Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religion. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 12, 2024

Jim Osman and Justin Peters Address Jesus Appearing to Muslims in Dreams

There have been tales of Muslims saying they have seen a vision of Jesus which led them to become followers of Christ. Is this true? Does this go against the doctrine of cessationism?

In this video, Jim Osman joins Justin Peters addressing this issue:

  

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Book Review: World Religions in Seven Sentences by Douglas Groothuis

 

There are many religions in the world and sometimes understanding them can exhausting. There are many resources on religion that looks like they were published by a seminary. Many Christians want to understand other religions so they may witness to a friend, co-worker, or neighbor that might be involved in them. 

Douglas Groothuis has written a book to help his readers understand seven of the major world religions including Christianity. The book is titled, World Religions in Seven Sentences. This is part of the seven sentences series published by InterVarsity Press

The seven religions that Groothuis looks at and the sentences associated with them are:


Nietzsche: God is Dead

Judaism: I AM WHO I AM

Hinduism: You Are That

Buddhism: Life Is Suffering

Daoism: The Dao that Can Be Spoken Is Not the Eternal Dao

Christianity: Before Abraham Was, I Am

Islam: There is One God, and Mohammad is His Prophet

Each chapter goes through the basics beliefs of each religion so that the reader can understand it. I am glad Christianity is in this because there are many Christians do not know the basics of the faith and why faith in Christ is essential. 

Granted, this book does not cover every world religion, but it does cover some of the major ones. I wish that Groothuis covered Mormonism and Roman Catholicism which are some have believed they are the same as Christianity, which it is not.

I received this book from InterVarsity Press in exchange for a honest review. 

Monday, January 25, 2021

Does God Accept The Worship of Other Religions?

Keith Mathison:

In the contemporary world, it is common for people who believe in God to affirm that God accepts the worship of all religions as long as the worshiper is sincere. There is no evidence for such a view in Scripture, however. In fact, from Genesis to Revelation, Scripture reveals the exact opposite.

This is clearly seen in the first of the Ten Commandments: “You shall have no other gods before me” (Ex. 20:2). The ancient Near Eastern world in which Israel lived was filled with all manner of religions and “gods.” God rejects these other religions. Why? Because the “gods” of these other religions are actually demons, and the worship of these demons is an abomination (Deut. 32:16–17; Lev. 17:7). The Apostle Paul teaches the same in the New Testament (1 Cor. 10:20).

During His temptation, Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 6:13 to Satan, saying, “You shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve” (Matt. 4:10). That is religious exclusivism. In the incarnation, the Word who was with God and who was God became flesh and dwelt among us (John 1:1, 14). He is now the one mediator between God and men (1 Tim. 2:5). There is no other.

Jesus Himself clearly expressed the exclusivity of Christianity when He said: “I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6). “No one” means no one. This is why Peter, when filled with the Holy Spirit, proclaimed the following regarding Jesus: “There is salvation in no one else, for there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved” (Acts 4:12). For those seeking salvation, there is no one else.

If God accepted the worship of all religions, there would have been no need for the incarnation, death, and resurrection of Christ because there were plenty of existing religions already during the first century. If God accepted the worship of all religions, there would also have been no need for the Great Commission and the evangelization of the nations. If God accepts the worship of all religions, the evangelism that Jesus commanded is a waste of time.

God does not accept any religion other than the one He graciously provided. He does not accept religions that substitute worship of the creature for worship of the Creator. God does not accept false worship. God does, however, accept the worshipers of any religion when they repent of those religions and trust in Christ.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Around The Web-December 5, 2018

When We Understand The Text addresses Seventh Day Adventism

The 20th Anniversary of the 9 Marks Journal: Essentials

All ESV Bibles from Crossway are 50% off till the end of the year

The Reformation Study Bible is on sale at Ligonier till the end of the week

Is the Old Testament Still Relevant for Christians? with Michael Kruger from Credo Magazine

Overcoming Fear in Evangelism by Barry York

Depression, Discouragement, and Hope in Christ During the Holidays by Dave Jenkins

From the 1689 Society, what is a healthy church?

Friday, January 19, 2018

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Around The Web-November 22, 2017

The Nashville “Megachurch” that embraced gay marriage two years ago has cratered by Denny Burk

Dear Mormon—I Can’t Call You a Brother in Christ by Josh Buice

The Gospel Coalition is offering free online courses about theology and life

How Sin Does Its Work by Brian Hedges

Study the Greek New Testament for Free at ESV.org

When We Understand The Text addresses replacement theology, protesting at other church, and qualifications for elders

Does the Bible Teach Common Grace? by Ben Carlson

In case you have not heard, the Village Church is transitioning away from the multi-site model of church ministry. In this video, Matt Chandler, Beau Hughes, and Josh Patterson discuss the multi-site model along its strengths and weaknesses and what is the future for their church.

Friday, October 27, 2017

Around The Web-October 27, 2017

4 Lies That Cause Pastors to Neglect Their Families by Jaime Owens

Calvinist Batman presents Tacit Trinitarian Theology with Fred Sanders

The Alpha Apologist from Mortification of Spin with James White

Reformation 500: Can Roman Catholicism be Considered Christianity? by Eric Davis

10 Marks of a Grace-Alone Church by Carl Truman

Whitewashed Heroes: The Flaws in Our Reformers by Scott Hubbard

Why Was the Reformation Necessary? by W. Robert Godfrey

Jared C Wilson is one of my favorite writers and one of my favorite books by him is Gospel Wakefulness. What is Gospel Wakefulness? Jared explains in this video.

