Posted on 05/21/2011 4:46:26 AM PDT by marbren
Camping is a victim of replacement theology. IMHO the lie of replacement theology is almost as insidious as idolatry. The key to holistic understanding of Bible prophecy is to understand the role of Israel in it. God keeps his promises to Israel. This is a model to the rest of us that he will keep his promises to us as well.
A majority of the church going world has been victimized. I believed the lie for 35 years. During the past 20 I have been seeking the truth and only recently did I stop saying IMHO replacement theology is a lie and replaced it with: Replacement theology is a lie dropping the IMHO. For those that do not know, Replacement theology is the lie that the Church has replaced Israel in Gods plan.
The church was polluted by Replacement theology early on. Origen and Augustine, early Fathers of the church, were the first to muddy up the scriptures in this way when they arrogantly took on the mantle of Israel for themselves. Martin Luther apparently did not study it and this lead to his anti-Semitism and Hitler. In many ways IMHO it is like a reverse of the circumcision party that led to Acts 15.
This replacement theology lie has lead to the church we have today. Everyone is running around not knowing what is happening in these end times we are in. The truth is The Church, the Bride of Christ, has a role and Israel has a role. Think of men and women, children and parents, husbands and wives, angels and people, dogs and cats, sheep and goats, wheat and tares. All these have roles God invented.
So the solution: Open your Bible, drop your preconceived notions and open your mind, ask God to reveal the truth about all this Israel stuff written in the Bible. The Lord Jesus Christ is central in it all. Gods Grace and Mercy is incredible, He does all the work. Faith and hope and love permeate the entire Bible and the greatest of these is love.
Cool! LCMS?
I was only referring to the number as it related to the content of your post.
I love the song “In The Garden”
I am confused, I thought Gagdad Bob, who you admire, was leading me to an intimate no walls relationship with God in his book I am reading. I am only half way through. The matter and life chapters were excellent I still have to read the mind and Spirit chapters. Maybe I’ll be disappointed?
Yes.
With your making comparison like that should I also conclude that you accept pedophilia as tolerable because the RCC keeps pedophiliac priests in positions within the church?
Did you like RIM? I did feel church growth may have been a motivating factor for the movement.
Hey, xone, long time no see!
Thanks for the blast from the past.
I see you and marbren have now met. That’s good.
Until now I thought I was the only Lutheran on FR that talks about tough stuff.
Two things Lutherans got right is Holy Communion and Justification. Too many people get stuck in works.
Although with Holy Communion there is the closed vs open issue.
Spiritual gift surveys were a nightmare when I was stewardship chairman.
No, and the link explains that better than I could. Church growth at the price of Scriptures is not a trade worth making. I'm not a fan of contemporary worship although I understand some are. I always liked the Red hymnal and enjoy Matins. Fortunately we have finally gotten rid of the blue (LW?) and have TLH. It took one service to raise the $$ for the new hymnal. But I still pine for the Red before they made word changes that added no clarity to the hymns. I remember SEMINEX and we have seen it fruits with the elca.
I always look for your comments. Marbren and I have already met, you were on the thread with us.
I do love page 5 and page 15. Do you have communion monthly or weekly?
You wrote to Cynical Bear: “Where’s the proof IN the Bible for your “God is my bosom buddy” kind of statement?”
I think fundamentalists (literalists that read the newspaper with one hand and the Bible with the other) would gain a lot if they spent some time reading books like this:
Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels
Bruce J. Malina
http://www.amazon.com/Social-Science-Commentary-Synoptic-Gospels-Malina/dp/0800634918
Book reviewer Loren Rosson III
This review is from: Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels (Paperback)
Bruce Malina and Richard Rohrbaugh are members of The Context Group: Project on the Bible in its Cultural Environment, and this commentary is one of the finest fruits of their labor. The authors shed light on subtle aspects of ancient Middle East culture which go completely over our heads when we read the bible.
The Context Group
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Context_Group
For instance, in ancient Palestine compliments were enviously aggressive. They implicitly accused a person of rising above others at their expense. Thus, when a man challenges Jesus by calling him a “good teacher”, Jesus must fend off the accusation with a counterquestion: “Why do you call me good? No one is good but God alone?” (Mk. 10:17-18/Mt. 19:16-17/Lk. 18:18-19). In Jesus’ world, honorable men didn’t defend themselves when challenged — for that would only concede ground to their opponents — instead, they counterattacked. In the gospels Jesus proves himself an honorable man time and time again. He never answers accusatory questions directly; he is always able to change the terms of a debate and shift its ground. In Mk. 11:27-33/Mt. 21:23-27/Lk. 20:1-8 a group of temple authorities confront Jesus and demand to know by what authority he made his prophetic demonstration in the temple. Jesus responds with a counterquestion and then ends up insulting them by refusing to reveal anything at all. Then, in Mk. 12:13-17/Mt. 22:15-22/Lk. 20:20-26, a group of Herodians and Pharisees try snaring Jesus by getting him to admit having revolutionary sentiments about paying taxes. Jesus deflects their question by having them produce a coin for him, and then, holding it up for all to see, he shames them with a nasty counterquestion and tricks them into identifying themselves as idolaters before concluding with his well-known cryptic saying, “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s”. All of these examples show how honorable first-century Jews debated in public.
The authors illumine the values of Galilean peasants as distinct from Judean Pharisees and other temple authorities. Consider the conflict related in Mk. 7:1-25, where a group of Pharisees demand that Jesus explain why his disciples eat with unwashed hands. Jesus, naturally, doesn’t deign to explain this. Instead, he counterattacks with insults — calling the Pharisees hypocrites — and then escalates the conflict by showing them up with scripture citations, setting his own interpretation of the Torah against theirs. But the authors do provide an explanation: “Keeping purity laws was a near impossibility for peasant farmers, who did not have the required water for ritual baths, as well as for fishermen, who came in constant contact with dead fish, dead animals, and the like. It was also very difficult for people who traveled about, such as Jesus and his disciples. The religious tradition of the Galileans had adapted itself in significant measure to the realities of peasant life.”
The commentary brings to life ancient Mediterranean values as contrasted with ours in the modern West. For instance, discovering identity was not a process of self-discovery like it is with us. Identity was provided by one’s peers, not by oneself. When Jesus asks Peter, “Who do you say I am?”, and Peter replies, “You are the messiah” (Mk. 8:29), most of us today think that Jesus knows who he is and is simply testing his disciples to see if they know. But the authors correctly refute this: “Since Jesus rejected his own honor by leaving his family and village and living as an itinerant exorcist-healer, he needs to find out what his status is both among the public and his followers.” They provide him with his messianic identity. Only when public support has grown substantially will he finally be comfortable identifying himself as the messiah (as in Mk. 14:61-62). For now, he is terrified of the title, and he “sternly orders Peter not to tell anyone about it” (Mk. 8:30).
Malina and Rohrbaugh have described just about every behavioral cue and cultural script we could think of — how ancient gossip networks functioned, why all rich people were considered thieves, the nature of patron-client relationships, etc. This book is a priceless tool, and it has already been used as a foundation for more comprehensive treatments of the historical Jesus. Be sure to buy it and the sequel, “Social Science Commentary on the Gospel of John”.
This is an updated and improved version of the earlier ‘92 publication, with material re-arranged for easier reading, and new commentary as well.
I agree, he loved everyone he spoke to and wanted them to grow in faith. He knew the hearts of everyone and responded appropriately. His conversations should be a model for all of us. Our Lord Jesus Christ never defended himself!
Semantics. People have different understanding of "faith". There is such a thing as Fallacious Faith
I agree
Corporately, twice, privately any time you wish.
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