Choose This Day

I’m one of the few people who has never watched The Chosen.  Not once.  Some may assert that, therefore, I am disallowed from criticizing this wildly popular series.  To that, I will reply that scripture and logic are the basis of my condemnation of The Chosen as unfit for consumption by believers and seekers alike.

Let’s begin with the claim of the creators of the show and its many defenders.

It makes Jesus so appealing and approachable that it’s causing millions of people to seek Him, some for the first time.

Apparently, the Bible just isn’t enough.  We must be spoon-fed from the silver screen but the trouble with that is the devoted audience of The Chosen is being fed a version of Jesus that is wholly man-made.  The show’s creators admit that in the first 4 episodes, NONE of it was drawn from the Bible.  They claim it’s based on the Bible but the dialogue, characters, backstories and details are all fiction.  Once in a while, they quote scripture, but so does Satan.

Presenting the story of Jesus as fiction is a serious mistake.  If God’s word is the perfect standard, what could be the motivation for adding so much filler?  I mean apart from money and fame.  What’s a hallmark of the last days?  Deception, not just the disgusting depravity that we see all around us, but wolves inside the church, feeding off of it and drawing people after themselves.  Do they look like wolves? Or do they masquerade as angels of light?  These are not tough questions.

The American church is being trained to fall head over heels in love with the Anti-Christ.  If we look at the known qualities of that person and then check out the actor who portrays Jesus in the show, there are distinct similarities. 

  • All that dwell on the earth will worship him
  • He is outstanding (Who is like unto the beast?)
  • He is a successful warrior
  • He speaks great things
  • He appears to bring peace

Please understand, I’m talking about Jonathan Roumie, the winsome darling of the media.  I watched his interview on The View, not typically a bastion of Christian thought, and I almost fell for him!  Did you know that the first three seasons of the show captured 600,000,000 views?  Six. Hundred. Million.

Now Jonathan has a prayer app where he’ll lead you into praying the Rosary.  I’ve read on some comment threads that people now envision his face when they pray.  He’s had to make public disclaimers “I’m not the real Jesus” with a charming self-deprecating humbleness that drives his fans to even more delight.

If you’ll fall for Jonathan Roumie in all his skull and bones, grave sucking, Rosary chanting, Pope loving, Knights Templar nonsense, you’ll fall for anything.

Yet he’s just the face of the show.  It gets worse.  The producer of The Chosen, Dallas Jenkins, describes himself as an evangelical Christian.  Ok, let’s take him at his word.  Here’s a quote: “I said that many LDS folks and I love the same Jesus.  I still believe that.   It’s gotten me in a lot of trouble but I still believe that.”

The ‘same Jesus’.  Is there more than one? 

Is your Jesus a spirit that was produced in heaven?  A spirit brother of Lucifer, and his earthly birth was not by a virgin but came about through sexual intercourse with Mary by his father god who resides on a planet near a star called Kolob?  Did your Jesus work toward becoming god by taking Mary, her sister Martha and Mary Magdalene as wives, and producing children necessary for him to become a god?  And that’s how he became the god of this world, taking his place among the multitude of gods ruling over numerous other worlds?

T.A. McMahon

What do you mean “No”? Because that’s the Jesus that the executive producer, Derral Eves believes in, as do most of the other producers of the series, Ricky Ray Butler, and Jeffrey and Neil Harmon of VidAngel, which is Angel Studios.  What communion has light with darkness?

Have you not read that this show is all about ‘helping people get to know Jesus better and to recognize similarities with the “Jesus of different faiths” ‘?  That’s why the Mormon backers have no problem with pushing multiple versions of Jesus.  Any Jesus will do.

The Bible is the complete, infallible word of God, given to mankind so that we can know God and be saved.  We know that faith comes by hearing the word of God. 

Show producer Dallas Jenkins stated in an interview, “Our intentions are different from the Bible’s intentions”.  The Bible’s intentions are to uplift Christ, so what are his?  He states that the show will be, “what the audience wants or needs to see”.  This show subtly swaps Scripture for mystical Catholic doctrine and cheap humor.  The show’s writer, Tyler Thompson claims the Bible is “good literature” but not infallible.

