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May 24, 2007, 2007
Coming From the Lighthouse Newsletter
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What's
Sex Got to Do With It?
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The Bible says we live in a "crooked and perverse"
world and that as believers we
are to "shine as lights in
the world" (Philippians 2:15).
The closer we move toward the
"end of the age" (Matthew
24), the darker and more perverse
the world becomes. Global peace
plans, inter-faith movements,
emergent spiritualities, and other
carnal-induced plots will not
help the world's woes. Jesus said,
"I have come as a light into
the world, that whoever believes
in Me should not abide in darkness"
(John 12:46). As the world moves
further away from Jesus Christ,
the darkness only grows. A person
can never escape that darkness
without Jesus Christ living in
him or her ... all these other
attempts are futile.
The New Age movement has now permeated
all areas of our society: the
business world, healthcare, education,
religion, and entertainment. Virtually
nothing has been untouched by
the tentacles of this occultic,
meditation-driven spirituality,
and it has entered the Christian
church through contemplative prayer
(i.e., spiritual formation). But
there is another area that mysticism
has united with ... and that is
the sexual realm. The marriage
of the two is referred to as tantra
(or tantric sex), and before you
stop reading this article, thinking
"What has sex got to do with
exposing contemplative and the
New Age?" we must tell you
will all soberness, this mystical
sexuality is growing faster by
the day, and it may ultimately
affect the lives of countless
Christians. Why? Because Christianity
at large is going in a mystical
direction, thanks to leaders like
Rick Warren, Erwin McManus, Brian
McLaren, Rob Bell, and far too
many to name, and within the realms
of these mystical states, many
will be introduced to tantra.
We decided to write this article
on tantra after a Christian woman
contacted us a few days ago and
told us (after seeing tantra mentioned
in a description of For Many Shall Come in My Name) that her Christian
husband (who is in leadership
in a large Christian movement)
was being enticed with tantric
sex.
Ray Yungen explains about tantra
and its relevance today:
Tantra is the name of the
ancient Hindu sacred texts that
contain certain rituals and secrets.
Some deal with taking the energies
brought forth in meditation through
the chakras and combining them
with love-making to enhance sexual
experiences.
Once completely off-limits to
the masses of humanity, tantra,
like all other New Age methodologies,
is now starting to gain increasing
popularity. A google search on
the Internet shows 6,600,000 entries
for the word tantra! This union
of sexuality and Eastern spirituality
is a perfect example to illustrate
just how much the New Age has
permeated our society as it has
affected even the most intimate
areas of people's lives.
The potential to impact a very
great number of people, especially
men, was brought out in an article by a sex worker who incorporates "Tantric
Bodywork" into her services.
She paints a very sad portrait
of the dynamics of the "enormous
sex industry" in which millions
of stressed and unhappy men seek
out "erotic release"
from women who are just as unhappy
and stressed as their clients.
She observes that there is a "culturally
rampant phenomenon that spouses
are disconnected from each other."
To remedy this tragic interplay
of exploitation, she has turned
to Tantric Union to give her clients
what she feels is not just sex
but "union with the divine."
After she read a book called Women
of the Light: The New Sacred Prostitute,
she turned her erotic business
into a "temple." Of
this temple, she says it is:
...dedicated to being a haven
of the sacred, a home for the
embodiment of spirit, filled with
altars, sacred objects, plants,
art, dreamy sensual music, blissful
scents. My space is home to Quan
Yin [a Buddhist goddess], crystals
blessed by the Entities of John
of God [a Brazilian spirit channeler].
Now the "multitudes of
men" who come to her get
much more than they bargained
for. In the past, wives and girlfriends
needed only to worry about sexually
transmitted diseases from cheating
husbands and boyfriends, but now
their men may instead bring home
spiritual entities!
