Obama’s Pastor is a strange dude

January 28, 2008
WorldNetDaily: Obama’s pastor disses Natalee Holloway

The Pastor of Mr. Obama is a bona fide kook. Makes you think about what he sees in this guy. I don’t know if I want my next President to have this guy as his spiritual leader. Check this link out from the church of Obama and notice what they are “about.”

Trinity United Church of Christ

“We are an African people, and remain “true to our native land,” the mother continent, the cradle of civilization.” Huh? Sounds like they are putting Africa before America to me. Once again, I don’t know that I want my next President to be a member of such a congregation.

I’m just saying…

Jesse

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Buchanan’s Take On McCain

January 26, 2008
Click here: WorldNetDaily: Why McCain would be worse than Bush.

I thought this may be of some interest to those of you trying to decide on who to vote for. I knew that McCain was soft on the immigration issue but this column by Pat Buchanan really reveals just how soft he is. This is definitely something to think about. I’m certainly not saying that he should not be voted for because he is still a very good candidate overall but let’s be very informed as we vote for our next President.

Jesse

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An Urgent Cry – J. Lee Grady

January 25, 2008

The following is from a column by J. Lee Grady of Charisma Magazine. I have emphasized what I think our really powerful points.

A group of charismatic ministers have called on American Christians to reclaim the neglected task of soul-winning.

The American church knows how to design functional buildings, develop sophisticated programs, utilize technology and preach to the proverbial choir. But we have forgotten the fundamental task of soul-winning—and as a result churches are closing at a record rate and more and more young people are leaving the faith.

That dire assessment of America’s spiritual condition was proposed last week in Orlando, when 50 national and international evangelists convened for an honest, 24-hour strategy session held at Charisma magazine’s headquarters. The participants included South African revivalist Rodney Howard-Browne, veteran street preacher Scott Hinkle and German crusade evangelist Reinhard Bonnke.

Rice Broocks, pastor of Bethel World Outreach Center in Nashville, Tenn., and founder of the Every Nation church-planting movement, organized the Orlando gathering because he believes the charismatic segment of the church has become distracted from its evangelistic mission.

“The statistics don’t lie,” Broocks says. “America has been described as a post-Christian nation. The urgency of the hour demands that we recapture the role of the evangelist for the planting of new churches and the equipping of churches to mobilize believers for ministry.”

Broocks recently teamed up with charismatic author and pastor Larry Tomczak to form ICE-CAP, the International Center for Evangelism, Church-Planting and Prayer, which just opened its offices in Nashville. ICE-CAP’s mission is to help train a new generation of evangelists and mobilize churches for strategic evangelism efforts.

Broocks introduced Tomczak as “the only guy I know who still gives out personal tracts.” Tomczak then told the story of how, on the previous night, he led a hotel desk clerk to salvation after giving him his printed testimony.

In three sessions held over two days, the leaders outlined several reasons why evangelism has waned. They include:

1. A lack of spiritual zeal in our churches. “Soul-winning must be a passion, not a program,” one attendee said. The renewing power of the Holy Spirit is the key to shifting our churches into a place of contagious faith.

2. A spectator mentality. Many Christians have been deceived into believing that evangelism is the work of paid clergy or itinerant specialists. Said one evangelist: “You don’t limit tithers to those who have ‘a gift of giving,’ do you? Everybody tithes. In the same way, everybody is supposed to be doing evangelism.” Broocks, Hinkle and others made it clear that the primary role of the evangelist is not to conduct meetings but to train and equip all believers to win souls.

3. A cultural disconnect. Hispanic leader Samuel Rodriguez pointed out that a large segment of the millennial generation has abandoned church because they feel it isn’t relevant to their lives. As long as the church remains mired in superficial religiosity, we won’t reach young people—who crave authenticity and want to apply the gospel to their world.

4. An increasingly secular culture. Vincent Esterman, who has done street evangelism for decades in France and Australia, believes the United States would do well to study how Christian faith has waned in Europe. Americans will most likely face similar hostilities in our culture, since universalism and atheism are growing here.

