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5.30.2011

Some highlights from an exchange with a churchian

All the main reformers had one thing in common: they understood the importance and power of proclaiming the *actual* word of God to people. Not a closed society smug in some church building but to, like, entire cities. Luther, Zwingli, and Calvin all specifically mentioned this. They knew this was their number one priority and without it nothing else mattered.


The churchian didn't get the above. Because it has to do with regeneration, which is effected, when it is, by the word and the Spirit. A foundational fact of the faith churchians are blank on.

People just need to hear the living word, it and the Spirit are what regenerates, and regeneration is the main thing. Once regenerated a person will gravitate towards on-the-mark biblical doctrine (if not full, sophisticated doctrine like Calvinist, Reformed doctrine, then certainly the on-the-mark basics), but they will also value it and truly understand it.


The churchian didn't want to interact with that one either. That's boring stuff. Besides, he doesn't understand any of it.

What regenerates, churchians? Man and ritual, or the word and the Spirit? Don't know? Try the latter.


Again, stupid talk from the scary stranger. Always talking about regen-, oh, whatever that word is.

Romanism is not just limited to a church in Rome.


Nope, it isn't. Hatred of the word and the Spirit occurs outside the Roman Beast church too. Churchian guy didn't want to interact on that subject either.

I'd rather be a hick who God can trust than a false teacher [with a fantastic seminary degree] flying under a false flag with no future other than the pain of hell fire.


Yes, the question: can God trust you? It's never asked in churchian environments, but they don't fear God. They fear man. And, no, God can't trust churchians. No matter how many crackers they eat or how much grape juice they gurgle down.

You owe a debt of gratitude to whoever it is that makes the effort to proclaim the actual words of the Old and New Testaments to you.


Yep. And, again, this went by the churchian leaving his consciousness unscathed and blank as usual. He was mocking a hick who read the Bible word for word and in effect made the call that was effectual for me. He doesn't value such an act because he doesn't think regeneration is a 'thing' let alone something effected by the word and the Spirit. He vaguely thinks (and is taught) that ritual regenerates him, but he doesn't even really think in such explicit terms regarding regeneration because it's not really an important thing in his churchian world.

Please write down a rule or a theory of Ouspensky's that I'm imprisoned to. Seriously, otherwise I can't know what you are talking about. Am I also imprisoned to Carl von Clausewitz' notions of defensive warfare and is that hamstringing me as a Christian? Seriously, write something down.


The churchian couldn't do that because he was just googling for cheap shot ammunition. He doesn't know much about anything, other than his favorite TV shows.

>Thanks to all that baggage, you misread some of the more pietistic or speculative Calvinists.

Who would they be? John Calvin? The Dutch Second Reformation Puritans? I'm reminded of R. Scott Clark who got to a point where he denied the very historical *existence* of Puritans so as to be able to not have to deal with them in the realm of Calvinism.


This confused the churchian as well. The irony of listing John Calvin as a "pietistic or speculative Calvinist" didn't crack his immunity to discerning irony. And the anecdote about Clark is not something he knows about nor could understand if he did know about it. Churchians don't know Puritans sought to 'reduce to practice' the faith. He doesn't know what that means either.

>Since you think you have special knowledge, you complain that everyone else is worldly, shallow and worse.

Worldliness in the church I define: I point out the man-fearing, the respecting of persons, the turning of the faith into all things 'family', etc. We can also talk about the worldly values of secular academia informing how churchians see the Bible. A lot of real worldliness going on in the churches. I define it. You? You are throwing empty words around.


I define what I'm talking about. The churchian just makes assertions based on the cheap shot ammunition his gets from google. Then he asks: "I'm doing good, right, pastor? Am I doing good?"

Let's talk about shallowness. What do I actually write along those lines? I talk about history, art, music, imaginative literature, science, religion, philosophy. But that is even a shallow gauge for shallowness. It doesn't take much to get up to speed with what the world has to offer regarding such influences. Shallowness really has its main cause in being in bondage to the fear of man. When you fear God alone you don't fear man. The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.


So there I give the churchian a very good definition of the cause of shallowness. It doesn't seem to have much effect on him.