Most readers might think that
tantra is something exceedingly
obscure that would never attract
average people. But the movie
industry thinks otherwise. In
a 2003 movie, Hollywood Homicide
(starring Harrison Ford, one
of the industry's leading men),
viewers were presented with a
brief snippet of tantric sex in
one scene where fellow police
officers opened the locker of
Ford's rookie detective partner
and out falls a book (which the
camera focuses on) about tantra,
revealing the side-kick's spiritual/sexual
affinities (incidentally, he also
teaches yoga in the film). (For
Many Shall Come in My Name,
2nd ed., pp. 115-116)
If Christians begin to incorporate
their contemplative proclivities
with their sexual lives (a Christian
version of tantric sex), the results
will be devastating to the church,
and we predict sexual perversion
will be more rampant than ever.
Why? Because if the altered states
of consciousness are truly demonic
realms (as we believe they are)
then tantric sex is another venue
of the hidden darkness that Jesus
spoke of.
These assertions may sound absurd
and far-fetched to some readers,
but evidence of the truth of this
does exist. For instance, Henri
Nouwen (who along with Thomas
Merton is one of the top icons
of the contemplative prayer movement),
in his last book The Sabbatical
Journey, favorably revealed
how he listened to audio tapes
on the seven chakras which is
the basis for tantric sex (p.
20). Also in Nouwen's book, he
makes mention of his encounter
with a mystic named Andrew Harvey,
whom Nouwen referred to as his
soul friend (spiritual mentor)
and how much Harvey's mysticism
had touched him (p. 149). And
yet Harvey's mysticism includes
the tantric element. In an upcoming
conference (The International Conference on Sacred Sexuality), Harvey
is leading a workshop called "Sexual
Liberation, Tantra, and Sacred
Activism" in which Harvey
will:
... show that sexual liberation and Tantra are vital parts
of the Divine Mother's plan for
the birth of a new humanity, since
they make possible a profound
and ecstatic contact with what
Andrew calls Divine Eros - a tender
passionate dynamic love-connection.
True Tantric sexuality gives its'
practitioners access to extraordinary
and unified energies which
will form the base of a commitment
to Sacred Activism.
As believers who are to "shine as lights in the world,"
we must flee the deeds of darkness
and "become blameless and
harmless, children of God without
fault in the midst of a crooked
and perverse generation."
We cannot do this in our own strength,
but Jesus Christ living inside
us will enable us through His
mercy and grace: "For it
is God who works in you both to
will and to do for His good pleasure"
(Philippians 2:13).
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One
Year Later - Focus on the Family
Still Promoting Contemplative
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One year ago, Lighthouse Trails contacted Focus on the
Family to share concerns about their
promotion of contemplative author
Gary Thomas in a FOF magazine. Shortly
after, we received a letter from Mr. Tim Masters of the FOF Office
of the Chairman, which stated:
[We] found nothing within
the pages of Sacred Parenting
[by Gary Thomas] that contradicts
the Christian faith or Dr. Dobson's
philosophy ... we are not in a position
to address the contents of Mr. Thomas's
other writings ... but this much
we can tell you: there is and always
has been a strong tradition of contemplative
prayer in the Christian church that
has nothing to do with mantras and
Eastern meditation. To confuse the
two, as you have done, is to jump
to an unwarranted conclusion based
on a misunderstanding of certain
features they appear to share in
common
In our May 10, 2006 newsletter, we responded to Focus on the
Family's defense of contemplative
prayer stating:
In light of Master's apparent conviction that the two camps
(Christian and Eastern contemplative)
are distinct and unrelated, it
is important to note here that
Tilden Edwards, the founder of the largest and most influential
contemplative school in the US,
would disagree that the two are
indeed different. Edwards revealed
that contemplative prayer is the
Western bridge to Far Eastern
spirituality in his book, Spiritual
Friend (of which Richard Foster
endorsed, calling it an excellent
spiritual book).
While FOF states they are "not
in a position to address"
Gary Thomas' other books (which
clearly promote contemplative),
the book that FOF does promote,
Sacred Parenting, devotes
an entire chapter to contemplative
spirituality, calling it the "active
discipline" of "true
listening," and saying it
is the way we can "seize
heaven and invite God's presence
into our lives" (pp. 58-59).
