MY CREED
I am a historical, non-charismatic, Reformed, confessional, amillennial Baptist who affirms the core teachings of evangelical Christianity (including the Five Solas of the Protestant Reformation), and denies modern attempts to obscure the purpose and design of mankind. I am a credobaptist, and hold the Reformed view of the Lord's Supper.
Historical - Historical implies that I'm not part of the nutty cultic conspiracy-theory mentality movement that seeks to divorce itself from historical Christianity, claiming that they have the "true faith' and others are simply following Roman Catholicism or the Pope. It also implies that I believe it is important to study church history. I realize that Christians of the past held to errors, and that current evangelical Christianity has problems itself. However, my reaction is not to separate from the evangelical Church and associate with fringe groups who claim to be the "true church". Been there, done that, bought the T shirt. This is the sort of behavior found in various cults and other fringe groups, and is commonplace among anti-Trinitarians, those who deny the deity of Jesus, Sabbathkeepers, and those that deny the canon of Scripture as used by the evangelical church.
Non-charismatic- I reject the teachings of the Word of Faith/Pentecostal/charismatic community within the Church regarding health, wealth, and prosperity, and accentuation of personal revelation over Scripture. Many of this community denies that God uses various types of suffering to conform the believer to the image of God. Additionally, this community largely accepts individuals who claim to be apostles and prophets. I do not believe there are apostles and prophets today in the sense of the apostolic offices, because the apostolic office required being appointed by Christ, after being a personal witness to the resurrected Christ, and requires manifestation of this office through signs and wonders, which validated their ministries as apostles and prophets. Additionally, this community tends to deemphasize doctrine and promote personal revelation. Finally, this community tends to teach that healing on demand is an entitlement under the atonement of Christ. I affirm that God heals according to his sovereign will, and the people of God should make their requests for healing known to God. Believers can be confident that God hears their prayers and the outcome of their prayer reflects his sovereign will for their lives. However, healing in this lifetime is not a guarantee, and the faithful rely on God's sovereignty and provision until the ultimate healing, the resurrection of our bodies.
Reformed - I believe in the doctrines of grace including radical corruption of mankind at the Fall, unconditional election to salvation, actual redemption of the elect, effectual calling of the elect, and preservation of the elect by the Holy Spirit. Some call these doctrines "Calvinism" but they are simply biblical teaching.
Confessional- I believe that confessions, creeds and catechisms are useful to the Church, especially the 1689 London Baptist Confession. Confessions are useful summaries of God's word by learned men of God from the past, and deserve our respect, while still realizing they are not infallible. A good confession can provide a seeker or new believer a good synopsis of the Christian faith, until they can develop their own fuller understanding of Christianity. They provide the kindling of God's word for the spark of God's Spirit to ignite. I am not part of the modern, hyper-emotional, brainless, prideful, signs and wonders seeking, anti-confessional movement within evangelical Christianity. I am strongly opposed to the "New Methods" view, propagated by revivalists like Charles Finney, that seek to discredit the teachings of older men of God, instead promoting methods leading to manipulation of goats into a shallow, meaningless confession of faith without a true heart change. The essence of their approach lives today in the modern megachurch movement. While claiming great numbers, one must question the depth of their faith and conversion.
Amillennial - I am amillennial, therefore I do not believe in dispensational premillennialism. I believe the Millennium mentioned in Revelation 20 is the current church age, where Christ and his saints rule from heaven. His rule has been inaugurated, but awaits the fullest consummation at his return. I believe death and sin are defeated at the resurrection upon Jesus' return, and will not continue to exist. I believe that the Church is true Israel, comprised of Jews and Gentiles united in Christ. I believe that a great, successful evangelism of Jewish people, who are mostly spiritually blinded at this time, will occur prior to the return of Jesus Christ. I believe Abraham and his spiritual descendants are true Israel, united in Christ, and will inherit the entire creation. I believe dispensationalists fail to employ hermeneutics consistently, and as a result, don't understand or believe that Jesus Christ, the Church and the New Covenant are the fulfillment of the types of Moses, ancient Israel, and the Mosaic Covenant. I believe God is faithful to all his unconditional promises, but dispensationalists misunderstand how these promises are fulfilled. I believe that prominent dispensationalist teachers employ slander to discredit covenant theology with charges of "spiritualizing" and "allegorizing", as well as anti-Semitism. They are hypocrites because they employ typology and recognize symbolism when it does not conflict with their dispensational doctrine. I do not think this is godly behavior.
Baptist - I affirm that baptism is for believers only, and don't believe it is appropriate to baptize children. I don't believe in a two-tier Church membership system that paedobaptism is based upon. Additionally, I don't think pouring or sprinkling are appropriate modes of baptism due to the language of burial used in Romans 6. I take the Reformed view of the Lord's Supper, and do not hold to the "memorial" view. I believe Jesus is present in a more fuller manifestation during communion, fellowshipping with His people through the mediation of the Holy Spirit when the Lord's Supper is being observed. However, I do not think the elements of communion contain the physical body and blood of the LORD. I object to the memorial view, though, as I believe that it makes the LORD's Supper a casual matter that becomes more ritual than a spiritual experience where Jesus fellowships with those united with him.
