t back off.”

“You can tell a tree by its fruit, not by its mouth, but its fruit.”

“When you’ve known of Jesus all your life, began to know him in childhood, for me, it was around nine…I’m just not bailing this late.”

10 Prayers for a New Pastor or Staff Member

communicating with the unchurched

Yesterday, the church where I am interim pastor (and a member) affirmed our candidate for our next senior pastor. I’m excited about the days to come, and I’m honored to support him and pray for him. Maybe one of these ways to pray for a new pastor or staff member will help you to pray for long-term leaders, too:

1. That he will have courage to preach the Word. This task is not going to get easier in the years to come, so I want to know I’m always praying for the man who leads me and my family spiritually. We need him to give us God’s Word.

2. That his family will experience a healthy transition. Generally, a pastor and his family are moving to a new location and a new place of ministry. When his family loves that transition, a pastor’s work is much easier. I pray for his marriage and his parenting in these changing times.

3. That he will model consistent, growing, godly living. All of us who pastor must set the example as we shepherd the flock. We who are the flock thus have the responsibility to pray the enemy will not win in our pastors’ lives.

4. That he will have a quick read of church culture. I realize that understanding a church is a ministry-long journey as the church grows, but it helps when a new pastor can evaluate his new congregation’s culture quickly.

5. That he will experience quick connections with the church staff. It’s not always easy to become someone else’s “boss” almost overnight via a church affirmation. Healthy church staffs, though, can make all the difference in the world as a congregation looks toward the future (and, if you’re interested, here are some posts about healthy church staffs).

6. That he will have a unique ability to remember names. People matter. Their names matter. When a pastor identifies members by their names, he grants them significance and value. Many of us, though, have to work at this task.

7. That he and his family will develop genuine friendships in the church. To this day, I still have friends I pastored over 30 years ago—and I count them incredible gifts of God to me. Pastoring is more fun when you’re pastoring real friends.

8. That he will know God’s vision for the future. The best pastoral leaders I know have a clear vision for what they believe the church should become. They believe in that vision, promote it, and lead toward it.

9. That the ministry he has left will sense God’s comfort and leading. The excitement of one church in gaining a new pastor is often the pain of another church losing their beloved leader. We’re all in this Great Commission task together, so we need to pray for each other’s congregations.

Why Does Mark Give Credit to Isaiah for Malachi’s Work?

communicating with the unchurched

As it is written in Isaiah the prophet…

You expect immediately after this statement a quote from a prophet named Isaiah. But you don’t get that. The verses immediately after are from another prophet; namely, Malachi.

Behold, I send my messengers before your face, who will prepare your way…

He then proceeds to actually quote Isaiah:

the voice of one crying in the wilderness: Prepare the way of the Lord, make his paths straight…

Why does Mark ignore Malachi and give all the credit to Isaiah? Can we really claim an inerrant Bible if we’ve got a gospel writer misattributing a source? That’s basic level scholarship. As I set about answering these questions we will also learn a little about textual variants.

My Bible Doesn’t Say “Isaiah the Prophet”

Some of my readers will grab their trusted KJV to check these verses and you won’t find “Isaiah the prophet” It will simply read “As it is written in the prophets…” No problem, then. Some may even go so far as to argue that this is part of the modern translations—they bring more confusion than help. The only problem is that it’s quite likely that “Isaiah the prophet” is the original. How do we know this?

Have you ever heard the phrase “textual variant”? It’s what happens when the many biblical manuscripts we possess conflict with one another. In this instance there are some manuscripts which read “as it is written in the prophets” and others have “as it is written in Isaiah the prophet.” Only one of these (or I suppose neither is a possibility) is original. What is inspired is what Mark actually wrote. So how can we figure that out. At times it is difficult, but the general rule of thumb is that “the reading that best explains the origin of the other readings is probably original.”

Those who have given their lives to figuring these things out have given us five specific rules (or maybe strong suggestions—because sometimes we break those rules):

  1. Prefer the shorter reading because scribes don’t add words
  2. Prefer the more difficult reading because nobody changes something to make it more difficult
  3. Prefer the reading that is most similar to the author’s typical vocabulary.
  4. Prefer the reading that accords best with the context and author’s theology.
  5. If dealing with parallel passages prefer the one that is less harmonious because a scribe wouldn’t change something to create less harmony between the texts.

There are also rules for weighing external evidence. We typically prefer the older manuscripts, the ones that have the most widely separated geographical areas, and the greater number of texts types which support that reading. Scholars differ on which text types to prefer, but the basic rules still apply here.

3 Dangerous Characteristics of False Doctrine

communicating with the unchurched

Consider this half-century old quote regarding false doctrine:

Here is the great evangelical disaster—the failure of the evangelical world to stand for truth as truth. There is only one word for this—accommodation: The evangelical church has accommodated to the world spirit of the age. … Truth carries with it confrontation. Truth demands confrontation: loving confrontation, but confrontation nevertheless. If our reflex action is always accommodation regardless of the centrality of the truth involved, there is something wrong. — Francis Schaeffer 

Francis Schaeffer knew that having sound doctrine was not only crucial, but also difficult. We live in a time and place where the conveniences of accommodating falsehood far outweigh the inconveniences of holding to what the Bible teaches—in the short run, at least. The reality is that our doctrine has eternal implications. When Paul warns Timothy of false teachers, he explicitly ties sound doctrine to the gospel (1 Tim 1:10-11). This is because the gospel requires faith and repentance. If we distort Jesus, then the object of our faith is not the Savior, and if we distort his commands, then God-honoring repentance is impossible.

3 Reasons to Beware of False Doctrine

1. False Doctrine Is Subtle

There are two types of teachers in the world: true teachers who teach true things, and false teachers who teach false things. Both claim to tell the truth. Jesus said that despite their sheep-clothing cover-up, we’d know them by their fruit (Matt 7:15). Listen to these striking words from Jeremiah:

An appalling and horrible thing has happened in the land: The prophets prophesy falsely, and the priests rule at their direction; my people love to have it so, but what will you do when the end comes? (Jer 5:30-31)

When our ears are tickled and our hearts are preyed on, do we reject it or do we “love to have it so”?

2. False Doctrine Is Powerful

Good doctrine saves souls. Once again, we look to Paul’s admonition to Timothy:

Keep a close watch on yourself and on the teaching. Persist in this, for by so doing you will save both yourself and your hearers. (1 Tim 4:16)

Bad doctrine is powerful too, but in an opposite way. That’s why condemning false teaching is not a matter of winning arguments or feeding egos, but clearly (and lovingly) warning people. Do we treat false doctrine like lethal poison?

Here’s why we ultimately should…

3. False Doctrine Is Dangerous

Any doctrine that is contrary to the gospel is damning. If we buy into it we will spend eternity in hell. That’s a watery paraphrase of what Jesus told the Pharisees for promulgating a false doctrine of works:

Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you travel across sea and land to make a single proselyte, and when he becomes a proselyte, you make him twice as much a child of hell as yourselves. (Matt 23:15)

Does the prudence with which we guard ourselves against false doctrine reflect the eternally serious implications of straying into it?

The three warnings regarding false doctrine above are expanded on from Secret Church 7: Angels, Demons and Spiritual Warfare.  

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