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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

TRUTH FROM the PROPHETS & WISDOM LITERATURE

    PROVERBS 3...

The following is an outline of verses 1-14 of the 3rd chapter of the
Proverbs of Solomon, Son of  David.  As we look into this chapter 
we will discover the "secrets" (Wisdom)  for living successfully in 
the eyes of  God and man.  The  Proverbs of  Solomon are not law.  
Proverbs are to be used as a guide to pleasing the Lord and living 
a successful and righteous life.                                            

I.  Keep God's Law, live long in peace.  vs. 1-2

II. Make mercy and truth the effort from you heart and find favor 
with God and man. vs. 3-4

III. Trust the Lord God, rather than your understanding, submit 
to him, and He will  give you direction.  vs. 5-6

IV. Do not be too proud to fear the Lord and you will be healthier 
and stronger.  vs. 7-8

V.  Honor the Lord with your possessions and increase to enjoy 
freedom from want. vs. 9-10

VI. Accept Chastening from the Lord and find Happiness, Wisdom 
and Understanding.  Those  who are  loved of  the  Lord (His follo-
wers) he corrects.  vs. 11-12

VII. Wisdom and understanding tend to make a man satisfied in 
life. (Blessed)  It is better than that of silver and gold.  vs. 13-14

The book of proverbs contains 31 chapters,  making it convenient 
to read a chapter daily each month. The third chapter has become 
one of my favorite passages of Scripture.

"My son, forget not my law; but let thine heart keep my command-
ments: For length of days, and long life,  and peace, shall  they add 
to thee."

"Let not mercy and truth forsake thee:  bind them about thy neck 
write them upon the tables of thine heart.
 So shall thou find  favour and  good  understanding in  the sight of 
God and man."
     
  "Trust in the Lord with all thine heart;  and lean not unto thine own 
 understanding.  In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct 
 thy paths."

  "Be not wise in thine own eyes; fear the Lord and depart from evil.
  It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones."

   "Honor the Lord with thy substance, and with the first fruits of all 
thine increase.  So shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy pres-
ses shall burst out with New wine."

  "My son, despise not the chastening of the Lord; neither be weary 
of  his correction:  For  whom the Lord  loveth  he  correcteth;  even 
as a father the son in whom he delighteth."

    " Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and the man that getteth 
understanding. For the merchandise of it is better than the merchan-
dise of silver, and the gain thereof than fine gold."  (kjv)


                                                                             donporter     7.30.13


Friday, July 26, 2013

"OLDSPEAK" from the Rutherford Institute


(The following was copied from a Rutherford Institute article received as an      email. There was no indication of copyright and is presented without edit.)
                                                                           

         "Oldspeak"                                 " The Passing of the Christian Right "

