SEARCH THIS WEBSITE

Follow Us

Note To Readers

Just a Note To Let You All Know That I’m Still in the Design and Structure Phase of Building this Site so There Will Be a Lot More To Come! I am working on many new pages to incorporate into the site. I will have daily and weekly updates on many topics with new blogs Book reviews, RSS feeds from other sites; updated automatically.

There is No Paid Advertising on this site and We Do Not Take Donations

Click a Topic!

 

Click on the Image to go to the website!

Ten Reasons to NOT Believe in Eternal Torment
Unity

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT! Home Page Index
Questions Without Answers

In Case You Missed These Front Page Atiicles I Have them Saved Here for You To Reference Any Time

Tuesday
Jan172012

“Yes, but there is GOD”

“Yes, but there is GOD”
“My soul, wait thou only upon God; for my expectation is from him. He only is my rock and my salvation: he is my defense; I shall not be moved. In God is my salvation and my glory: the rock of my strength, and my refuge, is in God” (Ps. 62:5–7).

The greatest lesson a soul has to learn is that God, and God alone, is enough for all its needs. This is the lesson that all God’s dealings with us are meant to teach, and this is the crowning discovery of our entire Christian life. GOD IS ENOUGH!

No soul can really be at rest until it has given up dependence on everything else and has been forced to depend on the Lord alone. As long as our expectation is from other things, nothing but disappointment awaits us. Feelings may change, doctrines and dogmas may be upset, the Christian work may come to nought, prayers may seem to lose their fervency, promises may seem to fail, everything that we have believed in or depended on may seem to be swept away, and only God is left—just God, the bare God, if I may be allowed the expression, simply and only God.

If God is what He would seem to be from his revealings; if He is indeed the “God of all comfort”(2 Cor. 1:3); if He is our Shepherd; if He is really and truly our Father; if, in short, all the many aspects He has told us of His character and His ways are actually true, then we must come to the positive conviction that He is, in himself alone, enough for all our needs and that we may safely rest in Him absolutely and forever

The thing that helped me most to come to a conviction that God was really enough for me

was an experience I had some years ago. It was at a time in my religious life when I was passing through a great deal of questioning and perplexity. There happened to be staying near me for a few weeks a lady who was considered to be a deeply spiritual Christian and to whom I had been advised to apply for spiritual help. I summoned my courage and went to see her and poured out my troubles, expecting that she would be at great pains to do all she could to help me.

She listened patiently, but when I had finished my story and had paused, expecting sympathy and consideration, she simply said, “Yes, all you say may be very true, but then, in spite of it all, there is God.” I waited a few minutes for something more, but nothing came, and my friend and teacher had the air of having said all that was necessary. “But,” I continued, “surely you did not understand how very serious and perplexing my difficulties are.” “Oh yes, I did,” replied my friend, “but then, as I tell you, there is God.” And I could not induce her to make any other answer.

It seemed to me most disappointing and unsatisfactory. I felt that my peculiar and harrowing experiences could not be met by anything so simple as the mere statement, “Yes, but there is God.”

From “God is Enough” Hannah Whitall Smith - 1832–1911

Smith, H. W., Dieter, M. E., & Dieter, H. A. (1986). God is enough. New York: Random House.

Thursday
Jan052012

Verse by Verse Teaching - How did it start? 

A. W. Tozer’s New Year’s Message


A. W. Tozer, long-time editor of the Alliance Witness, once penned this greeting for the cover of the January 1, 1938, edition of his magazine, and it was reprinted on the cover for the New Year’s edition in 1979. It read in part:
While all the promises of God are true and precious, yet it is good to take them one by one and especially commit ourselves to them. If you ask God to give you a special message for the opening year, one that will be made seasonable and real in every exigency of the unknown future, you will be surprised how faithfully He will fulfill His Word, and how fittingly the Holy Spirit will speak to you of things to come, and anticipate the real needs and exigencies of your life.

