Top 5 Abused Bible Verses

In working on my sermon this week, I’ve come across one of the most abused verses in Scripture. It’s not as abused today as it was some 70 years ago, but it is still one of the most abused passages of Scripture. The passage is John 8:31-32  “If you abide in My word, you are My disciples indeed. 32 And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” Only in it’s abuse, those using it only quote verse 32, without the first part of the conditional clause.

A conditional clause means that there is a condition to knowing the truth. Knowing the truth means that we are His disciples. Being His disciples mean that we follow Him and His word. Yet countless people use the old King James Version, Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall set you free, in a manner to indicate that the truth is just floating about for anyone to find it. It is not, for truth to be know, we must know it in the light of Christ.

I’m reminded of my childhood growing up in the cult of Christian Science and see that portion of the passage on the inside cover to Mary Baker Eddy’s Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures (Please note: she has no keys to Scripture. Her book is filled with senseless drivel. She doesn’t know Christ, God or the truth). The passage is used in such a way that it suggests that objective truth is just floating about and all we need to do is look for it. It’s not. The only true way to know real Truth is to know Christ and be known by Him (Matthew 7:21ff). Truth is not disconnected from Christ.

We also see this passage on the building of countless universities across the land. There too, it’s put forth as if truth is out there for anyone looking for it apart from Christ. I know the arch-rival of my own university, texas university, has the scripture emblazoned on one of the buildings. However I don’t think that school, or any other state-run school that has the passage emblazoned on campus is advocating their students become disciples and followers of Christ.

The point is that when Christ uttered those words, He was in a heated debate with the Jews about His identity and their need to be freed from sin. He wasn’t throwing up the idea that truth was to be known apart from Him. Knowing the truth means we must be “in Christ,” and by being “in Christ” we will know truth about who He is and who we are. We are sinners in need of a Savior, and the Truth is that He is that Savior. Being in Him means we are freed from one of our greatest foes: sin. We cannot be truly free unless sin is dealt with, and only through Christ is that sin dealt with. Otherwise we will die in our sins, as Jesus warned the Jews (John 8:21).

This is why this verse makes my Top 5 list of the most abused passages in history. People have abused it in an attempt to make themselves seem erudite in the pursuit of truth. Yet, truth pursued apart from Christ does us no good at all.

4. Number 4 on the list is Romans 8:28 And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose. The reason this one makes the list is that far too many people use it as a quick fix to someone else’s problems. Your cousin just died in a car wreck? Romans 8:28. You have cancer? Romans 8:28. You just lost your home to foreclosure? Romans 8:28. Your cat had puppies? Romans 8:28.

It is abused because of the way that it is used in Christian circles. People use it in an attempt to belittle the struggles of others and this is unconscionable. It is thoughtless, and mean. Paul writes that we are to weep with those who weep in Romans 12:15, not throw Romans 8:28 in their faces.

To abuse this passage is to ignore the fact that Christians have been called to suffer just as Christ suffered. I know, suffering is one of those things that polite Christians do not talk about. But it is a reality of the Christian life. To deny it, is to deny the calling every Christian has in life. So when someone suffers, don’t throw up a quick passage so you can sooth your conscience and be on your way. Sit down with them, and be with them and weep with them.

3. Number 3 on the list is Philippians 4:13 I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me. This verse is abused because it is ripped out of context. The context is that Paul is saying he has learned to be content whether he has plenty or he is abased, both to abound and suffer need. He does not say that he can conquer the world because he has Philippians 4:13.

This verse should not be the foundation of every motivational speaker to come down the pike. That is not what Paul is saying. In fact, he would probably be aghast at the idea that so many are using this passage in such a manner, given that Jesus Christ conquers the world and our worlds, we do not. We are mere servants, not tiny gods out to conquer all that is before us.

2. Matthew 7:1 “Judge not, that you be not judged.” This passage is abused among the haters of Christianity. It’s not used to teach us to guard against being hypocritical, as Jesus intended it to be used, but used to silence anyone who would espouse any godly standard above that of being a dog. Jesus isn’t giving a blanket statement for not judging, but given a lesson on how to judge rightly.

I like what Paul Washer is reported to have said concerning this verse: “People always tell me, ‘Judge not, lest ye be judged.’ I reply, ‘Twist not Scripture, lest ye be like Satan.’”

1. John 3:16 For God so loved the world… You know my hatred of the abuse of this passage. Far too many use it to justify their ungodly behavior and lack of holiness because of God’s love. In other words, “For God so love the world, I can live and believe as I please, and Jesus is there to take care of everything for me.”

This passage is also the foundation of so much bad theology that I think we should stop quoting it, and quote all of John 3 to bring it back into light. Anything less than this is to abuse the fulness of what Christ was saying in John 3.

There you have it, my Top-5 abused passages of Scripture. What are yours?

From Pleasantville to Principia — The Journey of One Woman’s Life from the Cult of Christian Science to Christ

The following was written by Ashley. She shared this with me after she discovered my posts about Christian Science on the cults page. I’m sharing her testimony with you, and with permission.

From Pleasantville to Principia

If you looked up my childhood in a dictionary, you would have found the word Pleasantville.  I was raised in Kansas City by two very loving, grounded, hard-working parents.  I had a brother 2 years older than me, and the four of us together were very close, loving and fun.  My brother and I were pretty good kids growing up.  Our parents ran an indoor sports complex, and so athletics were extremely important in our family.  We both grew up playing sports and hoped to someday see the fruit of our hard work through a College scholarship.

The Falsity of Fainting

We were members of the local Christian Science church.  I never really noticed that I was different from anyone else in school because of the church I attended.  I didn’t really notice there were other churches outside of Christian Science.  The first recollection of me realizing that Christian Science was different and so was I, was when I fainted for the first time.

It was on the day of Thanksgiving.  While getting ready for church, I made it very clear that my stomach was really hurting me and I didn’t feel capable of going and sitting for an hour in church.  As was custom, my mom or dad took me into a quiet room of the house and shared that I needed to “Know the Truth” about myself and to read from the Science and Health the Scientific Statement of Being.  I can to this day repeat it verbatim.

There is no life, truth, intelligence, nor substance in matter. All is infinite Mind and its infinite manifestation, for God is All-in-all. Spirit is immortal Truth; matter is mortal error. Spirit is the real and eternal; matter is the unreal and temporal. Spirit is God, and man is His image and likeness. Therefore man is not material; he is spiritual.

Praying that my body was spiritual and not material, I tried to be a good Christian Scientist, and overcome my pain by changing my thought and aligning it with God’s thought and proceed to attend the morning church service.

It didn’t take but twenty minutes into the service and I looked at my brother and shook my head.  The rest I don’t remember up until I woke to throwing up in the bathroom.  I was told that I fell back on the pew, hit my head, slid under the seat and started to throw up.  My dad rushed me out of the church.  I went home and was sick the whole week.  We prayed and no medical attention was sought out for my stomach pains and dizziness.

Through this experience, what made me realize that something was different about Christian Science was the reaction of my church congregation; or lack thereof.  No one mentioned my faint when I came back the following Sunday.  And I was told not to discuss  it to any friends, neighbors or family members.  By sharing this “false belief” about me fainting, I was accepting it to be true about myself.  And it wasn’t true, because I was a perfect child of God.

