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Apologetic discussions Apologetic Discussions Regarding the Teachings of Watchman Nee and Witness Lee

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Old 03-26-2013, 08:15 PM   #1
Cassidy
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I've been down this street before. It's a dead end.
You're dismissing again.

Ohio, I am sympathetic to folks who have concerns about dissing the book of James. However, those concerns are irrational and unfounded. Not all words in the Bible are God's, that is clear, so on what basis is the book of James held to a different standard as if everything in it were God's words?
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Old 03-26-2013, 08:29 PM   #2
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You're dismissing again.

Ohio, I am sympathetic to folks who have concerns about dissing the book of James.However, those concerns are irrational and unfounded. Not all words in the Bible are God's, that is clear, so on what basis is the book of James held to a different standard as if everything in it are God's words?
Concerns about dissing a book of the Bible are not "irrational and unfounded concerns." You have an errant thought about what is God's word. God's word is not just the red letter words of Jesus. God's word exhausts every avenue of thought and speech. God's word even includes the words of Satan and Judas. Imagine that!

I am not holding the book of James to a different standard. Matthew is God's word, and so is James, from the first word to the last.

Cassidy, I do wish you would apply your critiques of the book of James to the many writings of Lee instead. It was Lee who was not clear about God's New Testament Economy.
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Old 03-26-2013, 09:21 PM   #3
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Concerns about dissing a book of the Bible are not irrational and unfounded concerns. You have an errant thought about what is God's word. God's word is not just the red letter words of Jesus. God's word exhausts every avenue of thought and speech. God's word even includes the words of Satan and Judas. Imagine that!

I am not holding the book of James to a different standard. Matthew is God's word, and so is James, from the first word to the last.

Cassidy, I do wish you would apply your critiques of the book of James to the many writings of Lee instead. It was Lee who was not clear about God's New Testament Economy.
Igzy, I like your last question and will get to that. First, I want to address this point Ohio made as follows.

" God's word is not just the red letter words of Jesus"

What is your point here? I never said, suggested, nor remotey implied that. Are you trying to distract from the train of thought?

"God's word even includes the words of Satan and Judas. Imagine that!"

Let's clarify. All 66 books of the Bible are inspired by God and that includes every word from the first verse in Gen 1 to the last verse in Revelation. We call this Holy Writ the inspired Scripture or God's Word or the Bible.

The Scripture even includes words right out of Satan's mouth, it includes the vain and dark human counsel from Job's friends, it includes the uninspired ideas of Peter to forbid Jesus from going to the cross or his suggestion to make three tents for Jesus, Moses and Elijah. We can find thousands of such examples in the Bible where human thought, Satanic ideas, misguided opinions are expressed. Those few examples are sufficient to confirm that. The Bible even quotes books that were determined not inspired and not included in of the Canon of Scripture such as the book of Enoch quoted by Jude. These are not God's words though they are included in God's Word.

Now for some reason you want to treat the book of James as if it could not possibly contain something other than God's words. Recall, I did not say James is not inspired nor did I say that the book is not part of God's Word (capital as in the Holy Writ of Scripture). As I said all 66....

James was one of the most pious brothers in the early christian church. He was faithful in martyrdom too. He will have his faithful reward. However, many things in the book of James were not God's words. We also know from the scripture and from history that there were problems from Jewish christian teachers and leaders. Even Peter was intimidated and withdrew from eating with the Gentiles when some "came from James". Paul openly confronted Peter for this and this also indicates there was an issue.

The book is there for a good reason. I have not torn it out of my Bible and I read it too. Unlike Luther who thought it should never have been included at all, Witness Lee taught it has its proper place and of course it does. Like many passages that serve to instruct us by command, encouragement, exhortation, or contrast the book of James accomplishes that.

Yet, there is no logical nor biblical basis for holding the irrational belief that every word in the book of James, all of them without exception, are all also God's words.
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Old 03-27-2013, 04:55 AM   #4
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Igzy, I like your last question and will get to that. First, I want to address this point Ohio made as follows.

" God's word is not just the red letter words of Jesus"

What is your point here? I never said, suggested, nor remotely implied that. Are you trying to distract from the train of thought?
No, brother Cassidy, it's you who have distracted us from the train of thought starting with your post #45.

We were discussing the ground of the church, and now we are picking up the pieces of this train wreck, needlessly defending the scriptures as the word of God.

