We pray for unity within the Bible-Presbyterian Church. Calling some of their fundamentalists to repentance. We reprimand Far Eastern Bible College (FEBC) lecturers for teaching heresy and living in lust and pride! ++THIS BLOG HAS STRONG LANGUAGE. Reader discretion is advised++
5.1.22
2.1.22
We believe
We believe “all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose.” (Rom 8:28)
We believe God will surely punish some Bible Presbyterian Church leaders, elders and deacons, and our members because God loves us. And this will be very soon.
Unless we
repent from divisions, false teachings like Verbal Plenary Preservation, pride
and lust, In a vision, I saw demon and devil, and ghosts are not far from them.
Repent, come
out of the darkness, walk in the light. Have brotherly fellowship together in Christ
Rev Dr. Jack Sin's conclusion
Rev Dr. Jack Sin concluded that all the words of God are not preserved exclusively in the Textus Receptus (TR) underlying the King James Version (KJV) but in “all the providentially preserved Majority or 110 Traditional or Byzantine Greek manuscripts of over 5,000,” and his contention that the divine, perfect preservation of God’s words in the Greek New Testament underlying the KJV cannot be biblically or theologically proven.
31.12.21
What does it mean to have the fear of God?
For the unbeliever, the fear of God is the fear of the judgment of God and eternal death, which is eternal separation from God (Luke 12:5; Hebrews 10:31). For the believer, the fear of God is something much different. The believer’s fear is reverence of God. Hebrews 12:28-29 is a good description of this: “Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, for our ’God is a consuming fire.’” This reverence and awe is exactly what the fear of God means for Christians. This is the motivating factor for us to surrender to the Creator of the Universe.
Proverbs 1:7 declares, “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge.” Until we understand who God is and develop a reverential fear of Him, we cannot have true wisdom. True wisdom comes only from understanding who God is and that He is holy, just, and righteous. Deuteronomy 10:12, 20-21 records, “And now, O Israel, what does the LORD your God ask of you but to fear the LORD your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul. Fear the LORD your God and serve him. Hold fast to him and take your oaths in his name. He is your praise; he is your God, who performed for you those great and awesome wonders you saw with your own eyes.” The fear of God is the basis for our walking in His ways, serving Him, and, yes, loving Him.
Some redefine the fear of God for believers to “respecting” Him. While respect is definitely included in the concept of fearing God, there is more to it than that. A biblical fear of God, for the believer, includes understanding how much God hates sin and fearing His judgment on sin—even in the life of a believer. Hebrews 12:5-11 describes God’s discipline of the believer. While it is done in love (Hebrews 12:6), it is still a fearful thing. As children, the fear of discipline from our parents no doubt prevented some evil actions. The same should be true in our relationship with God. We should fear His discipline, and therefore seek to live our lives in such a way that pleases Him.
Believers are not to be scared of God. We have no reason to be scared of Him. We have His promise that nothing can separate us from His love (Romans 8:38-39). We have His promise that He will never leave us or forsake us (Hebrews 13:5). Fearing God means having such a reverence for Him that it has a great impact on the way we live our lives. The fear of God is respecting Him, obeying Him, submitting to His discipline, and worshiping Him in awe.
A Call to Persevere
Jude
17 But, dear friends, remember what the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ foretold. 18 They said to you, “In the last times there will be scoffers who will follow their own ungodly desires.” 19 These are the people who divide you, who follow mere natural instincts and do not have the Spirit.
20 But you, dear friends, by building yourselves up in your most holy faith and praying in the Holy Spirit, 21 keep yourselves in God’s love as you wait for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ to bring you to eternal life.
22 Be merciful to those who doubt; 23 save others by snatching them from the fire; to others show mercy, mixed with fear—hating even the clothing stained by corrupted flesh.
Doxology
24 To him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you before his glorious presence without fault and with great joy— 25 to the only God our Savior be glory, majesty, power and authority, through Jesus Christ our Lord, before all ages, now and forevermore! Amen.
28.12.21
Charles Shit has NPD
What is NPD?
Narcissistic personality disorder [NPD] . . . is a mental condition in which people have an inflated sense of their own importance, a deep need for excessive attention and admiration, troubled relationships, and a lack of empathy for others. But behind this mask of extreme confidence lies a fragile self-esteem that's vulnerable to the slightest criticism.
