Loraine Day is a 7th day Adventist… so I have a few
differences…HOWEVER she has done some amazing work. This is a great
article. Also attached is from her book who stole Christianity….
Professor
Truth
By Lorraine Day, M.D.
Every Sunday, “Christians” gather the family
together, go to a church, sing, pray, often participate in responsive readings,
give an offering, listen to a sermon by the pastor who may wear special
vestments, and after an hour or so, go home, believing they have worshiped the
Lord in the Biblical way.
“Christian” psychologists counsel their patients to
“find a good church” or “find a mentor in your church to hold you accountable”
or “talk to your pastor.” Very rarely do they tell them. “Turn to
God. Diligently study your Bible every day. Get down on your knees
and pray and the LORD will lead you into truth. The LORD will be your
Counselor directly.
Oh yes, they give lip service to the Lord’s ability
by saying “It’s good to pray to ask the Lord for guidance.” But the REAL
guidance seems always to come from “man.” “See
your doctor,” “Find a Christian counselor,” “Find a Christian
psychologist.”
The
implication is that God is unable to communicate with us directly, He always
needs an intermediary. That’s exactly what the Israelites wanted at Mt.
Sinai when God wanted to talk to them directly. They were afraid of God
and did not want Him personally to talk to them. They pleaded for Moses
to be their intermediary and God finally gave them their wish by setting up the
whole sanctuary service with its priestly rituals. (Exodus, Chapters
25-30)
But
when Jesus came to earth and died on the cross, the Temple curtain was ripped
from top to bottom signifying that the ritual of human priestly mediation
between God and man was OVER! From then on, we were to approach Jesus
directly, one on one, without any human intermediary. In the Upper Room,
God poured out His Spirit (literal translation “Breath of holiness”) on those
present symbolizing Christ’s authority to put His disposition, His life, His
“breath of holiness” into each person who develops a close relationship with
Him.
By
beholding Christ, we become changed. (2 Cor 3:18) By daily reading His
Word, by daily earnest prayer, by speaking to God like we would to our own
father, by looking constantly at Christ’s life, eventually we will become like
Him. He will put His “breath of holiness” in us - - - and we will exhibit
His character.
Jesus
said, “Be ye holy, for I am holy.” (1 Peter 1:16)
“Let
this mind be in you which is in Christ Jesus.” (Phil 2:5)
“I
will put my breath (mistranslated – spirit) in you.” (Ezekiel 36:27)
But
instead of all this, we “go to church.”
“As
startling as it may sound most everything that is done in our modern churches
has no basis in the Bible. As pastors roar from their pulpits about being
‘Biblical’ and following the ‘pure Word of God,’ their words betray them.
Alarmingly, precious little that is observed today in modern Christianity maps
to anything found in the first-century church. . .
“Shockingly,
most of what we do for ‘church’ was lifted directly out of pagan culture in the
post-apostolic period. . . If you are a Christian in the institutional church
who takes the New Testament seriously, what you are about to read will force
you to have a crisis of conscience. For you will be confronted by
unmovable historical fact.
“On
the other hand, if you happen to be one of those rare breeds who gathers with
other Christians outside the pale of organized Christianity, you will discover
afresh that not only is Scripture on your side—but history stands with you as
well.” Pagan Christianity, Frank Viola, p 27-29
Sunday as the Day of Worship
The
day of worship designated by God is the Seventh-day Sabbath. Instituted
at Creation by God Himself, given to Adam and Eve - the parents of the whole
human race, and made HOLY by the blessing of God, our Creator.
The
Seventh-day Sabbath is NOT Jewish because neither God nor Adam and Eve are/were
Jewish.
The
Seventh-day Sabbath was made HOLY by God. No man can change the HOLY
designation from one day to another.
