Friday, July 29, 2016

DIVIDING CHRISTIANS INTO CLASSES IS ROOTED IN GNOSTICISM



The doctrine that divides Christians into classes (anointed class and nonanointed class) actually originated with Gnosticism. The Bible describes ALL Christians as anointed ones who need only the Holy Spirit to teach and guide them (2 Corinthians 1:21, 22; 1 John 2:20, 27). The sect of Jehovah's Witnesses divides Christians into the 144,000 anointed ones that are bound for heaven and the Great Crowd (Jonadabs) that are not anointed but have the hope of living forever on a Paradise Earth. Members of the Great Crowd are dependent on the anointed ones, particularly the Governing Body, for their "spiritual food." The two-class system of Jehovah's Witnesses is a Gnostic doctrine that is 100% antithetical to the clear teaching of scripture. An ancient Gnostic philosopher named Valentinus invented the idea of Christians being divided into anointed and nonanointed classes.

As far as the heavenly hope is concerned, the apostle Paul said Christians have only "one hope" instead of two (Ephesians 4:4). Jesus said whoever does the will of the Father is one of His brothers (Matthew 12:50), and Hebrews 3:1 says that all the holy brothers are partakers of the heavenly calling. Anyone who does the will of God the Father is a brother/sister of Jesus and is therefore a partaker of the heavenly calling. Jesus is the firstborn among many brothers (Romans 8:29).

Jehovah's Witnesses are not the only ones who divide Christians into classes. A large number of neo-Gnostic cults were born during the Nineteenth Century; among them were the Mormons, Millerites, Christian Scientists, Jehovah's Witnesses, Seventh Day Adventists and Christadelphians and many others. About half of all these neo-Gnostic cults have either currently or in the past taught doctrines that divide Christians into superior and inferior classes.

The churches of the Word of Faith Movement and the New Apostolic Reformation (NAR) also divide Christians into anointed and nonanointed classes. For example, these churches say that apostles, prophets and prominent pastors have a special anointing from God's Holy Spirit while all other members of their church have either a lesser anointing, or no anointing at all, and are therefore dependent on the anointed church leaders for full spiritual enlightenment. Some of their other doctrines are Gnostic philosophies as well. Even the Roman Catholic Church has divided Christians into classes at different points in its history, with the Pope acting as a secondary mediator with Jesus Christ, followed by the cardinals and bishops, and finally the laity of the church that depend on their superiors.

The Christian apologist Justin Peters said, "If you are here today, and you know Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord, you’ve been born again, guess what? You're anointed, and you have the same anointing as does every other Christian. There are no super-Christians with a super-special anointing that the rest of us common schmucks just don’t have. If you’re in Christ, you’re anointed, and you have the same anointing as does every other believer. There are no super-Christians. That’s…that’s a Gnostic idea, the division of Christians into classes, that’s Gnosticism, it’s not biblical." (Peters, 2013, paragraph #15).

This Gnostic practice of dividing Christians into classes has been used by prominent religious leaders (within organized religion) to keep vast numbers of gullible followers dependent on them for spoonfed truth, or for some type of "esoteric knowledge" that presumably can't be found anywhere else. Today's neo-Gnostic cults have exploited this practice to the max, much to the disadvantage of their followers.

Here is a webpage that discusses the two-class system of the Valentianian Gnostics. You will find it under the subheading "The Called and the Elect." As you read it, you will notice how strikingly similar it is to that of today's Watchtower Society of Jehovah's Witnesses:

Brons, David. (2011). Christ and the Church - Valentinus and the Valentinian Tradition. Retrieved on July 29, 2016 from: http://gnosis.org/library/valentinus/Christ_and_Church.htm

Peters, Justin. (2013). The Devilish Puppet Master of the Word-Faith Movement. Retrieved on July 29, 2016 from the Grace To You website: https://www.gty.org/resources/sermons/TM13-10/the-devilish-puppet-master-of-the-wordfaith-movement


Slide borrowed from AndrĂ© Fernandez (2013) at Slideshare.net

Friday, July 15, 2016

THE RAINBOW OF GOD: WHAT DOES IT REPRESENT



THE BIBLICAL VIEW OF THE RAINBOW

After the waters of the Great Flood receded, and Noah and all creatures disembarked from the ark, God placed a rainbow in the sky as a sign of His promise to never again destroy the world with a flood. Not only did God make this promise to Noah and the human race, but to all creatures dwelling on the earth. (Genesis 9:8-17).