Why do I say Charles Shit has NPD? Because he started the lawsuit!
Look at him, he looks innocent. Hid his hands after he threw the stone on others. He kept his mustard well in the morning, he trimmed it and then went to sue Christian brothers. Such a dangerous pastor in BPC.
You better watch out, one day he may turn his back unto you too.
Outwardly, he is gentle, but he is like a snake, poisonous, dangerous, quiet, carnal. Immature tends to create his own “little church” within the larger church. Indeed, if he could get away with it, he would operate in a totally autocratic fashion, with heavy, top-down leadership.
He is very selfish, he has his own agenda. We will see that motive in his ministry in another few years' time.
Yes, toxic leaders are the distinct minority of Christian leaders. But they can do harm to the cause of Christ disproportionate to their numbers. And they can get away with their behavior for years because they often have a charismatic and charming personalities. Charming like a snake.
Watch out!
27.12.21
Warning to Charles Seet
1 Corinthians 6:7-9
7 The very fact that you have lawsuits among you means you have been completely defeated already. Why not rather be wronged? Why not rather be cheated? 8 Instead, you yourselves cheat and do wrong, and you do this to your brothers and sisters. 9 Or do you not know that wrongdoers will not inherit the kingdom of God?
Article for Charles Seet to read in 2022
Courting Trouble
To understand 1 Corinthians 6 it is
necessary to understand some basic characteristics of the judicial process in a
Roman colony. It appears that by the mid-first century a.d. trial by jury was reserved mainly for criminal
proceedings, and even then there might be exceptions.1 Trials would be
handled by some sort of judge, perhaps one of the colony’s duoviri, but it is possible that an aedile like Erastus might
handle a case that arose out of some conflict or problem in the macellum (the meat market) or the
marketplace.2 The earliest and most famous of Roman courts was the
“extortion” court, “the need for which became acute as Roman governors …
discovered the possibilities of enriching themselves at the expense of the
provincials.… Many of the great cases of the late republic and early empire
were heard before this court.”3
There was a three-stage judicial process for civil cases. First, the
plaintiff would appear before one of the city’s magistrates requesting a suit.
If the magistrate agreed that there were grounds for a suit the defendant would
be summoned by the plaintiff to
court. The factual details of the case would be discussed and debated and a formula (statement of the factual
details that both parties agreed on) arrived at. The trial would be based on
what was in the formula. Second, the
magistrate would then asssign a judge, agreeable to both parties, to the case
and pass along to him the formula.
Finally, the case would be heard by the judge and the sentence passed, but it
was the plaintiff’s responsibility to see that the judgment was carried out by
the defendant. This process could drag on for some time and could be aborted at
various points, for example if the defendant refused to come to court in the
first place and the magistrate was not inclined to use force. Going to court
could be a very expensive proposition. Tacitus tells us that a lawyer in a.d. 47 could command a fee of as much
as 10,000 sesterces (Ann.
11.5–7). The annual salary for a duovir’s
clerk in a Roman colony in Spain was only 1200 sesterces.4
A number of forces in Roman society affected the adminstration of
justice.5
Social status and rank vis-Ã -vis one’s opponent were major determining factors.
While “the situation of the weaker plaintiff improved with the end of the
Republic and the coming of the Empire,” the system remained heavily weighted in
favor of people of higher status.6 From at least the time of Augustus
certain people—fathers, patrons, magistrates, and men of standing—were
basically immune from prosecution for fraud by some kinds of other
people—children, freedmen, private citizens, and men of low rank. Only if a
lower status person had a powerful patron was there a likelihood that he or she
could bring a successful suit against someone higher up the social ladder.7
Another factor in civil cases was the lawyer. If he was a good
rhetorician, highly skilled in forensic rhetoric, one had a chance, even if
social standing stacked the odds otherwise. In courts the art of persuasion
became much more than a mere exercise in public oratory. People packed many
trials to hear the great orators of the day.
