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Showing posts with label Religious Syncretism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Religious Syncretism. Show all posts

Monday, June 13, 2011

The Reality of Hell

The Greek word Gehenna is one of the words used in the New Testament to describe Hell.  This is defined as a place “originally in the valley of Hinnom, south of Jerusalem, where the filth and dead animals of the city were cast out and burned; a fit symbol of the wicked and their future destruction.[1]  What are we to make of this?  Often, the original Greek and its representation of a garbage dump are misused to soften the concept of punishment and the stark reality of the place Jesus called hell. Of the 23 times the word “hell” is used in the New Testament. 12 times it is used in relation to fire or hell-fire.  In studying Christ total message on this subject it becomes clear that this was not just a reference to a city garbage dump but a depiction of what this place of punishment would really be like.  This depiction was an appropriate one to give those Jerusalem dwellers an everyday picture they could relate to and understand.  It was done with purpose.  Consider: it was a place where items that were no longer of use were destroyed; there was constant burning, heat and smoke rising up.  It was a practical description designed to convey the concept of a reality.  We know Jesus often used analogies to teach.  Here, he does the same.

Rob Bell a rising star on the evangelical stage is interviewed below and has been rightly criticized for watering down the Gospel. 



 
No Rob, Hell is not a place to be laughed at and shooed away as a myth.  Jesus taught the reality of the place of punishment and separation from God.  Whenever doctrine is taught, scripture cannot be taken out of its context.  It is not only misleading to confine the significance of Hell to a city garbage dump, it is a perversion of Christ’s teaching.   

What are we to do when Jesus said in Matthew 23:33 ”...how shall ye escape the damnation of hell”.  Here the word Gehenna is used, but in combination with the word “damnation”.  “Damnation of a garbage dump” doesn’t quite fit, does it?  The Amplified bible translates damnation (kriðsiov, transliterated as Kresis) as “penalty”.   This Greek word means a sentence of condemnation, a judgment. Here we see not only the concept, but an actual word describing hell as the ultimate punishment for mankind’s sins.  When we take in the totality of Jesus’ teaching on Hell, Luke 16 teaches that hell includes consciousness, feelings of pain, memory, torment, heat, regret, having the ability to see those in a better place.  Jesus taught of servants being placed in outer darkness for their wickedness.  2 Peter uses a word for Hell that describes a deep abyss. All this points to a place not to be taken lightly.  Teaching the old path, which is Christ’s way, includes teaching and warning about the punishment of Hell.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Platitudes Without Beatitudes.





Is this the Old Path?  Are preachers comprising the truth to keep their popularity? After a sermon that was so hard to understand and seemingly hard to live out,  Jesus asked the twelve disciples  “Will ye also go away?”  (John 6:67)  Jesus spent little time worrying about popularity or offending people with His message, because His message came from the Father. He asked the disciples to declare  where they stood on the Truth.  After Christ's  sermon, some followers decided not to walk with Jesus again.  They left him.  The disciples declared " To whom shall we go?  Thou hast the words of eternal life."  One of the reasons many are not hearing the gospel today is that too many “Osteen-like” preachers are afraid of alienating people (or potential book customers),  and while, yes,  they have the world’s attention with television shows and beautiful edifices, the spiritual food they provide is nothing more than general self-help, positive thinking  platitudes that anyone can teach.  Really, Joel? You can't  discuss Atheists either?  
Here are some Joel Osteen quotes…
--To me, we're marketing hope. (…or building a false hope?)
--You can be happy where you are. (But Joel what if “where you are” is sinful and sends you to hell?)
--It's the same message that people were preaching hundreds and hundreds of years ago, we're just repackaging it. (Or watering it down to make everyone comfortable…)
--I'm very careful about saying who would and wouldn't go to heaven. I don't know. (Can you at least tell us what Jesus said on the subject?)
--I'd like to think that I can help everyday people who don't necessarily go to church.
(Maybe you can, but the best help according to scripture,  is repenting of sin and being reconciled with God.)
All quotes from Joel Osteen are from   http://www.icelebz.com/quotes/joel_osteen  
We really are living in dangerous spiritual times.  This watering down of the gospel comes from a particular type of theological thinking called religious syncretism- which is a melding of contrasting religious beliefs.  This was practiced under the ancient Roman Empire, for political reasons.  For reasons of political unity throughout the empire, they did not try to change the various religions and beliefs of the lands they had conquered . [1]  Gonzalez notes that “Syncretism was the fashion of the time.  In that atmosphere, Jews and Christians were seen as unbending fanatics who insisted on the sole worship of their One God”.  Get the picture?  This is what we are faced with today. Those that preach against false religion or preach the idea that there is only one way to heaven are seen as unloving fanatics.  Satisfying this trend in religion will only lead to changing the gospel.

The result of trying to keep up with the current religious trend? Nominal Christians who in the end, believe in nothing, and standing for even less. 
There is only one gospel of Jesus Christ…


[1] Gonzalez, Justo L. The Story of Christianity, Volume 1, The Early Church to the Dawn of the Reformation. New York : HarperCollins , 1984, p 14-15.