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Name: Mike
Country: United States
State: Georgia
Metro: Atlanta
Birthday: 1/16/1972


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Member Since: 9/2/2002

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Saturday, July 11, 2009

Who's that Knocking on Your Door?

How do Jehovah’s Witnesses differ from Christianity?

 

1.     JWs believe Jesus was a created being, not the Son of God.

2.     JWs believe Jesus is actually Michael the Archangel.

3.     JWs believe Jesus was not resurrected bodily, but as a spirit.

4.     JWs believe Jesus returned invisibly in 1914 to the Watchtower Org.

5.     JWs believe the Holy Spirit in an ‘active force,’ not the person of God.

6.     JWs believe that hell is simply the grave.

7.     JWs believe that heaven will only accept 144,000 people.

8.     JWs believe that salvation is only found through the organization.

9.     JWs believe salvation can only be maintained by energetic works for the organization until the end, when one may then merit eternal life on a paradise earth.

10.  JWs believe Satan is the author of the doctrine of the trinity.

11.  JWs believe Jesus cannot be worshipped, only honored as Jehovah’s first creation.

 

JWs deny…

   The trinity, the deity of Christ, the bodily resurrection of Christ.

   The visible return of Christ, the Person of God the Holy Spirit.

   The promise of heaven to all believers, the necessity of new birth for all believers.

   The eternal security of the believer, the conscious eternal punishment of the lost.

 

On the other hand, Christianity teaches that God exists in a trinity of three eternal co-equal persons.  (Romans 1:7, John 20:28, Acts 5:3,4)

The Bible says that Jesus is no less than God in human flesh (Col. 2:9)

The Holy Spirit is the third member of the trinity.  (Matt. 28:19, Acts 13:2)

Jesus Christ rose bodily from the grave.  (John 2:20-21, Luke 24:39)

Jesus is visibly coming again to setup His kingdom on earth (Matt. 24:30, Acts 1:8, Revelation 1:7)

Salvation is found in the person of Christ and comes through faith in Him.  (Acts 16:31, Eph 2:8-9)

It is the work of God for man, not a work of man for God.  (Titus 3:4-6)

Jesus was and should be worshipped  (John 20:26-28, Matt. 2:10-12, Matt. 14:33)

 

JWs believe they are God’s government on earth and that all other governments are satanic, which is why you'll never see them recite the pledge of allegiance.  They don’t celebrate Christmas because they deny the incarnation of Jesus Christ.  They don’t celebrate Easter because they deny the bodily resurrection of Christ.

They have accepted the Watchtower organization as the prophet of God and God’s sole channel for His truth.  For the JW, to reject the organization is to reject God.  Only the organization can interpret the Bible according to the JW.

 

Excerpts above taken from Fast Facts on False Teachings, Ron Carlson & Ed Decker, Harvest House Publishers (p.117-132)


Sunday, June 28, 2009

Does Islam have a legitimate right to Jerusalem?
Psalm 137:5-6  "If I forget you, O Jerusalem, May my right hand forget her skill.  May my tongue cling to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I do not exalt Jerusalem above my chief joy."
The Old Testament references Jerusalem 767 times, the Koran doesn't mention it once.

Is Allah just another name for God?
Matthew 3:17  "and behold, a voice out of the heavens said, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well-pleased."
Koran 10.68  "They say: Allah has taken a son (to Himself)!  Glory be to Him: He is Self-sufficient: His is what is in the heavens and what is in the earth; you have no author for this; do you say against Allah what you do not know?"
Koran 17.111  "And say all praise is due to Allah, who has not taken a son and who has not a partner in the kingdom, and who has not a helper to save Him from disgrace; and proclaim His greatness, magnifying Him."
Koran 23.91  "Never did Allah take to Himself a son, and never was there with Him any (other) god - in that case would each god have certainly taken away what he created, and some of them would certainly have overpowered others; glory be to Allah above what they describe!"

Both cannot be true.  Either one or the other is false.

Is the Koran just an extension of both the Old & New Testaments?
The Bible says Jesus is the Son of God.
The Koran says God has no son.

The Bible says that Jesus died on the cross for the sins of man and was resurrected three days later.
Koran 4.157  "...did not kill him (Jesus) nor did they crucify him, but it appeared to them so."
Koran 9.30  "The Christians say: the messiah is the son of Allah; these are the words of their mouths; they imitate the saying of those who disbelieved before; may Allah destroy them."

Genesis 17:21 says the covenant promises flow through Isaac.
Koran 2.127  "Ibrahim (Abraham) and Ismail (Ishmael) raised the foundation of the house."

