|
| |
|
Modern Ecumenical Movement
There is great
emphasis in the church today on uniting professing Christians of all
denominations and beliefs. The message is that we're not so
different after all... we can work together.
Setting aside theological differences,
we can help each other in the things we all agree upon. That effort
is commonly referred to as "ecumenism,"
which is defined as "the organized attempt
to bring about the cooperation and unity of all believers in
Christ."
The foundation for this ecumenical
trend has been laid and built upon over many years. We saw the
beginning of institutional ecumenism in the 1960's, with
The World Council of Churches,
mostly liberal mainline Protestant denominations who denied such
essential doctrines as the inerrancy of Scripture and a literal,
bodily resurrection of Christ. For years, Evangelicals distanced
themselves from this institutional ecumenism because of the unsound
theology of the groups involved.
Today, however, that spirit of compromise has invaded
Evangelicalism. The recent Catholic-Evangelical
accord is an example of such compromise. In this accord,
Evangelicals compromised essential doctrines such as justification
by faith alone and the sufficiency of Scripture in order to unite
with Roman Catholics on issues such as abortion and school prayer.
Compromising the Truth
The undiluted preaching from God's Word and an authoritative stand
on truth seem to be on the decline. What we're seeing instead is a
broadening of the gospel, a redefining of what it means to be a
Christian, and a growing emphasis on inclusion and tolerance.
Ecumenism has come to mean "reducing all elements of faith to the
lowest common denominator. God's Word is neglected, experience is
valued above truth, a false and selfish "faith" is promoted, and
sound doctrine and correction are despised as "divisive" and
"unloving."
Ignoring the Scriptures, numerous evangelical leaders today claim
that a concern for doctrine causes division and therefore should be
avoided for the sake of love and unity among the brethren. The
Scriptures, however, couldn't be more specific in its opposition to
such a teaching.
I
urge you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and
put obstacles in your way that are contrary to the teaching you have
learned. Keep away from them. [Romans 16:17]
Divisions are created by teachings
that are contrary to sound doctrine.
"Whosoever transgresseth, and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ,
hath not God. He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ, he hath
both the Father and the Son" [2 John 1:9].
Unity in the faith is impossible
without the doctrine of Christ. Without such a foundation we have no
basis for the faith, for the gospel, for knowing Jesus, or for
knowing anything pertinent to the Truth.
The glittering terminology of ecumenical is seen, on close
examination, to be as hollow as a soap bubble and just as slippery
and hard to hold onto. Where is the "common ground" between belief
and unbelief? A believer cannot ignore the "major theological
differences" between him and an unbeliever. Instead, he should be
cutting through those differences with the Sword of the Word to win
the unbeliever to the Lordship of Jesus Christ. I cannot agree to
ignore an unbeliever's condition without, by that very act,
compromising my beliefs. For my beliefs include the Great
Commission, which requires me to tell the world of the gospel of
Jesus.
Modern Christian Ecumenical Movements
Even a cursory review of what has
taken place in the Church during the last 25 years will reveal a
fierce underming of the faith. Precisely as the Bible warns (Mt.
7:21-23; 24:4,11,24; 2 Thes 2:3; etc.), today's most effective
enemies of Christ are those who claim to be Christians and call
mankind not just to any old false religion but to a counterfeit
Christianity. |
ECT) Evangelicals and
Catholics Together
On
March 29, 1994, leading evangelicals and Catholics signed a joint
declaration, "Evangelicals and Catholics Together: The Christian Mission
in the 3rd. Millennium." Contained within the document, which attempts
to bring ecumenical unity, are some seriously compromising agreements
regarding proselytizing and doctrinal distinctions.
The 25-page document, originated by Chuck Colson and Catholic social
critic Richard John Neuhaus, was signed by 40 noted evangelical and
Catholic leaders including Pat Robertson, heads of the Home Mission
Board and Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention,
Bill Bright - founder of Campus Crusade for Christ, Mark Noll of Wheaton
University, Os Guinness, Jesse Miranda (Assemblies of God), Richard Mauw
(President , Fuller Seminary), J.I. Packer and Herbert Schlossberg.
It called for Catholic and evangelical cooperation on social and
cultural issues where both traditions share common goals, one example
being the fight against abortion. The accord also stressed mutual
allegiance to the Apostles' Creed, world evangelism, justification "by
grace through faith because of Christ," and encouraged "civil" discourse
over doctrinal differences.