My faints continued and so did my parents need help me KNOW THE TRUTH and not accept them.  I remember a time where my family drove to Florida and we had stopped at a gas station.  I had been sleeping in the back and woke up and no one was in the car.  I ran into the gas station in complete fear that I wouldn’t get my candy they usually would let us have on stops.  When I found my mom, I started to faint.  She quickly dragged me into the bathroom so that no one would see.  I remember vividly her trying to quietly wake me up and tell me that someone else was in the bathroom and to be quiet.  I didn’t understand why I couldn’t have the help of someone else besides my parents, but she definitely didn’t want my faint to be seen.  I have continued to have fainting issues to this day.  To be clear, I don’t want to dishonor my parents for what they thought was the right thing to do in those situations.  They always did their best to keep me safe and protected.  But what really stood out to me was the rejection of the belief that I was a “fainter”.  This rejection issue feeds into so many other areas of the Christian Science life.  There’s a sense of shame that comes with a Christian Scientist’s failure to have healing or physical health.  It is hard for me now to wrap my brain around.  If I couldn’t overcome my faints, I felt that it was something I wasn’t understanding in my own thought about God and my true being.  When in all reality, I’m a fainter and it’s okay.  To sum up, Christian Science is a works “religion” and teaches that IF we are praying rightly and “knowing the Truth”, healing will occur.  If no healing occurs; we aren’t where we need to be mentally.  Works.  And that is not how God works.  He is a God of GRACE.

The Principia Bubble

When my brother and I had gotten older, the reality that we were the only Christian Scientists in our school, started to settle in.  When our school had flu shots or required physicals, my parents handed in exemption forms from our local Church to our teachers, while all the other classmates were in the nurse’s office.  It became evident to my parents that we were slowly being opened up to the medical world quickly through our schooling and friendships we made.  So my parents did the right thing as Christian Scientists did, and they sold their business and home and moved us to St. Louis to attend the Principia Upper School-A School for Christian Scientists.

Principia offered everything my parents hoped and prayed for.  My brother and I had a strong education but more importantly, we both became extremely passionate for Christian Science.  We both were thorough in our studying of the Bible with its’ important Key- Science and Health by Mary Baker Eddy.  Every morning I read my Bible lesson and let the Science and Health guide me throughout the Bible in it’s own specific way, and I made my parents extremely proud with my daily spiritual growth.

The Wrong Decision or my BEST Decision

When it came time to choose where to go to College, I had always known that softball would play a key role in my decision process.  Considering I loved the sport and my parents paid a lot of money so I could play at an elite level all throughout high school, I made getting a scholarship my main goal.  At the time, I was 4th generation Christian Scientist.  My brother was already attending Principia College, and so were my cousins.  I worked extremely hard to get my scholarship and fortunately was offered one.

My parents still begged me to apply for Principia College and this is first part of “my story” where I knew the Lord specifically directed me.

I was always so obedient to my parents, but in my heart I knew Principia was the wrong place for me.  My reasoning was that all my highschool friends would be there and I didn’t want to repeat highschool all over again.  But looking back, it seemed very unlike me to not even please my parents with applying as a back up plan.

From College to I Do’s

I had 4 great years of college.  I stayed true to being a Christian Scientist, but found myself around a lot of people who thought I was extremely different.  I laughed it off, and egotistically thought that I knew the Bible better and was more spiritual than them.  After all, I was a Christian Scientist and was capable of healing myself through prayer.  They were all “weak” in thought and needed medicine.

And this is the 2nd part of “my story” where I saw the Lord’s hand at work.  He brought me my sweetheart.

My husband was a blessing like no other.  He was raised Catholic and I was raised Christian Science.  What were we to do?  Knowing my temperament, if I had married a man who was extremely opinionated and impatient, I probably would have put my foot down and said there was no way I would leave Christian Science.  But my husband was and still is none of those qualities.  He’s patient, open-minded and always calm.

We decided to attend both each other’s churches.  We both had found we disliked different parts of each other’s denomination and decided that we would figure it out in time, instead of pushing to join a church.

“But I’m a Christian!”

Right in the beginning of our marriage, my kind-hearted Mother in Law encouraged me to attend a Bible Study.  It is a 8 year study called Bible Study Fellowship.  This Bible Study didn’t allow you to speak about specific denominations.  It was a pure study of the Bible with application questions.   I thought it was great.  I had never studied the Bible without the Science and Health right next to me, and so I was very intrigued by this “new age” way to study.  Oh me.

The first year I really enjoyed the study.  But as any well-trained Christian Scientist would do, I ignored the parts of the Bible that were not “inspired by God’,  such as “we are sinners…”, “Christ is God”.  Obviously those were not inspired because Mary Baker Eddy told me that I am made perfect, sin does not exist and Christ is a great example-BUT DEFINITELY NOT GOD.

As I studied the Bible, the more clear it was to me that Mary Baker Eddy left out some extremely solid nuggets of TRUTH that I desperately needed to know about.  When I studied and realized that Jesus declared himself to be THE Savior, and that a final day of judgement was to come for all men, I was stumped.  I was told differently by my leader Mary Baker Eddy about my salvation.  That’s when my world began to crumble.  Is she calling Jesus a liar?  I couldn’t piece it all together without feeling a great deal of anxiety.  Nothing is more humbling than being passionate for one set of beliefs all your life and to one day find out that you are incredibly wrong.  But this is where the Lord really protected my broken-hardened heart.   At Bible Study Fellowship (bsfinternational.org) they would always ask us at the end of the lecture if we had accepted Christ.  That was what would qualify someone as being Christian.  I of course ignored that portion of the lecture because I was a Christian.  Right? Wrong.  The Lord continued to protect me.

The second year of this Bible Study feels like it was just yesterday; and I wish it was.  I would love to go back and repeat the feelings I had over and over.  It was my fourth week and we were studying the Book of Matthew.  One of the key principles shared was, “Repentance involves changed thinking and a changed life”.  That night, my life was changed.  I don’t even know how my legs walked me out of that church, but I somehow made it to my car and called my Mother in Law and started rambling off a bunch of questions.  Like always, she was calm, comforting, knowledgeable, and extremely helpful.  That night on the phone, I came to KNOW the Lord Jesus Christ as my Savior.  22 years old.  I drove home, and looking back I’m surprised that I didn’t get a speeding ticket.  I found my husband and quickly told him the news.  The GOOD NEWS.   Together we worship the Lord and I can’t be more grateful for God’s hand in my life.

Can someone teach me to forget, not just forgive?

I will be honest and say that I am definitely a working progress throughout this amazing change in my life.  Although I now know the Lord as my Savior, the pain of knowing I’m the “black sheep” in my family and lost in a sea of Christian Science friends who don’t understand who I am anymore, is one big dark cloud over my head.  I am working on forgiveness and trying to understand what God wants out of me.  But the anger I have and grudges I hold are not mine to carry.  They are the Lord’s. I am taking a place that’s not really mine when I hold onto the way people have wronged me.

I think about Joseph and his darkest hours in prison, sold into slavery by his own family, and wonder what He thought about God.  God brought people into Joseph’s life in his darkest hours to comfort and help him.  I think about my darkest hours and look back at different people God brought into my life.  He was always there through the encouragement and comfort of others.

This is my lower story that will glorify God’s upper story.