During a discussion with the Mormon partners,  they joke about the book of Revelation and the instruction to not add to the Bible.  Dallas Jenkins told them it’s okay to ignore what John said and add to the stories in the Bible (for the series) and later stated with a grin -and please do not miss this – “the people who only want to read the bible won’t be watching this series.

Randall LaCelle

It’s clear to me that the creators of this show haven’t believed the Bible or they would cease joking about Revelation.

I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book, if any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book: And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book. ~ Revelation 22:18-19

So at the very least, Dallas Jenkins may need to reevaluate the faith delineated in the Bible and put his trust in the true Jesus—or risk going through the Tribulation and then quite possibly heading to hell. Either way, he’s hardly the guy you should be trusting to get you closer to Jesus.

In the word of God we are instructed to be about “Casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into captivity every thought, to the obedience of Christ; and having in a readiness to revenge all disobedience, when your obedience is fulfilled.” ~ 2nd Corinthians 10:5-6

Not only has the show and the cast become a ‘high thing’, but they’ve also accomplished that by mocking the truth.  In the show, when Jesus meets Nicodemus he asks him “what does your heart tell you?” and later says “Soon it’ll all be about the heart.”  The word says the heart is deceptively wicked, so maybe the writer of the script has simply seen too many Disney movies. When Nicodemus tries to worship Him, Jesus stops him by saying he doesn’t need to do that.  John the Baptist is arrogant and rude at one point saying “You appear to not be ready to get into the specifics on a lot of things.”  At another point, John is bragging about how he’s planning on marching into Herod’s palace to tell him off adding “My followers will love it.”  Does anyone remember that part in the Bible where Peter called John the Baptist ‘Creepy John’?  Yet when John proclaimed “Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world” Peter then interjects after “Behold” . . . “I am eating a bug.”  Just going for the laughs, I presume? I think what offends me the most is the portrayal of Jesus as someone who had to rehearse his ‘speeches’ and have his notes corrected by his disciples.  Jesus is portrayed as needing fashion tips from the women who were with him and most painful of all retorting to his mother when she said she was proud of him “Maybe wait to say that until after I’m done, in case I mess up in front of such a big crowd.”

This pathetic twisted mess is NOT the gospel.  It’s NOT Jesus.

I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: which is not another, but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ.  But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you let him be accursed.  As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed. ~Galatians 1:6-9

“If a man love me, he will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him and make our abode with him.  He that loveth me not keepeth not my sayings: and the word which ye hear is not mine but the Father’s which sent me.” John 14: 23-24

There’s a great deal of evidence that the writers, directors and producers of The Chosen care nothing for an accurate depiction of scripture.  They care about the show.  Period.  The story of Jesus is merely a vehicle for their ambition, pride and greed. This pretend Jesus serves them so well and they are dishing him up to a worldwide audience.

Do you know who else is a pretend Jesus?  That’s right, the Anti-Christ.  The way is being paved for his horrifying arrival and acceptance of it is being set in place by men who claim they are followers of Christ.

Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you. ~2nd Corinthians 6:17

 

 

 

Do Christians Love a Lie?

T. A. McMahon

At a conference not too long ago, I was asked to give a review of The Chosen TV Series. I did so, but before I began my critique, I informed the audience that I hadn’t watched even one frame of the series, and my guess was that that revelation would make more than a few people upset with my criticisms. The immediate response by those enamored with the series about the life of Christ was to scorn everything I said, saying, “He’s like those who criticize books, even the Bible, without having read them!” I can relate to that. I’ve had many discussions with some who tell me what the Bible says without having read it themselves, so I can see why my initial review and its approach would put some people off.

Since my first critique I have viewed a couple of the programs, parts of which I’ll address. However, I want to explain why I believe watching the series is not necessary for rejecting it. In doing so, my explanations will appeal to Scripture and reason in light of Isaiah’s words, “Come now, and let us reason together, saith the LORD” (Isaiah:1:18
).

Why isn’t it necessary to watch The Chosen in order to criticize it, and how would that be any different than critiquing a novel without having read it? First of all, a novel is defined generally as “a fictitious prose narrative of book length, typically representing character and action with some degree of realism.” In other words, it’s a made-up story. Yet it must be read in order to be evaluated.