Chuck Colson has been fervently criticized for his part in this accord
and in his defense I can only say he has a desire to see Christ's high
priestly prayer (John 17) maintained. He said in his publication,
Jubilee, "All true Christians are one in Christ. That has to be. That
isn't just a theological proposition. That is a statment of ultimate
reality, because God has created us all, and those He has regenerated
and called to Himself all belong to the same, one God. Disunity is a
condition that God does not want; it defies what God has done. Therefore
it is an affirmative duty on the part of every Christian to work for
unity among true believers, never compromising truth, of course,
but always to work for unity.
The challenge, as I see it, for Mr. Colson and others working toward
true Biblical unity of the church is the dillution of their own faith.
While I believe there are most likely "born-again" saved people in the
Catholic Church whose faith in Christ transcends the teachings and
doctrines of the Church, there is a danger of losing sight of the fact
that the Catholic Church promises salvation apart from the finished work
of Christ on the cross.
The distinction is not in the common words they use, but in the
definitions of those same words. While Catholics and non-Catholics may
agree with the Apostles' Creed, they don't necessarily share the
meaning. While Catholics may say they agree with justification "by grace
through faith because of Christ," their actions sometimes shows
otherwise. While "civil" discourse over doctrinal differences may be
good, if that civility reduces the impact of world evangelism and
bringing the lost to Christ (including non-saved Catholics), it does
nothing to advance Christ's prayer for unity and hinders the
responsibility of believers to spread the gospel throughout the world.
Subsequent Developments
Colson and other signers later agreed to a
five-point statement clarifying Protestant distinctives that were not
clear in ECT. Critics claimed that the statement blurs doctrinal lines
on key issues, including salvation by faith alone. John MacArthur,
pastor of the independent Grace Community Church in Sun Valley,
California, told "Christianity Today" magazine his greatest concern was
the apparent disregard for "evangelical doctrinal distinctives."
The
new statement says cooperation between evangelicals and "evangelically
committed Roman Catholics" on common concerns is no endorsement of the
Roman Catholic "church system" or "doctrinal distinctives." It affirms
the Protestant understanding of salvation and legitimate evangelism
efforts.
Excerpts of the followup agreement include:
"We
understand the statement that 'we are justified by grace through faith
because of Christ,' in terms of the substitutionary atonement and
imputed righteousness of Christ, leading to full assurance of eternal
salvation; we seek to testify in all circumstances and contexts to this,
the historic Protestant understanding of salvation by faith alone (sola
fide).
"While
we view all who profess to be Christian--Protestant and Catholic and
Orthodox--with charity and hope, our confidence that anyone is truly a
brother and sister in Christ depends not only on the content of his or
her confession but on our perceiving signs of regeneration in his or her
life.
"Though
we reject proselytizing as ECT defines it (that is, 'sheep-stealing' for
denominational aggrandizement), we hold that evangelism and church
planting are always legitimate, whatever forms of church life are
present already."
In November '97, a group of evangelicals and Catholics led by Charles
Colson and Father Richard John Neuhaus released a statement, "The Gift
of Salvation," in which they say together, "We understand that what we
here affirm is in agreement with what the Reformation traditions have
meant by justification by faith alone." The statement says, "We agree
that justification is not earned by any good works or merits of our own;
it is entirely God's gift, conferred through the Father's sheer
graciousness, out of the love that He bears us in His Son, who suffered
on our behalf and rose from the dead for our justification."
Only
35 short years ago
Roman
Catholicism was included among the "modern Cults" about which Harold
Lindsell warned his students in a course by that name at Fuller. Today,
in spite of its false gospel of works and ritual which millions of
martyrs faithfully opposed to the death, Catholicism is embraced by our
most trusted evangelical leaders.
While
ECT and later agreements may allow some "convergence and cooperation"
between evangelicals and Catholics in many public tasks, there remains
some important differences including "the meaning of baptismal
regeneration, the Eucharist ... diverse understandings of merit, reward,
purgatory, and indulgences; Marian devotion and the assistance of the
saints in the lives of salvation..."