By John W. Whitehead
February 4, 2008

"Nearly 30 years after religious conservatives decided to reenter the political arena—after abandoning it as 'dirty' and leading to compromise—what do they have to show for it? The country remains sharply divided and the reconciling message they used to preach has been obscured by the crass pursuit of the golden ring of political power. In the end, they got neither the power, nor the Kingdom;  only the glory, and even that is now fading as these older leaders pass from the scene."—Cal Thomas, former vice president of the Moral Majority
We are witnessing the end of an era. The deaths of Jerry Falwell (May 15, 2007) and Dr. D. James Kennedy (September 5, 2007) augured a decided downward shift in the Christian Right's steady march to power. Yet long before these men were laid to rest, the movement they helped energize had begun its steady decline.
In the early 1980s, an emergent generation of evangelists lit up television screens, appeared on university campuses, and infiltrated syndicated radio waves. Among these leaders were Falwell, Kennedy, James Dobson, and Pat Robertson, evangelical figures who both predicted and embodied the formation of a new political religion that has transformed the national political scene.
While this marriage between the Religious Right and the political right has been in the making for nearly three decades, the union was consummated with George W. Bush's rise to power and resulted in the Christian Right's enjoyment of unprecedented political influence. As Falwell remarked in 2004: "For conservative people of faith, voting for principle this year means voting for the re-election of George W. Bush…. I believe it is the responsibility of every political conservative, every evangelical Christian, every pro-life Catholic, every traditional Jew, every Reagan Democrat, and everyone in between to get serious about re-electing President Bush."
In fact, those of the Christian Right have made no effort to hide their intentions to impact the political scene in the halls of Congress. Falwell, Dobson, and others laid great store on their contacts inside the Bush White House. As Falwell once remarked, "Everyone takes our calls." However, the Christian Right's claim of political influence may be supercilious. David Kuo, in his book Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political Seduction (2006), argues that Christian Right leaders are nothing more than politically inept tools used by politicians to advance their own agendas.
Kuo, who served as Special Assistant to President George W. Bush, noted that evangelical leaders were often invited to White House functions in an effort to curry their favor and garner their support. Conference calls were held in the White House to update Christian leaders. According to Kuo, talking points were distributed and advice was solicited from these Christian leaders and others. But "that advice rarely went much further than the conference call." And "the true purpose of these calls was to keep prominent social conservatives and their groups or audiences happy." As Kuo recognized, the political establishment just wanted access to the evangelical voting base.
Unfortunately, there is always a price to be paid for power and prestige. In the process of seeking policy outcomes and funding for faith-based initiatives, Christian activists were seduced by political power to such an extent that the gospel of Jesus Christ has been held hostage to a political agenda. Whereas Christianity was once synonymous with charity, compassion, and love for one's neighbor, today it is more often equated with partisan politics, anti-homosexual rhetoric, affluent megachurches, and moralistic finger-pointing.
In fact, the Christian Right has been painted as the "American Taliban." In his book American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on America (2006), Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and former war correspondent Chris Hedges contends that today's Christian Right resembles the early fascist movements in Italy and Germany that emerged at the beginning of the twentieth century. And no wonder he makes such a comment! The Christian Right has used religion like a sledgehammer to beat down its opponents.  For example, shortly following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, Jerry Falwell appeared on televangelist Pat Robertson's television show, The 700 Club. The attacks, Falwell said, were evidence that God was angry at America for its cultural immorality and the nation was paying the price for it. Falwell laid the blame on certain individuals and groups such as the ACLU for "throwing God out successfully with the help of the federal court system, throwing God out of the public square, out of the schools," as well as pagans, abortionists, feminists, gays, and lesbians.
The answer proffered is to take control of the government. In fact, Gary Potter, president of Catholics for Christian Political Action, advocates: "After the Christian majority takes control, pluralism will be seen as immoral and evil and the state will not permit anybody the right to practice evil." Such rhetoric has contributed to a genuine but growing backlash against the Christian Right that can be seen in the popularity of Chris Hitchens' book god is not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything (2007).
Indeed, as President Bush's political star has waned, the Religious Right's legacy and its ability to positively impact the nation are increasingly being called into question. Critics contend that the evangelical movement has been largely reduced to political impotence and moral irrelevance.
By many indications, since the rise of the Christian Right in the early 1980s, the moral condition of the country has worsened. Several years ago, a Barna Group study found that the American adults surveyed found the following, among other things, "morally acceptable": gambling (61 percent), cohabitation (60 percent), and sexual fantasies (59 percent). Nearly half of the adult population felt that two other behaviors were morally acceptable: having an abortion (45 percent) and having a sexual relationship with someone of the opposite sex other than their spouse (42 percent). And the younger the age group surveyed, the more these types of activities were deemed morally acceptable.
As the study concludes, "The generational data patterns make a compelling case for this ongoing slide. Even most people associated with the Christian faith do not seem to have embraced biblical moral standards. Things are likely to get worse before they get better—and they are not likely to get better unless strong and appealing moral leadership emerges to challenge and redirect people's thoughts and behavior. At the moment, such leadership is absent."

