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annsni said:Proverbs 18:21 "Death and life are in the power of the tongue,and those who love it will eat its fruits."
Do you think that we can speak death into our life? That if I say that my neighbor should die that he will? How about me speaking "life" over a dying person. Will they suddenly be restored to full health? No. Our words do not have power to change God's will, to change nature, to even change our circumstances.
youngmom4 said:I don't think that is what Joyce meant, either. I think she is speaking metaphorically, just as the proverb is. No, we can not literally make our neighbor die by saying that he will, but we are bringing death to our own spirits by violating several commandments: Jesus said if we are angry with someone that is the same as killing them, so I think wishing someone dead or saying they are going to die is much worse. Same thing for the converse statement; I may not restore someone to health simply by saying that they will heal, but if I pray for their good health, that is bringing life to my own spirit by keeping me in communication and relationship with God. Now, I could be wrong, and she could mean it like you're saying, but I just don't think so based on everything I've ever heard her say. :thumbs:
youngmom4 said:I don't think that is what Joyce meant, either. I think she is speaking metaphorically, just as the proverb is. No, we can not literally make our neighbor die by saying that he will, but we are bringing death to our own spirits by violating several commandments: Jesus said if we are angry with someone that is the same as killing them, so I think wishing someone dead or saying they are going to die is much worse. Same thing for the converse statement; I may not restore someone to health simply by saying that they will heal, but if I pray for their good health, that is bringing life to my own spirit by keeping me in communication and relationship with God. Now, I could be wrong, and she could mean it like you're saying, but I just don't think so based on everything I've ever heard her say. :thumbs:
I can remember when I was a pastor in the SBC and some of the local SBC churches were promoting it. The prayer of Jabez was promoted at the state level.Revmitchell said:I wasn't aware Beth taught the prosperity doctrine. I do know she teaches and endorses the heretical contemplative prayer founded in eastern mysticism and filtered by the catholic church.
gb93433 said:I can remember when I was a pastor in the SBC and some of the local SBC churches were promoting it. The prayer of Jabez was promoted at the state level.
superwoman8977 said:Okay I have to ask what is wrong with praying the Prayer of Jabez? I have prayed it for the last probably 4 years every morning. It keeps me going knowing that one day it will come to fruition.
LadyEagle said:I agree. But I have never heard any of those things from her from watching her program. And the material furnished here is several years old.
But two questions: Do we not believe death and life are in the power of the tongue? Do we not believe there is a law of sowing and reaping?
superwoman8977 said:Okay I have to ask what is wrong with praying the Prayer of Jabez? I have prayed it for the last probably 4 years every morning. It keeps me going knowing that one day it will come to fruition.
Usually, instead of figuring out what it is, and figuring out what it isn't, here is the type of response you get from alarmers:
Revmitchell, no need to be offended. I made that remark because from talking with you a lot in various threads, I expected some direct evidence from Beth Moore's mouth, not an incredibly biased site that misquotes, and misrepresents these people.
After awhile there is a deep yearning within to go into the upper regions beyond the clouds. In your imagination allow your spiritual body, shining with light, to rise out of your physical body. Look back so that you can see yourself lying in the grass and reassure your body that you will return momentarily. Imagine your spiritual self, alive and vibrant, rising up through the clouds and into the stratosphere. Observe your physical body, the knoll, and the forest shrink as you leave the earth. Go deeper and deeper into outer space until there is nothing except the warm presence of the eternal Creator. Rest in His presence.
Richard Foster, Celebration of Discipline: The Path to Spiritual Growth (New York, NY: Harper & Row, 1978), 27 (emphasis added).
We of the New Age can risk going against the tide. Let us with abandon relish the fantasy games of children.
Richard Foster, Celebration of Discipline: The Path to Spiritual Growth (New York, NY: Harper & Row, 1978), 170 (emphasis added but capitalization in the original).
“[the] spiritual climate is ripe... [for]... Jesus seekers across the world are being prepared to abandon the old way of the written code for the new way of the Spirit. Paul told us long ago we've been freed by the gospel to live a new way, but we've not known what it is or how to do it.”
David G. Benner, Sacred Companions: The Gift of Spiritual Friendship & Direction (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), 9.
Moore builds her case for contemplative in her frequent references to Brennan Manning in her book, suggesting that his contribution to "our generation of believers may be a gift without parallel" (p. 72). This is indeed a troubling statement made by a Christian leader who so many women look to for direction and instruction in their spiritual lives. Many of those women, in reading Moore's comments about Manning and her quoting of him in the book may turn to the writings of Manning for further insights. When they do, they will find that Manning is a devout admirer of Beatrice Bruteau of The School for Contemplation.
Bruteau believes that God lives in all creation, stating: "We have realized ourselves as the Self that says only I AM, with no predicate following, not "I am a this" or "I have that quality." Only unlimited, absolute I AM.
(Lighthouse Trails)
There are several economic theories to explain the causes of what Christians call temptation and resulting sin. Most of these have been influenced by Marxist views of mankind as essentially economic beings. Struggle between economic classes is as near as Marxism comes to a doctrine of sin. I leave to the department of Apologetics a thorough canvass of the several Marxist, essentially anti-Christian theories. Chief among them is liberation theology. Though it was primarily a movement among post-Vatican II Roman Catholics, students in undergraduate university classes in sociology met much of the same thought many long years ago when the now generally despised Stalin was still darling of many professors and Chairman Mao was soon to appear.
Robert Duncan Culver, Systematic Theology: Biblical and Historical (Ross-shire, Scotland: Christian Focus Publications, 2005), 368.