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#1 |
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Aron writes> 1. Didn't you ever hear the phrase "We stand on the shoulders of giants?" Whose shoulders do you think this refers to?
Sure, the servants that God raised up such as the Brethren, Zinzendorf, Martin Luther. 2. When the Ethiopian eunuch said, "How can I understand unless someone explains it to me?", don't you think he was looking for an expositor to help him? Sure. like Philip. Philip was not "Christian scholar". 3. Remember where Proverbs says (3x) "In a multitude of counselors there is safety." Right. It does not say in the multitude of scholars. 4. Where do you think the "interpreted word" comes from? Christian scholars, no? Or is only one 'oracle' capable of doing so? From a variety of believers and servants of God, not just scholars. 5. Psalm 45: "My tongue is like the pen of ready writer". We all can be Christian scholars; all of us. We can all be ready to expound on scriptures, and make a defense of the faith, should any enquire. The voice of the flock is the voice of the flock, not just one person speaking "ex cathedra". I don't think it is accurate to say we can all be Christian scholars. What you mean is that we can all expound the scriptures and each can provide a revelation as the Holy Spirit inspires us. I Corinthians 14 says "each one has..". If this is what you mean then I agree with you. 6. Remember the "sound of many waters"? The sound of Muddy Waters? Just checking. ![]() Seriously, if you mean by many waters all the believers sharing what the Lord has shown them and what they experienced of Christ then I agree with you in principle. But then, you are using a different working definition of christian scholars than Ohio used. He meant a class of intellectual Christians, what we call scholars in the traditional sense of the word, who validate minister's credentials. I disagree with him on that because it suggests academia is the qualification for the validation and it also usurps the authority of the Holy Spirit Who alone is responsible for the special commissions in the church.
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Cassidy |
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#2 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Greater Ohio
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Obviously you have rejected all of these brothers because your MOTA has condemned them all as "poor, poor, Christianity." What a shame to you! You take the word of just one man and condemn all others. Lee said that since 1948 there has not been one valuable book written in the whole of Christianity outside of his own books. Why do you swallow such arrogance, Cassidy? Why do you reject the whole of the body of Christ and cling to a man who cannot be trusted?
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Ohio's motto is: With God all things are possible!. Keeping all my posts short, quick, living, and to the point! |
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#3 |
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How do you know what I meant? Did you even ask? I was actually referring to the collective learned and mature ones in the body of Christ.
Ohio, Don't be silly. You know what you meant and I know what you meant. You said: "Show me one acceptable Christian scholar who will agree that sister Jean Guyon in France was the 17th century "Minister of the Age?" While we are on the subject, show me one acceptable Christian scholar who will agree that John Darby was the 19th century "Minister of the Age?" How about one that says Luther was the 16th century MOTA? Or one that will even consider Nee was the 20th century MOTA? Listen Cassidy, I am hard pressed to find even one Christian scholar who even respects Lee, let alone nominate him as the mother of all MOTA's. Maybe you don't like the sound of it played back or maybe you just lack the conviction of your beliefs so you want to change your definition in the middle of the argument. Alright. If you go with the more general definition of "christian scholar" or for that matter we can just agree on aron's definition of christian scholar, that is, most any believer (christian scholar if you prefer) can exercise this discernment about a minister with a commission, so then there are thousands, wait, tens of thousands of Christians that have confirmed the special commission and apostleship/ministry of both Watchman Nee and Witness Lee. And that my friend is how it is done.