In that chapter, Thomas names
two people who had a major impact
in his prayer life: contemplative/mystic
Teresa of Avila and Frank Buchman,
initiator of Moral Re-Armament,
now called Initiatives of Change,
an inter-faith organization working
towards globalization. Buchman
was a controversial figure, partly
due to his 1930s public statements
showing admiration for Adolph
Hitler. And according to cult
expert Dave Hunt, Buchman was
involved in both mysticism and
the occult:
MRA founder Frank Buchman ... embraced new revelations through
occult guidance [and]helped
to set the stage for the New
Age movement.... He inspired
thousands on all continents
to meditate ... decades before
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi left India.
(Hunt, Adaptation of Occult
Invasion, 1998)
Gary Thomas devoted three entire pages to Buchman in Sacred
Parenting. All things considered,
this book hardly seems like it
will be a "tremendous help
and a great inspiration to those
moms and dads who choose to take
advantage of its message."
On the contrary.
The question must be asked, when
Masters states that "there
is and always has been a strong
tradition of contemplative prayer
in the Christian church that has
nothing to do with mantras and
Eastern meditation," which
authors have or do teach contemplative
prayer excluding the mantra and
Eastern-like meditation? Richard
Foster, whom Focus on the Family
now promotes? Gary Thomas? Thomas
Merton? Brennan Manning? Henri
Nouwen? (All of whom can be found
on FOF websites and all of whom
teach mantra-style meditation)
We must also ask, can Focus on
the Family rightfully disregard
the contents of Gary Thomas' other
writings, writings in which he
tells readers to repeat a word
or phrase for 20 minutes until
the "word becomes part of
you." Did the Apostle Paul,
or the Psalmist or Jesus Christ
ever give such instructions? Of
course not. Gary Thomas' website
clearly promotes practices such
as lectio divina and centering
prayer all the while encouraging
visitors to read the works of
Thomas Merton and Basil Pennington,
both of whom wholeheartedly and
without reservation embraced Eastern
mysticism. Incidentally, Thomas
teaches Spiritual Formation at
Western Seminary. By promoting
one of Thomas' books, FOF is directly
promoting contemplative prayer.
Focus on the Family has entered
into an unbiblical territory that
can spiritually harm many people,
including children. It is our
prayer that Dr. Dobson and other
Christian leaders will look at
the facts fairly before proceeding
any further down this path.
At the time Focus on the Family wrote to us, they said that
they could not speak for Gary Thomas'
other writings, just Sacred Parenting.
However, it has come to our attention
that they are now spotlighting Thomas'
book, Sacred Pathways (mentioned
above), which promotes mantric-style
prayer. An article on FOF's TrueU.org website is written by Gary
Thomas called Sacred Pathways,
named for the book. The article
has a link to Thomas' own website,
in which he lists a number of "Christian
Classics" by several contemplative
mystics.1
It looks like Focus on the Family
is holding to their views on contemplative.
One year later, in addition to continuing
to promote Gary Thomas, they are
still promoting Richard Foster in
their Spiritual Formation series
by H.B. London2, Dallas Willard and Henri Nouwen (and the silence)3, lectio divina4, and Thomas Merton5. And earlier this year, an article on From the Lighthouse
blog titled "Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey - Promoting
Contemplative?" showed
more evidence of the contemplative
proclivities of Focus on the Family.
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On Evangelicals and Interfaith Cooperation:
An Interview with Tony Campolo
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The
following excerpts from an interview between interfaith gurus Tony Campolo and Shane Claiborne reveal the spirituality that is foundational
in the emerging church movement.