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.” Romans 8:28
It’s all about the UPPER STORY.  Christian Science was my darkest hour, and I know there will be many stumbling blocks along the way-but I have the armor of Jesus Christ and cannot be shaken.  It’s all about the Upper Story.

A Third Response to a Christian Scientist

It is time to finally finish up my response to a Christian Scientist which I started several weeks ago. The point is not to win this CS to the true faith, but to help those who are in the true faith see through the arguments that these people make, be they part of Christian Science, Mormonism, liberal churches, etc. It would be nice to see this man turn from the heresies of his faith, to saving faith in Jesus Christ, but given that this man is a practitioner in his religion and makes his living as such, he has sold his soul to this falsehood. Instead of coming to Christ to be saved, he came to Christ to make his money off of healings and propagating a lie. He has a form of godliness but denies its true power (2 Timothy 3:1-9).

As believers in Christ, we are to shun those who are into idle babblings, as Paul warned Timothy (2 Timothy 2:14-26). If you look at my other posts dealing with this man, you can see that much of their belief system is based upon idle babblings. They are not grounded in the truth of God’s word, but whatever wind of doctrine the blows along. This is what is so sad about those who are stuck in this belief system. Instead of grabbing onto the truth, they heap up their error to their own destruction. It is truly sad and we can hope that some will turn away from it to Christ as was the case for me when I was 29. So it is not impossible that God’s Spirit will move in them. I just do not think it likely because they refused to accept even the smallest bit of light that is given to them (John 3:18-21).

I’m picking up on Don’s argument in midstream. He is trying to claim that the Apocrypha is made up of early Christian writings and that we need to look to these books for a deeper understanding of healing, even though the Apocrypha was written before the time of Christ, and was never regarded as Scripture by those who wrote it or read it. Remember that the entire premise of their faith is based upon the healings of Christ, thinking that He came to teach us how to heal ourselves. No where does Scripture ever say such a thing. We are told to preach and teach the truths of Scripture and Christ, but never go about healing the people of the world.

On to Don’s writings:

Within those books are records of regular healings as a part of practicing one’s religion. Healings abruptly ceased at the time Constantine (Roman emperor) gathered the bishops to “standardize Christianity” and to make his life easier by eliminating the important debates that had been going on–whether Jesus was God, or that God made matter, or that he punishes people for being evil were some of the issues of the time for which differences of opinion from the orthodox view were severely punished.

The healing ceased? Can you give us some proof of this? Even the debates you cite, need documentation. Yes, Constantine order the Council of Nicaea together to help settle the Arian controversy. The issue concerned what the church believed, based on Scripture, about Christ and what Arius was trying to say about Christ. It truly is an important issue, and you would do well not to side with Arius.

The Christian community was accustomed to saying the Jesus Chris was just as much God as the Father was and is. Arian suggested that He was merely a man, created just as we are and with a beginning.

Now, how about a bit of hypocrisy on your part Don. CSers believe that Jesus was just a man, but then point to Christ’s own claims about Himself in John 8:58 “Most assuredly I say to you, before Abraham was, ‘I Am.’” On the one hand, you claim that Jesus was just a man. Yet, on the other had you claim that Jesus always existed and that this truth is the same for you as it was for Him. Remember, this is why you don’t celebrate your birthdays?

However we are not equal to Christ. He is the only begotten of the Father. This means, from the Greek, He is the unique One of God. He is different than we are. He was born without sin and of a virgin. All this you deny to be true by bringing Christ down to your level, or worse, exalting yourself up to His level. What hubris.

Jesus could claim that before Abraham, “I Am” because He existed before all of creation. He was not created at a point in time as the Arians claim, but existed before creation and was there during creation (see Colossians 1:15-18 and note that the “He” in the text is referring to Christ.) Abraham did not always exist. If all mankind existed before creation than Jesus would not have said, “before Abraham was…” He would have said, “we all existed before time.” But He doesn’t. He is declaring His equality with the Father. This is why the Jews pick up stones to kill Him. If what He says is not true, then they are right in stoning Him for claiming equality with God is blasphemous. The reason they fail in their attempt to bring about justice is that they are wrong in their assumptions concerning Christ. He is equal to the Father and has a right to claim equality with the Father.

Paul goes on to tell us that Jesus was not committing robbery by claiming to be equal with the Father (Philippians 1:6). It is only robbery if what He claimed was not true. Since it is true, then His claim of equality is NOT robbery. He is the fulness of God, revealed to us, without sin and unique in that He was not created, but the Second Person of the Trinity.

This issue is vital for the salvation of mankind. The Lamb of God must be both fully Man and Fully God. Otherwise there is no acceptable sacrifice for our sins. He must be fully Man so that He represents us on the cross and fully God so that He pays the eternal debt we owe for our sin to and eternal God. He is eternal and makes the payment we cannot make.

But since you do not believe in sin, your own sinfulness and a need for a sacrifice, I guess this all moot. This brings up another puzzlement I have with CSers. Why is it that they do not believe in the material world, saying that all matter is evil, yet they spend so much time focusing on the matter of their bodies which are bearing the marks of sin of mankind whenever sickness arise. CSers focus on saying matter is not real, in order to heal their material bodies, which are not real, all the while missing the very spiritual nature of Christ’s healings in the first place. I guess the blindness you suffer from is such that it leads to utter foolishness as well.

Back to your arguments.

What you wrote in your previous email reflects these beliefs.

All churches were classified as “cults” as a part of identifying a religious group during that period of time. There was nothing negative about it, then. “Cult” today is usually a derogatory term as used by orthodoxy meaning that any group who doesn’t follow the general guidelines established by the Nicean Creed is way off base and perhaps even evil.

Absolutely true and I do not shy away from this charge. Let’s play Paschal’s wager. If what you say is true, then what I say really doesn’t matter. However, if what I believe is true, then those who do not believe it spend eternity in hell. Seems like it would be pretty important to make sure one was right. Remember, the One who created hell, told us more about it than any other figure in the Bible, so you cannot dismiss it by saying it’s not real or doesn’t exist. Christ told us of hell and said that the way to destruction was the broad way. Given all your claims to broad appeals here and there, seems like you are on the broad way. After all, you keep appealing to the heretics, liberals and loonies for your support, ignoring God’s word and the One who gave us the guidelines for faith and salvation.

This is being played out today in evaluating Mitt Romney’s religion as well as in your emails to me. But none of these orthodox churches heal as a part of their focus, and that is what Jesus required to show proof of Christianity, accurately practiced. He used this to demonstrate to John (via John’s disciples) that he was the Messiah and told his followers to “go and do likewise”–that headings are demonstrations of true Christianity–the sign that Christians were on the right path.

No, again, this is the wrong assumption made by CSers. Your focus should be on preaching the gospel of Christ, which is the true power unto salvation, not the healings. Yet you do not preach the gospel at all. MBE preached another gospel all together and was unqualified to preach at all. The disciples did as they were directed and people were saved. Yes, there were healings. But the healings were not the focus of faith. Faith in Christ for salvation was and is the focus.

(Read works on early Christianity prior to the 4th century AD and don’t be blinded by theological historians who have recreated religion for their own purposes and established the orthodox paradigm over centuries of time).

That is quite a charge coming from one who follows Mary Baker Patterson Glover Eddy. She was a woman that suffered from illnesses her entire life and did whatever she could to over come them, even following P. Phineas Quimby and plagiarized his writings. She not only ignore those theologians, she ignored scripture as well and look at what you ended up with?