Verse by Verse

January 1
When preached simply and purely, verse-by-verse and book-by-book, the Bible can change lives and transform history. Just ask Zwingli.
Ulrich Zwingli was born on January 1, 1484, in a Swiss shepherd’s cottage in the Alps. His parents instilled in him a love for God. The young man proved a brilliant student, and following a brief stint as a schoolteacher he entered the priesthood. For ten years he labored in the village of Glarus, and there he began corresponding with the famous Greek scholar Erasmus.


The Swiss church was bubbling with corruption during this time. In 1516, when Zwingli moved to Einsiedeln, he, too, was struggling hard with sin. In his new village, the young priest fell into an intimate relationship with the barber’s daughter. But it was also in Einsiedeln that he borrowed a copy of Erasmus’s newly published Greek New Testament. Zwingli copied it. Carrying it everywhere, he pored over it continually and scribbled notes in the margins and memorized it. The pure Scripture began doing its work, and Zwingli’s life and preaching took on new vigor. Soon he was invited to Zurich as chief preacher in the cathedral.


He arrived on December 27, 1518, and began his duties on his thirty-sixth birthday, January 1, 1519, with a shock. He announced that he would break a thousand years of tradition by abandoning the church liturgy and the weekly readings as a basis for his sermons. Instead, he would teach verse-by-verse through the New Testament, beginning immediately. He proceeded to preach that day from Matthew 1 on the genealogy of Christ.
Such preaching was radical in its day, but Zurich loved it. Zwingli’s concern for the city’s youth, his courage during the plague, and his cheerful temper dispelled initial doubts about his reformation ideas. Later, when opposition arose, Zurich’s City Council and 600 other interested citizens gathered to evaluate his actions. The assembly (the First Zurich Disputation, 1523) affirmed Zwingli and encouraged his work. Lives were changed; history was made. The Swiss Reformation had begun.

Jesus Christ came from the family of King David and also from the family of Abraham … The Lord’s promise came true, just as the prophet had said, “A virgin will have a baby boy, and he will be called Immanuel,” which means, “God is with us.” Matthew 1:1,22,23

Morgan, R. J. (2000). On this day : 365 amazing and inspiring stories about saints, martyrs & heroes (electronic ed.). Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers.

It’s always been the rebellious ones, the outcast, the ones who wouldn’t accept the status quo, the ones who dared to be different and think different because they dared to think for themselves that have changed the course of history. “The Crazy ones” as someone once said; who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do… Call me crazy, call me a fool, but I believe God can do what He set out to do in His Son Jesus Christ whom He sent to SAVE THE WORLD! i’m just crazy enough to think that He did. I’m just bold enough to SAY that He did unashamedly! Because I can’t believe our Almighty God and Father of All can lie or lose one time or one thing! He just CAN’T BECAUSE HE IS GOD! Make all the ands, buts, or excuses you want but what I just said is a FACT that CANNOT CHANGE. HALLELUJAH!

You are reading the bible for yourself and maybe going to a church where the preacher is free to teach whatever way he sees the scriptures because someone like Ulrich Zwingli was crazy enough and bold enough to stand up to the institutional church and say “I believe you are wrong and I will do it my way and think for myself” and the religious world is a different place today because of it.

I have built this website for this very reason, to encourage people to take up the scriptures and study them for themselves with their own mind, heart, and common sense; no matter what people may say; especially people who are supposed to have it all figured out… Let me tell you, they don’t… I don’t, and we never fully will in this life. Although, we can stand on the undeniable truths of the character and nature of our God and Savior who is LOVE, and is Almighty and All-Knowing and say common sense tells me something is wrong with a message that God is “trying’ to save the world but it doesn’t look like he is going to get the job done, what with the wickedness and freewill of man and all… What NONSENSE! i don’t have all the answers and never will; but I can tell you that God WILL accomplish His redemptive purposes for this planet and mankind! It couldn’t be any other way or He’s not God is He?

John 3:17 (NIV)

For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.