The two men's use of Christian terminology
(and even Christian ideas) will
convince some readers that nothing
is amiss, but please consider the
following thoughts:
While Campolo says he believes that
Jesus is the only Savior, he does
not believe it is necessary to be
a Christian nor should we try to
convert people of other faiths:
I think there are Muslim brothers and sisters who are willing
to say, "You live up to the
truth as you understand it. I
will live up to the truth as I
understand it, and we will leave
it up to God on judgment day
Campolo believes that conversion
to Christianity or receiving Jesus
Christ as your only Lord, Savior,
and God are not prerequisites for
salvation. He makes it clear that
there are many paths to God. If
Campolo believed there was a hell,
set aside for those who reject Jesus
Christ as God, he would not say:
We [human beings] don't come to God in the same manner.
And each of us makes exclusivist
claims, and we have to recognize
that. We cannot allow our theologies
to separate us.
Campolo acknowledges that
people have theological differences
but he also believes there is one
common ground where we can be unified
-- that common ground is mysticism.
Campolo states:
All of a sudden in the hour of suffering there is a commonality.
And that's where we meet. It's
in mystical spirituality and in
communal mutuality that's where
we come together....
Perhaps one of the best things
we can do is stop talking with
our mouths and cross the chasm
between us with our lives. Maybe
we will even find a mystical union
of the Spirit ....
In a mystical relationship with
God, there is a coming together
of people where theology is left
behind and in this spirituality
they found a commonality....
In other words if we are looking
for common ground, can we find
it in mystical spirituality, even
if we cannot theologically agree,
Can we pray together in such a
way that we connect with a God
that transcends our theological
differences?
Campolo, like Rick Warren,
believes that certain Christians
are going to cause a problem for
the interspiritual process. He states:
"There is going to be one segment
of evangelicalism, just like there
is one segment in Islam that is
not going to be interested
in dialogue." And like Rick
Warren also stated, Campolo likens
these troublesome Christians to
Islamic fundamentalists (terrorists).
But one has to really question where
Campolo is getting his information
when he says the following:
We don't have to give up trying to convert each other. What
we have to do is show respect
to one another. And to speak to
each other with a sense that even
if people don't convert, they
are God's people, God loves
them, and we do not make the judgment
of who is going to heaven and
who is going to hell.
I think that what we all have
to do is leave judgment up to
God. The Muslim community is very
evangelistic, however what
Muslims will not do is condemn
Jews and Christians to Hell if
in fact they do not accept Islam.
These are not true statements.
From the sounds of this interview,
Campolo doesn't know the Bible or
the Koran very well at all. But
he reveals a lot when he says:
And that makes for a safer world, when we remove the layers
that separate us from seeing the
sacredness in every person,
the image of God in them.
In other words, the world
becomes safe and tolerable when
we come to understand that God is
in everyone, and if God is in everyone
then there is no need to convert
or to preach the Gospel. But if
Campolo is right, then the Bible
is wrong and Jesus was wrong when
He said:
And it came to pass, as he [Jesus] was alone praying, his disciples
were with him: and he asked them,
saying, Whom say the people that
I am? They answering said, John
the Baptist; but some say, Elias;
and others say, that one of the
old prophets is risen again. He
said unto them, But whom say ye
that I am? Peter answering said,
The Christ of God. And he straitly
charged them, and commanded them
to tell no man that thing; Saying,
The Son of man must suffer many
things, and be rejected of the
elders and chief priests and scribes,
and be slain, and be raised the
third day. And he said to them
all, If any man will come after
me, let him deny himself, and
take up his cross daily, and follow
me. For whosoever will save his
life shall lose it: but whosoever
will lose his life for my sake,
the same shall save it. For what
is a man advantaged, if he gain
the whole world, and lose himself,
or be cast away? For whosoever
shall be ashamed of me and
of my words, of him shall the
Son of man be ashamed, when he
shall come in his own glory, and
in his Father's, and of the holy
angels. (Luke 9:18-26)
Also see: Shane Claiborne and The New Monastics
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Pastors' Wives Conference - Speakers Favor Contemplative Authors
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The Eighth Annual First
Lady Conference will take place
on June 7-9 in Dallas, Texas, and
attendees should be on the look
out for contemplative themes. Two
of the speakers, Kay Warren (wife
of Rick Warren) and Priscilla Shirer,
have contemplative sympathies. Lois
Evans, wife of Pastor Tony Evans,
will be hosting the conference.