The Bible describes God as being personal.  The Koran says Allah is unknowable.
The Bible says God is triune.  The Koran says Allah has no son.
The Bible says God is Spirit and has personality.  He is the embodiment of love, the giver of grace, and is intensely interested in the affairs of men.  The Koran says Allah is undefinable, has no concept of grace, but only judgement.

Who is Allah?
The predominant religion of Pre-Islamic Arabia was animism.  It was a time when they believed in genis, magic carpets and magic stones; spirits ("jins") that inhabited rocks, trees, and the elements.
The chief among 350 of their gods was the "moon god" named Allah.  The crescent moon, the symbol of arabia, also signifies this fact. It was Mohammed who kept the chief god Allah to be worshipped and dismissed all the others.
Ramadan begins with the sighting of the moon in the 9th month of the Islamic lunar calender.
The rites of bowing toward Mecca, throwing stones at the devil, and the pilgrimage to Kabaa all predate Islam.


The Impossible Book (Jack Kinsella)

Imagine, for a second, that a collection of several dozen books about the cultural, religious and historical heritage of an historical people began to be composed around the fifth century AD.  That isn't when the collection was completed, but rather, when it started.  Since 500 AD, the work had been taken up by forty different individuals along the way, a book here, two books there, etc., with the final book of the collection hitting the news stands in January, 2007.

So, we have the time frame of sixteen hundred years to deal with.  Our first author would have composed his historical and cultural work as the Roman Empire began to collapse and the Goths and Vandals laid siege to Rome.  Mohammed had not yet been born.  The world was just entering the Middle Ages.  The prevailing science said that the earth was flat.  The sun revolved around the earth.  England was divided into tiny kingdoms.  The Dome of the Rock had not yet been built on Temple Mount.

That is our starting point.  Now, imagine that a couple of new books were added to the collection about every century or so.  Very few of our authors ever meet, most are separated by hundreds of years and hundreds of miles at a time when few could read or write and libraries were about as common as ATM's.

A couple of books in 500, a couple more in 600, etc., for about six hundred years.  That brings us to the period of the Magna Carta, and our collection of books is about one-third finished.  A few more centuries, a few more books, and it is half done around the time of Columbus.

A few more books, a few more centuries, and about the time of the American Revolution, our collection is three-quarters complete.  And on we go through history:  The War of 1812, the Civil War, WWI, WWII, Vietnam, the Gulf War, the War on Terror. . . and finally, in 2007, the last of the sixty-six books outlining the culture and historical heritage of our imaginary people is complete.

Now, to make it more interesting.  Although our authors don't know each other, lived centuries apart and never read each other's works before composing their own, the entire collection must read as if it were penned by the same guy.

If we know anything at all about literary history, it is that values, principles and styles change over time.  Even in his own lifetime, an author goes through fundamental changes in his own system of values and principles.  As a writer, I can go back and read what I wrote ten years ago and can track how my views have changed and matured over the decade.  It is actually quite interesting to see how much my views have changed.

Societies change and mature as well.  The Christian Church of AD 500 is not the Christian Church of 2007.  But for the sake of this exercise, we must assume that none of those personal, social or religious changes throughout the ages have any effect on our collection of historical books.  The book written in AD 500 and the book finished in 2007 must flow together as seamlessly as if they were written by the same guy on the same week.

Impossible?  Sure.  If one compared a book on US history published in 1907 with one published in 2007, one would wonder if the two books were even relating the history of the same country.  That's only a period of one hundred years.  To fit within our analogy, they would have to read as if they were written by the same hand.

The first five books of the Bible were written by Moses. Moses was a Hebrew who was raised and was well-versed in what was a thriving Egyptian culture.  He was reared in Pharaoh's court and "was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words and deeds" (Acts 7:22).  It would be natural to imagine that his writings would be heavily influenced by Egyptian thinking—yet they aren't.  Instead they reflect thoughts and principles that remain unchanged after more than 3,000 years.

The Books of the Law contain, for example, considerable information about health and sickness.  Notes Dr. S.I. McMillen in his 1972 book, None of These Diseases"From the record we discover that Moses had so much faith in God's regulations that he did not incorporate a single current [Egyptian] medical misconception into the inspired instructions ... The divine instructions were not only devoid of harmful practices, but had many detailed positive recommendations."

Now imagine a book of medicine penned in AD 500 in complete harmony with existing medical knowledge in 2007.  How amazing is that?

Moses was the author of the first five books of the Bible. All the other authors to come later faithfully reflected exactly the same values, despite the cultural, linquistic and scientific advancements that are part of 1600 years of history.