John 12:47 (NIV)

47 “If anyone hears my words but does not keep them, I do not judge that person. For I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world.

1 John 4:14 (NIV)

14 And we have seen and testify that the Father has sent his Son to be the Savior of the world.

I’m just crazy enough to believe it! Make up your mind this year to think for yourself. You know as much about God in your own heart than anyone no matter what kind of degrees or titles someone may have; Our Father God set it up that way. He said we must become as little children, and has chosen the weak things to confound the things that are mighty, the foolish things to bring down those who think they are wise. The first will be last and the last first… To really see the Truth for reasons to numerous to go into here but just keep coming back and stay in touch we will see things this year we would have never thought possible to wonderful to imagine. But then that’s the way God said it would be… we’ll get to that later..

Happy New Year

Pastor Dennis

 

Sunday
Jan012012

Is There Grace Beyond the Grave?

Is There Grace Beyond the Grave?

By Diane Perkins Castro

  

 

 

If coming to Jesus Christ in repentance and trust is necessary for salvation—and I believe that it is—then the doctrine of universal redemption hinges on whether there can be repentance and salvation after physical death. Many people go to their graves without ever acknowledging Jesus as their Savior—some without ever hearing His name. If it is true that they will ultimately be redeemed, then there must be a way for them to attain salvation after they die.

 

The Bible never says, “People can be saved after they die.” Neither does it say, “People cannot be saved after they die.” The answer to the question of whether they can be saved after they die must come by examining what the Bible does say about God and His work and purposes.
Although our physical death, like our physical birth, marks a dramatic change in our lives, I believe that God sees our whole life as a continuum, and He is continuously working in us throughout—He knew us before we were conceived, He knitted us together in our mother’s womb, He calls us to Himself and sanctifies us in this life, and He continues His work of drawing us into deeper knowledge of Him throughout eternity. Thankfully we are not locked in to the condition we are in when we die; God keeps revealing Himself and building our relationship with Him.
Neither are unbelievers locked in to their condition when they die. Experiencing God’s judgment and seeing Jesus face to face will not leave them unchanged. Some people say that if a person resists God until the end of his life, he will continue to do so after he dies. Perhaps for a time, but can a person remain forever defiant before our magnificently holy and loving God? At the very end of his life, Muammar Gadhafi changed from an arrogant, ruthless tyrant to a terrified, whimpering child, just in the face of the wrath and judgment of men. What will he do before God Almighty?
To insist that no unbeliever would ever turn to Christ after death, even if he were given the chance, is a tacit admission that something is not right: If we say that there is no chance to repent, then we find ourselves compelled to say that no one would take it anyway, because we recognize that if some would indeed ask for forgiveness, then it is unfair not to offer it. So the standard position is to maintain that no one who has rejected God in this life would ever receive Him in the next, even if he had the opportunity.
Yet that assertion flies in the face of common sense. For one thing, there will be no atheists after death. All the philosophical questions about the existence of God will go out the window when a person stands before the living God. And any illusions a person may have about his own goodness will be dispelled when he stands before the holy God. Those who rejected Him in this life thinking He was cruel will see that He is truly a loving God. The girl who hated God, believing He was like her abusive father, may say, “Now I see who you really are; I know I can trust you, and I want to come to you.” The aborigine who sought for Him in nature will discover the Creator of the sun and moon and trees and flowers. The lost souls who have stumbled through this life in “quiet desperation” may catch a glimpse of the joy that belongs to the redeemed and long to have it. Will God say to each of these, “Sorry, pal, you’re too late”? Does it make any sense that 100 percent of those who die without Christ will forever remain in rebellion against Him?
It is unlikely that all people who have rejected Christ in this life will continue to do so forever in the next. It is even more unlikely that God will instantly change His attitude toward all unbelievers the moment they die. Virtually all Christians agree that there can be genuine death-bed conversions; God continues to call people to Himself as long as they live, and some do come to Him in their last moments. So does God woo people with His love up until the end of their lives and then turn into the God of wrath the instant they draw their last breath? Does He cut off His mercy when one dies, or does His mercy endure forever? Does His nature change radically just because an individual transitions from one state to the next? No, we may experience different facets of God’s nature at different times, but His immutable qualities are always completely present and at work in Him.
These reflections are based on what we know from Scripture about the character of God, but they are philosophical and logical, not exegetical. However, I have also presented some passages in 1 Peter that suggest that people in the place of the dead (the “spirits in prison”) have a chance to hear the preaching of the gospel. [See “Presuppositions and Interpretations, Part 1”] Peter specifically says, “the gospel was preached to the dead” (1 Peter 4:6). What was this “good news” that the dead were hearing? That Jesus had accomplished atonement on the cross and risen from the dead, but it was too late for them and they were hopelessly doomed? Or were they being given a chance to respond to the gospel “that they might live according to God in regard to the Spirit”? (1 Peter 4:6)
Before closing I want to mention Hebrews 9:27, as it is often quoted as “proof” that there is no opportunity for salvation after death. But the verse says nothing of the sort; it simply says, “man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment,” in other words, “you die, and then you get judged.” The fact that a person will be judged after death in no way rules out the possibility that sometime in the eternal ages to come, the person might yet come to Christ in repentance and trust.
So although Scripture does not state explicitly whether salvation is possible after death, there are sound reasons to believe that God will not withdraw His offer of salvation the moment a person takes his last breath. It is entirely consistent with His nature and purposes that He will continue to reach out in mercy until every lost sheep is found, until the cross accomplishes its complete work of redemption of every human being.
This blog is a brief answer to the question of whether a person can come to Christ after physical death. I will elaborate on this question much more when I discuss how God will bring about complete justice and how Revelation paints a picture of ongoing healing and restoration.