There has been much speculation as to why God added a diversity colors to the rainbow, and what the colors represent. The rainbow is thought to be composed of six colors, including redorange, yellowgreen, blue and violet; yet, there are actually seven colors when indigo is included. The number seven (7) normally represents completeness and perfection from God's standpoint, and perhaps that's why God put seven colors in the rainbow. Some Bible scholars are convinced that the colors of the rainbow represent the six work days of the Creation Week plus God's seventh day of rest, as described in Genesis 1 and 2. Everything that exists on the earth, to which God made the Noahic Covenant, came into existence during the six/seven days of the Creation Week.


Other Bible scholars think that the colors represent the seven major ethnic subdivisions of the human race that descended from Noah and his three sons. (Genesis 10:1-32). There are also Bible scholars who portray the rainbow's seven colors as representing the Seven Spirits of God mentioned in the book of Revelation. (Revelation 1:4; 3:1; 4:5; 5:6; Isaiah 11:2). Still other Bible scholars believe that the rainbow represents God himself in all His glory (Ezekiel 1:28; Revelation 4:3; 10:1), and that the colors of the rainbow represent the seven most recognizable attributes of God that make Him so holy and glorious, including the attributes of eternal existence, omnipotence, omniscience, omnipresence, perfect love, pure truth and perfect righteousness. The rainbow forms from the refraction of white light as it passes through water droplets in the air, and, just as white light is the combination of all the colors of the rainbow, so "holiness" is the sum total of all of God's attributes; God is "Holy, holy, holy" (Isaiah 6:3; Revelation 4:8).


As far as eschatology or Bible prophecy is concerned, the rainbow may foreshadow the permanent end of sin, suffering and death, as well as the permanent end of God's wrath against His creation due to wickedness. Remember that the rainbow was a sign of God's promise to never pour out His wrath on His creation by means of a flood. The Noahic Flood serves as a warning example of an even greater destruction that is soon to befall this world---the coming of the Son of Man (Matthew 24:36-39; Luke 17:26-30; 2 Peter 3:5-7). Just as He did during the Flood, God will remove sin and death from His creation, except this time sin and death will be removed totally and forever---not even to be remembered. (Isaiah 65:17-25; 2 Peter 3:5-13; Revelation 21:1-8). This will be affirmed by the fact that all the redeemed saints, along with all of the New Heaven and New Earth, will be immortal and incorruptible before God. Analogous to the rainbow of Noah's day would be Almighty God and the Holy City establishing a permanent dwelling place among mankind in the New Heaven and New Earth; that is, after the final outpouring of God's wrath on the wicked has passed by. (Revelation 21:2, 3; 22:3-5). That's right; the rainbow in the New Heaven and New Earth will actually be the glorious presence of God himself among His holy people.


In addition, the rainbow represents the exaltation of God's mercy and grace over God's wrath and judgment. (Psalm 103:8-10; Micah 7:18; James 2:13). This present age, spanning from the Great Flood to the Final Judgment, is the time for God's holy people to go to the ends of the earth and tell lost sinners about God and His mercy, God and His grace, in hopes that they will repent, be saved and join the spiritual family of God with everlasting life. (Ezekiel 18:30-32; 33:11; John 3:16, 36; 17:3; Acts 17:30, 31; 1 Timothy 2:3-7; 2 Peter 3:9).


In a 2001 sermon, John MacArthur said of the rainbow: "God said to Noah, 'This is the sign of the covenant, this bow, which I've established between Me and all flesh that is on the earth.' The whole Flood story is a revelation of God's holy wrath. God is a God of vengeance, a God of judgment, a God of wrath [against sin]. But the rainbow is a sign that God is also a God of mercy and a God of grace and a God of patience and a God of peace. There will be a final wrath to come in which the universe will be destroyed by fire and all sinners will perish. Between the Flood and that final time is the period of grace, and the bow of God, the bow of a warrior, hangs in all its beauty over the earth against the clouds of judgment as the beauty of grace touching heaven at its arc and touching earth at its ends, to tell all humanity that God is gracious to sinners."


In closing, I want to warn people that our postmodern culture is deconstructing the Bible text and is giving unbiblical meanings to the rainbow. God's rainbow DOES NOT represent multiculturalism, pluralism or syncretism, nor does it represent a diversity of sexual lifestyles paraded with pride, nor does it represent a wide diversity of world religions pointing to salvation in the same God. All of these are man-made ideas of what the rainbow represents; these ideas are not grounded in an objective, exegetical interpretation of scripture. We must stick strictly with the biblical meaning of the rainbow, which is one of God's most beautiful, most awesome creations.