Core teachings of evangelical Christianity - I affirm the core teachings of evangelical Christianity including the full deity and full humanity of Jesus, monotheism (one God), the Trinity doctrine, justification by grace alone through faith alone in Jesus Christ alone to the glory of God alone, the inspiration and sole authority of Scripture as the rule of faith, the penal substitutionary atonement of Jesus Christ on the Cross, original sin, the virgin birth, the bodily resurrection, the eternal reward of the righteous and the eternal punishment of the wicked.
Five Solas - I affirm the teachings of the Reformation, including Scripture Alone (not Scripture and church tradition), Faith Alone (not faith and works including sacraments), Grace Alone (not grace and merit), Christ alone (not Christ and the intercession of Mary and the saints), and Glory of God alone (not human boasting).
Purpose and design of mankind - Man was created in the image of God, to represent God as stewards of the creation. "Image of God" includes, among other things, exercising dominion over creation, in a manner that reflects God's holiness. Man was created to live a God-centered life, but due to Adam's rebellion, fell into sin in the Garden. As a result, his soul is filled with vanity, futility as he lives a life independent of God. This creates the need for reconciliation through union with Christ, as man's created purpose is defined by God his Creator. The believer, upon humble faith and repentance wrought by a heart of flesh given by God through regeneration, is joined with Christ. Through union with Christ, he is brought into the fellowship of the Triune God, and begins to produce spiritual fruit. He is progressively transformed into the image of Christ throughout his life. Additionally, he experiences the true joy that God means for him to experience, because he is following his designed purpose.
Individually, man's purpose is to reflect the image of God, but he cannot reflect the image of Christ in isolation. He must also reflect the image of Christ in a communal sense within the communities he belongs to, such as his marriage, family, church and society. The collective, communal sense reflects God like the three Persons within the Triune God reflect everlasting community. This is why corporate worship, fellowship, and accountability is essential.
This describes my position on some key areas. It is basically my creed. Some points reflect essential, core Christian doctrine, and a few points reflect my strong convictions which, in humility, I admit that I may be wrong. God hasn't convicted me of another position on these matters yet, though.
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Christians should be aware that there are two related, wicked movements in America today: Black Lives Matter and the Woke Church.
These organizations are both leftist organizations that operate based on "critical race theory". Their teachings rely on a modified form of Marxism called cultural Marxism or Neo-Marxism.
Neo-Marxists claim that all white people are white supremacists. They claim that white people are oppressors, and non-white people are the oppressed. White people must submit to them, and must be involved in racial reconciliation, which means that they must protest the establishment and attempt to tear it down. The means that they use are shaming, violence and sometimes death.
While Woke Church claims to be Christian and focuses mostly on race, Black Lives Matters is a non-Christian organization whose leadership practices an occultic ancestral worship religion called Ifa. Black Lives Matter is mainly led by black lesbian women, and promotes abortion, homosexuality and transgenderism heavily. They hate the traditional Christian family unit, and seek to destroy these fundamental creation institutions.
The Woke Church movement has infiltrated the Christian church, and organizations such as the Gospel Coalition, Cru, and Southern Baptist Convention are involved with this false teaching. Additionally, several professors at various seminaries are involved. Individuals associated with this movement include Eric Mason, Thabiti Anyabwile, Jarvis Williams, Walter Strickland, Anthony Bradley, Matthew Hall, Matt Chandler, David Platt, JD Greear, John Piper and Lecrae.
BLM supports homosexuality, transgenderism, abortion, defunding the police, as well as the use of violence to achieve their ideological goals. Governmental officials (including Biden/Harris), corporations and celebrities have been duped into contributing political and financial support to this group, which might well be used for domestic terrorism. Weak politicians are being pressured to hinder law enforcement officers in their duty to protect the public. Additionally, the leftist media is twisting news stories to align with the BLM agenda.
Realize, too, that BLM has infiltrated the educational system at the lowest and highest levels. In some areas, children are being brainwashed into BLM ideology which includes racism, homosexuality, transgenderism and anti-police rhetoric. White children are made to feel like racists, and boys are being feminized because these nuts believe that masculinity is toxic. The traditional rough-play of boys is being discouraged in this effort to feminize them. Christopher Rufo, a Christian investivative reporter, has some excellent interviews on Youtube regarding this.
A Christian cannot support Black Lives Matter. Black Lives Matter is a racist organization. How are they racist? They claim that all white people are white supremacists. This is a racist claim, since it claims all people with a certain skin tone are white supremacists.
Racism is wrong and anti-Christian. Every member of the church, regardless of physical or ethnic characteristics, are united with Christ, and share in adoption due to this union. Additionally, they are united to one another through this common union with Christ, and should be valued equally.
Read the book "Fault Lines" by Voddie Baucham. He exposes this movement from a Christian perspective. Also, read the book called "The Christian's True Identity: What It Means to be In Christ" by Jonathan Landy Cruse. It is very good in explaining what it means to be in Christ.
I recommend viewing this series of videos for a great understanding of the "woke church" and the false doctrines that it teaches:
It is called "Christianity and Wokeness" by Owen Strachan.
I also recommend this set of videos by Travis McNeely, called Critical Race Theory Series"
This is a simple, basic video that is helpful, too:
Here's another good, simple one:
Guard your minds from leftists in our society who are trying to destroy our nation. Keep resisting the attempts of leftists (including Joe Biden/Kamala Harris/"Progressive Democrats") to seize our freedom speech, freedom of religion, right to assemble, and gun ownership rights.
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