The
Truth About Lent
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The
Truth About the Church
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The
Truth About the Antichrist
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The
Truth About Valentine's Day
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The Truth About the Rapture
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The
Truth About Obama's Inauguration
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The
Truth About Bible Statements
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The
Truth About Sunday Worship and Blue Laws
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The
Truth About Prophecy and Hamas
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The
Truth About the Calendar
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The
Truth About Christmas and Chanukkah
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The
Truth About Christmas and December 25th
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The
Truth About Thanksgiving
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The
Truth About the Bible
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The
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The
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Issues (articles and video)
The
Truth About Luther and the Reformation
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That's
NOT in the Bible?
Truth
about popular statements
By
Daniel Rendelman
ravemet@comcast.net
www.emetministries.com
The Bible has affected
mankind in countless ways. It is the best selling book of all time.
Harvard, Yale, and Princeton once based their curriculum upon the Scriptures.
For many years Webster's Dictionary predominately defined words from
their usage in the King James Version. The message of the Bible has
sparked wars like the Crusades, changed lives of horrible sinners like
Jeffrey Dahmer, and become part of everyday speech. Phrases like "cleanliness
is next to godliness" are repeated over and over as coming from
the good book. But, do many of the popular sayings we attribute to the
Bible actually originate from the Scriptures?
"God
helps those who help themselves" is just one example of a quote
that doesn't have Biblical origin. This statement was actually first
made by Ben Franklin in the Poor Richard's Almanac of 1757. This isn't
a bad idea, but it isn't Scriptural. How could the man on the cross
next to the Savior actually help himself?
When problems
plague a person the popular Christian catch phrase "this too shall
pass" is often repeated. This statement can't be found in the Bible.
Yes, pain is only temporary compared to the eternal glory of Heaven
but you won't find this "verse" in your Bible. To read this
quote, try opening the Jewish Talmud.
"Once
saved, always saved" is a popular Baptist citation that isn't from
the Bible either. The theology of eternal security can easily be argued
as Revelation 3:5 speaks of blotting someone's name OUT of the book
of eternal life. Don't be mistaken about this declaration.
Is money
the root of all evil? Not according to the Scriptures. The Apostle Paul
said in 1 Timothy 6:10 that the "love of money is the root of all
evil." Money is a tool that can be used for good or bad. The love
of money is greed. This desire to receive for self alone is indeed the
force that drives all wickedness.
"A
bird in the hand is worth two in the bush" is a phrase from a newspaper
in 1833. And "beggars can't be choosers" was first used in
a 1546 book of proverbs.
Perhaps
the most used unbiblical phrase derives from a hymn written by William
Cowper. He wrote that "God moves in a mysterious ways." Today,
this statement is repeated over and over by believers and unbelievers
alike. The truth is that the Almighty is not mysterious whatsoever.
The Creator can be known and understood through His word. We are the
ones with a problem of understanding the infinite. For a Bible believer,
nothing about the Creator should be mysterious as EVERYTHING can be
for the good. Everything that occurs is not good but can work for our
benefit. Romans 8:28, "And we know that all thing work together
for the good to those who love Him and are called according to His purpose."
Error brings
more error. We delude ourselves when we erroneously attribute man's
ideas for Biblical wisdom. The only way to know if what we think is
in the Scriptures is to study and know the Bible. The truth of the Bible
will set us free from error and misunderstandings. To learn more truth
from the bible visit www.emetministries.com.
Finding
the Truth about Luther and the Reformation
By
Daniel Rendelman
ravemet@comcast.net
www.emetministries.com
Christians throughout
the world celebrate the last Sunday in October as "Reformation
Day." This is in remembrance of how Martin Luther posted his Ninety-five
Theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517.
Luther's actions exposed the Catholic Church as full of false doctrine,
superstition, and ignorance. His main disagreement centered on salvation
by grace through faith.
After Luther's
courageous acts, the Protestant movement gained popularity. Luther changed
the Sunday worship service to focus on preaching instead of the Eucharist,
but he left other Catholic traditions intact. The "new" Lutheran
worship style differed little from the Catholic Mass. "Luther retained
the basic order of the medieval Mass along with the ceremonial aspects
of lights, incense and vestments," Maxwell, Outline of Christian
Worship, page 77.
Luther
talked much about the "priesthood of all believers" but did
not allow the reformation to affect the services of worship. Luther
said, "It is not now nor ever has been our intention to abolish
the liturgical service of God completely," Luther's works, LII,
20. Accordingly, the pulpit and not the altar table is the central element
in most contemporary churches. Many similarities still remain between
the Catholic Church and most Christian denominations like Episcopal,
Lutheran, and Methodist. Did Luther go far enough? Was the Reformation
the needed resistance of evil and the complete return to righteousness?
Sadly,
Luther's actions did little to change church worship. Yes, Luther led
a drastically needed reformation of doctrine BUT the Protestant movement
has continued to mirror many Catholic traditions. It's been almost 500
years since the first Reformation Sunday but the church is still stuck
in incorrect Catholic practices. Here are a few examples:
"Is
not every Christian obliged to sanctify Sunday and to abstain on that
day from unnecessary servile work? Is not the observance of this law
among the most prominent of our sacred duties? But you may read the
Bible from Genesis to Revelation, and you will not find a single line
authorizing the sanctification of Sunday. The Scriptures enforce the
religious observance of Saturday, a day which we never sanctify."
Cardinal James Gibbons, The Faith of Our Fathers (1917 edition), p.
72-73 (16th Edition, p 111; 88th Edition, p. 89).
History
shows that Christ-mass is a leftover holiday with symbols of Madonna
and child which were borrowed from Egyptian worship of Isis and Horus.
This is in violation of Exodus 20:3.
On June
29, 2008 the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments
banned the sacred name of "Yahweh" from being used in liturgy
or music. The name of "Yahweh" is seldom heard throughout
Christianity. This is in violation of Exodus 3:30.
Catholicism
and much of the modern church teaches that the Pastor or Minister acts
as a mediator for confession, sin, or learning of doctrine. This is
in violation of 1 Timothy 2:5.
Luther
participated in a reformation that continues until this day. Many people
are laying aside unbiblical practices and searching for the truth. This
movement will continue until the return of the Messiah. The Savior will
make His second coming when the truth faith is restored completely.
He will return when there is a full reformation. "Repent therefore,
and be converted, that your sins may he blotted out, when the times
of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord; and He shall
send Jesus Christ, which before was preached unto You: Whom the heavens
must receive until the times of restoration of all things, which God
hath spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began,"
Acts 3:17-21.