The high-profile scandal in the fall of 2006 involving Ted Haggard, who at the time was president of the National Association of Evangelicals (NAE), underscores the crisis in modern Christianity. For example, Haggard used his position as head of NAE to advocate various Christian Right platforms in condemning homosexuality and campaigning for amendments banning same sex marriage. However, he was forced to resign as pastor of his mega church and president of NAE when it was discovered that he was involved in sexual immorality with a homosexual.
The real tragedy of the Ted Haggard debacle was not that Haggard had been leading a double life. As David Kuo remarked to the Associated Press, "It's  tragedy enough if a pastor fails, but this is not about a pastor failing. This is about a politician failing, and the politician is bringing Jesus down with him."
Yet all is not lost. There is a growing sense among many Christians that politics cannot provide the fulfillment they are seeking. After all, by its very nature, politics is driven toward division, compromise, deceit, and, inevitably, corruption. Perhaps people are finally starting to wake up to this truth. According to Kuo, while evangelicals aren't flocking to the Democratic Party, they are perhaps turning away from politics as a means of moral engagement and fulfillment. His prediction is sustained by one post-election online survey of more than 2,000 people, which revealed that "nearly 40 percent of evangelicals support the idea of a two-year Christian 'fast' from intense political activism."
D. James Kennedy was, perhaps, keen to this shift. As a leading figure in the Christian Right and Republican Party politics, Kennedy's televised messages had strayed from traditional preaching to focusing primarily on politics and social issues. However, in April 2007, shortly before his death, Kennedy announced that he was shutting down the Center for Reclaiming America and his Center for Christian Statesmanship in Washington, D.C. He intended to return to his ministerial roots.
The Christian Right should follow suit. Unlike many Christians today, Christ did not engage in politics, identify with the government, or attempt to push an agenda through government channels. In fact, for Christians to be stridently aligned with conservative politics is to miss the point of their religion. "One of the greatest injustices we do to our young people is to ask them to be conservative," theologian Francis Schaeffer wrote. Conservatism, as such, means promoting a political agenda and, thus, maintaining the flow of the status quo. True Christians, however, should be revolutionaries against a status quo dedicated to materialism and the survival of the fittest. Indeed, Christians should stand outside the status quo. This includes politics. We often forget that Christ spoke truth to power and made it abundantly clear that His kingdom was not of this world.
Unfortunately, all too often Christians wrap their religion in the flag, so to speak. For the Christian, country and faith are never synonymous, and they are not two equal loyalties. As Francis Schaeffer noted, "It must be taught that patriotic loyalty must not be identified with Christianity." As Christians in past regimes have found, identifying with the establishment, as much of modern evangelicalism is doing, can present a grave danger—the establishment can and often has become the church's enemy.
Not only is it perilous to identify with the established powers, it also negates the true mission of the church. The church is not to identify with power but to speak truth to power—even at great costs. Martyrs, past and present, testify to this.
Thus, if Christianity is to serve as the moral compass of society, Christians must remain clear of the constraints and compromises entailed in political affiliation. The most appropriate role of religion in politics lies in its ability to define moral issues and speak truth to power. The voice of moral authority, enabled and enhanced by its spiritual roots and raised without dependence upon the legitimacy of the state, will always be the highest expression of true freedom. Such a voice denies the ultimate authority of the government to create or define right or wrong by its own power.
All this does not mean that the church has to be silent. This is definitely not a day for a sleeping church. While Christians should avoid politicizing their religion, this does not mean that pastors or individuals should not address the pressing social and moral issues of the day. Just the opposite is true. Christians need to be clear in what they say and stand by it.
Most of all, there is a dire need for a compassionate Christianity. Like the early church, the modern church needs to cut across all lines and reach out to every segment of society. If not, irrelevance will become its epitaph.

This post copied from the website of the Rutherford Institute.  This is no indication of copyright.  7.26.13

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

FALSE PROPHETS... Jeremiah 23: 16-17, 17: 9, Romans 2: 1



Thus says the Lord of hosts:  “Do not listen to the words of the pro-
phets who prophesy to you.  They make you worthless; They speak 
a vision of  their own hearts,  not from  the mouth of  the lord.  They 
continually say to  those who  despise  Me,”  ‘The  Lord  has  said,  
You  shall  have  peace;  And  to everyone  who  walks according to 
the  dictates of  his  own heart,'  they say,  'No evil shall come upon 
you'."  Jeremiah 23: 16-17

"The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; 
who can know it."  Jeremiah 17: 9

