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Originally posted by atestring:
Dkh,
Do you think everyone that disagrees with you is in a cult?
Handbook of Today's Religions, Josh McDowellA cult is a perversion, a distortion of biblical Christianity and/or a rejection of the historic teachings of the Christian church. The Apostle Paul warned there would be false Christs and a false gospel that would attempt to deceive the true church and the world.
Walter Martin gives us a good definition of a cult when he says:
A cult, then, is a group of people polarized around someone's interpretation of the Bible and is characterized by major deviations from orthodox Christianity relative to the cardinal doctrines of the Christian faith, particularly the fact that God became man in Jesus Christ (Walter Martin, The Rise of the Cults, p. 12).
CARMOneness Pentecostal people are many and varied. The two main groups that hold to Oneness theology are the United Pentecostal Church International (the largest) and the United Apostolic church. There are others like the Assemblies of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Bible Way Churches of Our Lord Jesus Christ as well as a host of independent Oneness churches scattered throughout the United States.
The following points of doctrine are generally held to by the Oneness Pentecostal groups.
1. Denies the doctrine of the Trinity.
2. Denies justification by faith alone by stating that baptism is also required for salvation.
3. Jesus is God the Father.
4. Jesus is the Holy Spirit.
5. The name of God is "Jesus."
6. Baptism is necessary for salvation.
7. Denies pre-existence of the Word as the Son.
8. Teaches that the He existed as the Father.
9. Being born again means repentance, baptism, and speaking in tongues.
10. Baptism must be administered by an ordained Oneness minister to be valid.
11. Baptism must be administered with the phrase, "In the name of Jesus" instead of the phrase, "In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit" (Matt. 28:19).
12. Speaking in tongues is a necessary requirement to demonstrate that a person has been baptized in the Holy Spirit, and is, therefore, saved. It is claimed to be the initial sign of the infilling of the Holy Ghost.
13. Restitution of all things, though the devil and the angels will not be restored.
14. Women may be pastors.
15. Only Oneness people will go to heaven.
Originally posted by DHK:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by atestring:
Dkh,
Do you think everyone that disagrees with you is in a cult?
Handbook of Today's Religions, Josh McDowellA cult is a perversion, a distortion of biblical Christianity and/or a rejection of the historic teachings of the Christian church. The Apostle Paul warned there would be false Christs and a false gospel that would attempt to deceive the true church and the world.
Walter Martin gives us a good definition of a cult when he says:
A cult, then, is a group of people polarized around someone's interpretation of the Bible and is characterized by major deviations from orthodox Christianity relative to the cardinal doctrines of the Christian faith, particularly the fact that God became man in Jesus Christ (Walter Martin, The Rise of the Cults, p. 12).
CARMOneness Pentecostal people are many and varied. The two main groups that hold to Oneness theology are the United Pentecostal Church International (the largest) and the United Apostolic church. There are others like the Assemblies of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Bible Way Churches of Our Lord Jesus Christ as well as a host of independent Oneness churches scattered throughout the United States.
The following points of doctrine are generally held to by the Oneness Pentecostal groups.
1. Denies the doctrine of the Trinity.
2. Denies justification by faith alone by stating that baptism is also required for salvation.
3. Jesus is God the Father.
4. Jesus is the Holy Spirit.
5. The name of God is "Jesus."
6. Baptism is necessary for salvation.
7. Denies pre-existence of the Word as the Son.
8. Teaches that the He existed as the Father.
9. Being born again means repentance, baptism, and speaking in tongues.
10. Baptism must be administered by an ordained Oneness minister to be valid.
11. Baptism must be administered with the phrase, "In the name of Jesus" instead of the phrase, "In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit" (Matt. 28:19).
12. Speaking in tongues is a necessary requirement to demonstrate that a person has been baptized in the Holy Spirit, and is, therefore, saved. It is claimed to be the initial sign of the infilling of the Holy Ghost.
13. Restitution of all things, though the devil and the angels will not be restored.
14. Women may be pastors.
15. Only Oneness people will go to heaven.
Orthodox doctrine centers mainly around the doctrines of soteriology and Christology, though there may be others inluded such as Bibliology.Originally posted by atestring:
DKHH
What is your criteria for determining what is orhtodox?
Also, please list a group that disagrees with you that you do not consider to be a cult.