And what of this 'special knowledge'? What's wrong with special knowledge? Is it good knowledge? Based on the authority of the word of God, does it measure up? Does it withstand the tribunal of Scripture? Is it necessary? Is is empty? Is it vain? Is it helpful knowledge? Again, quote something.


And here I was trying to get the churchian to ponder this all-purpose (much like the word 'gnostic') term 'special knowledge'. Usually they mean "is God talking to you directly? huh?", but in this case he can't say that, so he just says 'special knowledge.' No, he doesn't know what he's referring to. I'll explain it though, next...

Let's make it easy: One man's special knowledge is another man's Bible commentary.


"Uh, nuh uh." Oh, yes! churchian. One man's special knowledge is another man's Bible commentary. There are different languages and influences and sources for knowledge and understanding of ourselves and the world around us, churchian. Just because you are too shallow to discern between them and use a practical, on-the-mark one doesn't make them non-existent. In this area you are no better than a dim atheist, making demands that conform to your own level of shallowness and lack of development. Yes! I said 'development'! Do you deny degree in development among human beings? Really? You do? No... I can't believe that you would... No...

Your shallowness is not just a passive state you live in either is it, churchian? You *desire* to be shallow. It's like living in darkness. The better to keep your filthy desires and your ungodly hatreds secret.


Another insight that didn't seem to register on the church Christian's radar. Must have had stealth technology attached to it.

>I said superstition and I mean superstition. As in "an irrational spiritual discipline or religious practice not based on Scripture."

I seriously doubt you know of *any* spiritual discipline based on Scripture that doesn't involve crackers and grape juice.


This is a statement rather foundational to this exchange with the churchian. No, it didn't register with him at all. I'm use to it by now.

6 Comments:

Blogger Randall van der Sterren said...

As for regeneration, you have no excuse:

Justification by faith is not just an isolated act of gaining knowledge. In fact, faith is not alone in the person justified! It is accompanied with all other saving graces.

One way an adult convert manifests those graces by finding a faithful church for word, sacrament and discipline. Particular congregations are part of the visible church, outside of which there is no ordinary possibility of salvation. Christ gave these churches the ministry, oracles, and ordinances of God, for the gathering and perfecting of the saints in this life.

If you are in Christ as you say, you will led TOWARD a church, not away.

May 31, 2011 at 12:01 AM  
Blogger c.t. said...

>Justification by faith is not just an isolated act of gaining knowledge.

Light up straw men much?

Here's something you don't know about faith, churchian. It's not just a grace from God, it doesn't just follow upon regeneration by the word and the Spirit, it is not just about the knowledge (yes, by the way, there is knowledge involved) of who we are to have faith in and why, it is also a 10 on the Richter scale earthquake to our inner fallen nature in that we *recognize something higher than us* in the act of having saving faith. That would be He who created us, and in the economy of redemption He who saved us by his active and passive obedience. Yes, churchian, this recognizing something higher than 'me' is a big deal. Vanity, worldly pride, and self-will refuse to recognize anything higher than 'me'. These are the reins the devil has in us to control us. How do I know all this? Did I learn it from churchians? No, churchians don't know the first thing about vanity, worldly pride, and self-will. They don't think in such terms and would consider anyone who did a bit 'weird', right, churchian? This is the subject of spiritual warfare, churchian. A subject your ministers of the devil don't want you to know about (mark that word 'know', churchian).

May 31, 2011 at 12:57 AM  
Blogger c.t. said...

>In fact, faith is not alone in the person justified! It is accompanied with all other saving graces.

The problem with where you go with this is: The Church of God Most Righteous on 1st Avenue pastored by Kip Kingdom is not a 'saving grace.' Ecclesiology is not soteriology. Sacramentology is not soteriology. As much as sacramentalists, and clericalists, and formalists, and moralists want them to be.

>One way an adult convert manifests those graces by finding a faithful church for word, sacrament and discipline.

I don't need a church building with paid pastor to access the word of God. Each era of God's plan of redemption requires different things regarding 'church.' Access to the word of God is not a problem in this era. If I could only access the word of God in a church building I'd be the first person there, front row, dealing with all the human element involved. Whatever's necessary.