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A news article on the event explains that this year's theme
for the conference is "Devotion
Not Commotion." Priscilla Shirer
talks about getting rid of this
"commotion" (or distractions,
in other words) in last year's Be Still DVD, which is an infomercial for contemplative
prayer. The DVD that Shirer participated
in also features contemplative advocates
Richard Foster (Celebration of
Discipline), Katherine Brown-Saltzman
(a UCLA professional who uses guided imagery and meditation with her patients), Buddhist
sympathizer Peter Kreeft, and Beth
Moore (who later admitted she was
in favor of contemplative spirituality2).
In the Be Still DVD, Priscilla Shirer explains how she now views
prayer:
Most of my prayer time is filled up with what I'm saying to
Him, as opposed to just being
quiet and actually giving him
an opportunity to speak to me.
And of course I've thought about
hearing the voice of God all my
life, and I've thought about wanting
to hear Him, but it never occurred
to me that I needed to consciously
go into His presence with my mouth
closed, giving Him an opportunity
to get a word in edgewise. And
so I've just begun in my prayer
life over the past year of my
life to make a conscious effort
to be in a time of prayer, and
yes, to speak to Him, but to consciously
say, okay, I'm done talking now,
because I'm just gonna sit here
in the stillness and wait
to see what it is that you want
to say to me.
To understand what Shirer means by "stillness" and
"go into His presence,"
a look at contemplative teachers
she resonates with is vital. On
her website (now in an archived file), Shirer recommends several contemplative
mystics such as Calvin Miller (Into
the Depths of God), Madame Guyon, Brother Lawrence (who danced violently like a madman when
he went into contemplative states),
Richard Foster, and Jan Johnson
(When the Heart Waits). These
authors have all played significant
roles in the advancement of contemplative
spirituality within Christianity.
While Shirer gives a disclaimer
that she may not agree with everything
these authors write, she does not
warn her readers about the main
thesis of these author's books -
contemplative mysticism - but says
they will encourage and challenge
you. That's like giving a child
a handful of jelly beans, with 80%
being poisonous red ones and 20%
other colors, and saying, "They
might not all be good for you, but
I'm not going to tell you which
ones are harmful so enjoy."
This kind of disclaimer means nothing
except to say, "Hey don't blame
me if you get hurt." In March
of 2006, Shirer participated in
the CCN Be Still project with contemplatives Dallas Willard
and Richard Foster.
Kay Warren, another speaker for
the upcoming women's conference,
also resonates with contemplative
prayer. Listen as Ray Yungen explains:
The pastors.com website [Rick Warren's site] is saturated with
favorable comments, endorsements,
and promotions of many contemplatives.
On two separate occasions on the
website, Warren makes reference to a book his wife, Kay, recommends:
My wife, Kay, recommends this book: "It's a short book,
but it hits at the heart of the
minister. It mentions the struggles
common to those of us in ministry:
the temptation to be relevant,
spectacular and powerful. I highlighted
almost every word!"
The book Kay Warren recommends is In the Name of Jesus by
Henri Nouwen. Nouwen devotes an
entire chapter of that book to
contemplative prayer saying:
Through the discipline of contemplative prayer, Christian leaders
have to learn to listen to the
voice of love ... For Christian
leadership to be truly fruitful
in the future, a movement from
the moral to the mystical
is required.
Anyone who knows something about the Warrens' background should
not be surprised by their promotion
of Nouwen. Rick Warren is a graduate
of the Robert H. Schuller Institute
for Successful Church Leadership.
Schuller himself emphasized the
impact that Nouwen had on his
school:
All of our students have to watch and listen to Henri Nouwen.
I keep interrupting and stopping
the video machine, telling them
to notice how he uses his hands,
to look at the twinkle in his
eye, to see how he connects his
eye with the eye of the listener,
to be aware of the words he uses
all positives, no negatives.
