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The first article is
called, "David Jeremiah Proposes
‘Major Paradigm Shift’ for His Church"
that was distributed by the Lighthouse
Trails Research Project. They reported
that Bible teacher David Jeremiah was
endorsing a book by Erwin McManus
called The Barbarian Way.
They identify the theme of the book as
a "new missiology…" in which "Rick
Warren and others proclaim, ‘God
doesn't care what religion you are,
just add Jesus to what you already
have.’ Thus you can be a Buddhist with
Jesus, a Hindu with Jesus - that's OK.
McManus clarifies this when he states:
‘The greatest enemy to the movement of
Jesus Christ is Christianity.’ He
elaborates more: ‘They [Barbarians -
who he tries to convince readers they
should be] see Christianity as a world
religion, in many ways no different
from any other religious system.
Whether Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam, or
Christianity, they're not about
religion; they're about advancing the
revolution Jesus started two thousand
years ago’ (p.6)."
The article concludes, "The book reads
more like a primer to prepare for an
anarchist war than instruction and
exhortation on how to live the
Christian life according to the Bible.
He says: ‘The way of Jesus is far too
savage for their sensibilities (those
who are 'civilized')... Why a reckless
call to awaken the barbarian faith
within us at the risk of endangering
this great civilization we have come
to know as Christianity? ... It is
time to hear the barbarian call, to
form a barbarian tribe, and to unleash
the barbarian revolt. Let the invasion
begin."
The other article with the same call to
evangelize people of other religions to
simply add Jesus to the religion in which
they were raised came from the pen of Tim
Timmons. The article called "While 'the last
Christian generation' is upon us, the first
Jesus generation has returned" was published
on the Christian ASSIST News Service on
September 18, 2006. Timmons talked about
some Buddhists who believe in Jesus even
though they are still practicing Buddhists.
It reads in part:
"Just as the early disciples of Jesus spent
several years learning from the Master,
Himself, these young men are doing the same.
They are truly followers of Jesus. This is
the most unique discipleship dynamic seen in
modern times. Eight young Buddhists are
being mentored in the teachings and
principles of Jesus. After a minimum of 5
years in this process, the eight men have
been named Mentors. These men, in turn,
walking two-by-two are mentoring 2-3 "mentees"
in the same way.
"In fact, the Tibetan
government and the Dalai Lama have honored
these four pairs of disciples. They have
been awarded the position of ambassadors.
They were named Ambassadors to the Poor in
the Spirit of Jesus of Nazareth.
"Buddhist, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim or
Christian must be seen as cultural,
religious backgrounds. Not one of these
cultural backgrounds must be forsaken in
order to be a follower of Jesus. Jesus
trumps it all! He is all-inclusive and isn’t
owned by Christianity. I love what Brian
McLaren wrote in A Generous Orthodoxy, ‘I
must add, though, that I don't believe
making disciples must equal making adherents
to the Christian religion. It may be
advisable in many (not all?) circumstances
to help people become followers of Jesus and
remain within their Buddhist, Hindu, or
Jewish contexts. This will be hard, you say,
and I agree. But frankly, it's not at all
easy to be a follower of Jesus in many
'Christian' religious contexts, either.’"
There were several
reaction to Timmons on the apologetics blog
called AR-Talk. Here is how several
defenders of the faith responded.
My own pastor Tim Brown noted:"…A Japanese
can remain a Japanese and a Tibetan a Tibetan and be a
Christian, but can a Buddhist remain a Buddhist and be a
Christian? Can an atheist be a theist at one and the same
time? Can one hold to reincarnation and resurrection at the
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same time? Can one
believe in karma and Christ at the same
time? Can one hold to the finality of
Mohammed and Christ at the same time? Can
one believe that Jesus is the Son of God
and not the Son of God w/o being
hopelessly confused? Can A be non-A? You
get my drift. Some basic logic categories
seem to be fused together."Brooks Alexander, long associated with SCP
(Spiritual Counterfeits Project) in
Berkeley, responded: "That's exactly what
it is: "Syncretism" has been the knock on
the "emergent" crowd from the beginning,
and here it is on full and flagrant
display. At least Timmons doesn't try to
hide his enthusiasm for dumping 2000 years
worth of gospel preaching about sin,
repentance, the cross, etc -- you know,
all that stuff that makes people
uncomfortable. What he's apparently left
with is the same load of "great teacher"
garbage that C. S. Lewis skewered so
deftly (and so fatally) in Mere
Christianity. Under it's influence,
Christianity becomes just one more
politically correct religion; no wonder
the Dalai Lama (the prince of syncretism)
likes it. I'm still trying to figure out
whether these people are as arrogant as
they come across, or just soft-headed.
Worst case scenario: a combination of the
two."
Jonna, of Living Lamb Ministries, said, "I
am guessing that they are not willing to
drop anti-Christian practices of their
culture. Otherwise, there would be no
story here. They would simply be
Christians from Tibet. A Native American
must leave shamanism. An African must
leave voodoo. A European must leave
druidism. A Tibetan must leave mysticism.
All cultures have associated sorcery
practices. A person must leave these
practices to follow Christ. They may not
drag their baggage or their baggage will
overtake them. They cannot serve two
masters. The 'Mentors' are not qualified
to lead others, as they are ever learning,
but unable to come to a knowledge of the
truth. When they meet the Truth, they will
come out from among them."
Marcia Montenegro, an expert in new age
spirituality wrote, "Either one is a
Buddhist or one is a Christian. If you are
a Buddhist Christian, you not really saved
as the 2 are entirely incompatible. The
Buddhist cultural background is part of
Buddhist belief; I don't see how the 2 can
be separated. How can one be a Christian
and still be called Buddhist? Isn't this
syncretism? Are these Buddhists Tibetan
Buddhists (the article implies this)? Then
they can be Tibetan Christians, but not
Buddhist Christians. I am wondering what
in their Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim cultural
background are they not leaving?"
And author James Sundquist hit the nail on
the head with: "My only comment would be
that Tim Timmon's sounds exactly like
Mother Teresa, whom Rick Warren quotes and
touts!"
There is nothing new under the sun. Early
Christianity apostatized when converts to
Christianity from pagan religions merged
Christianity to paganism which gave birth
to the Roman Catholic Church and the Holy
Roman Empire. But it was not so in the
early church. When those from other
religions came to Christ, they forsook all
for Him.
Acts 19:18-20 "And many who had believed
came confessing and telling their deeds.
Also, many of those who had practiced
magic brought their books together and
burned them in the sight of all. And they
counted up the value of them, and it
totaled fifty thousand pieces of silver.
So the word of the Lord grew mightily and
prevailed."
This trend will no doubt catch on as the
prophesied great apostasy grows like a
snowball cascading down a snowy slope,
growing and growing until the avalanche
comes crashing down. There is no stopping
it, but at least we can rescue some from
being overtaken in its path.
Reprinted by permission.
Visit
http://www.apostasyalert.org for many
more articles by Jackie Alnor.
For more
articles related to Mr. Tim Timmons and
his type of teachings, we suggest these
links:
http://www.crossroad.to/Quotes/Church/post-modern/emergent/timmons.htm
http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/08/shack.htm
Click here to
read our Past Issues for
amazing articles.http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/08/shack.htm
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