Not so with The Chosen. It professes to be true to the Bible’s teachings, as well as a faithful representation of the Bible’s stories and characters. The Bible, however, declares itself to be inerrant and infallible in all that it teaches, as well as God’s authority in all that it commands. It’s God’s Word. If it condemns any attempt to visually represent the content and characters of the Bible (which it does) then one has no need to watch The Chosen because it claims to visually represent it—in direct disobedience to the Scriptures.

All biblical movies are visual translations and interpretations of the words and narrative presented in the Bible. If a Christian was aware that the Bible condemns visual translations and interpretations of the Scriptures, there would be no need to evaluate a movie or video series based upon the Bible before rejecting them. But does the Bible denounce any such attempts to translate/interpret it through a visual medium?

It does. And it does so in many indisputable ways. But before I point out the scriptures related to the Bible’s denunciation of such productions, I need to present some of the components that are involved in the production of making a movie that must be considered when determining whether or not “biblical movies” can be truly biblical. These are things I know and have experienced while studying filmmaking in graduate school and having worked for 20th Century Fox studios for a number of years. I then moved on to a career as a screenwriter in Hollywood before being saved and spending four decades in Christian ministry with Dave Hunt.

This is how the process works. A movie begins with a screenplay. It’s either an original story or a screen adaptation from someone else’s work (such as the Bible). The screenplay or movie script, in addition to presenting the storyline or plot, the characters, and the dialogue, consists of visual descriptions of what is taking place in the movie story. For example, if a scene calls for a vehicle, a description is needed for the art director or prop man to find the right kind of car for a particular scene or purpose. If the script calls for the car to be crashed, that needs to be described in detail if the crash is going to be unique and significant to the storyline. This is just one example of the creative input that is necessary for the filmmaking process.

Although the screenwriter is the initial composer of the movie script, changes to the script always take place during filming. Such changes are usually made by the movie’s director. Reasons for the changes from the original script are seemingly endless: actors’ egos, budget cuts, weather problems, location problems, the executive producer’s ego, the cameraman’s “inspirational idea” for filming a scene, union problems, stunt failures, the director’s ego, etc. The author of the motion picture, for the most part, is the screenwriter, even though contributions of interpretation also come from the director, the actors, and a host of others creatively involved in the filming process.

All of that and much more are involved in every attempt to translate the Bible itself into a theatrical motion picture for the silver screen and/or television. The question therefore, for every Bible-believing Christian, is this: Can the Bible be presented through the filmmaking process and stay true to what God’s Word says about His Word?

Well, what does it say? Proverbs:30:5-6
:“Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him. Add thou not unto his words, lest he reprove thee, and thou be found a liar” (italics added). God’s words are His words, written down by men, His prophets (2 Peter:1:20-21
). “Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man’s device” (Acts:17:29
, emphasis added).

 “I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book: And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book” (Revelation:22:18-19
).

The Bible is God’s revelation to all humanity, and His alone. “But I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of Jesus Christ” (Galatians:1:11-12
).

What then of a “biblical” movie? As with other theatrical endeavors, such a production comes about primarily through the screenwriter’s interpretation of what has been written in Scripture. Add to that the movie-making necessities and changes, things such as a storyline and dialogue related to the plot that are obviously lacking in the Bible, they therefore must be supplemented by the screenwriter in order to create a theatrical production.

Character descriptions are limited, at best, and must be added in order for a casting director to select the actors. Along that line, how does one cast the sinless God/Man, Jesus Christ? The perfect attributes and righteous characteristics of the Son of God could never be displayed by an actor on the screen. When such an idea is incorporated into the script, the end result is a counterfeit Christ at best. In fact, such an attempt fits the very definition of blasphemy as one strives to apply human characteristics to Jesus that undermine His divine character.

I hope you’re getting the picture here (pun intended) that any effort to translate the Bible into a visual medium must result in a veritable distortion of God’s Word which is why such attempts are condemned.

For anyone who doesn’t understand what I mean by calling such efforts “distortion” resulting from man’s input, it begs this question: “What do you really believe about the Bible?”

Do you understand it to be God’s direct communication to mankind? Do you realize that the Bible is totally of Him and from Him? Do you get the fact that without His divine revelation about Himself and His created beings, finite and fallen humanity is left with only opinions, guesses, speculations, and the like about Jesus Christ and the gospel of salvation? Those so-called contributions by humans have led to the multitude of man-fashioned religions that purport to give insights regarding God.