 

If coming to Jesus Christ in repentance and trust is necessary for salvation—and I believe that it is—then the doctrine of universal redemption hinges on whether there can be repentance and salvation after physical death. Many people go to their graves without ever acknowledging Jesus as their Savior—some without ever hearing His name. If it is true that they will ultimately be redeemed, then there must be a way for them to attain salvation after they die.
The Bible never says, “People can be saved after they die.” Neither does it say, “People cannot be saved after they die.” The answer to the question of whether they can be saved after they die must come by examining what the Bible does say about God and His work and purposes.
Although our physical death, like our physical birth, marks a dramatic change in our lives, I believe that God sees our whole life as a continuum, and He is continuously working in us throughout—He knew us before we were conceived, He knitted us together in our mother’s womb, He calls us to Himself and sanctifies us in this life, and He continues His work of drawing us into deeper knowledge of Him throughout eternity. Thankfully we are not locked in to the condition we are in when we die; God keeps revealing Himself and building our relationship with Him.
Neither are unbelievers locked in to their condition when they die. Experiencing God’s judgment and seeing Jesus face to face will not leave them unchanged. Some people say that if a person resists God until the end of his life, he will continue to do so after he dies. Perhaps for a time, but can a person remain forever defiant before our magnificently holy and loving God? At the very end of his life, Muammar Gadhafi changed from an arrogant, ruthless tyrant to a terrified, whimpering child, just in the face of the wrath and judgment of men. What will he do before God Almighty?
To insist that no unbeliever would ever turn to Christ after death, even if he were given the chance, is a tacit admission that something is not right: If we say that there is no chance to repent, then we find ourselves compelled to say that no one would take it anyway, because we recognize that if some would indeed ask for forgiveness, then it is unfair not to offer it. So the standard position is to maintain that no one who has rejected God in this life would ever receive Him in the next, even if he had the opportunity.
Yet that assertion flies in the face of common sense. For one thing, there will be no atheists after death. All the philosophical questions about the existence of God will go out the window when a person stands before the living God. And any illusions a person may have about his own goodness will be dispelled when he stands before the holy God. Those who rejected Him in this life thinking He was cruel will see that He is truly a loving God. The girl who hated God, believing He was like her abusive father, may say, “Now I see who you really are; I know I can trust you, and I want to come to you.” The aborigine who sought for Him in nature will discover the Creator of the sun and moon and trees and flowers. The lost souls who have stumbled through this life in “quiet desperation” may catch a glimpse of the joy that belongs to the redeemed and long to have it. Will God say to each of these, “Sorry, pal, you’re too late”? Does it make any sense that 100 percent of those who die without Christ will forever remain in rebellion against Him?
It is unlikely that all people who have rejected Christ in this life will continue to do so forever in the next. It is even more unlikely that God will instantly change His attitude toward all unbelievers the moment they die. Virtually all Christians agree that there can be genuine death-bed conversions; God continues to call people to Himself as long as they live, and some do come to Him in their last moments. So does God woo people with His love up until the end of their lives and then turn into the God of wrath the instant they draw their last breath? Does He cut off His mercy when one dies, or does His mercy endure forever? Does His nature change radically just because an individual transitions from one state to the next? No, we may experience different facets of God’s nature at different times, but His immutable qualities are always completely present and at work in Him.