One often hears the naive expression, especially in justifying the new
ecumenical acceptance of Roman Catholics as Christians, "I embrace all
those as brethren who 'love Jesus' and 'name the name of Christ.'" Yet
many cultists profess to love Jesus and almost all "name the name of
Christ." One must discern what is meant by such words. The gospel of
God's grace is denied by every cult and false religion, including Roman
Catholicism, where infant baptism removes original sin and makes one a
child of God, salvation is in the church and its sacraments, redemption
is an ongoing process of perpetually offering the body and blood of
Christ upon its altars, and good works merit acceptance with God.
|
You can't believe two contradictory propositions at the same
time! |
You can't believe Christ obtained
redemption through His blood and also
believe redemption is being accomplished through Catholic liturgy.
You
can't believe salvation is by faith and "not of works" and
at the same time believe that good
works earn salvation.
Pro-Life Movement
While the founders of Operation Rescue may
have intended only to save the lives of the helpless children that are
destroyed through abortion, they now find themselves serving an entirely
different purpose.
"I have never seen such an instrument for ecumenism as Operation
Rescue is," said Catholic priest Patrick Malone, head of St. Mary
Catholic Parish just outside Wichita. Malone explained that Operation
Rescue "has a very strong evangelical flavor nationwide, but the
experience here has been that the operations break down barriers that
have separated churches as we stand for the common cause of the unborn
child." Recognizing that the movement offers a tremendous
opportunity to sweep millions of Protestants under the guidance of the
papacy, Catholic leaders are now encouraging Roman Catholics to join
Operation Rescue and shape its future direction. It's already working.
said Malone, "People I've demonstrated with, attended rallies with
and spent time in jail with--the evangelicals and others--apologized
again and again to me" for the views they had held of the Catholic
Church.
At Indianapolis 1990, Catholic priest Michael Scanlan gave a testimony
about being arrested during an Operation Rescue demonstration. He spoke
of the close fellowship between Catholics and Protestants in the jail,
and said many of the Protestants attended the masses which were held
there. He also said that after these ecumenical experiences, some
Protestants began
reciting
the rosary during Operation Rescue demonstrations. |
Freemasonry
Freemasonry is the largest international
secret society in the world, with more than 6 million members. It is an
all-male organization whose principles are explained as "brotherly love,
relief and truth." "What makes Masonry so influential is the fact that
of its many millions of members so many occupy leadership positions
around the world. In our own country there is nearly always a
significant percentage of Masons on the White House staff and in the
Cobinet, Senate, Congress, Supreme Court, and Pentagon, as well as in
top business management."(Dave Hunt, Global Peace and
the Rise of the Antichrist, pp. 158-59.)
Freemasonry secretly fosters ecumenism and quietly prepares its members
to accept and be part of the coming
new world order.
Freemasonry promotes the idea that there are many ways to God in
contrast to what Jesus said,
"I am
the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except
through me.." (John 14:6).
In Carl Claudy's book, "Introduction to
Freemasonry" (1931), he writes, "In his private petitions a man may
petition God or Jehovah, Allah or Buddha, Mohammed or Jesus; he may call
upon the God of Israel or the Great First Cause. In the Masonic Lodge he
hears petition to the Great architect of the Universes, finding his own
deity under that name. A hundred paths may wind upward around a
mountain; at the top they meet." This tolerance of all religions is
further clarified, "Masonry does not specify any God of any creed; she
requires merely that you believe in some Deity, give him what name you
will ... any god will do ..." Albert Pike, former Supreme Pontiff of
Universal Freemasonry, likewise exults: "Masonry [is that religion]
around whose altars the Christian, the Hebrew, the Moselm, the Brahman
[Hindu], the followers of Confucius and Zoroaster, can assemble as
brethren and unite in prayer..." (Albert Pike, Morals
and Dogma of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry
(Charleston, SC, The Supreme Council of the 33rd Degree for the Southern
Jurisdiction of the United Stated, 1906), pg. 226.)
Consider this quote from a more contemporary Masonic thinking, taken
from the current manual of instruction used by Masons in the state of
Kentucky (Kentucky Monitor by Henry Pirtle, pg. 95):
"Masonry makes no profession of Christianity ... but looks forward to
the time when the labor of our ancient brethren shall be symbolized by
the erection of a spiritual temple ... in which there shall be but one
altar and one worship; one common altar of Masonry on which the Veda,
Shastras, Sade, Zend-Avesta, Koran, and Holy Bible shall lie untouched
by sacrilegious hands, and at whose shrine the Hindoo, the Persian, the
Assyrian, The Chaldean, The Egyptian, the Chinese, The Mohammedan, the
Jew, and the Christian may kneel and with one united voice celebrate the
praises of the Supreme Architech of the Universe."
