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burn in hell

Southern Baptists Passes Doctrine That Hell is ‘Eternal Conscious Punishment’, Christian News.

Hmmm. Like I said in my last podcast, some folks are more invested in hell than in Jesus.

Here’s the actual resolution.

ON THE REALITY OF HELL
June 2011

WHEREAS, Rob Bell, in his 2011 book, Love Wins, has called into question the church’s historical teaching on the doctrine of eternal punishment of the unregenerate; and

WHEREAS, The church has addressed this issue throughout her history, yet orthodox Christians have affirmed consistently and resoundingly the reality of a literal Hell; and

WHEREAS, The Bible clearly teaches that God will judge the lost at the end of the age (Matthew 25:41-46; 2 Peter 2:9; Revelation 20:11-15); and

WHEREAS, God must judge the unregenerate because He is a holy God whose judgments are altogether righteous (Psalm 96:10; Romans 2:1-5; Revelation 15:3); and

WHEREAS, The Scriptures affirm that this judgment of the unconverted is a judgment unto conscious, eternal suffering apart from the steadfast love and grace of God (Matthew 7:23; 25:46; Luke 16:22-25; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-10); and

WHEREAS, The Bible precludes the possibility of any opportunity for salvation after death (Hebrews 9:27), urging sinners instead to embrace the glorious gospel today (2 Corinthians 6:2; Hebrews 2:3; 3:13); and

WHEREAS, Jesus Christ and the apostles, out of their love for lost people, affirmed the reality of Hell in their own preaching to urge sinners to receive the grace of God, to repent of their sins, and to believe the gospel, and thereby to enter into abundance of eternal life (Matthew 10:28; John 10:10; Acts 17:30-31); and

WHEREAS, The prospect of fellow human beings, created in the image of God, spending eternity in Hell grieves us deeply; and

WHEREAS, The Scriptures exhort the church to hold fast to and proclaim the “faith once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3) and to “guard the good deposit” of truth the Lord has entrusted to us in His Word (1 Timothy 6:20; 2 Timothy 1:14), including difficult truths; and

WHEREAS, The Baptist Faith & Message affirms the biblical teaching that “Christ will judge all men in righteousness. The unrighteous will be consigned to Hell, the place of everlasting punishment” (Article X. Last Things); now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the messengers to the Southern Baptist Convention, meeting in Phoenix, Arizona, June 14-15, 2011, do hereby affirm our belief in the biblical teaching on eternal, conscious punishment of the unregenerate in Hell; and be it finally

RESOLVED, That out of our love for Christ and His glory, and our love for lost people and our deep desire that they not suffer eternally in Hell, we implore Southern Baptists to proclaim faithfully the depth and gravity of sin against a holy God, the reality of Hell, and the salvation of sinners by God’s grace alone, through faith alone, in Jesus Christ alone, to the glory of God alone.

driscoll comment

Rachel Held Evans | Mark Driscoll is a bully. Stand up to him..

Rachael Held Evans is one of those few bloggers who I check in with weekly. Her writing and insights, in my mind, stand out in a heavily populated blogosphere.

This post regarding Mark Driscoll is right on target and well worth sharing. I think she sums up his evangelical “bad boy” behavior when she writes, “In evangelical circles, he’s like the kid from high school who makes crude jokes at every opportunity, uses the words “gay” and “queer” to describe the things he most detests, encourages his friends to subject the unpopular kids to ridicule, and belittles the guys who aren’t “macho” or “manly” enough to be in his club.”

His personal attacks on other pastors and people in the name of biblical fidelity put him in the same company of boomer preachers like John Piper and John MacArthur who do the same but dress it in more polite language. Be it Rob Bell or John Armstrong or others who don’t tow the evangelical line in his narrow understanding of doctrine. It seems that there is a stream of conservative evangelicalism that won’t police its bullies, preferring to call their actions as “prophetic” or “speaking the truth”, when in fact its neither.

The comment thread to Rachael’s blog post is over 500, Mars Hill has been flooded with calls and emails, and Pr. Driscoll has pulled the comment off his facebook page. But the conversation has gone viral and looks like it will go on for a while.

reject

You Might Be An Evangelical Reject If… | the Pangea Blog.

Its amazing how groups always try and sort out the “apostate” from the “true believers” and its so true in the church. Evangelicals, and I use that term broadly, have a long history of casting out the unfaithful, often with brutal condemnations. Here at least is someone who receives his labeling of outcast unclean with a sense of humor.

YouTube – Grover Henson Memorial Day Tribute from WJP.