Nevertheless, the Roman judicial system was pervaded by “improper
influences” and this “made equality before the law unattainable” or virtually
so.8
Citizens were less likely to be arrested, beaten, and imprisoned than
foreigners. “The principal criterion of legal privilege in the eyes of the
Romans was dignitas or honor derived from power, style of life, and
wealth.”9 To the wealthy, well-born, and well-connected went
the chief rewards of the legal system, along with many of the other benefits
available in society. There was a strongly aristocratic bias to the whole
culture. Justice during the empire was far from blind and was often looking
over its shoulder.
The importance of this for 1 Corinthians 6 is that at the very least
one or both of the Christians going to court were probably well-to-do and
hoping to exploit the judicial system to their advantage.10
As in ch. 5 we find further hints here that Paul’s chief troubles in Corinth
were caused by well-to-do members of the ekklēsia.
Chapter 6 has been traditionally divided
into two parts, the first on a case in a pagan court involving differences
between two Christians (vv. 1–11) and the second on another case of sexual
immorality (after the one in ch. 5), in this instance a man going to
prostitutes (vv. 12–20). It is often doubted that the case in 6:1–11 is
directly connected to the incest case addressed in ch. 5, since it has to do
with fraud (v. 7) and thus is likely a property matter. But since marriage
often was a property matter, there
may be a close connection.
There are close links between 6:12–20 and what follows in ch. 7. Paul
is trying to establish both a Christian view of the importance of the human
body in the order of redemption and the practical implications of an
eschatological worldview for present sexual conduct. He continues to address
his audience’s view of human sexuality and their aberrant theology of salvation
in ch. 7.11
Both cases discussed in ch. 6 deal with a serious breach of community
and an ensuing bad witness to the world. Paul argues that by taking disputes to
a pagan court and by fulfilling one’s sexual drives outside the body of Christ
one is violating Christian community and Christian witness. He uses several
sarcastic rhetorical questions, not detailed arguments, to express himself
here. Especially sarcastic is the question whether there is not one sophos (wise person) among the
Corinthian Christians who could judge the matter (v. 5), in view of their
claims about being wise. All these rhetorical questions are meant to shame the
Corinthians into seeing their real moral condition and to deflate their
unwarranted pride. This letter would be read before the whole congregation and
would be a humiliating public shaming.
The point in v. 1 could be
that Gentile courts are inherently unrighteous. Dio Chrysostom, commenting on
Roman Corinth about a.d. 100, says
that there were “lawyers innumerable perverting justice” there, and refers to
young men declaiming forensic pieces in the courtyard next to the Temple of
Poseidon during the Isthmian games, hoping to drum up business (8.9).12
K. Wengst has stressed that in view of the experiences listed in his
tribulation catalogs (1 Cor. 4:9ff.; 2 Cor. 11:23ff.), Paul had little reason
to trust Roman justice and that this passage should be read in that light.13
But Paul’s sweeping dismissal of the practice of law does not amount
to an attack on the law as such, and his statement that it would be better to
suffer wrong (v. 7) “presupposes the recognition of law.” “Going to law here is
itself regarded as doing injustice and robbing one’s adversary. That injustice
and robbery thus appear in the garb of law … makes it clear why Paul can
describe the judges as unjust.”14 Paul believes that
Christians, like Jews before them, should settle all disputes among themselves
on their own. He does not deal here with the case of a Christian and a
non-Christian entangled in legal matters.
In both this and the next case, Paul provides the wider Christian
perspective by bringing in eschatological matters. In the first case, he brings
in the fact that on judgment day believers will judge the outside world and
even angels (vv. 2f.); in the second
case, he refers to the future resurrection, which shows the value that God has
placed on human bodies (v. 14). The Corinthians’ problems arose not just from
bad ethics or bad social values but from bad theology, which affected all
worldly affairs and matters including sexual and legal matters. They had an
inadequate if not non-existent future eschatology, or at least future
eschatology was not shaping their values and decision making. Paul’s point in
vv. 2f. is that if they are going to go on and judge the world, then surely
they can handle an ordinary mundane matter now on their own.
Some have identified “the despised” (or “the least esteemed”) in v. 4 as Christians,15
in which case Paul is showing his contempt for the litigators, or possibly he
wants to invert the secular pyramid by putting the least esteemed of the
congregation on top as judges. But if the word in question really means
“despised,” then this view seems unlikely. It is more likely that the ekklÄ“sia in this verse is the secular
assembly, not the Christian congregation.16 Men oun (“no, rather,” “therefore”) in the first clause must be
given its due weight, so that v. 4 answers to v. 3.17 In v. 4, then, Paul
asks rhetorically whether resorting to a pagan court does not amount to
appointing outsiders ill-suited to the task to judge among Christians.