The Warrens took Schuller's word for it with regard to Henri
Nouwen. It's no wonder: the Warren's
were greatly impacted by Schuller,
according to a Christianity
Today article, which quotes
Kay Warren as saying, "He
[Schuller] had a profound influence
on Rick." (from A Time of Departing, 2nd ed., pp.154-155)
Toward the end of Henri Nouwen's life, after many years of adhering to the
contemplative way, Nouwen said the
following:
Today I personally believe that while Jesus came to open the
door to God's house, all human
beings can walk through that door,
whether they know about Jesus
or not. Today I see it as my call
to help every person claim his
or her own way to God.(From Sabbatical
Journey, page 51, 1998 Hardcover
Ed.)
And it is for this very reason that we continue to warn about
contemplative spirituality. Those
who practice this mantric-style
prayer and embrace the belief system
behind it often end up with panentheistic
viewpoints -- going into the "stillness"
changes the way one looks at God
and the Gospel. Just this week,
a man called us who had this exact
thing happen to him. He said he
was a Christian, but over time,
through meditation, he began to
change his views on truth and become
"enlightened" (much like
Sue Monk Kidd when she started reading
Thomas Merton). Now, this man believes
that all things are one, that God
is in all things, and that while
Jesus Christ has a christ-consciousness,
he is not the only one who does;
Gandhi, Buddha, etc. also share
this virtue. This man who called
us said that the world is coming
into a place where all will be enlightened
through a critical mass, and when
I asked him about the role meditation
will play in this, he acknowledged
it's significance. He also said
something that is noteworthy: "Most
Christians have no idea what the
New Age movement is all about."
Unfortunately, he himself has become
a victim to it and is immersed in
its deception.
If women attending the Eighth Annual
First Lady Conference are introduced
to Henri Nouwen, Richard Foster,
Brother Lawrence and other mystics,
these women could potentially be
put in harm's way, and their spiritual
lives may be at risk. We pray and
hope that Kay Warren and Priscilla
Shirer will not recommend or make
favorable references to contemplative
teachers. On the contrary, we hope
they will issue a solid warning
against contemplative spirituality.
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Exposing the Darkness of Online Christian Bookstores
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LTRP Note: The following article by WorldNetDaily is one of several that
Lighthouse Trails has posted over
the last few years that deal with
New Age, homosexual, and pornographic
material in Christian online bookstores.
Some may ask, why so many articles
on this subject. But things kept
in secrecy must be exposed, for
it is in the secrecy that its power
lies. As light is being shed on
a deeply dark area of society (and
the church), it can make people
uncomfortable talking or reading
about sexual perversion. Unfortunately
many of the victims are children
as the use of pornography often
results in child molestation. Lighthouse
Trails is grateful to these ministries
and the men behind them who care
enough to step on this often untreaded
area. And because there is a strong
connection between New Age (the
occult), homosexuality, and sexual
perversion, we have for the past
five years considered pornography
a topic Lighthouse Trails must report
on, especially when it is hidden
within the seams of bookstores claiming
to be Christian, and whose patrons
trust them because of this claim.
WorldNetDaily
by Bob Unruh
"Porn flowing into Christian
bookstores"
An online company providing books
to hundreds of Christian bookstores
throughout Canada and the United
States promotes XXX-rated materials,
occult titles, manuals on homosexuality
and lesbianism and satanism, according
to a center that monitors the industry.
As WND has reported, a company called
BookManager serves a St. Catherine's,
Ont., Christian bookstore whose
owner recently discovered books
on occultism, pornography and the
like could be located through its
website.
Now Bud Press, who runs Christian
Research Service, has told WND that
the company actually serves hundreds
of Christian bookstores, whose owners
now are facing the problem of what
to do.
"One manager planned to contact
BookManager and request the removal
of the non-Christian and pornography
materials," Press said. "But
with a 'title link' of 'over 4,000,000'
books, the chances of that happening
are slim to none." Click here to read the rest of this news story.