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Cassidy |
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#4 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Natal Transvaal
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But what if there are hundreds of thousands, wait, millions of Christians who have NOT confirmed the special commission and apostleship/ministry of both Watchman Nee and Witness Lee? Do we have a vote? Do we divide along "yea" and "nay" lines, with those churches who say that they have been "helped" by the ministries of Nee & Lee separated from those who have not? And for that matter, how about those assemblies that are "absolute for the ministry of Nee and Lee" versus those that are merely "positive"? Does the fact that Watchman Nee has been read into the Congressional Record help us? Or the fact that Billy Graham has a Hollywood Walk of Fame star? Of course I am being facetious, but really the fact that Nee sold a lot of books doesn't do it for me. We might then say that Joel Osteen or Joyce Meyers or Rick Warren might have that "special commission", too. Perhaps Lee should have gotten in line behind Warren or Osteen. And if this choosing, this setting aside is of the Holy Spirit, then how are the saints supposed to discern? We are back at square one, with a popularity contest. And so we yet again remember the scene in Mark chapter 9, "And they all were arguing among themselves as to which of them was the greatest." The devil isn't stupid. If he can get a successful ruse going he will keep it going. Why invent new tricks when you can still use the originals? I keep thinking of recent poster amrkelly's remarks that he had 'sight', or 'discernment', to understand Nee's gift to the Body. Don't we all? I mean, we all agree there is the Holy Bible, that reveals to us God's Son, Jesus Christ the Lord. He is truly the savior of the world. We all see this, and hold it to be true. When the apostle Paul wrote that "there are apostles, prophets, and teachers" in the assembly of the faithful, how are we supposed to discern? Should we simply agree with ones who are adamant that their favorite writer/teacher/speaker is God's anointed, special vessel? Again, it plays back into Mark 9 for me. I'd rather that we dispense with jawing over titles and positions. Just minister. There are lots of poor out there, lots of scoffers, unbelievers, sick, confused, and those who are addled by winds of teaching. Just minister. Whatever you are is what you are. At the 'Bema' God will pronounce judgment, and place you exactly where you belong; no higher or lower. What I find ironic is that we here in the flesh today are also placed exactly where we belong. If we spend our time & effort focused on church hierarchy and whatnot we simply confirm of what spirit we serve. We are convinced that we have to suss all this out for "good order in the church", even while ignoring the long trail of wreckage associated with such fixations.
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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#5 | |
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But he never got to it. Before leaving, what he reduced to was calling the book, and me, names ... like evil and wicked. Maybe Andrew is just a big talker, like his hero Watchman Nee.
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Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
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#6 | |
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I was kind of shocked. I mean, I had no idea I was such an evil creature! Simply because I had disagreed with Lee's theses, and treated his ideas critically like any other author, suddenly I was, to them, the most vile of men, and a despiser of God's authority. My point is that perhaps both Andrew and these Lee acolytes held that their particular author held some special position, above our ability to critically appraise it. So to Andrew, as to them, it was "plain" that everything put out by this person was self-evidently true, and all which critiqued it was patently absurd, and anyone who persisted in "not getting it" was therefore willfully obtuse, and immoral, to some degree. In other words, if the author was perceived by them to be God's special anointed oracle, then by treating that author's ideas like that of any redeemed and fallible sinner (think of Peter's repeated and well-documented failures, even AFTER the day of Pentecost) we were actually rebelling against the throne of God Himself. Or so I suppose. Anyway, I was struck by the parallel experience of how an attempt at mature and civil discussion of the theology of the author in question, on its own merits, quickly degenerated into name-calling, in both cases.
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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#7 |
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Aron, some years back trying to see if the local church had changed I joined a local church forum on yahoo groups.
For a couple of months I was just a lurker. Then I started posting innocent teaser posts, to see what would happen. But all I got was cut and paste answers quoting from Life-Studies. So I got things stirred up when I asked if the forum was a computer generated algorithm. Then we had some real discussions. Things went well until I revealed I was an ex-local churcher. Then I got banned from the forum. I went round and round with the forum moderators, one of them putting me back on the forum, and the other kicking me off. I even reached out to Ron Kangas thru email, who said he tried to help me but had no power over the forum. The good moderator told me that local churchers were told to stay away from ex-local churchers ... and that's why I got banned. So I joined to find out if the local church had changed, and found out that it hadn't.