   During the days of Jeremiah the prophet,  there were “prophets” 
whom the Lord God rejected  because of the message of their pro-
phecy.  First they spoke as prophets of  Baal as in verse 13 of chap-
ter 23,  “And I  have seen  folly in the  prophets of  Samaria:  They  
prophesied by Baal and caused My people Israel to err.”  Secondly 
the Lord told Jeremiah,  in verse 16, “They speak a vision of  their 
own heart, not  from the mouth of the Lord…”  Of  course,  no one 
who names the name of Christ or follows the Lord God of the Bible 
could be found who responded to a prophecy they knew to  be from 
Baal, a pagan god who was/is no god.  But what about the prophecy 
from the heart? All of my life, to speak from the heart has been tou-
ted to be a great and wonderful thing. Vrs. 17:9 and 23: 16 certainly  
bring this kind of  thinking into question.  Is it  a bad thing  to speak 
from the  heart?   Well,  since the  heart is deceitful and  is  wicked,  
 there remains only one source of truth or true prophecy.  Prophecy 
is to  be  believed,  only as  it emanates  from  the Lord  God of  the 
Bible and proves  in  every  case  to be  dependable  and  accurate.  
Just  as we  take Scripture  to be divinely inspired of God, and infal-
lible, the prophets were accurate  and to  be trusted  as  they spake 
after  having received a word from the Lord God.  There were other 
standards for them such as integrity,  morality and  the word had to 
come as a Word from the Lord,  not in a  dream or a vision from the 
 heart  of  the  prophet.  The  Word  from  the Lord,  in some cases,
came as visions from Him as in Job 20:8, Proverbs 29:18, and Acts 
26: 19.   In Acts,  Simon Peter  was  given  a  vision  preparing  him 
to receive gentile seekers.  This vision was from the Lord God and
it came true in every respect.

    If my understanding is correct, a prophet is not only one who fore-
tells events that are to come to pass, but  is also one who  tells forth 
the truth of the Gospel  and events surrounding our  Lord's  time on  
the earth and  the ramifications of His birth, life, death, resurrection, 
ascension and intercession on our behalf.  So, a preacher of the Gos-
pel is a Prophet, although he may not have special revelation, outside 
Scripture,  of events yet to come, and receives his message from the 
Word of God, as found in Scripture.  He is, however; enlightened by
the Holy Spirit of God.  Pastors, Preachers, and Evangelists today are 
Prophets, called of God to these ministries, and are no less authorita-
tive as their message squares with Scripture.   If the word of a modern 
day Prophet does not square with the known,  accepted  Word of God, 
Scripture,  he must be regarded as a false prophet since one measures 
all  things by  the Word of God.  The follower of  Jesus Christ also has  
the Holy Spirit  on  his/her  life,  who along with  Holy Scripture  is the 
light, Life, and Instructor in every matter.  He gives discernment as to 
whether a messenger is from the Lord.  Without conscious effort, the 
Spirit controlled Child of  God is able to come to a conclusion and dis-
cern  whether  the messenger  is consistent with  the character of  the 
Word and the giver of that Word, Jesus Christ.  

There is an important distinction  between one who discerns, and  
one who is  judgmental.  That is sin.   Over  the years I have failed 
that test on more occasions than I care to admit.st.

   "Judge not,  that  you  be not  judged.  For with  what  judgment you  
judge,  you  will  be  judged;  and  with the  measure you use;  it will  
be measured back to you." (Matthew 7;1)  It would be profitable to 
read the entire chapter. 

According to this Scripture, it is impossible to be a critic/judge,   
and still be well pleasing to our Heavenly Father.  

With that said, this does must  not  keep one from  exercising his 
mind as did the Berean church.  It is said in Acts 17: 11, "These
men were  more noble  than those  in Thessalonica,  in  that they 
received  the word with all  readiness of mind,  and searched the 
Scriptures daily, whether those things were so."  
It is our responsibility, in every instance, to determine the validity 
of  the message preached  by confirming it with Scripture.   As we 
look  into the Word of God we  find truth.   Although  it may cause 
us, from time to time,  to disagree with the messenger, we are not 
to judge;  the Word  is  judge.  We should not,  criticize this one to 
others,  but gently confront, using  the Word of  God to enlighten,
and keep fellowship.  Recalling the "Golden Rule" will help.

    Remembering all men to be fallible; there is no truth in any doc-
trine or precept set  forth by a  man except as  it squares with the 
Word of the living God.  When we remember that  all men,  great 
or small, are mere flesh and blood, subject to error,  our responsi-
bility is to  validate every word,  comparing it  with  the Word and  
develop,  by diligent study and application,  knowledge and under-
standing  of  the Word of  God,  led by  the  Spirit of  God.  At the 
same time, remembering;  we have  feet of clay...  edited 2.06.17
 

donporter,sr