Thursday, August 10, 2017

What To Know About Jehovah’s Witnesses

Most of us have had an encounter with a Jehovah's Witness. Some of us it is at our front door and others may have encountered them in various places. There is a great deal of confusion about them.

Are they Christians? What do they believe? Joe Carter gives us a brief overview of what is a Jehovah's Witness and what they believe:

1. Jehovah’s Witnesses—their name is intended to designate them as “a group of Christians who proclaim the truth about Jehovah”—compose less than 1 percent of U.S. adults, yet are among the most racially and ethnically diverse religious groups in America. According to Pew Research, no more than 4 in 10 members of the group belong to any one racial and ethnic background: 36 percent are white, 32 percent are Hispanic, 27 percent are black, and 6 percent are another race or mixed race. Roughly two-thirds (65 percent) are women, while only 35 percent are men. They also also tend to be less educated, with a solid majority of adult Jehovah’s Witnesses (63 percent) having no more than a high school diploma (compared with, for example, 43 percent of evangelical Protestants).

2. Jehovah’s Witnesses (hereafter JWs) consider themselves to be Christians (but not Protestants), even though they reject the doctrine of the Trinity. JWs claim that Jesus was not divine and that the Holy Spirit is an “active force” and not a person. JWs believe that Jesus is God's only direct creation, “the firstborn of all creation” and therefore rightly entitled to be called the “son of God.” However, they believe that as a created being “he is not part of a Trinity.” They believe Jesus lived in heaven before coming to earth and, after his death and resurrection, he returned to heaven. They also believe Jesus “gave his perfect human life as a ransom sacrifice” and that through his death and resurrection “make it possible for those exercising faith in him to gain everlasting life.”

3. JWs believe that the kingdom of God is a real government in heaven that will soon replace human governments and accomplish God’s purpose for the earth. They believe that Jesus is the King of God’s kingdom in heaven and that he began ruling in 1914. A relatively small number of people—144,000—will be resurrected to live with Jehovah in heaven and rule with Jesus in the kingdom. They believe that God will bring billions back from death by means of a resurrection and that “many now living may yet begin to serve God, and they too will gain salvation.” However, those who “refuse to learn God’s ways after being raised to life” will pass out of existence forever (they will not suffer in a “fiery hell of torment”).

4. JWs practice door-to-door ministry because they believe it is an effective way to fulfill the Great Commission and that first-century Christians continued to spread their message both “publicly and from house to house” (they cite Acts 5:42; 20:20). They do not believe that door-to-door ministry is a means of earning salvation by doing good works. They also believe that “pressuring people to change their religion is wrong” though they do believe in attempting to argue for their particular beliefs. In their door-to-door ministry they generally distribute two magazines, Awake!, a general religious magazine, and The Watchtower, a magazine whose content is focused on “the significance of world events in the light of Bible prophecies.”

5. JWs believe the Bible is “God’s inspired message to humans.” In 1961 a JW corporation, The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society, published its own formal equivalence translation of the Bible: the New World Translation of the Holy Scriptures (NWT). As of 2015, the NWT has been translated in whole or in part into 129 languages. Since the release of the NT translation in 1950, this version has been criticized for changing the meaning and words of the text to fit JW doctrine. A prime example is John 1:1. Both the ESV and NIV translate that verse as, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The NWT version translates the passage as “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was a god.” The addition of the indefinite article “a” is added to avoid the conclusion that Jesus is God. Referring to this verse, Bruce M. Metzger wrote in 1953, “It must be stated quite frankly that, if the Jehovah’s Witnesses take this translation seriously, they are polytheists.” Despite a preference for the NWT, JWs still use other translations of the Bible in their witnessing work.

6. JWs do not celebrate either Christmas or Easter, because they believe the Bible teaches that it’s Jesus death—not his birth or resurrection—that should be celebrated. They also believe that Christmas and Easter are not approved by God because they are rooted in pagan customs and rites. They also do not celebrate birthdays because they believe “such celebrations displease God.”

7. JWs have a number of beliefs that are peculiar to their sect: While they accept medical treatments and do not practice faith healing, they don’t accept blood transfusions because they believe the “Bible commands that we not ingest blood.” They do not believe in going to war or getting involved in political matters, and they do not consider the cross to be a symbol of Christianity, because they claim “the Bible indicates that Jesus did not die on a cross but rather on a simple stake.”

8. JWs do not refer to their places of worship as churches, but rather as a “Kingdom Hall.” They have no paid clergy, for they believe the “model of first-century Christianity” is one in which “all baptized members are ordained ministers and share in the preaching and teaching work.” Both men and women can be ministers, though within each congregation “spiritually mature men” serve as “older men,” or elders.” About 20 congregations form a circuit, and congregations receive periodic visits from traveling elders known as circuit overseers. JWs are not required to tithe and no collections are taken at their meetings, though donation boxes are available.

9. Doctrinal guidance is provided by a Governing Body made up of longtime JWs who currently work at the international offices in Brooklyn, New York. A number of corporations are in use by JWs, though they are often referred to collectively as “The Society” after the oldest and most prominent of their corporation, “The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania” (which is now located in Brooklyn). Not much is known about the financing of the JW corporations other than that they own significant real estate holdings in New York City. For instance, the group’s headquarters, which is currently for sale, is expected to be sold for around $1 billion.

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