These reflections are based on what we know from Scripture about the character of God, but they are philosophical and logical, not exegetical. However, I have also presented some passages in 1 Peter that suggest that people in the place of the dead (the “spirits in prison”) have a chance to hear the preaching of the gospel. [See “Presuppositions and Interpretations, Part 1”] Peter specifically says, “the gospel was preached to the dead” (1 Peter 4:6). What was this “good news” that the dead were hearing? That Jesus had accomplished atonement on the cross and risen from the dead, but it was too late for them and they were hopelessly doomed? Or were they being given a chance to respond to the gospel “that they might live according to God in regard to the Spirit”? (1 Peter 4:6)
Before closing I want to mention Hebrews 9:27, as it is often quoted as “proof” that there is no opportunity for salvation after death. But the verse says nothing of the sort; it simply says, “man is destined to die once, and after that to face judgment,” in other words, “you die, and then you get judged.” The fact that a person will be judged after death in no way rules out the possibility that sometime in the eternal ages to come, the person might yet come to Christ in repentance and trust.
So although Scripture does not state explicitly whether salvation is possible after death, there are sound reasons to believe that God will not withdraw His offer of salvation the moment a person takes his last breath. It is entirely consistent with His nature and purposes that He will continue to reach out in mercy until every lost sheep is found, until the cross accomplishes its complete work of redemption of every human being.
This blog is a brief answer to the question of whether a person can come to Christ after physical death. I will elaborate on this question much more when I discuss how God will bring about complete justice and how Revelation paints a picture of ongoing healing and restoration.

 

This blog was posted in my RSS feed on the URNews Page.

 

 

From “The Christian Post” By Diane Perkins Castro “Ambassador of Reconciliation”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday
Dec292011

Past Front Page Articles

Some things are just too good to pass up. So, just in case you missed one of the Great Front Page Articles at Not1lost.org we will keep them here for your convenience and reference anytime you would look back over some of the Real Good News found on the front page here at Not1lost.org. 
Thanks For Visiting!
Pastor Dennis

 

Wednesday
Dec282011

The “Other Wise Man” and the Real Magi 

by Ken R. Vincent

 

A little over a hundred years ago, Prof. Henry Van Dyke re-introduced the Western World to 
the real Magi in a beautiful fictional book, The Story of the Other Wise Man.   Knowledge of 
the Magi as priests of the Zoroastrian religion had been forgotten after the Moslem conquest 
of the Middle East but had re-emerged during the 19th century.  Prof. Van Dyke’s Other Wise 
Man, like the more famous Three Wise Men who brought gifts to honor the Baby Jesus in the 
Gospel of Matthew, were Magi. Theirs was the only religion in the ancient world other than 
Judaism to worship one God, and their prophet Zoroaster had predicted the coming of future 
saviors from “the nations.” The Magi believed that Salvation is attained through Good 
Thoughts, Good Words, and Good Deeds.In The Story of the Other Wise Man, the fourth 
Magi is delayed in his attempt to join the others in their search for the Savior because he 
repeatedly interrupts his journey to care for the sick and needy.  At the end of his life, he 
experiences a vision of the crucified Jesus who assures him that in performing good works 
for  “the least of my brethren, you have done it to me” (Matthew 25:31-46).

