Quote:
Originally Posted by InChristAlone
I admit that I am biased against the LC and LCers. I have no respect for this organization. I don't like what they have done with my wife, her family, and every saint I know. The cult brainwashed them to such an extent that they lost ability to look at their organization and their believes critically. They turned themselves into sponges that soak up any hogwash the LSM feeds them. They idolize WL, blindly believe every LR doctrine, and get up in arms over any critical remark. I know they are just victims. But it's painful to see them recruiting, deceiving, and brainwashing other people. They do not share the love of Christ with new believers. They just clone each other, turning new believers into slaves of the doctrine. "The blind leading the blind."
It's hard to help LCers see the truth. If they prefer to keep their eyes closed, then no man is capable to show them anything. Especially, when this man is like me, who doesn't have much love in his heart.
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I cannot color code brothers and sisters in the local churches. While meeting there it's very easy to say objectively so and so is cold or so and so is hot, all the while not having a personal relationship to know what brothers and sisters are going through. Which is why is it's very easy to claim the high peaks ministry all the while being oblivious what is happening at ground level.
While there may be brothers and sisters whose behavior fits InChristAlone's post (showing partiality towards the blending brother's speaking), but that is not indicative of brothers and sisters meeting in the local churches as a whole.
What if I told you a family I've known for nearly 40 years have no problem inviting former leading ones and their spouses into their home.
Another I've known for 20+ echoes the concerns John Ingalls brought forth in
Speaking the Truth In Love. Sure you can send your children through FTTA, but that doesn't mean you're 100% one with LSM. I think for many in the local churches, there is not a better alternative for meeting as the church in their respective localities. The problem is not the message, but men who have yet to be humbled.