The Current Bible scholars (as found at Harvard, Yale, Chapel Hill) are not wed to particular religions or theologies but operate across a broad spectrum of disciplines. They are showing that primitive Christianity (Jesus’s Christianity) is not what has survived today under the orthodox theory which creates “clouds without rain.”

Again, the way to destruction is broad. These modern-theologians are off base because they are not letting Scripture be their guide.

While we are on this topic, Tim, is healing a regular part of your religion and your preaching. And how is it that there are thousands of recorded heaings in Christian Science–hundreds of them documented by the medical profession before and after the healing? If Christian Science is misguided and perhaps even evil how does it heal? And, I think of Jesus statement to those who hated him, “For which of my good works do ye stone me?”

Do you not think that even Satan has the power to heal? Simply because you have healings does not prove your point. It is the rest of your theology that show you are out of accord with the teachings of the apostles and prophets. See above… see the fact that MBE was not qualified to be a pastor (1 Timothy 2:12). See the fact that you deny sin even though the Scriptures declare it to be so.

As for what Jesus said, you are taking it out of context once again.  Then the Jews took up stones again to stone Him. 32 Jesus answered them, “Many good works I have shown you from My Father. For which of those works do you stone Me?” The Jews answered Him, saying, “For a good work we do not stone You, but for blasphemy, and because You, being a Man, make Yourself God.” 

The signs, wonders and works authenticated who He was and is, not you. You are not God. You are not the Second Person of the Trinity. He did that showing that not only did He utter the words, “Let there be light,” but showed that with a word He could change the course of sin as it ravaged the bodies of His children. The gospels are about HIM, not you and your petty experiences. You think because you have healings that you are right in your beliefs. But Jesus warned even against such as yourself:

Matthew 7:21-23 “Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ shall enter the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father in heaven. 22 Many will say to Me in that day, ‘Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Your name, cast out demons in Your name, and done many wonders in Your name?’ 23 And then I will declare to them, ‘I never knew you; depart from Me, you who practice lawlessness!’”

He clearly teaches that even those who do all kinds of wonders have no hope unless they are known by Him and know Him. Since you believe the warp and woof of Christianity is about your own works, then take heed of Christ’s warning.

Paul will also go on to say that it is not by works, as you have pointed out, that show that we are saved, so that no man can boast in them (Ephesians 2:8-9). Our works are not the  determining factor of our salvation and acceptance by God. It is by faith alone in Christ alone that we are saved and made acceptable to Him. It is not works that get us into heaven or help us earn favor with Him. Yet, what have you done but boast in all your works?

So, who is to decide what is correct theology.

This is why orthodoxy is orthodoxy. We test what is taught according to Scriptures and if it doesn’t fit with Scripture, then it is not true. This is why we can punt MBE’s Science & Health with Keys to the Scriptures. First, does it correspond to Scriptures? Nope. Not even close. She seems like she is writing from a different planet all together. Secondly, if it does correspond, then is it necessary? Nope, since it doesn’t meet the first qualification, then it has nothing to add to our understanding. And yes, I have read it.

The only way I know is through proof of its utility. Paul said, “Show me your faith by your words, and I will show you my faith through my works.”

Again, you show your ignorance of Scripture once again. It is James who writes as such. We do believe in good works, but not works that is void of faith. We are saved by faith alone in Christ alone, but our faith is not alone. Yet, even the good works we do, Christ gets all the credit for we can only do good works by the power of the Holy Spirit.

So, I will continue on my spiritual journey to my highest sense of what is right in serving God and mankind. I wish you well on your journey, Tim.

Matthew 7:13-14 “Enter by the narrow gate; for wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and there are many who go in by it. 14 Because[a] narrow is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life, and there are few who find it.” I close with that verse because I am on the narrow way. Don, you have appealed to the broad way of the world. I appeal to you to jump off the broad road that you are on and to enter by the narrow gate, believing Him for salvation, not your own works or testimonies, etc. Count all that as dung, so that you may gain Christ (Philippians 3:8).

You can read my first response here, and my second response here.

A Second Response to a Christian Scientist

This is my second response to Don, a Christian Science practitioner. I tried to respond to him in the comments section, but feel that to respond adequately I must do a bit more in-depth parsing of what he is saying. You can find my first response here, and the original post, Christian Science: Deadly in More Ways Than One, here.

Again this is not so that I change his mind. The man has made his profession as a Christian Scientist and has ample “experience” to support his claims. What I’m saying is that his claims, while based on experience, are not to be trusted since these claims are not based on God’s word.

Here is more of what he writes:

Dear Pastor Timothy,

Here is some factual information that you may be overlooking in our discussion:

The basis of your religious theory cannot be proven by the Bible without very loose interpretations of scripture and by ignoring other important facts about God and man. You hold an orthodox view of God, Jesus and Creation. Are these views correct? You believe they are. I don’t agree. The fact that it is a majority opinion among “Christian religions” today is not proof of its validity nor that it is taught in religious seminaries.

Don, we are not basing our beliefs on a majority of opinion. We are basing our belief upon God’s word and this is why our beliefs are orthodox. Since the Scripture is the only rule and faith for our beliefs and salvation, then these views will not change over time. If we want to know God, we must turn to Him since His word is a light unto our feet (Psalm 119), in turning to Scripture, we are beginning to seek Him in wisdom.

Our views are not “theory” but are based upon historical facts. You claim that our views are based on very loose interpretation. What views are you speaking of? What doctrines fall apart because they are based on loose interpretation? Just look at the doctrine of the resurrection of Jesus Christ and there is testimony from more than 500 witnesses. The testimony we have in the gospels, and the rest of the New Testament, specifically in 1 Corinthians 15:3ff is historical evidence to the resurrection. So what loose interpretation are you speaking of?

Of the Holy Trinity we have plenty of verses to support this doctrine as well, including several that speak directly to it, like Matthew 28:18ff… baptizing in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For some reason, your leader, Mary Baker Patterson Glover Eddy cannot fathom the trinity at all. Her mind just didn’t have the capability and yet she redefines the Trinity based on her own whims. Here is her definition:

“Life, Truth, and Love constitute the triune Person called God,—that is, the triply divine Principle, Love. They represent a trinity in unity, three in one,—the same in essence, though multiform in office: God the Father-Mother; Christ the spiritual idea of sonship; divine Science or the Holy Comforter” (p. 331).

What Scripture does she base this definition upon? She takes attributes of God and reduces it to a triune formula, but doesn’t speak to the three Persons that have revealed themselves to us. That is like reducing a description of a person to their hair, skin color and the size of their mouth. She does a great injustice to the three Persons who have revealed themselves to us. Again, based upon what? It seems if anyone is playing loose with Scripture, it is MBE.

As for calling the Father, Father-Mother this is another concoction of your leader. Jesus said to call Him “Father” and this is how He addressed the First Person of the Trinity. Since Jesus Christ is the Second Person of the Trinity, the creator of heavens and earth (Colossians 1:15ff, John 1) and in perfect will with the Father, what right does she have to add “mother” to the Father’s name? To add to His name where the Scripture has not added is contrary to the will of both the Father and the Son. Again… MBE’s writings are out of accord with Scripture. I guess this is why those of you in CS look to loose interpretations and theories in science to back up your claims.