Masonry clearly teaches salvation through all religions, whereas the
Bible teaches there is salvation in only one name under Heaven - the
name of Jesus (Acts 4:12). Masonry focuses on "The Great Architect of
the Universe" who can be defined any way the worshipper wants to define
him. (Dr. David R. Reagan, "Should A Christian Be A
Mason?," Bible Prophecy Insights, No. 25, November 1992.)
The New Age Movement
One of the major goals of the New Age
Movement is to create a Universal Religious System with all historic
doctrinal distinctions removed. It is so dangerous because it's so
widespread infiltrating every aspect of our lives in last few years.
They believe they are chosen to usher in Peace, Love and Brotherhood
under the leadership of a personality that they call the Christ and
claim he is alive today awaiting his entrance to the world stage at any
moment.
It is found in the Women's Movement, the Peace Movement, and the
Ecological Movement. It is not organized with one single leader but
rather happens out of people's lives. It is a loose network of thousands
of groups with a common ingredient of Hindu religion and a common
aversion to traditional Christianity and is a movement that is rapidly
replacing Judeo-Christian values with new values.
Instead of destroying religion, they are figuring out how to use it for
their own means. President Bill Clinton recently said, "We are
redefining in practical terms the immutable ideals that have guided us
from the beginning." It's not too difficult to see what ideals he is
talking about - the moral commandments put forth in the Bible. Thus,
this popular president has possibly done more in the past few years to
erode values such as honesty, integrity, purity and faithfulness than
anyone in recent history.
Vice-President Al Gore co-opts religion for his pagan goals, writing,
"The richness and diversity of our religious tradition throughout
history is a spiritual resource long ignored by people of faith, who are
often afraid to open their minds to teachings first offered outside
their own system of belief. But the emergence of a civilization in which
knowledge moves freely and almost instantaneously through the world has
... spurred a renewed investigation of the wisdom distilled by all
faiths. This panreligious perspective may prove especially important
where our global civiilzation's responsibility for the earth is
concerned." (Earth in the Balance; Ecology and the
Human Spirit, pp. 258-259)
This dangerous new, counterfeit spirituality is putting on a righteous
face and emerging as the answer for an American society gone violently
and perversely mad. What the social engineers need is something watered
down that sounds religious, something mystical and full of mystery that
makes everybody feel really devout, and certainly something that is
politically correct, yet fulfills everybody's yearning to be at peace
with God.
"In the early seventies, ten years before the term "New Age" appeared,
Brooks Alexander, founder and director of Spiritual Counterfeit
Projects, wrote: "The Bible gives us a clear, if unpleasant picture: in
the last days of history as we know it, our race will be brought
together in a common expression of cosmic humanism. This coming great
world religion will offer itself to us as the ancient wisdom and hidden
truth underlying all the religious forms of history.""
(Tal Brooke, When The World Will Be As One, pg. 237.)
Baha'i World Faith
The
Baha'i
World Faith claims to be a religion of unique relevance to the
modern world. Its emphasis upon rationalism, human rights, international
peace, education, equality of the sexes, and the eradication of all
forms of prejudice gives the Baha'i Faith a very broad base of appeal.
The Baha'i cry for one world religion appeals to the ecumenical spirit
of the age, especially in light of the continuing insistence that
Baha'is are in
perfect
harmony with the Christian Faith.
The doctrine of Divine Manifestations is the central plank of Baha'i
theology. Through this doctrine Baha'is are able to take seemingly
amiable positions toward members of the major world religions, for each
of their founders were manifestations of God and thus each religion has
a measure of truth. On the same premise Baha'is draw converts from other
religions, for, they insist, the other religions were for other ages
while the religion of Baha'u'llah is for today. To follow it in no way
will conflict with one's native faith, for there is truly only one faith
in mankind's history, best represented now by the Baha'is.