God
Himself wrote the Ten Commandments with His own finger - - in STONE! The
Fourth Commandment tells us,
“Remember
the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour and do all
thy work; but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God. . .For in six
days the Lord made the heaven and earth and the sea and all that in them is,
and rested on the seventh day: wherefore the Lord BLESSED the Sabbath day, and
MADE IT HOLY.” Exodus 20:8-11
Jesus
did NOT “do away with” the Ten Commandments at the Cross. Christians who
believe He did, always hang on to NINE of the commandments. The only one
they want to eliminate is the Fourth Commandment – the Sabbath Commandment.
The
words “first day of the week” and the word “Sunday” do NOT appear anywhere in
the Scriptures, including the New Testament. The word is always Sabbaton in
the Greek, meaning the Seventh-day Sabbath–Saturday in our modern
calendar. The Bible translators translate the word “Sabbath” or “First
day of the week” at their whim and to suit their preconceived theological
beliefs.
Jesus
was NOT resurrected on Sunday, as the Bible translators have made it to
appear. He was resurrected on the Sabbath. (See “Was Jesus Really Resurrected on Sunday?”)
Sunday
is NOT “The Lord’s Day.” The Seventh-day Sabbath is “The Lord’s
Day.” Jesus said, “The Son of Man is also LORD of the Sabbath.”
Jesus
was NOT a Jew. (See “Who is Israel? Who is the Church?”)
Jesus was/is God - and God is NOT “Jewish!”
When
Jesus was on earth, He worshiped on the Seventh-day Sabbath. After His
resurrection and ascension to heaven, His apostles also continued to worship on
the Seventh-day Sabbath. During Christ’s entire earthly ministry and
after He was resurrected, never once did
Sunday
worship is purely pagan as it venerates the Sun God. The Sun – the
creation – is worshiped rather than the Creator! The Sun is worshiped by
New Agers and witches, but should never be worshiped by Christians!
Emperor
Constantine ceremonially established Sunday as the day of worship in 321 A.D.
as he inculcated Paganism into Christianity to build unity in his empire.
It
is true that before the era of Constantine many Christians were already
worshiping on Sunday, particularly “Gentile” Christians. The Jews of that
era were rebelling frequently against the empire, leading to crack-downs by the
government. Non-Jew Christians often were being caught in the cross-fire,
mistaken for Jews because they worshiped on the Seventh-day Sabbath.
In
order to avoid persecution by the government, “Gentile” Christians decided to
separate themselves from the Jews by worshiping on a different day. They
chose Sunday, a day that would bring no persecution on them because it was
endorsed by the pagan government.
History
often records the Christian conversion of Emperor Constantine but many skeptics
doubt the depth of his commitment. In fact, Constantine was not a
Christian at all as he openly continued to worship the Pagan Sun God for the
rest of his life. “Almost to his dying day, Constantine ‘still functioned
as the high priest of paganism.’ In fact, he retained the pagan title
Pontifex Maximus, which means Chief of the pagan priests! (In the 15th century,
this same title became the honorific title for the Catholic Pope!) Pagan
Christianity p 109
After
the era of Constantine, the Catholic Church endorsed Sunday “Sacredness”, often
boasting of their “right” to change the solemnity of the Seventh-day Sabbath to
the first day of the week. Claiming to be “God on earth”, the Pope claims
the authority to change the Word of God. This of course, is blasphemy!
The
Catholic Church sneers at the Protestants who claim to have separated from the
Catholics in the Reformation. “What are the Protestants protesting?” ask
the Pope, cardinals and bishops, “The Protestants, by keeping Sunday as their
holy day, have endorsed OUR right to change the Scriptures, to
put tradition above the Bible, while they claim to accept the Bible and the
Bible only for doctrine.”
The Order of Worship
Whether
you are a Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Evangelical, Church of Christ,
Pentecostal, Lutheran, Seventh-day Adventist, or a member of any other
Protestant denomination, the Order of Worship, except for some minor
superficial alterations, is pretty much the same:
The
Greeting
Prayer or Scripture Reading
The Song Service
The Announcements
The Offering
The Sermon
One or more of the following: altar call, more singing, the Lord’s Supper, or another prayer
Closing Announcements
The Benediction
Prayer or Scripture Reading
The Song Service
The Announcements
The Offering
The Sermon
One or more of the following: altar call, more singing, the Lord’s Supper, or another prayer
Closing Announcements
The Benediction
With
some minor rearrangements, almost 350 million Protestants around the world
observe this liturgy week after week.