Don, why do you call yourself a Christian Scientist at all, if you do not believe God’s word? Why not just say, a religious scientist… or a follower of Mary Baker Patterson Glover Eddy, since this is truly what you are. Again, you views are bases on half-truths, with makes your system of belief based upon lies.

Before Columbus sailed, the vast majority of humanity believed the world was round. That didn’t make it so, and Galileo was imprisoned for the rest of his life for stating that the sun revolved around the earth. In fact, he was threatened by death if he didn’t recant. The Roman Catholic church pardoned him only a few decades ago and by this pardon admitted it had been wrong. I see this in the future for true Christianity.

Because some people mistakenly believed that the world was flat, and not round, disproves Christianity? (This is not true. No educated person in the Middle Ages believed this. Check out here and here for a better explanation. Again, you are working from hearsay and ignorance).  BTW, pointing to the Roman Catholic church falls short. I’m a Protestant for a reason Don. We do believe that the RC church errs on a lot of things, this is why there was a separation. But that is a different argument. The point is that you are still not pointing to Scripture for our beliefs. Our beliefs need to be rooted in God’s word, not the scientific world around us. Does the Bible speak to the shape of the earth? Actually, it does, see the article here.

Your theology comes from the 4th century AD and the Nicean Council in 325 AD as adopted and perpetuated by the Roman Catholic Church. For centuries, anyone not adhering to it or preaching something different was declared a “heretic” and often punished with death.

Don, our theology is rooted in Scripture. Did the Nicene Council help us understand what the Bible was saying? Absolutely. Again, the Council was only declaring what is true about God, and about the Person of Christ. If anything that a man-made council declares does not square with Scripture, we throw it out. This is why the writing of MBE are rejected outright. Again, what did she write: If any of her writings don’t agree with Scripture, then toss them out. We are doing just that.

Previous written works (many of the books which could have been included in the New Testament) were marginalized or destroyed.

Again, congratulations on your graduation from the DaVinci Code School of Theology. No, the books that were not included in the Bible were not included because they are not divinely inspired. The extra biblical works like the Gospel of Thomas were rejected because they were not written by the Apostles. and came much latter than the First Century. You love to grab onto every heresy of the faith for your support. Doesn’t that cause you just a tad bit of caution? Doesn’t that bother you that you are jumping on board with every heretic to come along?

The documents found at Nag Hammadi, Egypt escaped this fate and were discovered in 1945 and translated by 1970. They presented an entirely different view of true, primitive Christianity than does the dominant orthodoxy of today. Somebody hid these documents so they wouldn’t be destroyed (most probably by the orthodoxy of the day) and they lay in clay jars until discovered by Bedoin Camel herders nearly 1500 years later.

Yes, we know of the Nag Hammadi writings. Here is what Wikipedia says concerning them:

Nag Hammadi is best known for being the site where local farmers found a sealed earthenware jar containing thirteen leather-bound papyruscodices, together with pages torn from another book, in December 1945. The mother of the farmers burned one of the books and parts of a second (including its cover). Thus twelve of these books (one missing its cover) and the loose pages survive.[1] The writings in these codices, dating back to the 2nd century AD,[2] comprised 52 mostly Gnostic tractates (treatises), believed to be a library hidden by monks from the nearby monastery of St Pachomius when the possession of such banned writings, denounced as heresy, was made an offence.

Notice who was hiding them? Gnostics. The Apostle Paul was writing against incipient gnosticism when he wrote Colossians and so was John in his letters. This was one of the reasons these writings were rejected. The Gnostics believed that Jesus was merely a spirit and did not come in the physical flesh. Yet He did. That is why it is so stressed in the New Testament with the gospels and His birth, with John pointing out things like the fact that He hungered and was tired and was thirsty and suffered on the cross. He was physically here in a body. John will restate this reality in 1 John 1:1 That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, concerning the Word of life. Again in John 1:14, The Word became flesh. This is not some higher idea being expressed here as MBE does. John is declaring the Christ took on the human body in order to redeem the human body. The only way that true redemption from sin can come about is by a human taking our place on the cross. He had to be human in order to represent us, as the Second Adam.

Mrs. Eddy knew nothing of the Nag Hammadi discovery, so she could not have utilized any of these writings in her discovery of Christian Science. They were discovered nearly 40 years after her death. Yet, it confirms much of what she wrote about and taught.

I refuse to accept her “discovery.” She plagiarized the writing of Phineas Quimby as historians tell us. And simply because she is in agreement with the heretics of the 2nd Century, does not confirm her discovery as true. The Nag Hammadi writings needed to be rejected for they came in the 2nd Century by those who rejected that Christ came in the flesh and dwelt among us. See paragraph above.

As for her ignorance of Nag Hammadi, she was ignorant of quite a bit. I know you guys love to display her great genius, but it truly is lacking.

In the early years of Christianity–during Jesus presence in this world and on into the 2nd century AD, healing (and even raising the dead) was a natural, normal part of the Christian practice.

Again, can you give us some proof of this? What writings are you referring to? What about the book of Acts, healings did take place there, but even Paul could not have the thorn removed from his flesh.

As for healings today, I would say that there are still healings today. God is still moving in the lives of His children to heal them, but He doesn’t always heal us. That is not the goal of Christ’s coming. Again, this is the big misunderstanding of CS. You think that the entire point of His ministry was to teach us how to heal, but it is not. His healings merely pointed to the reality that He was the Messiah, the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world.. that is, those who believe in Him for salvation. This is not what MBE taught, nor does CS teach this truth.

Read some of the early christian books (apocrypha). There are over 150 that are known today. Only 27 of them made it into the current Bible (which I use, by the way). They were chosen by the orthodox fathers to comprise part of the cannon with which we are familiar today. They were selected to favor the orthodox view. Those that didn’t were omitted from the cannon–those that didn’t conform to orthodox theology or couldn’t be edited to reflect that thought.

Another massive assumption on your part. The 27 books that are Scripture were not edited to become orthodox. They were already orthodox and this is why they were included into the Bible. The other books were not orthodox and not worthy of being included as God’s word.

OK, I’m repeating myself. Don, you would do yourself well to actually read the Bible and start basing your beliefs on what is says, not what some heretics from the 2nd Century say, not on something some scientists in our day that sort of support your view say, not on what MBE says.

I will finish going over your discourse later. But there are a lot of assumptions on your part and that is what I remember from CS. They feed on assumptions and hearsay, especially if if makes their belief system seem more plausible. To be correct, our assumptions and beliefs must be rooted in God’s Word, the 66 books of the Bible.

Christian Science: Deadly In More Ways than One

I was pleased to see that the Christian Post had an excellent piece exposing the deadly nature of Christian Science. I have written on this false-religion numerous times because I was raised a Christian Scientist and my mother died as a Christian Scientist. I know the deadly nature of the religion, both physically and spiritually.

It is always good to see other believers taking the time to expose these cults for what they are, false religions with no real hope of salvation. Like most cults, Christian Science is just as bad as the rest for it seeks to teach its followers that salvation, redemption, etc., are all based on our own actions. For the Christian Scientist, it really is about thought control. If we just correct our thinking, then sin, death and all the evils of the world will go away. The emphasis is on the followers ability to do this in order to see desirable results.

As one can surmise, the reality of the results are deadly, given the fact that many have died trying to “correct” their thinking so that diseases would go away. That is the point of the Post’s article.