Atestring, are you an expert on cults? Why do you call into question Josh McDowell and Walter Martin's research? What have you done in the field of researching the cults? I have used not only their materials but others as well in my teaching of cults in the college I am associated with. I find that their material is quite adequate.Originally posted by atestring:
Walter Martin and Josh Macdowell are mere humans and they are not the authority on cults.
I have respect for Josh Macdowell but i realize as you should that books are not 100% accurate nor are they written to be . They are written to sell. Money talks in the Christian Bookstores.
I am not oneness and I may disagree with them on some things and agree with them on other things but I will not call them a cult just because of the list that you mentioned.
The list takes issue with certain things but does not listen to their scriptural basis for believing such things.
I challenge you to get on a oneness website (since you obviously live your life on the internet)and ask them why they believe what they believe. You may find that they are not 100% wrong. They did not wake up one morning and say, " I think I will make DKH mad."
There are lots of things that they preach that we could all learn from and that we would agree on.
They love Jesus. They love to procaim the power of the name of Jesus as the church in The Book of Acts did.
You may find out that you don't know everything about them.
BTW ( because of your post) you seem to be threatened by Pentecostals and Charismatics. Are they strong in Canada. Is your church loosing members to them. There must be a reason for the annomosity that you have to them.
YOu may be right on some issues just as we all are but you are as human as the rest of us and therefore you could be wrong on certain issues as could I.
Atestring, are you an expert on cults? Why do you call into question Josh McDowell and Walter Martin's research? What have you done in the field of researching the cults? I have used not only their materials but others as well in my teaching of cults in the college I am associated with. I find that their material is quite adequate.Originally posted by DHK:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by atestring:
Walter Martin and Josh Macdowell are mere humans and they are not the authority on cults.
I have respect for Josh Macdowell but i realize as you should that books are not 100% accurate nor are they written to be . They are written to sell. Money talks in the Christian Bookstores.
I am not oneness and I may disagree with them on some things and agree with them on other things but I will not call them a cult just because of the list that you mentioned.
The list takes issue with certain things but does not listen to their scriptural basis for believing such things.
I challenge you to get on a oneness website (since you obviously live your life on the internet)and ask them why they believe what they believe. You may find that they are not 100% wrong. They did not wake up one morning and say, " I think I will make DKH mad."
There are lots of things that they preach that we could all learn from and that we would agree on.
They love Jesus. They love to procaim the power of the name of Jesus as the church in The Book of Acts did.
You may find out that you don't know everything about them.
BTW ( because of your post) you seem to be threatened by Pentecostals and Charismatics. Are they strong in Canada. Is your church loosing members to them. There must be a reason for the annomosity that you have to them.
YOu may be right on some issues just as we all are but you are as human as the rest of us and therefore you could be wrong on certain issues as could I.
Any cult, (like Oneness) that claims to be the only ones that are going to Heaven, are definitely a cult. Any group that denies the trinity fall into the category of a cult, for they attack the person of Jesus Christ. Your URL did nothing to address these issues, only tried to explain them away using a lot of double talk. A Oneness article written to defend their indefensible doctrine. It can easily be picked apart. For example: "We do not believe that the Father is the Son, [but] we do believe that the Father is in the Son" What they are not clearly saying is that Jesus Christ is simply a manifestation of the other persons of the trinity, all of whom exist at one point in time in the person of Jesus Christ. In reality there (in their minds) there are no other "persons" of the trinity. The only "person" is Jesus Christ. The others are simply manifestations. This is heresy.Originally posted by atestring:
DKH I do not claim to be an expert on cults but I also do not acknowledge you as an expert either.
On the issue of Oneness Pentecostals which I am not one but do not believe they are a cult ,
I challenge you to study a little more
check out: http://www.mikeblume.com/culthunt.htm
Wouldn't some IFB churches, then, fall into the cult category?Originally posted by DHK:
Any cult, (like Oneness) that claims to be the only ones that are going to Heaven, are definitely a cult.
No my standard is the Word of God, which the Oneness cult does not match up to. I used Granny Gumbo and her situation as an example. If you can't accept that, then fine and well. That is your problem.Originally posted by atestring:
Sounds like your standard rather than the Word of God is Granny Gumbo. With all due respect to Granny she , you, or, I are not infallable.