I created this video just using iDVD for a sermon this past weekend. Its a great song by Bill Cosby called Grover Henson Feels Forgotten. It came out in 1970, made it up to #70 on Billboard, and then disappeared. I was six when it came out, so I don’t remember it. I came across it at a garage sale about 15 years ago on a record, as I recall. But it made sense on this weekend when the First Reading in the Lutheran lectionary was on Paul talking to the Athenians about their “unknown god.” I took the angle of talking about not only our forgotten dead but the forgotten people in our communities that we in the church overlook. So, enjoy the song.

World, I’m writing you this letter
And I’m not the kind of guy
Who likes to complain but this morning
Private Grover Henson really felt forgotten
And you couldn’t have picked a worse time
To drop that lonely morning rain

There’s mail call again this morning and
I just disappeared from the end of the line
I guess you’d say, I’ve run out of excuses
About those lost letters of mine

Did you know that last year’s income tax
Was the only mail I’ve gotten, that’s right
And they said I still owed a hundred bucks
And Grover Henson feels forgotten

(Grover Henson feels forgotten)

So, I wrote myself a letter
Mmm hmm, are you ready for me
Yes, I did, and I must have read it
To just about everyone

I signed it, your loving mother and
I addressed it to her favorite son
But God knows I’ve never known her
And I’ve never known her love

The only dad I ever had
Was my father up above
And, world, Grover Henson feels
Forgotten in this early morning rain

World, if my time should come tomorrow
Could I ask one thing of you
Would you send me one little letter, world
If it’s not too much to do

And could you have it
Read to me by a choir
I’d hear it wherever I lie

And Grover Henson
Wouldn’t feel forgotten

Well, here is one of our Lutheran scholars talking about the rapture and her book on it on MSNBC. The thing is, even though this rapture drama is over, the teaching is still out there and it will happen again. Her book and interview help put it into a better perspective the next time around.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Enough said. Enjoy your weekend. I’m just sorry I missed out on my Facebook post rapture looting party. It was canceled a little while ago.

rapture sign

Rachel Held Evans | The Great Disappointment.

Once again Rachael does a great job in looking at both the history of the rapture craziness but also a more serious perspective on us who are the vast majority of Christians. I love this line:

Like it or not, Harold Camping and his followers make us laugh because we see a small piece of our faith in theirs. They are exaggerated caricatures of ourselves.

We have similar moments of wanting to control God, elevate our own “rightness”, and get following Jesus wrong. Enjoy the post and see you in the morning.

NYT: Kids hope to attend party — if world doesn’t end – US news – The New York Times – msnbc.com.

Well, on the last day of the world as we know it, all I can say is that its no wonder people often don’t take people with any real seriousness. Nothing brings out weirdness like world and economic tensions, when people’s local communities seem to be dying, to create and bring out people like this. Its happened before – the world is ending, run for the hills, sell your stuff, and then gloat when God takes us perfect people and leaves the unworthy behind. That’s how these parents have raised their kids – you may be ours but you aren’t good enough for God to take you to heaven. Yeah, we love you but sucks to be you. I guess the best take might be that its good that the rapture is coming now. Otherwise these kids are going to be in therapy for decades over this.

Never mind that the rapture has no history in the Christian Church prior to the mid 1800s here in the US with a traveling preacher. Never mind the majority of Christians don’t accept as doctrine. Never mind that the word or the concept appears in the Bible at all. It makes for a good human interest story, makes Christians look foolish or as emotionally abusive parents. Its all about the weirdness and in the end, one group feeling superior over another.

Lets just get past 6PM tonight and then we can get over the jokes and crazies and get back to living like Jesus.

shane

Rachel Held Evans | How to follow Jesus…without being Shane Claiborne.

Once again, my friend has hit the nail on the head this morning. Sometimes we make affluence and being American as in imputed sin and that our faithfulness and authenticity is in question. We are who we are where we are and God has a purpose in that as well. Sometimes being prophetic doesn’t mean who have to become John the Baptist. Sometimes it means just being who you are in the image of Christ.

wired for god

Religious belief is human nature, huge new study claims – CNN Belief Blog – CNN.com Blogs.

This is interesting. Doesn’t say anything about the existence of God, only our desire to find and connect with God, Something higher and beyond ourselves. And who said science and God are opposed?

Blogger announces own death after battle with cancer – CNN.com.

Very weird to see this doing a mind break this afternoon.

“Here it is. I’m dead,” read the last internet post of Derek K. Miller, who died last week after more than four years of blogging about his struggle with colorectal cancer.

As a blogger myself but nothing on his scale, it does make me wonder on the impact of blogging on our living. What do you do when you see on a blog or facebook “I’m dead.” Click “Like”?

Just a little surreal but I guess it points to the old truth that neither our living or our dying is fully our own.

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