Where did the Protestant Order of Worship come
from?
It
has its basic roots in the Catholic Mass. (Philip Schaff, History of the
Christian Church: Volume 3, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1910, p. 505). The
Catholic Mass did not originate with the New Testament, but instead, grew out
of ancient Judaism and paganism. (Frank Senn, Christian Liturgy: Catholic and
Evangelical, Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997, p. 54)
Historian
Will Durant points out that the Mass was deeply steeped in pagan magical
thinking as well as Greek drama. (Will Durant, The Age of Faith, New
York: Simon & Schuster, 1950, pp 521-524.)
“The
Catholic Mass that developed out of the fourth through sixth centuries was
essentially pagan. The Christians stole from the pagans the vestments of
the pagan priests, the use of incense and holy water in purification rites, the
burning of candles in worship, the architecture of the Roman basilica for their
church buildings, the law of Rome as the basis of ‘canon law,’ the title Pontifex
Maximus for the head bishop, and the pagan rituals for the Catholic
Mass.” (Frank Viola, Pagan Christianity p. 40)
When
Luther launched the Reformation in 1520, he railed against the Catholic
Mass. “To the medieval Catholic mind, the offering of the Eucharist was
the re-sacrificing of Jesus Christ. As far back as Gregory the Great
(540-604) the Catholic church taught that Jesus Christ is sacrificed anew
through the Mass. . . More recently, Catholic theologians (for the past 70
years) have said that the Mass is a re-presentation of the one sacrifice rather
than a new sacrifice as did the medieval Catholic Church.” Ibid p 42
The
altar for the Mass and the Eucharist was the central focus of the Catholic
service. But Luther gets the credit for making the sermon the climax of
the Protestant service. Read his words:
A
Christian congregation should never gather together without the preaching of
God’s Word and prayer, no matter how briefly”. . . “The preaching and teaching
of God’s Word is the most important part of Divine service.” Concerning
the Order of Public Worship, and “The German Mass” from Luther’s Works, LIII,
pp. 11 and 68, respectively.
The
Christian church today agrees with Luther’s belief in the centrality of
preaching, “yet it has no Biblical precedent whatsoever.” Frank Viola,
Rethinking the Wineskin, Chapter 1.
Luther’s
liturgy varied little from the Catholic Mass, and in the end was nothing more
than a truncated version of it. Under Luther’s influence, the Protestant
pastor simply replaced the Catholic priest.
“One
further practice that the Reformers retained from the Mass was the practice of
the clergy walking to their allotted seats at the beginning of the service
while the people stood singing. This practice started in the fourth
century when the bishops walked into their magnificent basilica churches.
It was a practice copied straight from the pagan imperial court ceremony.
When the Roman magistrates entered into the court room, the people would stand
singing. This practice is still observed today in many Protestant
churches. Yet no one ever questions it.” Pagan Christianity p
50
The Sermon
Without
a Sermon, most people feel like they didn’t go to church. The Sermon is
the bedrock of the service. But the sermon actually detracts from the
very purpose for which God designed the church gathering. Here is the
explanation:
“The
modern Christian sermon has the following features:
- It is a
regular occurrence – delivered faithfully from the pulpit at least once a
week
- It is
delivered by the same person – typically the pastor
- It is
delivered to a passive audience; it is essentially a monologue
- It is a
cultivated form of speech, possessing a specific structure. It
typically contains an introduction, three to five points, and a
conclusion.
Whereas
the kind of preaching mentioned in the Bible, particularly the Old Testament
preaching and teaching, contained the following characteristics:
- Active
participation and interruptions by the audience were common
- They
spoke extemporaneously and out of a present burden, rather than from a set
script.