Paul is clear in v. 7 that
going to pagan court already amounts to moral failure. He asks the plaintiff,
in words probably drawing on the Jesus tradition, would it not be better to be
defrauded? In v. 8 he addresses the
one who did the defrauding and reminds him that people who behave in this
manner will not inherit God’s dominion when it finally comes.[1]
1 Jesus’ case might have been such an exception since
Pilate, not the Sanhedrin, was in the end the one who decided it.
2 Cf. J. K. Chow, Patronage
and Power: A Study of Social Networks in Corinth (Sheffield: JSOT, 1992),
p. 80.
3 G. A. Kennedy, The
Art of Rhetoric in the Roman World 300 b.c.
to a.d. 300 (Princeton:
Princeton University, 1972), pp. 11f.
Ann Annales
4 Cf. Chow, Patronage
and Power, p. 76.
5 See P. Garnsey, Social
Status and Legal Privilege in the Roman Empire (Oxford: Clarendon, 1970),
pp. 183ff.
6 Ibid., p. 192, cf. p. 217: “The possibility of suits
brought by men of comparatively humble origin and position against men of rank
cannot be ruled out; but they are unlikely to have been a frequent occurrence.”
7 It is better to speak of social status or level and
not social class, since the modern notion of class does not really suit the
situation in the Roman Empire. There was nothing quite equivalent to our middle
class. The three basic distinctions were between citizen and foreigner, honestiores and humiliores, and freeborn and slave. Depending on which distinction
was being used, one could be higher or lower. For example, a freeborn person
could be poor, whereas a freedman or freedwoman could be rich, and this was of
great importance in a city in which one bought one’s way into society, public
office, and sometimes even justice. Furthermore, some honestiores did not have citizenship while some humiliores did. See A. Clarke, Secular and Christian Leadership in Corinth
(dissertation, Cambridge, 1991), pp. 26ff.
8 Garnsey, Social
Status, p. 207.
9 Ibid., p. 279.
10 Cicero (Pro Caecina 73) complains that three things hinder justice from
being done in the provinces east of Rome: gratia,
potentia, and pecunia, that is,
“excessive favor,” power or great resources, and money, that is, bribery.
11 Many Corinthian Christians apparently
thought that salvation did not involve the body.
12 If one also considers the analogy with
Jesus’ parable in Luke 18, it is believable that Paul may have been referring
to judges in Corinth. Unlike B. W. Winter, “Civil Litigation in Secular Corinth
and the Church,” NTS 37 (1991), pp.
559–72, I doubt that Paul’s reference is to juries, since small civil claims
did not usually call for a jury. The plural “the unrighteous ones” does not
require a reference to a jury, since Paul is generalizing here.
13 K. Wengst, Pax Romana and the Peace of Jesus Christ (Philadelphia: Fortress,
1987), pp. 76f.
14 Ibid. This assessment does not
conflict with what Paul says in Romans 13 since there he speaks of the divinely
ordained and intended function of government, not of some particular practice
of it, and he is not referring to Christians making use of the judicial system
but of actions initiated by the authorities.
15 Winter, “Civil Litigation,” p. 570.
16 It is possible that en tÈ©̄ ekklÄ“sia̧ means “of the assembly” so that Paul’s
complaint is about making pagans judges of the Christian ekklēsia. In any case, if Paul could call secular judges
“unrighteous” (v. 1), he could equally well call them “despised.”
17 J. B. Lightfoot, Notes on the Epistles of Saint Paul (Winona Lake: Alpha, reprint),
p. 213.
[1]
Witherington, Ben, III. 1995. Conflict and
Community in Corinth: A Socio-Rhetorical Commentary on 1 and 2 Corinthians.
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.
26.12.21
Ecclesiastes 12:12
Be warned, my son, of anything in addition to them. Of making many books there is no end, and much study wearies the body.