A deadly religion is passing off as “Christian” and has been for more than a century. Not just spiritual death, but literal death as well; hundreds of people have died as a result of disease untreated because a Christian Scientist will tell you, sickness is only an illusion.

Christian Science is one of the few religions in the world that contains a core teaching that is often deadly when put into practice,” James Beverley writes in The Nelson’s Illustrated Guide To Religions.

“Quiet carnage is a part of the Christian Scienceculture,” stated Linda Kramer, a former member who is now a born-again believer, in the article, “Christian Science: Attempting a Comeback.”

That culture is in fact, a cult, apologists say, and different from Christianity in every way.

“Christian Science deserves the title of cult since it departs from plain Bible teaching on major doctrines and the movement also adopts a potentially deadly view of how to deal with sickness,” Beverley, professor of Christian Thought and Ethics at Tyndale University, said in an email to The Christian Post.

I’ve rejoiced that this religion has fallen on hard times here of late. In fact, very few people that I grew up with that were raised as Christian Scientist, are still in the cult. I believe this is due to the hypocrisy built into the religion and it’s failure to deal with sin in a meaningful way. For instance, the religion teaches that the existence of sin ceases to exist as long as the thoughts of sin exist.

If this is true, then why did our parents ever have to correct us growing up? How could they ever say anything we did was wrong? It was just their wrong thinking of sin.

Plus, we grew up in households where no miracles every truly occurred. Sicknesses never seemed to vanish with correct thinking. We still wore glasses, still got the chicken pox, still caught colds, still got headaches. That correct thinking never seemed to get us any where. Whereas going to a doctor, we discovered that there were actually medicines to deal all those things, including headaches.

This is one of the reasons Christian Science is a dying religion, as the article points out:

Death and sickness are probably the cause of the significant drop in numbers recently, Miller said, though the religion attracted many big thinkers and celebrities at its peak in the early 1900s.

“It’s a dying religion,” he said “They’re dying out because they’re dying off. They don’t realize that at this point.”

“With modern medicine, it’s not attracting many.”

Kramer agreed. “It’s a dying religion, definitely. Right now we’re seeing a drop because a whole generation of baby boomers who were raised in Christian Science are now leaving the church.”

That’s why it’s so important to still try to reach these people, both Miller and Kramer stressed.

I’m grateful for this. I don’t think the religion ever will die off completely. Too many looney women involved in it (this religion is truly dominated by women.) But it is good to see that the numbers are way down.

Here are other posts on the topic:

Ex-Christian Scientist: Don’t Let the Cults Redefine the Terms

Christian Scientist Have Great Testimonies, But…

Dreaded Animal Magnetism…

Kudos to Kathy Ireland

I don’t really keep up with what is going on in Hollywood, so it is a surprise to see one star being openly pro-life. Kathy Ireland was awarded this week by “the YWCA Greater Los Angeles with the 2011 Phenomenal Woman of the Year Award at the “Saluting Women Who Are Instruments of Change” ceremony.” She also happens to be extremely pro-life and said that Planned Parenthood should not receive government funding. This shows she has true courage to stand up for her beliefs, especially when the Hollywood crowd is so opposed to those beliefs.

The other interesting aspect of her position is that she came to the pro-life point of view based solely on the science of the issue.

“I’ve never set out to win a popularity contest. I came from [being previously pro-choice], but when I was confronted with the science – and I spoke to top scientists throughout our country asking, ‘Would you please just show me some shred of evidence that the unborn is not a human being?’ and no one has been able to show me any, and I will continue to fight for those human rights until someone can show me otherwise,” she continued. “So a lot of people get mad at me, but that’s okay. I listen to criticism because sometimes there are things to learn, even if it’s wrapped in a nasty package.”

Many on the left love to say that we don’t come to our positions because of true thought and research, yet here is a starlet doing just that. Kudos to Kathy Ireland for standing up for her beliefs in the face of a hostile Hollywood crowd.

The Marks of a Cult

Many of you who come here to my site often, know that I have strong feelings about the cults in America. That is because, while they may be represented by nice and well meaning men and women, their message is clearly destructive to those who follow those messages. What they do is take the gospel and distort it by adding different meaning to the language of orthodox Christianity.

The following is the introduction to a series put out by the Apologetics Group, which is committed to helping us see error where it rears its ugly head, be it from Mormonism, Christian Science, or fruit cakes like L. Ron Hubbard. They do say that those in a cult have the rights and freedom to worship God as they please. However, to try and use the language or orthodox Christianity, making it mean something different than the true meaning, is dubious at best. The cultist really need to be honest about who they are and are not.

For instance, Mary Baker Eddy and Christian Scientist will tell you that they believe in the Trinity when asked. But to them, the Trinity represents the ideas of truth, love and hope, or something along those lines. This is out of accord with the true orthodox position on the person of God, who has revealed Himself as Father, Son and Holy Ghost. He is three distinct persons, One in essence. To call Him anything less than what He has revealed Himself to be is dishonest and idolatrous. We must worship the God who is, not the gods of our own imaginations. After all, God is not concerned about our weak sensibilities, but about His glory. When we come to Him and accept Him for who He has revealed Himself to be, then He is glorified. When we do not, then we insult Him.

Watch a bit of the video and learn more at their site:

The Purpose of Christ: To Preach, To Save, Not to Heal

In my recent discussions on Christian Science, I’ve had some interesting comments. To get a CS saying anything at all is a good thing since they are taught not to debate, argue or discuss their beliefs if there are any really tough questions… like, “how can you say matter doesn’t exist? If I hit you in the face, I’m sure your non-existent face would feel the full brunt of my non-existent fist.” Never mind facts.

And the following writer, Hank, ignored some facts about the discussion when he made the following comments:

I find it interesting that when people are so engrained in thought (some call it being brainwashed) that they fail to see the big picture – and whats more, unsubstantially(sic) reject ideas that challenge their own. They fear what they don’t understand.

Hank’s problem is that he didn’t read all the posts that I’ve written concerning Christian Science. If he had, he would have known that I was raised as a third-generation Christian Scientist. My father was a Christian Scientist (he isn’t any longer, he is now a true believer), and his father was a Christian Scientist. I joined the Mother Church when I turned 21 and I was a faithful member for at least a year after that. Then the illogical aspects of the religion begin to bother me. So to accuse me of not understanding is a ridiculous charge. I understand the religion and the fact that the founder of CS, Mary Baker Eddy, plagarized  her “truth” from a man named P. Phenias Quimby, who was literally a snake-oil salesman. This is not taught to us growing up. The leaders of CS don’t want their members to realize their beloved leader was a quack. Tell me, who is brainwashed in this scenario? The one who questions Christian Science and their beliefs, or the one who is a devoted follower of MBE?

Hank goes on:

How did Jesus heal, really? Ask yourselves that. I would challenge each of you to actually read, and try to understand what Christian Science is, and the Bible for that matter. Becuase I don’t think you do.

This is one of those charges made against those who don’t know the faith. I’m sure it works well among those not raised in the faith. He was addressing both me and my brother, both raised in the faith. He is also asking about the healings of Christ. He is making the mistake of placing too much emphasis on Christ’s healing and not enough emphasis on the statements made by Christ on why He came to earth. Jesus is very clear about His purpose and it is not to teach us how to heal ourselves, as those in Christian Science would have you believe. Listen to Christ’s own words on the subject:

Mark 1:38 “Let us go into the next towns, that I may preach there also, because for this purpose I have come forth.”