Though the recognized Divine Manifestations represent just about every
conceivable world view (Monotheism through Moses and Jesus, polytheism
through Krisna, Agnosticism through Buddah, and dualism through
Zoroaster), Baha'is insist that they are actually united in purpose and
teaching. The spiritually initiated see beyond the apparent differences.
In fact, Baha'u'llah warned that anyone who saw even the slightest
possible difference between their words and messages would be guilty of
disbelieving and repudiating God.
Pop-Psychology
The infiltration of psychology into the
church has also strengthened the trend toward ecumenism. Psychology
plays a major ecumenical role by providing common faith, language and
ritual for everyone from atheists, cultists and occultists to Roman
Catholics and evangelicals. Most Christian radio stations are saturated
with Christian psychology programs, yet the vast majority of listeners
to these programs know very little about the doctrine or church
affiliation of the men they listen to. These men are accepted as
authorities on Christian living simply because they say they are
Christians and believe the Bible. These men unify Christians, not on the
basis of Scripture but on their psychological influence which is
trans-doctrinal.
|
|
Promise Keepers
What could be wrong with Christian men
uniting to become more godly? What could be wrong with men assuming
leadership in marriage? What could be wrong with promoting the virtues
of sexual integrity, parental responsibilty and church devotion?
Well, of course, there is everything right and nothing wrong with
becoming more godly, assuming leadership, sexual integrity, etc . There
is a fundamental problem, however, with the Promise Keepers' approach to
the Gospel and to the way godliness is achieved in the life of a
believer. It is an approach that has attracted Catholics and Mormons as
well.
Promise
Keepers is committed to reaching across denominational barriers in an
effort to unite men. And they have been successful in doing that.
Promise Keepers supporters and sponsors include Evangelicals, Catholics,
Lutherans, Presbyterians, Methodists, Episcopalians, Charismatics,
Catholics, Mormons and others. These groups have been divided by major
doctrinal differences for many years. But now these differences are
being dropped for the sake of unity. The very fact that both the Roman
Catholic and Mormon churches have officially declared that they find no
conflict between PK teaching and their own doctrines ought to tell you
that something is seriously wrong. This seems to be an ecumenicalism of
proportions never experienced since the Reformation.
There have been single issues, such as abortion, pornography, and
prohibition, that have drawn a spectrum of churches together, but none
have reached the popularity and ecumenicalism of the Promise Keepers.
Promise Keepers is a burgeoning force in American Christianity. With the
goal of Point Men in every church, one cannot ignore its influence.
Beneath the emotional hype, camaraderie, enthusiastic speakers, songs,
and cheers, Promise Keepers champions a psycho-spiritual, ecumenical and
political agenda.
Those who get involved with Promise Keepers are trained in a mixture of
humanistic psychology and corrupt Christianity. Men attending a massive
1993 Promise Keepers conference were given complimentary copies of The
Masculine Journey: Understanding the Six Stages of Manhood by
psychotherapist Robert Hicks. In a review of this book, T.A. McMahon
notes:
"The book, written to help 'provide
directions for a man's life so that he doesn't get lost along the way,'
is mainly psychologically biased conjecture centering around six Hebrew
words. In chapter after chapter, subjective insights into manhood are
offered through quotes by a host of secular authors with a psychological
bent, including Carl Jung, inner-healing therapist Leanne Payne,
transpersonal psychiatrist/spiritualist Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, and Sam
Keen, former theologian in residence at Esalen, the New Age/Eastern
mystical therapeutic center south of San Francisco.
The Promise Keepers' movement is part of
an ecumenical trend of down-playing doctrine for unity that puts aside
essential theological issues in order to promote a unity which is not
biblical unity. Are false doctrines being addressed? Are the people in
these churches challenged to flee their false religious systems? The
answer is "No." Key foundational issues have been dropped, all for the
sake of supposed unity.
The men who are reached through this ministry are not necessarily
brought into sound New Testament churches and grounded in the truth.
They are not being taught to keep themselves pure from apostasy and
heresy. They are not being trained in discerning false gospels from the
true. Rather they will be instructed in unscriptural ecumenism as they
are sent back to their church congregation or parish to become active
laymen. They are being taught that doctrine is not crucial, that to
fight for the truth is unspiritual. They are even being encouraged to
accept apostate denominations as genuine expressions of Christianity.