Your questions are moot, and having nothing to do with the discussion at hand. I will say this: that I have met such people and talked with them, but no we are certainly not losing any members (or sleep) over them. The Bible warns of wolves in sheep clothing. It commands us to rebuke false doctrine and to expose it.Again let me ask you, are Oneness Pentecostals strong in Canada where you live. Are you loosing church members to them. If so why?
Do you know any Oneness Pentecostals personally and have you been to there church to see first hand what they believe ?
"And Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light."I grew up in a town that The UPC Church is the largest church in the City. The Pastors son was a good friend and He never tried to tell me that I wasn't saved or that I was into doctrinal error.
He was just a good Christian friend. I never heard him say anything that made me believe that He didn't believe in the deity of Jesus. I even visited his church once. It was a little different thatn what I was used to but Ididn't see uncscriptural practices.
He probably didn't tell you that if you were not baptized by them, in their churh, by their pastor, that you were not saved. Right?Once we did discuss baptizing in the name of Jesus rather than the Father son and Holy Ghost but he showed me that this happened in the Bible. He never told me that I wasn't saved because I was baptized in the name of the Father , Son and Holy Ghost. He may have believed differently than I but that does not make his church a cult anymore than some of the churches that you mentioned that you do not agree with and do not consider them a cult simply because you do not agree with them .
The dictionary defines cult as "a system of religious worship or ritual"; "devoted attachment to, or extravagant admiration for, a person, principle, etc.", "a group of followers." This is a typical secular definition and by it, any believer in any god is a cultist, even atheists since they have an admiration for a principle and are a group of followers of the philosophy of atheism. Therefore, this is too broad a definition since it doesn't sufficiently address the issue of true and false religious systems.
The definition I use (and other Christian ministries and theologians use as well) for "non-Christian cult" or "non-Christian religion" is a group that may or may not include the Bible in its set of authoritative scriptures. If it does include the Bible, it distorts the true biblical doctrines that effect salvation sufficiently so as to void salvation.1 If it doesn't use the Bible, it is a non-Christian religion and does not participate in the benefit of divine revelation.
In Christian bookstores, there are almost always 'cult' sections which include the Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses, etc. So, I am not alone in describing what a non-Christian, bible based cult is. Nevertheless, what makes something non-Christian is when it denies the essential doctrines of the Bible.
The Deity of Christ, which involves The Trinity
the Resurrection, and
Salvation by Grace
All of them add to the finished work of Jesus on the cross. Some cult groups even add to the Bible, i.e., Mormonism which has the Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, and The Pearl of Great Price. Also Christian Science has added Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures. The Jehovah's Witnesses, however, have actually changed the text of the Bible to make it fit what they want it to. For information on this see Jehovah's Witnesses and how they have changed the Bible.
Cults add their own efforts, their own works of righteousness to the finished work of salvation accomplished by Jesus on the cross. All Cults say that Jesus' sacrifice is sufficient, but our works must be 'mixed with' or 'added to' His in order to prove that we are saved and worthy of salvation. They say one thing but believe another. They maintain that they must prove themselves worthy and that they must try their best to please God and prove to Him that they are sincere, have worked hard, and are then worthy to be with Him. In other words, they do their best and God takes care of the rest.
This is absolutely wrong. The Bible says that we are saved by grace not by works "For by grace you have been saved through faith...not as a result of works, that no one should boast, (Eph. 2:8-9, NASB); not by anything we do "For we maintain that a man is justified by faith apart from works of the Law" (Rom. 3:28, NASB). Because if there was anything that we could do to merit the forgiveness of our sins, then Jesus died needlessly "nevertheless knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the Law but through faith in Christ Jesus, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, that we may be justified by faith in Christ, and not by the works of the Law; since by the works of the Law shall no flesh be justified...I do not nullify the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the Law, then Christ died needlessly (Gal. 2:16, 21, NASB).
Read more at www.carm.orgWhat is Oneness Pentecostal theology?
Oneness Pentecostal theology affirms that there exists only one God in all the universe. It affirms the deity of Jesus and the Holy Spirit. However, Oneness theology denies the Trinity. The Trinity is the doctrine that there is one God who manifests Himself as three distinct, simultaneous persons. The Trinity does not assert that there are three gods, but only one. This is important because many groups who oppose orthodoxy, will accuse Trinitarians of believing in three gods. But this is not so. The doctrine of the Trinity is that there is one God in three persons.