Do you believe that God’s Word is “given by inspiration of God” (i.e., God-breathed—2 Timothy:3:15-17
)? Do you believe the Apostle Paul’s Holy Spirit-inspired exhortation to the Thessalonians: “…when ye received the word of God which ye heard of us, ye received it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh also in you that believe” (1 Thessalonians:2:13
)? What do you think about Luke:4:4
: “It is written, That man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God” (emphasis added)?

The Apostle Paul, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, did not mince words: “I marvel that ye are so soon removed from him that called you into the grace of Christ unto another gospel: Which is not another; but there be some that trouble you, and would pervert the gospel of Christ. But though we, or an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which we have preached unto you, let him be accursed. As we said before, so say I now again, If any man preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed” (Galatians:1:6-9
, emphasis added).

Every believer in Jesus Christ must come to a true biblical belief in His Word. If what a person is taught about Jesus is not true to the Person revealed in the Scriptures, that character is “another Jesus,” a “false Christ,” no matter how endearing and engaging the actor may be (2 Corinthians:11:4
Matthew:24:24
). The same is true regarding all the actors representing biblical characters.

Movies are perhaps the most seductive of all media the world over. I learned as a screenwriter that manipulating an audience’s emotions was the key to a box-office success: make them laugh, make them weep, frighten them, make them cheer, arouse their passions, their lusts. In other words, control their emotions. That power of persuasion through the film medium seduces believers who normally would recognize that they are being snared by a fictional screen character. The comment most often given by those who enjoy the TV series is “I really like a lot of the human qualities displayed by The Chosen’s Jesus. It’s so easy to relate to him.” Others have said similar things about their favorite “disciples.”

Remember, what is presented in the Bible is wholly of the Holy Spirit. It is exactly what God wants us to know and believe. That’s what sets believers apart from the so-called spiritual insights of humanity: “Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth” (John:17:17
). Anything that “adds” to that truth, no matter how emotionally and “spiritually” moving, is condemned as having corrupted God’s truth.

I’ve been told that my writing about and speaking out against “biblical” movies (Showtime for the Sheep;andThe Bible According to Hollywood”) have come at a time in which the movie industry is finally “supporting Christianity,” and therefore I am “speaking out against the cause of Christ.”

Although that may seem to be a reasonable objection to many, it’s actually a rationalization that dismisses what inevitably takes place in the movie-making process of translating the Bible visually. It also demonstrates an ignorance of the culture of Hollywood, which is no friend of biblical Christianity. Tinsel Town’s only motivation is box-office—in other words (in the King James version), “filthy lucre.” And as we know from Scripture, “The love of money is the root of all evil” (1 Timothy:6:10
).

Even so, The Chosen series is condemned by the Bible first and foremost because it adds man’s ideas (his beliefs, concepts, viewpoints, conceptions, images, perceptions, his religions, and especially his feelings, etc.) to what God alone has communicated. It makes no difference how far afield the additions are—even the smallest contribution would not be of God, but of man.

For those who are still not seeing the problem with this, let’s consider a program that makes the highly publicized claim that it’s helping people get to know Jesus better and to recognize similarities with the “Jesus of different faiths.” What if the Jesus we are being introduced to is not the biblical Jesus, but rather a spirit that was produced in heaven? Suppose he was the spirit brother of Lucifer, and his earthly birth was not by a virgin but came about through sexual intercourse with Mary by his father god who resides on a planet near a star called Kolob? What if this “Jesus” worked toward becoming a god by taking Mary, her sister Martha, and Mary Magdalene as wives, and thereby producing children necessary for him to become a god? And the godhood that this Jesus achieved enabled him to become the god of this world, taking his place among the multitude of gods ruling over numerous other worlds?

Hopefully you’re thinking, “That’s not the Jesus I know from God’s Word!” However, it is the “Jesus” that the executive producer of The Chosen, Derral Eves, believes in, as do most of the other series’ producers such as Ricky Ray Butler and Jeffrey and Neil Harmon. Neil Harmon, as co-founder with his brother Jeffrey of VidAngel (now ironically titled Angel Studios—see Galatians:1:8
), the Utah-based distributor of The Chosen, declared that he and his brother Jeffrey are “faithful members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. We love Jesus and we love our faith in Christ.”