- There
is no indication that Old Testament prophets or priests gave regular
speeches to God’s people. Instead, the nature of Old Testament
preaching was sporadic, fluid, and open for audience participation.”
Ibid p 77
From
Where did the Christian Sermon Come?
The
Christian sermon was borrowed straight from the pagan pool of Greek
culture! In the fifth century B.C. a group of wandering teachers
called sophists invented rhetoric (the art of persuasive speaking). “They
recruited disciples and demanded payment for delivering their orations.
The sophists were expert debaters. They were masters at using emotional
appeals, physical appearance, and clever language to ‘sell’ their
arguments” Ibid. p 79
Subsequently,
many pagan orators became Christians and pagan philosophical ideas unwittingly
infiltrated into the Christian community. “Thus the pagan notion of a
trained professional speaker who delivers orations for a fee moved straight
into the Christian bloodstream.” Ibid p 82 As organization of the
church increased, there came a gradual restriction of the liberty of addressing
the community, to the official class. Eventually, only those who were
trained were allowed to address the assembly and the clergy-laity distinction
began widening at breakneck speed.
One
scholar has said, “The greatness of the orator took the place of the astounding
event of Jesus Christ. And the dialogue between speaker and listener
faded into a monologue.” Wayne E. Oates, Protestant Pastoral
Counseling (Philadelphia: Westminster Press). 1962, p. 162.
In
a word, the Greco-Roman sermon replaced prophesying, open sharing, and
Spirit-inspired teaching. Ibid p. 107
As
early as the third century, Christians called their sermons by the same name
that Greek orators called their discourses. They called them
homilies. Today, one can take a seminary course called homiletics to
learn how to preach. The influence of Greek Ideas, p. 109
Yngve Brilioth, A Brief History of Preaching, (Philadelphia:
Fortress Press, 1065).
Sermonizing
harms the church because it is a one-way affair. The preacher is
separated from the congregation by space and usually height. His pulpit
is elevated above the passive people in the pews. No one can ask questions.
It is inconvenient, out of place and considered a rude interruption.
Instead of the congregation being actively involved, it sits passively and
motionless, thus stalemating spiritual growth.
In
addition, the sermon makes the preacher the religious specialist and confirms
the unbiblical role of the clergy.
“How
can a Christian passively sit in a pew and affirm the priesthood of all
believers when he is passively sitting in a pew!?” How can a Protestant
Christian claim sola Scriptura (‘by the Scripture only’)
and still support the pulpit Sermon?” Pagan Christianity, p 93
The Church Building
Nowhere
in the Bible does God make provision for His followers to come together in a
building built solely for worship services, to hear a sermon preached.
When the Israelites in the wilderness at Mt. Sinai, pleaded for a human
intermediary rather than allowing God to talk to them directly, God set up the
sanctuary service. But neither in the sanctuary in the wilderness, nor in
the Temple in Jerusalem, did God provide for the people to come inside a
designated building to hear a sermon preached.
Both
in the sanctuary in the wilderness and the Temple in Jerusalem, God’s rule was
that only the priests could enter, not the people. The “Jewish” synagogue,
where people sat down and listened to a sermon, appeared in the New Testament,
probably starting sometime during the 400-year intertestamental period, but was
not endorsed by God. God’s presence was not in the
synagogues.
God’s
presence was in the Temple, the Shekinah glory, over the ark
in the Most Holy Place. But no one, but the priests, was allowed to enter
any compartment of the sanctuary. God has made it perfectly clear that he
does not endorse the type of “church” service that is common today.
The
temple, the priesthood and the sacrifice of Judaism all passed away with the
coming of Jesus Christ.
The
word church does not appear in the New Testament. The word mistranslated
as church is ecclesia that literally means the called
ones. “To the ears of a first-century Christian, calling a
building an ecclesia (church) would be like calling a woman a
skyscraper!” . . .Clement of Alexandria (150-215) is the first person to use
the phrase ‘go to church’ ---which was a foreign thought to the first century
believers. You cannot go to something you are!”
