From One Believer To Another

From One Believer to Another

If this is your first time visiting this blog, “Welcome!”

As you read, I pray you’ll not see me as being angry at anyone. Firm at times with some, I’ll agree with that. I know that no matter what a person has gone through, things they’ve said or done, or still doing for that matter, there’s a 50/50 chance of my having sought forgiveness for doing the exact same thing at one time or another. I know the battle is not against flesh and blood my friend.

Throughout this blog you will find me quoting things heard on the radio. You’ll not find the names of those who said these things in the posts. I do document their names, the date, time, and radio station call sign on my copy of the original document. I do not publish these details because our mission should be to expose the false teachings not to personally attack the person.

If you should continue reading my friend, you will find the Anthanasian Creed being exposed for what it is, a false doctrine. The word of God having the final say. My trusting in He who knows hears and sees all things, the God of the [Bible].

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

I Highly Recommend Not Using The Word Of God To Create Falsehoods

Jesus said to her, “Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, ‘I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.’” John 20:17 (NKJV) While listening to the local “Christian” radio station, I heard, taken straight from John 20:17, “I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.” The speaker then went on to say, "That’s why Jesus can say Father.” What the speaker failed to mention was that Jesus also said, in John 20:17, “And to My God and your God.” This is a common theme with followers of the Anthanasian Creed, quoting Scripture but failing to acknowledge that Jesus calls God His God, “My God,” in them (Matthew 27:46 and Revelation 3:12 as well). Jesus calling the all-knowing God of the Bible “My God” His God in these three verses (7 times total) isn’t a cultural tradition, it’s a Biblical fact. This time of the year, Micah’s prophecy (Micah 5:1-5) of Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem gets a lot of attention. We do not know the actual [calendar] day of Jesus’ birth. What we do know is that in Micah 5:4 (NKJV), Jesus “shall stand and feed His flock in the strength of the Lord, in the majesty of the name of the Lord His God.” Key words are, “the Lord His God.” After two thousand plus years, since Jesus’ birth in Bethlehem, one would think Micah’s prophecy of Jesus feeding “His flock in the strength of the Lord, in the majesty of the name of the Lord His God,” would get an equal amount of attention. Not so. Somehow the words “His God” in Micah 5:4, referring to Jesus’ God, seem out of place. We don’t have to look far, as to why. The Anthanasian Creeds believe it [or else] “the Son is God” to be saved false method of salvation, has taken precedence. The Bible is not the friend of false things, including the Anthanasian Creeds, unless one believes “the Son is God” one cannot be saved. This addition to God’s plan of salvation, is simply false.

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