If that were the Jesus that The Chosen series is introducing us to, would that be a concern? As some may have surmised, the Jesus described above is not the biblical Jesus but rather the Jesus of Mormonism, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the faith to which many of the series producers belong. But is that the Jesus of The Chosen? Thus far in the series, the fundamental doctrines of Mormonism have not been plainly presented. Could they be? Yes—but perhaps not yet.

Yes, because The Chosen’s audience has been conditioned to accept whatever the screenwriter, director, and other creative personnel contribute, with no apparent concern for biblical accuracy. The program that launched the series, for example, was the background story of Mary Magdalene which included the death of her father when she was young, her being raped by a Roman soldier, and the failure of Nicodemus as he attempted to exorcise demons from her. Those details came not from Scripture but from the imagination of those who contributed to the script. Yet for the greater number of viewers, few of whom have read the Bible, the images they watched were received as though they are actually in the Bible.

I’ve been told biblical movies are great motivators for people to check the Bible out. Really? What happens when they can’t find the movie scenes such as the gritty backstory of Mary Magdalene? Furthermore, most people would rather watch a highly dramatized Bible story with little concern that it’s fiction than read the actual words of Scripture. “Based on a true story” is good enough, even though the “based” part is a movie fabrication.

I have interviewed numerous believers who viewed so-called biblical movies, and although most of these Christians knew the Bible pretty well, I was dismayed to find that they actually believed that many of the unbiblical scenes in those productions were found in the Bible! Difficulty in distinguishing between what one may have read in the Bible and what one saw on screen in an alleged biblical movie is one of the damaging effects of presenting biblical content visually. That notwithstanding, why would a believer in God’s Word fill his or her head with things that are made to appear biblical by a film company—but are not?

My “perhaps not yet” comment has to do with Mormonism’s continual attempt to promote itself as basically Christian in its theology. For years the organization has strived to be accepted as just another Christian denomination. The only way that can happen is if the LDS Church initially conceals its fundamental beliefs and packs its promotional productions with all sorts of unbiblical scenes and characters. The more that such corruptions are accepted, the wider the door opens for any-and-all beliefs to be introduced, including the bizarre doctrines of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It also helps to have a professing evangelical writer/director (Dallas Jenkins) working on The Chosen. His promotional interview with a Mormon apologist is a classic example of obfuscatory ecumenism, meaning he does his best to muddy the waters between foundational biblical Christianity (which he claims to believe) and the cultic teachings of Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. His ecumenism is made clear in his own words: “I said that many LDS folks and I love the same Jesus. I still believe that. It’s gotten me in a lot of trouble but I still believe that.”

When Jesus was asked by His disciples about the days just prior to His return, He said, “Take heed that no man deceive you” (Matthew:24:4
). That’s a penetrating description of the days in which we are living, a time in which “sound doctrine” has all but vanished throughout Christendom (2 Timothy:4:3
). Sound doctrine is the full and absolute counsel of what God has communicated in His Word. Anything added to that by man in his attempt to visually portray God’s word is a counterfeit—a fictitious deception.

As I mentioned at the beginning of this article, there is no need to watch any episodes of The Chosen in order to decide whether or not they are supported by God’s Word. All a Bible-believing Christian has to hear is that the television series attempts to represent the stories and characters found in the Scriptures; that inevitably results in adding all kinds of content to the Bible, the action of which is clearly condemned.

For those who nevertheless are enamored with The Chosen yet claim they know and love the Scriptures, The Chosen television series begins with background information about Mary Magdalene nowhere found in the Bible, as noted, but is produced out of the imagination of all the creative movie people, from the screenwriters to the director, and on down the production line. What then of additions to the final episode of season two (although examples are found throughout the entire series)? We’re shown that the disciples are in charge of producing the speaking events of Jesus (e.g., crowd control, distributing flyers for his events, setting up a stage complete with curtains for his presentation of the Sermon on the Mount). Do the Scriptures tell us that the wardrobe of Jesus for his stage appearance was decided upon by four women? Did Jesus, along with his mother, pine for his stepfather Joseph before his preaching on the Mount…or anywhere else in Scripture? Was Matthew, as seen throughout the series, the continual script advisor regarding the content of the sermons and teachings of Jesus? Did Jesus anxiously have to rehearse his preaching before delivering his teachings to the crowd? All those things are found in The Chosen. They are not only missing from God’s Word, their inclusion amounts to blasphemy—that is, a blatant mischaracterization of God manifested in the flesh.