Ibid. p 100
Since
Christ has risen, we believers have become the temple of God. “When
Christianity was born, it was the only religion on earth that had no sacred
objects, no sacred persons, and no sacred spaces. Although surrounded by
Jewish synagogues and pagan temples, the early Christians were the only
religious people on earth that did not erect sacred buildings for their
worship. The Christian faith was born in homes, out in courtyards, along
roadsides, and in living rooms.” Ibid p 102
“In
the first three centuries, the church had no buildings. . .” Ante Pacem,
p. 166. John A. T. Robinson (The New Reformation, Philadelphia, The
Westminster Press, 1965), p 89. As one scholar put it, “The Christianity
that conquered the Roman Empire was essentially a home-centered movement.
It was a conscious choice on their part.” Robert Banks, The Church Comes
Home (Peabody: Hendrickson Publishers, 1998), pp 49-50, and Philip Schaff, History
of the Christian Church: Volume 2, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1910, p 62.
Church
buildings began with Constantine. . .In A.D. 312, Constantine became Caesar of
the Western Empire. By 324, he became Emperor of the entire Roman
Empire. Shortly afterward, he began ordering the construction of church
buildings. He did so to promote the popularity and acceptance of
Christianity. If the Christians had their own sacred buildings—as did the
Jews and the pagans—their faith would be regarded as legitimate.” Ibid
107,108
“The
church building brought significant changes to Christian worship. Because
the Emperor was the number one ‘lay-person’ in the church, a simple ceremony
was not sufficient. In order to honor him, the pomp and ritual of the
imperial court was adopted into the Christian liturgy.
“It
was the custom of the Roman Emperors to have lights carried before them
whenever they appeared in public. The lights were accompanied by a basin
of fire filled with aromatic spices. Constantine introduced candles and
the burning of incense as part of the church service. During his reign,
the clergy, who had first worn everyday clothes, began dressing in special
garments. What were those special clothes? They were the garments
of Roman officials.
“The
Roman custom of beginning a service with processional music was adopted as
well. Worship became more professional, dramatic, and ceremonial. . .
Fourth century Christianity was being profoundly shaped by Greek paganism and
Roman Imperialism. The upshot of it all was that there was an immediate
loss of intimacy and open participation. The professional clergy
performed the acts of worship while the laity looked on as spectators.”
Ibid p 116
The
liturgy, the sermon, clerical vestments, the hierarchical leadership structure,
and the church building were all pagan customs absorbed into the Christian
faith. Rather than being from the Old Testament, as they are often
attributed, these practices came by way of the mysteries (the pagan cults) and
were justified by (incorrect) references to the Old Testament.
The Pastor
“The
Pastor is the fundamental figure of the Protestant faith. . .Remove the Pastor
and modern Christianity collapses. Remove the Pastor and virtually every
Protestant church would be thrown into a panic. Remove the Pastor and
Protestantism as we know it dies. The Pastor is the dominating focal
point, mainstay, and centerpiece of the modern Church. He is the
embodiment of Protestant Christianity.” Ibid p 141
The
word “Pastors” does appear in the New Testament;
And
he gave some as apostles, and some as prophets, and some as evangelists, and
some as PASTORS and teachers. (Ephesians 4:11 NASB)
“Pastor”
is the Latin word for shepherd. It is a metaphor to describe a particular
function in the church. It is not an office or a title. Shepherds
are those who naturally provide nurture and care for God’s sheep. The
term should not be confused with an office or title as is commonly conceived
today.
Ever
since sin entered the world, there has been an implicit desire in man to have a
physical leader to bring him to God. In the wilderness, the Israelites
wanted Moses to be the physical mediator between them and God.
At
the time of Samuel, Israel clamored for a king, even though God wanted His
people to live under His direct Headship.
“Alongside
of man’s fallen quest for a human spiritual mediator is his obsession with the
hierarchical form of leadership. All ancient cultures were hierarchical
in their social structures to one degree or another. Regrettably,
post-apostolic Christians adopted and adapted these structures into their
church life.” Ibid. P 146
Up
until the second century, the church had no official leadership. They
were religious groups without priest, temple, or sacrifice. Christ was
their Leader.