There is so much theological diversity among those involved with Promise
Keepers that no in-depth discussion of Scripture or what it means to be
a Christian could take place without tearing the movement apart. If one
followed the doctrines of some of the groups involved in this movement,
one could not even be a Christian. And if one is not a Christian,
nothing that person does will enable him or her to be godly.
Though we can rejoice that men may get saved and their lives turn around
for the good, yet results in and of themselves do not necessarily mean
the movement has God's approval or that the methods Promise Keepers uses
are right and in conformity to the will of God. Numbers 20 provides a
classic example of this. Moses was commanded by God to strike the rock
(Ex. 17:5) and speak to it (Num. 20:8) and water would come forth
miraculously to supply the needs of the Israelites and their animals. In
a fit of rage and frustration over the rebellious attitudes and
complaints of Israel, Moses angrily struck the rock twice and water came
out of the rock in abundance to quench the thirst of millions of people
and animals. God graciously displayed His supernatural power and
performed a miracle in the presence of the entire assembly. Yet, did God
approve of Moses' methods? Did the visible result of water coming out in
abundance demonstrate God's hand of blessing was upon Moses' work? No,
his disobedience was noted and as punishment, he was forbidden to enter
the Promised Land. "The good results that were publicly displayed did
not justify the wrong way in which God's will was carried out" (Axioms
of Separation, p. 14). The same is true about Promise Keepers.
The Christian Response
to Ecumenism
Nineteenth-century preacher Charles
Spurgeon was known for taking unpopular positions as he ministered God's
Word, and faced the same arguments confronting many Bible teachers
today. His response to the seductive power of compromise for
popularity's sake was especially poignant: "What have you and I to do
with maintaining our influence and position at the expense of truth? It
is never right to do a little wrong to obtain the greatest possible good
... Your duty is to do the right: consequences are with God."
How, you might ask, can a Bible-believing church accept many of
teachings held up today? Simple. Few read the Bible any more. Far too
many people simply go along with whatever they are told is biblical,
with no particular interest in checking it out for themselves. For those
whom the Lord equips, He sets forth an essential for discernment:
"...If
you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know
the truth, and the truth will set you free." [John 8:31-32]
For the sake of our growth in the faith
and our development of discernment, we must "hold to" the teachings of
God's word. "Hold to," or "continue" (KJV) means to submit to
Christ's teachings, to abide in them (i.e., to let our mental,
physical and spiritual life be governed by them), and to remain
in them, becoming steadfast in the faith. If we do this, then we are His
disciples, we will know the truth, and will be set free by the truth.
How many times have you heard that somebody was "causing division in the
church?" Well, maybe they were supposed to! After all, there are two
things that cause division according to the Bible: truth and error.
Haven't you heard the scripture, "Do
you suppose I came to grant peace on earth? I tell you, no, rather
division!" That's right! Jesus said that
"from now on five members in one
household will be divided three against two, and two against three"
(Luke 12:51-52). Hard words to hear! Yet, harder to accept. But,
that's what Jesus said and is preserved in the Holy Scriptures. He said
that whole families would be divided over Him. And there are many
occasions in the New Testament when whole assemblies of people were
divided because of Jesus (John 7:43, 9:16, 10:19, Acts 23:6-7).
People who love the
truth will divide from people who love lies.
Today, when there are so many who are
professing religion, is it any wonder that some of the deepest
truths in the Bible - repentance, faith, holiness, etc. - are also some
of the greatest objects of debate in the Church. It must be said that
those who truly want to know God's views on these great pillars of
Christian doctrine, will appear to be divisive - and rightly so, in an
age when the great gospel message of salvation can be reduced to such a
sugar-coated, bakery-item as, "God loves you and has a wonderful plan
for your life!"
Can ecumenists by uniting, set the standards for the rest of the world?
"Who's kingdom is the earth anyway?" This worldly kingdom belongs to
Satan until Jesus Christ returns. Jesus said in John 18:36,
"My kingdom belongs not to this
world..." He said he did not come to bring peace, but rather
division.
Division that comes from the proclaiming of the truth will usually
include some intense reaction and opposition, but it will also produce
good fruit and the advancement of God's kingdom (not to mention the
conversion of souls.)