5. Tensions between evangelists and pastors. Eric Cowley of Global Focus Ministries spoke for many in the room when he shared that many pastors feel threatened by evangelists and don’t want to share local church resources with them. At a time when the role of apostles and prophets has been reclaimed in charismatic circles, the role of the evangelist has been marginalized.

6. The church’s credibility crisis. Recent religious scandals, incessant fundraising on Christian television and reports of televangelists living in opulence have produced increased skepticism about preachers’ motives. Many of the leaders in Orlando were incensed by the blatant moral and ethical abuses occurring in our movement. Said one leader in a moment of candor: “If I see one more telethon on Christian television I’m going to puke.”

7. Bad theology. Broocks pointed out that American Christianity has, at times, morphed into an errant “virus” that has had a negative impact on countries where it has been exported. “We preach a gospel that offers faith without repentance, grace without the fear of God and destiny without discipleship,” he said.

8. A poorly defined mission. Many churches no longer understand what evangelism is. Missionary mobilizer David Shibley offered the group a succinct definition, borrowed from his days in Southern Baptist seminary: “Evangelism is sharing the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ in the power of the Holy Spirit with a view to bringing people to repentance and faith in Christ so that they might serve Him in the church.”

In the first evening session, after a time of spontaneous prayer, Bonnke laid his hands on all the participants and asked God for a fresh anointing of evangelism on the American church. This humble man who has led 47 million people to Christ (and once saw 2 million make decisions for salvation in one meeting in Nigeria) told the group that this anointing has nothing to do with him. “I am not giving you my anointing when I lay hands on you. Jesus is the one who anoints you,” he said.

As Bonnke laid his hands on my head, I stood in the gap for all of us. I believe there is indeed a new grace available to the American church in this hour. I hope we are ready for the changes it will bring. When the spirit of evangelism grips our hearts, it will totally reorder our priorities, interrupt our schedules, mess up our church programs, destroy our religiosity, challenge our timidity and burn up our selfishness.

If you are willing to embrace that anointing without placing conditions on it, please ask for it now.

Timely stuff I think. Food for thought indeed.

Brother Jesse


Great Site For Candidates Position

January 23, 2008
Check this site out for the Presidential candidates positions on the issues. It allowed me to eliminate some right away.

OnTheIssues.org – Candidates on the Issues

Jesse

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Hybels "confession"

January 5, 2008
This is a quote from a recent article on iphc-enews.org:

If you simply want a crowd, the “seeker-sensitive” model produces results. If you want solid, sincere, mature followers of Christ, it’s a bust. In a shocking confession, Hybels states:

“We made a mistake. What we should have done when people crossed the line of faith and become Christians, we should have started telling people and teaching people that they have to take responsibility to become ’self feeders.’ We should have gotten people, taught people, how to read their Bible between services, how to do the spiritual practices much more aggressively on their own.”

Incredibly, the guru of church growth now tells us that people need to be reading their Bibles and taking responsibility for their spiritual growth.

It would seem that the “seeker-sensitive” and “purpose driven” movement is beginning to manifest some problems. I have learned much from them but I always felt like the formula would break down at some point. Why? I always felt like there was too much accommodation of flesh. You really can’t pet the adamic nature and expect it to want to get better because you have treated it nicely. Either the Spirit works to convict and draw to Jesus or it’s just so much entertainment of the flesh nature of hell-bound sinners.

Christianity is about Christ. It is about our taking up our cross and following Him. I’m afraid that was left out of the equation in this movement. His claims can’t be made “relevant” before expecting someone to embrace them. They can’t always be rationalized and justified by human wisdom. The Gospel will hurt the pride of sinful humanity. Let’s quit apologizing for it.

I say we teach the truth straight up. Surely we must speak the truth in love but we can’t keep tickling ears with sugar coated sermonettes that will not offend and be politically correct. The Apostle Paul, John Wesley, D.L. Moody and Charles Finney did not care whether or not the rebellious sinner was sharply challenged by the Gospel message. Why should we be so worried about it? Perhaps this is what the country needs. If it offends let it! Battle lines need to be drawn. The devil is raging today more than ever and I think it is time we took this war seriously. Politics will not advance the Kingdom and neither will being nice to sinners.

Jesse

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