12:12 This verse in the NIV appears to warn the reader against the study of any teachings beyond the true (canonical?) wisdom, but this would be reading too much into the Hebrew text. A more probable translation is: “Beyond all this, my son, be advised: Of making many books there is no end.” The contrast is not between the study of canonical versus noncanonical wisdom but between failure to appreciate wisdom on the one hand and excessive zeal for study on the other.
Garrett, Duane A. 1993. Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs. Vol. 14. The New American Commentary. Nashville: Broadman & Holman Publishers.
PS: If you would keep looking for answers in many other books, you would wear yourself out. STAY AWAY FROM BOOKS WRITTEN BY FALSE TEACHERS!
Ecclesiastes 12
12 Rememberb your Creator
in the days
of your youth,
before the
days of troublec come
and the
years approach when you will say,
“I find no
pleasure in them”—
2 before the sun and the light
and the
moon and the stars grow dark,
and the
clouds return after the rain;
3 when the keepers of the house tremble,
and the
strong men stoop,
when the
grinders cease because they are few,
and those
looking through the windows grow dim;
4 when the doors to the street are closed
and the
sound of grinding fades;
when people
rise up at the sound of birds,
but all
their songs grow faint;d
5 when people are afraid of heights
and of
dangers in the streets;
when the
almond tree blossoms
and the
grasshopper drags itself along
and desire
no longer is stirred.
Then people
go to their eternal homee
and
mournersf
go about the streets.
6 Remember him—before the silver cord is
severed,
and the
golden bowl is broken;
before the
pitcher is shattered at the spring,
and the
wheel broken at the well,
7 and the dust returnsg to the ground it
came from,
and the
spirit returns to Godh who gave it.i
8 “Meaningless! Meaningless!” says the
Teacher.a j
“Everything
is meaningless!k”
The Conclusion
of the Matter
9 Not only was the Teacher wise, but he
also imparted knowledge to the people. He pondered and searched out and set in
order many proverbs.l 10 The Teacherm
searched to find just the right words, and what he wrote was upright and true.n
11 The words of the wise are like goads,
their collected sayings like firmly embedded nailso—given by one
shepherd.b 12 Be
warned, my son, of anything in addition to them.
Of making
many books there is no end, and much study wearies the body.p
13 Now all has been heard;
here is the
conclusion of the matter:
Fear Godq
and keep his commandments,r
for this is
the duty of all mankind.s
14 For God will bring every deed into
judgment,t
including
every hidden thing,u
whether it
is good or evil. [1]
b Ecc 11:8
c See 2 Sa 19:35
d Jer 25:10
e See Job 10:21
f Jer 9:17; Am 5:16
g See Ge 2:7; See Ps 146:4
h Ecc 3:21
i See Job 20:8
a Or the leader of the assembly; also in
verses 9 and 10
j Ecc 1:1
k See Ecc 1:2
l 1 Ki 4:32
m See Ecc 1:1
n Pr 22:20–21
o See Ezr 9:8; See Job 6:25
b
Or Shepherd
p See Ecc 1:18
q See Ex 20:20; See 1 Sa 12:24; See Job
23:15; See Ps 19:9
r See Dt 4:2
s See Dt 4:6; See Job 37:24
t See Job 19:29; See Ecc 3:17
u See Job 34:21; See Ps 19:12; Jer 16:17;
23:24
[1] The New
International Version. 2011. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.
Txxe Life Bible Presbyterian Church's Christmas Joy
We have a super-joy this Christmas Day.
We have joy because we have found a perfect Bible in the end. HOHOHO...
We have the perfect Word of God in our hands.
We are rejoicing because we have the Perfect Greek Bible underlying the English King James Bible.
We have joy because we are separatists, separated from the unfaithful brothers and sisters in Christ.
We have joy because we are faithful to the end.
We have “WOW...WOW...WOW” in our lives because we are born again. Once save always saved.
We have joy because we are better in Greek and Hebrew. Shalom.
We have joy because we are wiser than others. We stick to the KJV, not NIV. HOHOHO...
We have a lot of joy to share with the dark worldwide.
We have such wonderful joy this Christmas Day.
Ads
Applying God’s Word Today
Many statements in Scripture indicate that the Bible is given to us for more than satisfying our curiosity about what God is like, what He h...