Like many scholars of his time, Prof. Van Dyke was fascinated by the real Magi.  Although 
early Christian artwork had pictured the Magi accurately in priestly Persian attire, their 
appearance became transformed by later legend into opulently clad Kings.  But St. Matthew 
doesn’t call them Kings; he calls them “Magi”.  Modern translations of the New Testament 
often use “Wise Men.”

Prof. John Hinnells of the University of London notes that St. Matthew, who is thought to have 
written his Gospel in Antioch, Syria, would have been familiar with the beliefs of the Magi, 
whom history locates in that community in the First Century.  More than any other Gospel 
writer, Matthew cites texts from the Hebrew Bible to prove that Jesus was the Messiah,  but in 
this instance, Matthew tells us that priests from a religion other than Judaism followed the 
Guiding Star to Jesus. Why?


One answer given is that the Zoroastrians were known to be astrologers.  Remember that 
Balaam, another non- Jew in the Hebrew Bible (Numbers 24:17), predicted that “a star shall 
come forth out of Jacob and a scepter shall rise out of Israel….”  But many other religions of 
the First Century practiced astrology. A related answer sometimes voiced is that the Magi 
were Chaldaens; Chaldaea, another name for Babylon, was where Western astrology was 
invented. At the time of the birth of Jesus, the religion of the Magi was the dominant religion in 
Babylon.

But the primary importance of the Magi was the enormity of their influence in the world of the 
First Century.  Their religion was dominant in the first Persian Empire prior to Alexander and 
in the Parthian Persian Empire, which was much larger than modern-day Persia (Iran) and 
included (modern-day) Iraq, the eastern half of Syria, southeast Turkey, Armenia, and half of 
Turkmenistan.  The Zoroastrian Persians were once rulers in Palestine and remained “next-
door neighbors” of Roman Palestine at the time of Jesus’ birth. Additionally, their main 
language was Aramaic, which was the language of Jesus.  Some Magi even resided in pre-
Islamic Southern Arabia where the frankincense and myrrh were grown and traded. So it was 
the Magi who worshiped the one God of Light, called Ahura Mazda (the Wise Lord), who were 
at the birth of Jesus.  St. Matthew was declaring to the non-Jewish world, especially the world 
of the East, “Jesus is your Savior too!”

The Magi at the Nativity of Jesus was not the first communication between the Zoroastrian 
and the Jewish religions. By the time of Jesus’ birth, the Jews had been acquainted with the 
religion of the Magi for over 500 years!  Indeed, the Magian Kings Darius, and Xerxes are 
mentioned fondly in the Hebrew Bible; the good Persian King Cyrus the Great was 
responsible for allowing the Jews to return to Jerusalem from their Babylonian exile with the 
treasures from their Temple. It is likely that the Magi would have known of the Jewish 
prophecy of a savior similar to their own.

We in the West forget that early Christians lived and modern Christians still live in Africa, 
India, and the Middle East. Indeed, before Islam, 10% of the Middle East was Christian. The 
Zoroastrians and their priests, the Magi (now called Mobeds), are still with us too. In fact, 
there are 15,000 in North America. No other religion has as much in common with our Judeo-
Christian heritage.

So at Christmastime, after you read the story of the Magi in the Chapter 2 of Matthew, skip 
over to Chapter 25 (vs.31-46).   Remember the Other Wise Man and his prophet, Zoroaster, 
who also taught the supreme importance of good works and who predicted the coming of 
other saviors.

Ken R. Vincent is the author of: The MAGI: From Zoroaster to the “Three Wise Men”