“Among
the flock were the elders (shepherds or overseers). These men all stood
on an equal footing. There was no hierarchy among them. Also
present were extra-local workers who planted groups of believers. These
were called “sent-ones” or apostles. But they did not take up residency
in the “churches” for which they cared. Nor did they control
them.
The
vocabulary of New Testament leadership allows no pyramidal structures. It
is rather a language of horizontal relationships that includes exemplary
action.” Ibid p 146
“Then
Ignatius of Antioch (35-107) stepped on the stage. The origin of the
modern Pastor and church hierarchy can be traced to him. Ignatius
elevated one of the elders above all the others and called him “the
bishop.” According to Ignatius, the bishop has ultimate power and should
be obeyed absolutely. Consider the following excerpts from his
letters:” Ibid p 147
“All
of you follow the bishop as Jesus Christ follows the Father. . . No one is to
do any church business without the bishop. . . Wherever the bishop appears,
there let the people be. . . You yourselves must never act independently of
your bishop and clergy. You should look on your bishop as a type of the
Father. . . Whatever he approves, that is pleasing to God. . . Early
Christian Writings: The Apostolic Fathers (NewYork: Dorset Press, 1968). pp
75-123)
By
the mid-third century, the authority of the bishop had hardened into a fixed
office. The Early Christian Church, p. 92.
“Due
to the influence of Cyprian, a former pagan orator who converted to
Christianity, the door was open to resurrect the Old Testament economy of
priests, temples, altars and sacrifices. Bishops began to be called
‘priests,’ a custom that became common by the third century. They were
also called ‘Pastors’ on occasion. In the third century, every church had
its own bishop. And bishops and presbyters together started to be called
‘the clergy.” Ibid pp 149-150 The clergy caste was cemented by the
fourth century.
“At
the head of the church stood the bishop. Under him was the college of
presbyters. Under them stood the deacons. And under all of them
crawled the poor, miserable ‘laymen.’ By the end of the fourth century,
the bishops walked with the great. They were given tremendous privileges.
They got involved I politics which separated them further from the presbyters
(priests).” Ibid p 151.
Elders
naturally emerged in a group of believers through the process of time.
They were not appointed to an external office. Instead, they were recognized
by virtue of their seniority and contribution to the group. But there are
only three passages in the New Testament that tell us that elders were publicly
recognized; in the “churches” in Galatia, the elders in Ephesus, and the
“churches” in Crete.
“The
word ‘ordain’ in these passages does not mean ‘to place into office.’ It,
instead, carries the idea of endorsing, affirming and showing forth what has
already been happening. It also carries the thought of blessing.
“In
the case of workers being sent out to evangelize, the laying on of hands was
done by apostolic workers. This merely meant the endorsement or
affirmation of a function, not the installment into an office or the giving of
special status, as it came to mean in the late second and early third centuries
when “ordination” took on an entirely different meaning.
“By
the fourth century, the ceremony of ordination was embellished by symbolic
garments and solemn ritual. Ordination produced an ecclesiastical caste
that usurped the believing priesthood. From where do you suppose the
Christians got their pattern of ordination? They patterned their
ordination ceremony after the Roman custom of appointing men to civil
office. The entire process down to the very words came straight from the
Roman civic world.” Ibid p 164
“The
unscriptural clergy/laity distinction has done untold harm to the Body of
Christ. It has ruptured the believing community into first and
second-class Christians. The clergy/laity dichotomy perpetuates an awful
falsehood. Namely, that some Christians are more privileged than others
to serve the Lord.
“Our
ignorance of church history has allowed us to be robbed blind. The
pastoral office has stolen your right to function as a member of Christ’s
Body! It has shut your mouth and strapped you to a pew. It has
distorted the reality of the Body, making the Pastor a giant mouth and
transforming you into a tiny ear. It has rendered you a mute spectator
who is proficient at taking sermon notes and passing an offering plate!”