You say 'sacraments' plural. Really? Isn't baptism in your understanding of it a once and done ritual? There is no plural in your 'sacraments.' You eat crackers and drink grape juice. The most shallow reading of the New Testament possible. You ignore *everything* Jesus says about spiritual warfare and progressive sanctification, but those *crackers and grape juice* boy! they will magically do...what? something! You can sure see the result too, can't you?

No, churchian, your 'sacraments', your shallow understanding of those two visual parables, are not authoritative for all Christians, and are certainly not even biblical. How many times did Jesus say, please stop taking what I say so literally. I.e., figure it out.

As for discipline... Discipline regarding what? If a regenerated Christian, who is a prophet, a priest, and a king, can't maintain a degree of discipline there's something missing there. For unregenerate believers who have to be told not to sleep with their wife's sister, I suppose your 'church' can play a role there. It's not the faith though.

>Particular congregations are part of the visible church, outside of which there is no ordinary possibility of salvation.

This is false. Obviously many Christians who have been regenerated by the word and the Spirit were not in any church when it happened. This is an extra-biblical statement. It comes from man, not the word of God.

>Christ gave these churches the ministry, oracles, and ordinances of God, for the gathering and perfecting of the saints in this life.

This is Romanist. The Reformation brought to light the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers. Again, a regenerated Christian is a prophet, priest, and king. What you are doing is using the Bible to give warrant to the activities of the synagogues of Satan. What do the synagogues of Satan do? They keep the word of God away from people. They mutilate and corrupt the word of God. What do your churches do, churchian? You use the authority of man, the priesthood of scholars, to demand that the received pure and whole word of God be mutilated and corrupted and looked down upon rather than looked humbly up to, and to teach that the Bible needs man more than man needs the Bible. *This you are doing, in pretty much EVERY church in existence in our day.* This is what you make a fake biblical appeal for me to come under the authority of. This is why a Christian says to you: get thee behind me Satan. We'll deal with you and your 'churches' when the King returns.

>If you are in Christ as you say, you will led TOWARD a church, not away.

I'm IN Christ's Church. Your very unconscious language is Satanic through and through.

And, you won't understand this because you don't experience it, but regenerated Christians find themselves in the company of other Christians without even trying. It's something about how the Spirit works.

May 31, 2011 at 1:27 AM  
Blogger c.t. said...

I must say, though, Randall, that the above comment from you is the first time I've detected no troll vibe. You obviously speak what you believe, and I do know there is real questioning among church level Christians whether they have been regenerated or not and it bothers you. I would just say that your Achilles heel on that which you petulantly refuse to deal with, collectively, is your approach to the word of God. The word of God is the environment where regeneration potentially happens. The church level either never engages the word of God (their pastors certainly don't proclaim it word for word without telling their congregations where it is wrong or what have you) or the underlying, foundational teaching in the churches that the word of God is a mere document that scholars are giving to them (one day they may get it all together too!) creates a quiet low valuation for the word of God which translates into deadness and worse in the churches.

The word of God is foundational to the faith. If your approach to the word of God is based on the fear of man and giving in to the demands of your fallen nature then of course you are going to have an uneasy feeling regarding your state vis-a-vis God in your quieter more honest moments.

May 31, 2011 at 1:48 AM  
Blogger c.t. said...

In other words, Randall, I don't preach that you not go to your church. I preach that you engage the word of God *complete.* And humble yourself to the pure and whole *received* word of God. Whatever you do along with that will have life in it.

May 31, 2011 at 1:54 AM  
Blogger c.t. said...

By the way, when I get hot under the collar in my usual fashion and say things like when the King returns we'll deal with your churches, etc., do I really believe that? Yes, I do. I am hardcore. Do I really think churchians will burn in hell, or be hauled off to hell by soldiers of Christ like myself? Um, not in all cases, there is some exaggeration for effect there, but some of you will be, yes. I believe that. You don't mess with the word of God and not get your reward for it.

May 31, 2011 at 2:14 AM  

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