For more information
on the ongoing problem of Christian bookstores, see the following:
Hidden from View: LifeWay Christian Bookstores
THE DIRTY LITTLE SECRET ABOUT MANY ONLINE CHRISTIAN BOOKSTORES
'Christian' bookstore features X-rated flicks
Note: To better understand
the devastating effects of pornography,
read Laughter Calls Me, a true story.
Ted Haggard Story Will Raise Serious Questions For All
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Evangelist to Africa Speaks Out Against Rick Warren's "Big
Mouth" Comments
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LTRP
Note: Loren
Davis and his wife have been evangelists
to Africa for many years. A year
and a half ago we reported that
Davis was warning Christians in
Africa about Rick Warren's Purpose
Driven plans for Africa. After Davis
read our article a few days ago,
Rick Warren Condemns Christians ... Again, Davis made
the following comments:
Davis: I understand Rick Warren includes me
with the "big mouths"
who he says "haven't done
zip." Perhaps he considers
contending for sound Bible doctrine
being "a big mouth."
To set the record straight, since
2000 my wife and I have built
178 churches in unreached villages
and brought the gospel and pastors
to those villages. Most of these
churches we have built are also
being used as pre-schools or regular
schools. We have provided water
tanks connected to many of our
churches to provide water for
many villages and have brought
untold truckloads of maize to
hungry villagers. Many of these
tribes where we have built churches
were very violent and involved
in rustling and raiding against
their neighboring tribes as a
way of life. We have been told
by different government leaders,
that since we have come in building
churches and bringing the Gospel
that peace has come to these villages.
There are few raids anymore. We
have recently preached a crusade
in a Muslim city where many thousands
attended and a great number of
Muslims came to Malawi. I guess
he considers all these Muslims
coming to Christ as "zip."
Rick Warren said regarding Rwanda,
that he is going to transform
the churches into centers for
feeding the poor, education and
providing medical facilities.
Well, we are not against those
things and do many of those things
ourselves. But the fact is, the
primary purpose of the church
is not humanitarianism. The church's
main purpose is to provide a place
where people can find Christ;
prepare people for where they
will spend eternity; and to be
taught the truths of the Bible.
If Rick Warren and his friends
want to go full time into humanitarian
work, that's fine. Let he and
his friends work full time for
the U.N. with whom they already
associate with; but don't, in
the name of humanitarianism, turn
the churches away from their main
purpose of being spiritual institutions
and transform them into social
institutions. Loren Davis
www.lorendavis.com
For related information:
Race for Africa by Loren Davis
Armed Men Hijack Car of African Evangelist
Bruce Wilkinson (Prayer of Jabez) Quits Africa
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Chuck Colson Says the Evangelical Movement Growing UP
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LTRP Note: In thisNew York Times
article, Chuck Colson says
that the evangelical movement is
growing up. With the heavy infiltration
of mysticism and New Age thought
into the evangelical church, it
is anything but growing up.
New York Times
By MICHAEL LUO and LAURIE GOODSTEIN
Emphasis
Shifts for New Breed of Evangelicals
The evangelical Christian movement,
which has been pivotal in reshaping
the country's political landscape
since the 1980s, has shifted in
potentially momentous ways in recent
years, broadening its agenda and
exposing new fissures.
The death of the Rev. Jerry Falwell
last week highlighted the fact that
many of the movement's fiery old
guard who helped lead conservative
Christians into the embrace of the
Republican Party are aging and slowly
receding from the scene. In their
stead, a new generation of leaders
who have mostly avoided the openly
partisan and confrontational approach
of their forebears have become increasingly
influential.
Typified by megachurch pastors like
the Rev. Rick Warren of Saddleback
Church in Orange County, Calif.,
and the Rev. Bill Hybels of Willow
Creek Community Church outside Chicago,
the new breed of evangelical leaders
- often to the dismay of those who
came before them - are more likely
to speak out about more liberal
causes like AIDS, Darfur, poverty
and global warming than controversial
social issues like abortion and
same-sex marriage. Click here to read the rest of this news article.
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Trading Truth for Solidarity
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