Ibid. p 178
“The
modern Pastor not only does damage to God’s people, he does damage to
himself. The pastoral office has a way of chewing up all who come within
its pale. Depression, burn-out, stress, and emotional breakdown are
terribly high among Pastors. At the time of this writing, there are
reportedly more than 500,000 Pastors serving churches in the U.S. Of this
mass number, consider the following statistics that lay bare the lethal danger
of the pastoral office:
- 94%
feel pressured to have an ideal family
- 90 %
work more than 46 hours a week
- 81% say
they have insufficient time with their spouses
- 80%
believe that pastoral ministry affects their family negatively
- 70% do
not have someone they consider a close friend.
- 70%
have lower self-esteem than when they entered the ministry
- 50%
feel unable to meet the needs of the job.
- 80% are
discouraged or deal with depression
- 40%+
report that they are suffering from burnout, frantic schedules, and
unrealistic expectations.
- 33%
consider pastoral ministry an outright hazard to the family
- 33%
have seriously considered leaving their position in the past year.
- 40% of
pastoral resignations are due to burnout.
“Most
Pastors are expected to juggle 16 major tasks at once. (East Hillsborough
Christian Voice, Feb 2002, p 3) And most crumble under the
pressure. For this reason, 1,600 ministers in all denominations across
the U.S. are fired or forced to resign each month. Over the past 20
years, the average length of a pastorate has declined from seven years to just
over two years.” Ibid 179-181
The
modern Pastor does not have a strand of Scripture to support his
existence. During the Reformation, the Catholic priest was transformed
into the “preacher,” the Minister,” and finally “the Pastor.”
The
“Pastor” is a pagan tradition that has no basis in Scripture.
The Cross
A
former Mason mentions that the tau cross “is actually the symbol of the pagan
slain and risen god, Tammuz (Ezekiel 8:13-14). It is a symbol for just
another counterfeit Masonic “Christ.” William Schnoebelen, Masonry:
Beyond the Light (Chino, California: Chick Publications 1991), p 119
The
Phoenicians used the tau cross as a magic symbol. Frank Gaynor,
Editor, Dictionary of Mysticism (New York: Philosophical
Library, 1953), p 182
“The
Tau, T, is the emblem of mercury, of Hermes. It is the crux ansata and
the crux HermisD. . . the crux Tau was also the
emblem of the generative power, of eternal transmigrating life, and thus was
used indiscriminately with the Phallus. It was, in fact, the
phallus. The Tau is the Thoth, the Teut, the Teutates of the Druids; and
Teutates was Mercury. . .” Godfrey Higgins, Anacalypsis, An
Attempt to Draw Aside the Veil of the Saitic Isis (London England: n.;, 1874).
The
Bible calls this Cross an “abomination.”
The
Lord said unto me, Turn thee yet again, and thou shalt see greater
abominations that they do.
Then
He brought me to the door of the gate of the Lord’s house which was toward the
north; and, behold, there sat women weeping for Tammuz.”
Ezekiel 8:13,14
Ezekiel 8:13,14
Jesus
was crucified on a pole (literal translation), NOT a cross. The word
“cross” in Strong’s Concordance is stauros, #4716. It means a
stake, a post or a pole.
The
“Cross” is a Pagan symbol.
The Lord’s Supper
Originally,
the Lord’s Supper was a full meal, a Christian banquet. Jesus did not
tell us to take a thimble full of grape juice and a tiny, tasteless cracker as
a remembrance of Him. He was having a meal with His friends, a communal
meal.
“Today,
tradition has forced us to take the Supper in an atmosphere of gloom and
doom. We are told to reflect on our sins. . . In addition, tradition has
taught us that taking the Lord’s Supper can be a dangerous thing. Thus
most modern Christians would not be caught dead taking it without an ordained
clergyman present.” Pagan Christianity p 128
When did the Full Meal cease?
Around
the time of Tertullian (160-225), the bread and the cup began to be separated
from the meal and by the lat second century, the separation was complete.