Oneness theology denies the Trinity and teaches that God is a single person who was "manifested as Father in creation and as the Father of the Son, in the Son for our redemption, and as the Holy Spirit in our regeneration."1 Another way of looking at it is that God revealed himself as Father in the Old Testament, as the Son in Jesus during Christ’s ministry on earth, and now as the Holy Spirit after Christ’s ascension.
In addition, oneness theology also maintains that baptism is a necessary part of salvation; that is, in order to be saved, one must be baptized, by immersion. If you are not baptized you cannot be saved. However, not only must baptism be by immersion, it must also be administered with the formula "In Jesus’ name" rather than the formula "In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit" which is mentioned in Matt. 28:19. Finally, this baptism must be administered by a duly ordained minister on a church that maintains oneness theology: United Pentecostal, United Apostolic, etc.
Oneness churches also teach that speaking in tongues is a necessary manifestation of the Holy Spirit. Since a person cannot be saved without the Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:9), it follows that only those who have spoken in tongues are really saved. There is, therefore, an emphasis that Oneness church members speak in tongues to "demonstrate" that they are saved and have the truth.
Oneness groups are decidedly Arminian in the doctrine of salvation. They deny predestination and maintain that it is completely up to the individual to decide whether or not he wants to be saved. They also teach that it is possible to lose one's salvation.
There is within the Oneness movement an attempt to represent themselves in a modest and holy manner. This is to be commended. However, sometimes it tends to become legalistic in that women are required to abstain from wearing makeup and pants. They also must have their heads covered. Likewise, men should be well dressed, preferably in ties (this has been my experience with them). Such practices are not wrong in themselves, and are good examples of propriety. However, when they become requirements for acceptance in a church, it is legalistic. Legalism leads to bondage and the requirements of keeping the law to maintain salvation. It then becomes a means by which a person's spirituality is judged. Oneness churches strongly imply that if you go to movies, or have a TV, or wear makeup, etc., then you are not "really" a Christian.
I am not saying that the Oneness Theology necessarily leads to legalism, but it seems to be quite evident that it has taken over much of Oneness practice.
No my standard is the Word of God, which the Oneness cult does not match up to. I used Granny Gumbo and her situation as an example. If you can't accept that, then fine and well. That is your problem.Originally posted by DHK:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by atestring:
Sounds like your standard rather than the Word of God is Granny Gumbo. With all due respect to Granny she , you, or, I are not infallable.
Your questions are moot, and having nothing to do with the discussion at hand. I will say this: that I have met such people and talked with them, but no we are certainly not losing any members (or sleep) over them. The Bible warns of wolves in sheep clothing. It commands us to rebuke false doctrine and to expose it.Again let me ask you, are Oneness Pentecostals strong in Canada where you live. Are you loosing church members to them. If so why?
Do you know any Oneness Pentecostals personally and have you been to there church to see first hand what they believe ?
"And Satan himself is transformed into an angel of light."I grew up in a town that The UPC Church is the largest church in the City. The Pastors son was a good friend and He never tried to tell me that I wasn't saved or that I was into doctrinal error.
He was just a good Christian friend. I never heard him say anything that made me believe that He didn't believe in the deity of Jesus. I even visited his church once. It was a little different thatn what I was used to but Ididn't see uncscriptural practices.
He probably didn't tell you that if you were not baptized by them, in their churh, by their pastor, that you were not saved. Right?Once we did discuss baptizing in the name of Jesus rather than the Father son and Holy Ghost but he showed me that this happened in the Bible. He never told me that I wasn't saved because I was baptized in the name of the Father , Son and Holy Ghost. He may have believed differently than I but that does not make his church a cult anymore than some of the churches that you mentioned that you do not agree with and do not consider them a cult simply because you do not agree with them .
And it would be biblically wrong, imo.Originally posted by atestring:
Being baptized in a particular denominational church as requirement for salvation is implied im Many Baptist churches.
No Baptist believes that. If you believe that then you are not a Baptist. That baptism is a requirement for salvation, is a heresy known as baptismal regeneration--one of the early heresies of the church. Baptism doesn't save. The blood of Christ does. Baptism, in this way, takes away from the sufficiency of the atoning work of Christ on the cross. There is no Baptist that believes that baptism is required for salvation. If he did, he wouldn't be baptist.Originally posted by atestring:
Being baptized in a particular denominational church as requirement for salvation is implied im Many Baptist churches.