Those who are drawn to the Jesus of The Chosen have been seduced into believing in a character who is not the perfect God/Man presented in God’s Word, but rather a man-made counterfeit Christ whose ministry had to be enabled through the input of his disciples. That’s not the Jesus Christ of God’s inerrant, infallible, and all-sufficient God-breathed Word.

Those who claim to believe the Scriptures but are drawn to The Chosen need to heed the Bible’s far-reaching warning: “For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect. Behold, I have told you before” (Matthew:24:24-25
).

(For further insights into the problems with visually translating the Bible, we recommend Showtime for the Sheep and “The Bible According to Hollywood.” For materials related to the cult of Mormonism we recommend The God Makers and “Mormon Fiction” [see TBC article August 2003]. More importantly, we highly recommend reading Psalm:119:1-176
.)

 

 

 

A Worthwhile Vocation

Why Yes, I Am Going to Try to Destroy His Work

You simply never know when inspiration will strike.

Today I’d walked my large Bernedoodle Carson to the river,

tended to my vegetable garden, enjoyed a fresh salad for lunch and was just settling into a pleasant afternoon of peaceful contemplation when my phone thrummed with an incoming text.  When I say ‘incoming’ it’s because that’s what you shout when you hear the roar of enemy ordinance heading your way.

BC:  “Have you listened to the comments made about The Chosen by Dallas Jenkins?”  Attached were two links.  I bit and started to watch the first one.

I must confess, I found his mannerisms and precise speech arrogant and I’m no fan of The Chosen so I responded rather promptly “What a pompous punk. Started to listen but just can’t”. (true confession: another alliterative pejorative sprang immediately to mind but I chose the milder rebuke) 

BC: “I did not take him as pompous at all.  I am surprised that you feel free to judge him without watching the show or listening to his view”.

Always anxious to learn but feeling a tad impatient I responded thusly: “Sigh.  The show is produced and directed by temple Mormons.  They conceded that the first four episodes were not based on any scripture.  I will not watch what cult members dream up, no matter how entertaining.  I thought the spirit rolling off him was pure arrogance”.

BC: “So I send you 2 videos to watch and you do not bother to get my point? I believe you are wrong about the Mormons.  And if I am right, you are defaming someone – a brother in Christ – based upon your opinion.  The studio may be Mormon owned but the show is not”. (here’s a clue – she’s not right).

I retorted with more restraint than I felt: “So you’re accusing me of defamation?  Now that’s intriguing.  Just because I refuse to see your point.  I’m going to have to go with Biblical accuracy”. 

I watched the second video she’d supplied.

 

I’m glad I watched it, yet at this point, I’m wondering why an evangelical believer would join himself to darkness and pour his life into presenting a false picture of the God he says he worships.  We are to judge believers in the church who violate the faith.

How many Christians joke about what Jesus was doing while hanging on the cross?  

AAAND she’s back:  “I am saying you are bold on stating your beliefs but have not listened to him.  He is born again.  The Chosen is a tool to reach the unreached.  Is it meat?  No.  But that is not the goal audience.  I am ok with that baby step for people.  I came to know Jesus at a concert where the love of Jesus was preached.  I think better to be praying for the fruits of this show than bashing the Dallas. (I know, it’s just a text, I am reprinting with full accuracy, mistakes and all) If he is born again and doing what God lead him to do, who are we to bash him?  He answers to God alone.  Are you praying as much for him to be faithful or to destroy what he is doing?”

Here at last is the crux of the matter!

I had to ask this friend if something (else) was bothering her and added “And yes, I would destroy anything that exalts itself over the knowledge of God.  The true God.  You betcha.” 

For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal but mighty in God for pulling down strongholds, casting down arguments and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God, bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ, and being ready to punish all disobedience when your obedience is fulfilled. ~ 2nd Corinthians 10:4-6

I sent my friend the video you can peruse here: 

https://youtu.be/r0mckI8Xfl8

 

In short, Mormons aren’t Christians and their slick, appealing series on Jesus isn’t teaching you about the one true God.

It’s not defamation to defend the truth.

