Results 1 - 2 of 2
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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | Did Jesus suffer in hell when he died? | Luke 23:46 | gracefull | 65304 | ||
eD. Direct me to 'objective' proof. School records, a paper he wrote for school... something. But you still have not responded to the fact that he and most other WOF teachers do not teach, OUR thoughts produce the results WE want. They teach the Word of God becoming my thoughts mixed with faith produces the result. Metaphysics teaches the power comes from our mind and there is no God. You can't see the difference? All have sinned and come short of God's glory. " I receive that, I am a sinner". If you repent God is faithul and just to forgive us. "I believe that and I repent" For God so loved the world He gave His only begotten son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have eternal life. "I reeive that, I now have eternal life". That is God's way in all His promises. God said it I believe it, that settles it. (God is now obligated) |
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2 | Did Jesus suffer in hell when he died? | Luke 23:46 | EdB | 65346 | ||
graceful I would advise you to get the book "A Different Gospel" by McConell for proof of Kenyon's involvement in metaphysics. Remember I never said Kenyon taught metaphysics I said his teaching was heavily influences by his exposure to metaphysics. By the way Emerson College of Oratory where Kenyon by his own admission attended was a hot bed of Metaphysical philosophy. At the time Kenyon attended, Kenyon was angry at God and spent nearly the entire 4 years as an atheist proving to others God did not exist. That comes from Kenyon's own testimony. He actually made one young man reject his salvation. Here is snippet of McConell’s book How could this early Gnostic teaching get into the modern day WOF movement? D.R. McConnell in his penetrating book, "A Different Gospel" has documented that the real father of the WOF movement is E.W. Kenyon, who died in 1948. McConnell shows that Kenyon was heavily influenced by the Mind Science cults. In the second chapter of his book, McConnell records this statement from John Kennington, once a follower of E.W. Kenyon, "At one time, I was a blind follower of Kenyon... Now with the passing of a little time and with a little more understanding, I have come to realize that E.W. Kenyon has simply 'baptized' many concepts from Christian Science. In so doing, he became a source for a form of 'Pentecostal Christian Science,' even though Kenyon himself was not a Pentecostal" (McConnell, "A Different Gospel," p.15). EdB |
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