Sun, Dec 20th - 5:02PM
A Look At The Cults
Many well-meaning ministers express a longing to return to
the 1950s era, some even describing the 1950s as a golden age for Christianity
in America, failing to realize that the cultural and religious trends of the
1950s (and previous decades) led to the accelerated and enormous increase in
the cults, the occult, and modernism that characterized the 1960s and
continues. Consider just a few examples:
• Neglecting and denying the influence of the
Bible and Christianity in American history in school textbooks and mass media.
• Replacing Bible truths with humanism.
• The teaching that Bible standards only apply
to the religious (church) aspects of life and not the secular realm.
• Acceptance of the theory of evolution in Christian
circles, and endorsement of the theory of evolution by many respected clergy
and mainline churches.
• Replacing Biblical separation (godly
relationships, conduct, and distinctions within society) with isolation and
neutrality.
• Using the Bible, Gospel music, and religious
activities to escape reality instead of facing it.
• Putting material prosperity, appearance, and
social status above character in importance.
• Replacing ministry and patriarchy with
church programs.
• Ministerial exemption from the draft
encouraged cowards, unbelievers, heretics, and sexual perverts to pursue
positions and careers in ministry.
The list of cultural and religious trends of
the 1950s and previous decades that increased the appeal of the cults could
continue but these examples should suffice to help you see the point. Rather
than romancing the past or longing for a return to the past, we should focus on
how we can avoid the mistakes of the past.
What leads so many into cults, especially since most
initiates into cults come from a religious background in a mainstream church or
denomination? Cults use the heart to trap the mind. Think of this in terms of
fishing: Emotion (such as love-bombing) is the lure, doctrine (false doctrine
mingled with truth) is the hook, and fear (along with guilt) is the barb or net
that helps keep the "fish" from getting away. Cults replace personal
study, discernment, and growth with a childlike dependence on a religious
leader or group. The cults teach a faith, but not Biblical faith. Biblical
faith is based on facts or knowledge of God's Word, and while feelings may
result, feelings are not the basis of Biblical faith. Remember the pattern: 1.)
Fact, 2.) Faith, 3.) Feelings; in cults and the occult this pattern is usually
reversed. Faith, like love, always has an object, and cults present a wrong
object of faith.
The Hebrew word rendered "world" in Ecclesiastes
3:11 means eternity or the ages. In other words, humans are born with a natural
need for spiritual guidance and an effective religion/belief system. Even
though they are wrong, the cults do fill a basic need and provide answers.
Hungry sheep will wander in search for food. Looking at church ads, and
considering what people are being fed in many churches and through Christian radio,
Christian television, and Christian literature, it should surprise us that the
cults do not attract more 'wandering sheep' than they do. (Consider Acts 20:28)
American students who were raised on English often have far more difficulty
with English classes and English grammar than many foreign students who learned
English when they were grown or almost grown. Often the students in a foreign
language class having the most difficulty are the children of immigrants who
speak that language as their native tongue; in many cases the children of
immigrants know just enough of their parents' language to communicate with
family and assume that they are fluent. We have a similar situation in
Christian circles when it comes to doctrines and basic Bible knowledge. A typical
cult recruit or initiate comes from a religious background but is not
well-grounded in faith and knowledge.
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