I wrote The Idol of Evangelism yesterday.  My point is that lying to people about Jesus is not helping, whether it’s leaving chunks of truth out to make him easier to approach or just plain making stuff up.  My friend concedes The Chosen is not meat, my point is, neither is it milk (for new believers).  It’s poison.

It’s akin to pointing the lost to a mirage so they die in the desert and that’s not love.

Love is what you see from the family that found Jesus after 30 years in the Mormon church.  Please hear them.

 

The Idol of Evangelism

Selling a Fake Jesus

 

I just finished reading a short yet masterful book called Letter to the American Church by Eric Metaxas and I stole the title of this piece from chapter nine.

The book is described as a “bucket of cold water thrown into the face of a sleeping church” but I didn’t find it unpleasant in the least, only refreshing.

The topic is a slumbering church in a time of horrific evil and Christians who will not utter a peep.

Let me just say one more thing about the book:  Read it.

So what’s my problem with evangelism?  If it saves even one soul from an eternity in hell, shouldn’t it be of utmost importance?

It turns out that’s a big “IF”, huge even.  The American church has been put on notice already, but I have a particular bone to pick.  The Jesus we’ve been selling isn’t the real deal.  I’ll give you one example:  The Chosen.  It’s a tv series created by temple Mormons about Jesus.  We’re looking to people who don’t know Jesus and have no relationship with Him to tell us about our lord.  We’ve lost our minds.

The Jesus being sold today has one main attribute: his engaging kindness.  He loves everyone.  He died to save everyone.  He would never say anything that would drive anyone away from . . . hang on.

Ever hear of the rich young ruler?  He wouldn’t sell all he had to follow Jesus and so walked away in sadness.

How about the Pharisees of whom Jesus said:

You are of your father the devil and your will is to do your father’s desires.  He was a murderer from the beginning, and does not stand in the truth, because there is no truth in him.   When he lies, he speaks out of his own character, for he is a liar and the father of lies.  But because I tell the truth, you do not believe me.  Which one of you convicts me of sin?  If I tell the truth, why do you not believe me?  Whoever is of God hears the words of God.  The reason why you do not hear them is that you are not of God. ~John 8:44-47

I don’t believe this is a truth vs love passage.  I don’t think Jesus was deliberately destroying relationships in order to be truthful.  I think that many, when they hear the truth will run toward it so it would make sense that Jesus would cut loose people who are not of God so that people belonging to God may find Him.  The fact of the matter is that you cannot separate truth from love, or love from truth.  If you do, you end up destroying both.  That truth and love cannot be destroyed is still accurate, but you can destroy truth and love in a person’s life.  You are killing people by being too ‘kind’ to tell the truth.

I have found that you can tell a hard truth and some people will walk away from the faith but others will be saved.  In the Book of Acts, there’s the story of Sergius Paulus, a proconsul described as an intelligent man who called for Barnabus and Saul (Paul) in order to hear the word of God.  There was another man, Elymas the sorcerer who ran interference because he wanted to turn the proconsul away from the faith.

Here’s Acts 13:9-12

Then Saul, who also is called Paul, filled with the Holy Spirit, looked intently at him and said, O full of all deceit and all fraud, you son of the devil, you enemy of all righteousness, will you not cease perverting the straight ways of the Lord?  And now, indeed, the hand of the Lord is upon you, and you shall be blind, not seeing the sun for a time.  And immediately a dark mist fell on him, and he went around seeking someone to lead him by the hand.  Then the proconsul believed, when he saw what had been done, being astonished at the teaching of the Lord.

Evil must be confronted for the light to get through.  We are called as Christians to be many things, not merely evangelists, but people with a sound mind and firm spine to stand for the truth.  Oddly enough, not everyone likes that.

I see Jesus as a huge rock in a fast-flowing river that causes the watercourse to split in two and continue thenceforth as two different streams.  One to life and one to death.  “We must have unity” my foot!  

Do you know what drives church building these days?  Especially evangelizing mega churches?  Unity.  The price we pay for such massive togetherness is to sacrifice the truth.  Staying accurate on doctrine will necessarily drive people away.  

So for the uber-large gatherings, commonality is stressed and accuracy is out the window.  If Jesus is truth, then we are sacrificing Him all over again.  Will he be happy with us if we misrepresent him to the point that people dash off to a winsome Pied Piper and never know the Truth?

