Recent Comments
- MamboGreat Sermon!If end times folk would read the historical interpretations of Genesis from Ancient Orthodox and Catholic sources, this confusion about Revelation would not be nearly as confusing. People reinvent the wheel.
- David PrinceGreat Sermon!
- LottieVery Good Info!
- LottieInteresting Teaching!There's more to this "honoring parents" commandment than we think. It's amazing how our modern culture/worldview has more of an influence on us than we perceive.
- LottieGreat Teaching!There may be more to idolatry than what we think. We may, unknowingly, be practicing forms of it. Thank you, Dr. Sanders, for this information.
- LottieVery Good Reminder!Information we kind of bypass in the Christian community.
- Justin Ty MeGreat Sermon!This is truly an insightful, encouraging, and much needed message for Christians who think that they are not viewed as being anti-semitic and who believe that our government will keep them safe.
- Justin Ty MeAbsolutely Great Sermon!God's people would not be destroyed if they rightly divided His word, studied to show themselves approved, and prepared themselves to give a defense of the Gospel that saves.This message is necessary if we are going to win souls to Christ.
- LottieA Continued Look At Judaism And EschatologyInteresting information
- LottieJUDAISM AND ESCHATOLOGYA brief look at role of Judaism in the world and end-time events. Who the true spiritual Jews are, and no, we're not talking replacement theology.
- LottieGreat Teaching!I've been thinking--”Danger, Will Robinson, danger!”--man does not like his God-given name because it defines him as a being that is tied to the earth. This name reminds him that he is not the Elohim or even a god. So, he is always (like at the tower of Babel) trying to change his name, that which defines him, to a name that means he is more than man, to a name that's great. But there is only One Who has the right to change our name, the One Who has the Name that is above all names: the Lord Jesus Christ, the One that named man.Umm...your “instant language day” comment/joke made it seem like God was caught off guard and had to tweak His plan, and I know from your other messages that you don't, in even a teeny-weeny way, believe that.Thank you, Dr. Sanders, for making me think about things that I'd accepted without giving any thought about it and hadn't realized that I had.
- LottieGreat Teaching!My speculation :-) when I came to this part in Genesis: Oh, I see. Cause he had to bring an offering to God from the fruits of his labor, Cain just yanked something out of the ground, so to speak. (I thought of Malachi 1 where God said the priest were contemptuously serving/offering sacrifices to Him.) Abel, showing how he felt about God, was real careful about his offering. He brought to God the first--and the best of the first--of the “fruits” of his labor. Question: Dr. Sanders, what is your source for “worthless” and “strength?” I've been looking and can't seem to find those meanings for the names Abel and Cain. I didn't know, until I sat down and thought about it, because of eschatology being used as a big money maker, and the eschatological arguing, I had become rather end-time weary. I am so glad, Dr. Sanders, that I took a chance and “peeked behind” your end-time titles.
- LottieThe FundamentalistsI've recently finished reading two booklets by the late Pastor John E. Ashbrook that provide some insightful details about what took place within the Fundamentalist camp. They are “Axioms of Separation” and “The New Neutralism II.”
- Dr. Leon L. SandersGreat Sermon!Insidious is correct. The more I study the moe I discover that we are little different than our ancestors proving the truth of the Bible, "nothing new under the sun".
- LottieShades of Gnosticism!Gnosticism is insidious; it invades our thinking and affect our views of things in ways that we do not recognize as gnostic.