 The
Scripture is unmistakably clear: the primary attribute by which God
wants to be known is holiness--He is totally separate
from all that is sinful or defiled. Fifty-five times God refers to
Himself in Scripture as the "Holy One." Fifty-nine times He is
called or described as being holy. There are only forty-three times
where God is said to love or that He Himself is love. Interestingly
enough, the word "holy" (or a form of it) occurs 651 times in Scripture.
The word "love" (or a related form) whether human or divine is mentioned
only 546 times. Although no attribute of God is mentioned more
frequently in the Bible than that of holiness, there is perhaps no other
characteristic so ignored and misunderstood as this one. Many seem to
view holiness and love as being contradictory: holiness is too negative
and divisive while love seems to be positive and accepting. But contrary
to God's nature is the notion that love must tolerate or even refuse to
expose error. God's love is compatible with His holiness. As believers
follow the command to imitate their God (Eph. 5:1), they are not free to
pick and choose which characteristics to copy. The modern day definition
of love largely sets aside God's demand to His children,
"Be ye
holy for I am holy" (Lev. 11:44; 1 Pet. 1:15,16).
Holiness is the hub of the wheel from
which all other divine attributes radiate. Anything that is genuinely at
the heart of God should primarily reflect that same characteristic of
holiness. With the blatant rejection of the Bible doctrine of separation
(which finds its foundation in the holiness of God), Promise Keepers
cannot be legitimately considered "at the very heart of God." Whenever a
movement becomes engrossed in compromise with error, it ceases to
reflect that core attribute which God has chosen as His name (Isa.
57:15).
Still some would try to ignore the wrong of compromising methods and
point out only the good that is seen. Some would even say that those who
dare criticize a movement (as PK) which has enjoyed such phenomenal
success are being nit- picky. If there can be an agreement on the
"major" doctrines of Scripture, then why not get on the bandwagon of a
good cause? To this Albert Dager makes the following remarks:
"The evidence of God at work is not
outward results, but conformity to Scripture, which in turn results
in outward change. Outward change without conformity to Scripture is
merely human righteousness. Change of mind does not always equate to
change of heart. A genuine change of heart results in the holding of
Scripture in high esteem. Nor does it distinguish between so called
`essential doctrine' and `secondary doctrine' ... (2 Tim. 3:14-
17)... When the Holy Spirit says that all Scripture is given for
instruction in righteousness, He isn't speaking only of the
so-called `Big Five' doctrines the ecumenists are claiming as reason
for unity. He means all of Scripture itself is the essential
doctrine of the Faith" (Media Spotlight Special Report, p. 14).
He then continues with these comments:
"The end does not justify the means.
The proper focus must be on the means itself, as well as on the end.
. . Results are not the final arbiter of truth; one's pious demeanor
is not the final arbiter of truth; one's ability to call fire down
from heaven is not the final arbiter of truth. God's Word is the
only and final arbiter of truth" (Ibid.).
Behold the emergence of
the ecumenical apostate church, the bride of Antichrist!
"Positive Christianity" is the enemy of the cross.
The truth offends those who don't want to
hear it. Yet to speak anything less is to trifle with the eternal
destiny of souls. Ecumenism's promise of "unity" is tempting, but it
denies Christ and paves the way for the Antichrist and his new world
religion. It is a unification that will ultimately lead to destruction.
True unity is not sought by pretending that there are no differences, as
modern ecumenists have done, but by recognizing and respecting those
differences, while focusing on the great orthodox truths all Christians
share. Articulated in the classic confessions and creeds, it embraces
such fundamentals as the Virgin birth, the deity of Christ, the
Atonement, the Resurrection, the authority of Scripture, and the Second
Coming.
Man-made unity is not what God desires. He wants a holy people.
Many Christians believe that unity in itself will bring about a holy
revival. But unity cannot bring holiness, only holiness can bring about
true unity. For when God's people start seeking to live, worship and
pray according to the Holy Word of God, then God Himself will answer
Jesus' prayer and make those who seek Him, truly "one!" THEN God will
unite the hearts of those who love Him, and hate sin and error, and He
will truly shine forth from the midst of such a people - the true people
of God!
The unification of the various national identities, races, and religions
can only be achieved through the eradication of sin. That means only
through the Lord Jesus Christ can we become perfectly one. The other
avenue to unite people, the program of the Antichrist, will only be
accomplished temporarily through deception. |
|