Yes… He came to preach. Over and over again Jesus preached to and taught the people. This is one of His primary purposes. He was preaching about the Kingdom of God (Luke 4:43), about repentance, about the need to trust in and believe Him for salvation. He would say such statements that if we wanted to be a part of Him, then we must drink His blood and eat His flesh (John 6.) He was alluding to the union we have with Christ, not His literal blood and body, and this would be played out in the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper. He would teach that the Law, when fully understood, condemns all mankind, and all need to trust in Him for salvation. He would teach and preach on both heaven AND hell. In fact, we have more information about hell that came directly from Jesus than any other person in the Bible. After all, He was the one that created hell for the purpose of dealing with Satan, a being that He created, and Satan’s minions (also beings that He created, See Matthew 25:41). He would also tell us that in heaven, we are not like we are here on earth. There is no marriage in heaven. By doing so, He is saying that this is the way we are created, with material bodies that are fallen and need to be redeemed by Him.

He redeems us by calling us to repentance for our sins.

Mark 2:17 “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners, to repentance.”

Now the CSer might say He is addressing the physically ill, so this points to a purpose of healing. The problem is that central to their theology is that they see the material world as evil and non-existent. They believe that since God is Spirit and that God is all in all, then the only true existence is that which is spiritual. But God didn’t make a spiritual world, but a material world. He even went so far as to call all things that He made good. So to call matter evil is to dispute what God has said about His creation.

Are we not spiritual as well? Originally, yes. There was a spiritual aspect to us but when sin entered into the world, all mankind died with Adam spiritually speaking and physically as well. Physical death represents the spiritual death that Adam introduced into the world via his sin against God. Therefore, we are all born physically alive, but spiritually dead. Ephesians 2:1ff. shows us that we are spiritually dead until God makes us spiritually alive. Jesus called this being “born again.” This new birth must come from God, the Holy Spirit working in our lives, in conjunction with the preached word of God. This is why Jesus preached so much.

He also came so seek and save that which was lost. This is what He preached. Luke 19:10 for the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost.” Again, the point is that Jesus states His purpose over and over again, and never once does He point that His purpose is to teach us how to heal ourselves, or to save ourselves, or to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps. He is telling us that we are incapable of doing all these things, and that we need to depend upon Him for everything. John 15:4 Abide in Me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, unless it abides in the vine, neither can you, unless you abide in Me.

In other words, we cannot do anything apart from Him. If we bear any fruit worthy of repentance, it is because we are in Him and the Holy Spirit is in us helping us, leading us, guiding us in bearing that fruit. None of this comes about without saving faith in Him. (Realize that CSers do not believe that Jesus is the Christ, but that He represented the Christ. Right there, they differ on who Christ is. See this link concerning His deity.)

The point is that CSers believe that Jesus came merely to teach us to heal. This is what MBE taught for she was always sick and healing was a major concern for her. She says that she healed herself when “a spirit” came upon her and taught her the truth of CS. Her testimony is that she was near death because of a fall onto the ice. She was walking, fell on the ice and was near death. They summoned a doctor and the doctor said there was nothing he could do for her (there was nothing wrong. The same doctor would say that when he examined her, she wasn’t anywhere near death). Then in the middle of the night, the spirit came, taught her all about CS and she was “miraculously healed.”

From this healing comes the well spring of their theology and religion. The problem is that healings they always boast of are never ones that are verifiable like the ones that Christ did. In other words, they are never healings that are obvious to the human eye, as were the ones that Christ did. Every miracle that Jesus performed was such that it was obvious that a miracle had taken place, blind people seeing, the lame for decades walking, the dead rising, etc. For the typical CSer, the testimony of healing is always questionable because they are the ones testifying to the sickness and the healing. It’s not something that we can see, as in the lady in the wheel chair who was paralyzed for 35 years, suddenly got up and walked.

In fact, you can find just as many cases where the sick in CS ended up dying as they were in healing. This has always been one of my problems with CS. If it is true, then why don’t they walk through a hospital or two, heal everyone inside and show us the validity of their claims. If their belief system is true, then it should be true at all times and for everyone. Not just those inside CS. If CS is true then why don’t they go into the Children’s hospitals and close them down because of their ability to heal? They don’t do so because they cannot. The CSer is just as powerless as we are when it comes to healing ourselves by positive thinking. That stinking matter, that is sinful and fallen, will not cooperate with our positive thoughts.

In fact, a closer look at true Christianity will show that often times, sickness is used by God to bring us into a closer relationship and dependence upon Him. The Father lovingly uses our sufferings for our benefit and His glory. This is the truth of our sanctification. We can expect to suffer on this side of glory because our Lord suffered as well. Jesus did come to alleviate suffering, but not on this side of glory. Only those who believe in Him for salvation will benefit in His glory and redemption.

Since Christian Scientist do not believe in Jesus Christ of the Bible, then they are not partakers of this blessing. This is the problem with cults, they use the same terminology that we do, but to them it means something different. This being the case, they do not worship the true and living God of the Bible, but a false god of MBE’s own making. We can only pray that God opens their eyes to the truth as He did for me, my brothers and my father.

Christian Scientists Have Great Testimonies, But Those Testimonies are Still Based on Lies

When I posted “That Dreaded Animal Magnetism” earlier in the month, I knew the likelihood of a real Christian Scientist showing up would be high. I didn’t have to wait long. The writer was making a case for CS being true, but only based that claim on his experience. The problem is that his experience is not based on the whole of Scripture, but selected passages used by Mary Baker Eddy to bolster her argument. Using such hermeneutical tactics can lead one to get the Bible to say just about anything we want.  It is bad theology and based upon a lie. Truth is not truth if it is based partly on a lie.

For instance, the visitor writes:

For me, prayer as taught in Christian Science is effective, when I open my heart. And I’m sure this is an action that must occur between the individual and God. It’s an admission to oneself that God’s Christ comes to us right where we are.

We already have a departure from true Christianity. Did you see it? Probably not because what he wrote seems to be close to what many evangelicals tend to say from time to time. The key is that “God’s Christ” and the Christ of the Bible are two different Christ’s. To a Christian Scientist, Christ means the higher idea, the perfect expression of love and thought. Christ is not a man, namely Jesus, but Jesus was merely a man living out this higher idea and being an example to us. Hopefully the red flags are going off for you because you are seeing that this is not the Christ of the Bible, but Mary Baker Eddy’s imagination.

(Never mind that the writer also ignores the basic Biblical tenant of total depravity, meaning that we are dead in our trespasses and sins UNTIL God sends His Spirit, in conjunction with His word, to convert our hearts from being dead to alive.)

It doesn’t matter what Jesus we follow, if that Jesus is not the one in Scripture, he is false. No one has the right to make God into our own image therefore we must be sure that the One we believe in is of Scripture and not our imagination. Jesus is the Christ, who came to die on the cross and deal with our sins. To separate Jesus from the Christ is to have another Christ all together. CSers don’t believe in sin at all, and believe that His death was unnecessary for atonement because, since God is love, He really wasn’t mad at us in the first place. All that wrath stuff was just incorrect thinking. But God is Holy and must deal with sin, because sin is a transgression against Him and His person. Our sin is an affront to God. We may think lightly of it, but we have offended the holy and eternal God of Creation and that must be dealt with. His holiness demands retribution.