These writers would consist of people from the most diverse backgrounds.  Amos was a sheepbreeder and fruit caretaker.  David was a shepherd who became a mighty king.  Others, such as Daniel and Nehemiah, held high positions in foreign governments.  In the New Testament, the writers consist of several former fishermen (Peter and John), a tax collector (Matthew), a physician (Luke) and several others of different professions.  Few, if any, ever read what had been written before.  Even fewer, if any, of the Bible's authors ever met one another.

One of the foremost Bible scholars of the past century, F.F. Bruce, wrote in his book, The Books and the Parchments: How We Got Our English Bible"The Bible is not simply an anthology [a collection of books]; there is a unity which binds the whole together ... Any part of the human body can only be properly explained in reference to the whole body.  And any part of the Bible can only be properly explained in reference to the whole Bible."

The narratives are historical, faithfully reflecting society and culture as history and archaeology would discover them thousands of years later.  And while there may be disputes among archaeologists about certain details of the accounts, there is a general consensus of the Bible's accuracy.

Dr. Norman Geisler, professor of theology, summarizes the findings of Biblical archaeology:

"In every period of Old Testament history, we find that there is good evidence from archaeology that the Scriptures speak the truth.  In many instances, the Scriptures even reflect firsthand knowledge of the times and customs it describes.  While many have doubted the accuracy of the Bible, time and continued research have consistently demonstrated that the Word of God is better informed than its critics."

Not only is the Bible historically accurate, but when it deals with scientific subjects, it is also reliable. This is one of the reasons the Bible can be accepted as a trustworthy document that should be taken literally.  Although it was not written as a textbook on history, science, mathematics or medicine, when the writers of Scripture touch on these subjects, they were inspired by God not to make mistakes, but to write what was true—sometimes stating facts that scientific advancement would not reveal or even consider for thousands of years.

Isaiah knew the earth was round a thousand years before Columbus set sail for the New World.  "It is He that sitteth upon the circle of the earth . . . " Isaiah 40:22

Job explains the global hydrological cycle three thousand years before science 'discovered' it.

Hebrews 1:10-11 confirmed the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics (all things deteriorate with time) nineteen centuries before Einstein:

"You, Lord, in the beginning laid the foundation of the earth, and the heavens are the work of Your hands.  They will perish, but You remain; and they will all grow old like a garment. . ."

How many times has an unbeliever picked up a Bible and sighed to himself, "If I just had proof that God exists, then I would believe."

How much evidence does one need?

taken from The OmegaLetter @ http://www.omegaletter.com/articles.asp?ArticleID=6029


Even If (by Darlene Eastes)

Even if
Your heart is breaking,
Your mind is unclear
You're tired and restless and full of fear
Come to Me.
Even if
You say words you shouldn't
You don't do things you should
You doubt and try to change,
but never think you could.
Come to Me.
Even if
You thought an evil thought
You thought the thought again
You turned the thought to action and now you're bound in sin.
Come to Me.
Even if
You say, "But I knew better, I belong to You."
Child, I am not surprised by anything you do.
I made you in My image I fashioned you with care,
When you cried tears into your pillow, remember I was there.
I have always been and always will I be.
For even when you do those things, you still belong to Me.
Even if you do these things, Oh child, don't you see?
Even if, even if, you still can come to Me.
There is a secret place I have created where you may seek My face,
This place I have for you is called "The Father's Warm Embrace."
And when I have held you in My arms and rocked you, listening closely to your fears,
I will place you on My lap and wipe away your tears.
Then, I will smile.  A smile to let you know I am pleased.
For when you hurt and when you sinned, still - you came to Me.
So, do not draw back from Me my child,
I am Abba Father to you, remember in My word
I said, "Behold, I make all things new."
I will forgive you, heal you, restore you,
I will shower you with grace.
I will never turn My back to you, but you will see My face.
On your journey home, when I see you I will run.....
Even if, Even if, My child,
Even if just come.


Friday, January 23, 2009

O blessed Jesus, Your love is wonderful!  It is the admiration, joy and song of glorified saints.  The experimental sense of Your love on earth sweetens the bitterness of life and disarms death of all its terrors!  It was love which moved You to bow the heavens, to come down and sojourn on earth, to humble Yourself, to take on You the form of a servant, and become obedient unto death, even the death of the cross!  You pitied me in my lost estate.  You sought and found me when I sought You not.  You spoke peace to me in the day of my distress, when the clouds of guilt and darkness hung heavy on my soul and I was brought to the borders of despair.  You have borne with all my weakness, corrected my mistakes, restored me from my wanderings, and healed my backslidings.  May Your lovingkindness be ever before my eyes to induce me to walk in Your truth.  May Your love be the daily theme of my meditations, and the constant joy of my heart!

~John Fawcett
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Christ Precious
By John Fawcett
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