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Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
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#8 | |
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Location: Greater Ohio
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Every storm in the Recovery could be distilled down to this statement, "he sees things, we don't." Instead of Jesus Christ being the "Knower of hearts," we gave that honor to our leader, hence even the Lord Himself was neutralized, and unable to speak through the members of His body, which He desperately tried on a number of occasions. Hence, Recovery leaders became the defacto "vicar of Christ," speaking for Him in every instance. Thus Lee could supposedly "see" John Ingalls' heart -- ambitious, destructive, conspiratorial, rebellious, leprous (pile it on Blendeds, because now you can "see" too.) The Catholic church became what it is primarily because every member had abrogated their discernment to the Bishop of Rome, the "Holy See." That course of action is dangerous for sure, as history shows us the slippery slope down which the church slid under the reign of Rome. Even the so-called Recovery Move of God followed that well worn slide of Rome, with Darby, Nee, and Lee all leading us down. Throw discernment to the wind, we're following The Man who leads us to God. Unfortunately that man is not Jesus Christ our Lord.
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Ohio's motto is: With God all things are possible!. Keeping all my posts short, quick, living, and to the point! |
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#9 | |
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Did his vision work out to be true? Was God really doing what he claimed? In the end wasn't his vision really about making him an acting god?
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Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
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#10 | |
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And Lee brought this to the U.S. Suddenly we were talking about Pember, Mackintosh, Darby, Kittel, Alford. None of these I'd heard about in my Congregational church, so arguably Lee "saw things we didn't". BUT, we also saw things Lee didn't. And that's where the Nee/Lee system brought in corruption. Sight was held to be a one-way stream: the only thing we were supposed to 'see' was that Lee was the one with nearly unfettered access to God's light. So our only revelation was supposed to come when we stood up in the meeting, after some sharing by the Maximum Brother, and exclaim, Suddenly it was all clear to us! Praise God for this speaking! The Lord is meeting all my needs through this timely word from our brother! Etc, etc. Our job was to shout slogans which had come from the dais. That was it. Shout it until you get it. Our ability to think independently was frowned upon as the dangerous seeds of ambition and division. I believe today that every believer has sight. Yes, Lee had it, and so did Nee. But so do you and I. And our buying into the program of Nee and Lee "nullified the function of the members of the Body", as Lee put it so succinctly. The author of Hebrews urged us to "see Jesus" in the text. I think we could spend all our lifetimes doing just that. There is an uncertainty in that invitation, which could be dangerous to some, because what you see and what I see might differ somewhat, and we just have to learn to live with that, and each other. I have learned that what I see can separate me from others. Do I insist on my view being the 'feeling of the Body', or the new interpretive truth? Or is what I see simply what I see? An interesting thing about both Nee and Lee's ministries, is that as time went on both of them saw things that led to organizational centralization, and the accumulation of temporal power. Nee went from promoting local churches free from external (read: foreign) control, to "the Jerusalem principle" and the need for coordination & control; "God's deputy authority" and all that. Lee also went from "local churches on local ground" to "the vision of the Body" and so forth. In both cases we departed from looking away unto Jesus, and moved toward looking away unto headquarters. And in both cases our 'sight' got reduced to "Big Brother is right". That was the extent of our vision. Beyond that, as one of the Blendeds proudly declared, we were going to be like ostriches, with our heads firmly planted in the sand.
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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#11 | |
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And he was only in his 20s, I believe.
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Mike I think . . . . I think I am . . . . therefore I am, I think — Edge OR . . . . You may be right, I may be crazy — Joel |
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#12 | |
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Cults: My brain will always be there for you. Thinking. So you don't have to. There's a serpent in every paradise. |
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#13 | |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Kittel I would think how impressive, how careful and all-inclusive Lee's scholarship was. But in hindsight he was just occasionally using Christian scholarship as a prop, and for a patina of legitimacy. Look at how quickly he would denigrate anything and anyone as "poor" and "deformed" which he couldn't use. Which happens to be about 99.5% of Christian scholarship. And that is just the learned ones. The mature ones he could use even less.
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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#14 |
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I notice that when Living Streamers find some "traditional Christian scholars" like Moody Bible Institute or Christian Research Institute to aid them, they do so with alacrity. But in the many instances where the Streamers deviate, they say, "Who needs Christian scholars?"
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"Freedom is free. It's slavery that's so horribly expensive" - Colonel Templeton, ret., of the 12th Scottish Highlanders, the 'Black Fusiliers' |
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