That retribution can either come by us, meaning we rightfully spend eternity in hell paying off our debt of sin to the Father (which is for eternity since He is eternal), or we can believe in the God-Man, Jesus Christ, to deal with our sin on the cross. The CS apologists continued:

I suppose many of the healings I have had through my study of Christian Science could have been treated effectively through medical science. Yet my first response is to find resolution through prayer alone. Those I have helped through prayer and I have experienced complete healings of flu and cold symptoms, sprained ankles, dislocated joints, migraine headaches, problems from severe accidents and many other challenges.

All this sounds great, but these arguments could have been made by a tribal Shaman praying to a mountain or tree God. Nothing in this claim points to anything validating his faith. They only show that he persevered and got well. The human body can take care of all of these ailments and found “complete healings.” I guess that last phrase means that the migraine headache went away. Also please note, none of the healings were of the nature of those that Christ performed. When Jesus healed, it was obvious the person was really truly ill. He was healing migraine headaches, but people covered with leprosy. The diseases and illnesses were so severe that there was no doubt the person in question was ill. Like many of the faith healers in Christianity, all these ailments could have been faked.

Also, these events that the writer claimed are true are based on his experience. They do not prove or disprove the claims of Christian Science. We also know that Satan can perform miracles as well, so how do we know that the man’s healings were not the work of Satan. We do not. By they way, before you accuse me of attributing these healings to Beelzebub, and thereby committing the ultimate sin, notice that the writer said he did these things. He is not attributing these healings to the Holy Spirit or even Jesus Christ, but his ability to think and pray correctly.

He continues:

Yes, there have been times when I felt I needed to turn to medical science for help and there is no Christian Science church hierarchy that dictates I may never turn to medical science. But these experiences haven’t stopped me from turning to prayer again the next time I am challenged. With each healing I may attribute to prayer, I grow in character and feel closer to God’s love.

Again, his entire statement is based on what he does, and there is no glorifying God in the least. True believers know that if we bear fruit, it is because the Holy Spirit is working in us, so that God gets all the glory. Christian Science doesn’t seek to glorify God, but man. Another little indication that it is false.

The logo on the cover of the Christian Science textbook, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures, by Mary Baker Eddy, has these four statements made by Jesus (from Matthew 10), “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out demons.” To me, casting out demons means that in my prayers, I can’t just affirm God’s goodness and His perfect protection despite what the world might throw at me. I must also cast out the demonic thought that it might be God’s will that I suffer or die or that God made the problem I’m suffering from. This negative self-talk is what Mrs. Eddy described as animal magnetism.

Here we do have an appeal to the logo for Christian Science. Hardly convincing evidence to the truth and validity to his claim. The real kicker is that “negative self-talk” that he refers to. True believer knows that we will suffer on this side of glory. It is what it means when the Father rebukes us, or prunes us (John 15:1-5, Hebrews 12:3-11). God disciplines us, allows us to suffer and uses those sufferings for our spiritual growth. They are not given to us so we can pull ourselves up by our spiritual bootstraps and correct our thinking. But used to chasten us because He truly loves us. If Jesus Christ (one and the same) suffered on the cross, can we, as His followers and children, expect anything less? The New Testament doesn’t seem to indicate this at all.

Christian Science is not true Christianity, just another lie and form of rehashed Gnosticism. It doesn’t matter that our visitor is sincere in his beliefs, he is sincerely wrong.

Neil also wrote a post about sincerity of beliefs doesn’t mean those beliefs are right. As he points out, you can be sincerely wrong. He wrote:

In my airplane experience I sincerely believed that the shaving cream was toothpaste, but I was sincerely wrong.  No amount of sincerity was going to change the composition of what was in the tube.  Religious views are the same. No amount of sincerity will result in your beliefs creating the traits of the one true God.  Therefore, you should follow the facts where they lead and make every effort to know the truth about God.

The pottery does not get to create the potter.  In fact, the potter hates it when the pottery makes up fake potters.

His point is that no matter what beliefs we have, if those beliefs are not based in objective truths, they are wrong. Christian Science is not based in objective truth. Yes, they do use the Bible and catapult into beliefs based on true statements of the Bible. But they are very limited in what they say is true of the Bible.

I would expect the writer to come back and dialogue concerning his beliefs. But CSers are trained not to argue. This is a wonderful tactic by the leaders of their group. They know that if they argue, one might actually convince them that their views are wrong. By telling their followers not to argue, this gives them the excuse to “take the higher road” so to speak. It fosters their pride and convinces them that they are right. Very clever. But deadly. Again, if your beliefs are based on a lie, it doesn’t matter how sincere you are or what your experiences are, if they do not line up with Scripture or even basic general revelation, they are wrong.

That Dreaded Animal Magnetism

I was dialoging with an old friend over the religion we both were are part of when we grew up. Both of us are now ex-Christian Scientist. Please don’t confuse this with the more glamorous, yet just as hell bound, Church of Scientology, dreamed up by L. Ron Hubbard and fostered by the likes of Tom Cruise and John Travolta. Christian Science cannot boast such high-profile actors. I think Sandy Duncan and the woman that played opposite Archie Bunker are about as famous as they get. This is because, as another friend and ex-Christian Scientist once said, “This is the most stupid religion on the face of the earth.”

Yes, those of us who leave this ill-fated religion, have plenty of stories to tell.

For instance, I remember when I was visiting my favorite Aunt & Uncle in Little Rock one year, that I complained of a headache. I had headaches all the time. The typical response from my mother, the most avid CSer you could find, would tell me to think good thoughts and my headache would go away. I would think good thoughts and my head aches would always remain. (As any good CSer will tell you, it was because of the dreaded animal magnetism, in which someone was thinking bad thought around me, keeping me from healing myself. As far as I could tell, I was the someone because my thoughts went like this, “think good thoughts, think good thoughts, damn headache, won’t go away! Think good thoughts.”) Needless to say, my headaches would depart in their own good time.

But not the time I was in Little Rock. I complained and my Aunt & Uncle offered me… aspirin. I couldn’t believe that. They were offering me the evil aspirin to take for my headache that wouldn’t go away. “Well, isn’t that sinful?” I asked this, never seeing the contradiction in beliefs. CSers believe that sin only exists as long as the belief of sin exists. O how I could have exploited that little lie had I not been so naive. “But Mom, you only think I hit John. Quit thinking that and the thought of me pounding his head will go away!”

Back to the aspirin. My Aunt quickly piped up, “no aspirin is not a sin.” Her argument was so convincing, I caved immediately. I took the two white pills with some water as my head continued to hurt. Within 20 minutes, my headache was gone! I was so excited, those 2 little pills actually got rid of my headache. It was a miracle… or at least a miracle cure! Why hadn’t anyone in my religion discovered this before? It sure would have got rid of trying to think good thoughts.

DISCLAIMER: If any Christian Scientists are reading this, just remember, that this post doesn’t actually exist. I don’t want to be accused of being your evil animal magnetism!

BTW, I was sent this link by a friend that will help you understand Christian Science better than I can explain it. Be careful though, it has a few explicatives that I do not approve of and a portrayal of God that is inappropriate. But the video is worth watching because it nails their beliefs and practices well enough that you will begin to understand.