The Lord’s Supper then became a sacred ritual and required a sacred person to
administer it. The ritual then became shrouded in fear. The mood
became somber and glum. “The participants are told by the pastor that they
must examine themselves with regard to sin before they partake of the
elements. A practice that came from John Calvin.” Ibid. p 243
The
Lord’s Supper, when separated from its proper context of a full meal, has
become almost a pagan ritual, a morbid religious exercise, rather than a joyous
festival. It moved from being a real meal to being a symbolic meal, from
bare simplicity to elaborate splendor, from being a lay function to being a
priestly function. Nowhere in the New Testament is there any evidence that
it was the duty or special privilege of anyone to lead worshippers in the
celebration of the Lord’s Supper.
Seminaries for Pastors
“In
the minds of most Christians, formal Christian education qualifies a person to
do the Lord’s work. Unless a Christian has graduated from Bible college
or seminary, he is viewed as being a ‘para’-minister. A pseudo Christian
worker. Someone less than the big boys. How dare such a person
preach, teach, baptize, or administer the Lord’s Supper if he has never been
formally trained to do such things . . . right?
“The
idea that a Christian worker must attend Bible college or seminary to be
legitimate is horrifyingly ingrained. It is so ingrained that when people
feel a ‘call’ of God on their life, they are conditioned to begin hunting for a
Bible college or seminary to attend.
“Such
thinking fits poorly with the early Christian mindset. Bible colleges,
seminaries, and even Sunday schools were utterly absent from the early
church. All are human inventions that came hundreds of years after the
apostles left the human stage. . . Unlike today’s ministerial training,
first-century training was hands-on, rather than academic. It was a
matter of apprenticeship, rather than of intellectual learning. It was
aimed primarily at the spirit, rather than at the frontal lobe. Pagan
Christianity p 247.
As
the Reformation progressed, the uneducated pastors were encouraged to attend
schools and universities. Protestantism promoted a well-educated clergy
that became the backbone of the movement. Eventually, the Catholics
wanted their priests to match the learning of the Protestant pastors.
Christian
education in the United States followed after the Aristotle model and was
highly systematized. Some of the earliest universities to train the
clergy were Yale (1701) and Harvard (1636).
“The
Bible college is essentially a 19th-century North American
evangelical invention. “In response to the revivalism of D.L. Moody
(1837-1899), the Bible college movement blossomed in the late 19th and
early 20h century.” Ibid p 259
“Modern
theological teaching is data-transfer education. It moves from notebook
to notebook. In the process, our theology never gets below the
neck. If a student accurately parrots the ideas of his professor, he is
awarded a degree. . . Theological knowledge, however, does not prepare a person
for ministry.” Ibid p 265
“Still worse is the elitism that the seminary
system feeds. The approach taken by seminaries is self-referential.
It sets its own criteria for who gets to play and on what terms. Then it
looks down its nose at those who do not think that criteria is particularly
useful or important.
“But perhaps the most damaging problem of the
seminary and Bible college is that it perpetuates the crippling, unscriptural,
humanly-devised clergy system. . . In the seminary and Bible college,
professors and pastors alike illegitimately justify the existence of an
unbiblical system in which they live, breath, and have their being.
“Instead of offering the cure to the ills of the
church, our theological schools worsen them by assuming (and even defending)
all of the unscriptural practices that produce them.” Ibid 267
Now that you understand that the organized church
with all its accoutrements is of “man” and not God, are you willing to abandon
these traditions? Or will you continue practicing what
you know to be at odds with the ways of God?
Are
you going to ignore what you now know, or will you be faithful to the light
that you have learned? Or will you continue to elevate your religious
inventions above the inspired revelation of God?
Will
you step out of the institutional church that embraces practices that violate
the New Testament or will you “invalidate the Word of God for the sake of your
traditions.” Matthew 15:6
History
shows that where conscience and tradition collide, most of God’s people go with
tradition. But if they go with tradition rather than God’s Word, are
they really “God’s people”?
The
question before us is. . .