We can say things like “We won’t fight over non-salvation issues” and let error run rampant.  We might play music that entices people with high emotion and a good time but doesn’t extol God.  We might invite popular teachers in to create a huge event, but sound teaching is passed over.  We might intentionally create such a welcoming environment that no one is offended, ever.  If the idol you serve is a huge church, know this, Molech will exact tribute.  It’s God’s church, he will fill it or empty it at His will.  Serve the Lord alone.

 

We’ve all seen images of a parched wanderer lost in the desert, crawling through the dunes until finally, he spots a huge body of refreshing water glimmering in the distance.  With his last ounce of strength, he pushes on to his salvation, only to find it’s a mirage.  

Now imagine that scene with a crowd of cheering “Christians” with signs saying “Get your cold water here!” or “Keep Going, You’re Almost There” or “Beach Towels – $5”.

Kindness and encouragement are the utmost cruelty if what you’re selling is a lie.

 

 

Another Jesus

Accept No Substitutes

But I fear, lest somehow, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.   For if he who comes preaches another Jesus whom we have not preached, or if you receive a different spirit which you have not received, or a different gospel which you have not accepted – you may well put up with it! ~ II Corinthians 11: 3 & 4

Pilgrims’ Lack of Progress

The wife of a pastor friend of mine posted about a trip she took recently.  “What a wonderful weekend in Dallas . . . We toured one site where The Chosen was filmed and attended IF Gathering 2023 soo good”. 

I have touched briefly on the work of fiction which is The Chosen.  This is a Mormon Temple-controlled story of a gentle, attractive, fascinating Jesus.  Just in case the actual gentle, attractive, fascinating Jesus is not entirely to your taste.  There’s plenty to find on real Jesus, but the fake one is so entertaining that “you may well put up with it!”  Heck, you’ll seek it out, soak it up, sell your brain to it and make a pilgrimage to the set where the lie is spun.

The inherent tragedy in feeding yourself Jesus junk food is that the real feast is left languishing.  Any spiritual nutrition you can gain is left alone while your sluggish, weak soul feeds on sugary substances that cannot sustain, and this while the last battle is rapidly approaching us.  A chubby kid on the couch popping M&M’s does not a gladiator make.

If you want your soul thrilled and your mind settled on why you believe, spend more time in the Word.  Another good book is below.  Talk about the lights coming on, this is deeply nourishing.

When it comes to the IF Gathering, I’ve already covered that topic in a post called An Ounce of Prevention.   Jennie Allen looks like a Christian, she simply doesn’t talk like one.  As Charles Spurgeon is noted for saying: 

Discernment - Spurgeon Quotes - Girded with Truth

 

Jennie Allen came to my former church and the large event was billed as the “Be Bold” women’s conference.  I did not go.  If anyone is offering a “Be Discerning” women’s conference, let me know.

Paul wraps up the 11th chapter of II Corinthians by defending the authenticity of his apostleship:  

But what I do, I will also continue to do, that I may cut off the opportunity from those who desire an opportunity to be regarded just as we are in the things of which they boast.  For such are also apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into apostles of Christ.  And no wonder! For Satan himself transforms himself into an angel of light.  Therefore it is no great thing if his ministers also transform themselves into ministers of righteousness, whose end will be according to their works.

I keep sensing a pervasive urgency that has nothing to do with being mean-spirited and everything to do with getting souls to shelter in the only safety while there is still time.   If I see another “Above all else, be kind” sticker on social media I will again be overcome by how obtuse we are as a culture.  Kindness, softness, and an overarching drive for unity are greasing the skids for souls to go to hell.  It may offend you that I’m not being nice but I will not assist in consigning souls to hell so that people will think well of me.

Picture a faith that goes far beyond feelings and then ask God to cause you to hunger for it.   He invigorated my shallow, lazy, indifferent soul – yours is no challenge.

Philippians 3:10-14

My aim is to know him, to experience the power of his resurrection, to share in his sufferings, and to be like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.  Not that I have already attained this – that is, I have not already been perfected – but I strive to lay hold of that for which Christ Jesus also laid hold of me.  Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself to have attained this.  Instead, I am single-minded: forgetting the things that are behind and reaching out for the things that are ahead, with this goal in mind, I strive toward the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus.

Stop filling your mind and soul with bits of sand, go for the pearl of great price.