Let me state again that the plain words of the book of James are surely God's word, but that Lee's speculations about the "ground of locality," so obviously missing from the plain text of the Bible, are merely the improvised teachings of man, promoted for selfish gain.
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Old 03-27-2013, 05:26 AM   #5
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Yet, there is no logical nor biblical basis for holding the irrational belief that every word in the book of James, all of them without exception, are all also God's words.
As Igzy said, unless the Bible provides us with a guide on how to distinguish what is and is not "God's speaking" within His word then it is very irrational to make this judgment.

After being trained by WL I was under the impression that James was placed in the Bible as a test to see if we understood God's economy. How arrogant and idiotic is that? It treats WL's interpretation of the Bible as gospel and Bible itself as a red headed step child. However, I was never able to find even the slightest hint that this was so. True, the passage in Galatians does state clearly that James is off, but this error could be the basis for a repentance and a vision expressed in the book of not having the faith of our Lord Jesus with respect of persons.

Paul had a failure that was the basis for his vision of the Body. Are we to say that what James did was more heinous than Paul? (Paul persecuted saints unto the death which led to his vision that they were the Body of Christ, hence his sight couldn't be restored until one of these saints laid hands on him).

Peter had a failure that was the basis for his vision. (He denied the Lord to his shame, so that when the Lord spoke to him later in the dream he feared to deny Him again).

Referring to Galatians only supports that James had a critical vision, similar to Paul and Peter. An assertion that is supported by the clear word of the Bible which refers to the Lord appearing to James (1Cor 15:7). So when WL says that James doesn't have a clear vision he is directly contradicting the word of God. The Book of Galatians helps us to realize how critical this vision of not having the faith of our Lord Jesus with respect of persons is. An error that is clearly manifested in the LRC. Instead of despising the word of God why not receive it in meekness?

Who better to have this vision and share this vision of not having the faith of our Lord Jesus with respect of persons than the brother of Jesus?
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Old 03-27-2013, 06:23 AM   #6
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After being trained by WL I was under the impression that James was placed in the Bible as a test to see if we understood God's economy. How arrogant and idiotic is that? It treats WL's interpretation of the Bible as gospel and Bible itself as a red headed step child. However, I was never able to find even the slightest hint that this was so. True, the passage in Galatians does state clearly that James is off, but this error could be the basis for a repentance and a vision expressed in the book of not having the faith of our Lord Jesus with respect of persons.
WL loved to point out the various failures of the men of God in the Bible -- from James to Barnabas to Apollos to Noah to Peter etc. -- yet never once did he ever own up to his own failures which have robbed and stumbled the saints and slandered the prophets whom God raised up to rebuke him. WL loved to keep the saints wondering which Psalm was the word of God, while no one spent the time to examine Lee's books to determine which was merely human sentiment. Most people call this hypocrisy. Some call it criminal.

Cassidy balked when I mentioned the red-letter words of Jesus being the only words of God, but where does his "inquiry" end? Is Biblical history, e.g. Kings and Chronicles, the word of God? Cassidy says all scripture is inspired by God, but all scripture is not God's word. Then can God only speak to us thru His own words in the Bible? How many times in history has the Spirit of God convicted His children using James' word, "faith without works is dead?"
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Old 03-27-2013, 06:56 AM   #7
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Cassidy, your whole line of thinking is off-base and reflects very poor reasoning.

Just because certain things which do not reflect God's nature are recorded in the Bible as matters of record, it does not therefore follow that a whole book of direct teaching could in the same manner not reflect God's nature.

Things that are said or done in a biblical retelling of history are one thing. Direct teaching and decree are something else.

We have to surmise that when a writer of a book of the Bible, especially a NT book, in the first person makes a direct declaration of truth and decree then that declaration reflects God's thought, nature and command.

What you are doing is, again, a form of equivocation. You are mixing multiple meanings of "inspired." Yes, the entire telling of a story is inspired. No, Peter's actual claiming the Jesus should not go to the cross was not inspired. But the telling of the story and the overall lesson the story is trying to teach us is inspired. But when it comes to direct teaching, we have to conclude it is inspired, whether Solomon taught it or James taught it.
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Old 03-27-2013, 08:06 AM   #8
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Cassidy, your whole line of thinking is off-base and reflects very poor reasoning.
But isn't this a case in point? UntoHim and others argued that those in the LRC are told what to think. Doesn't Cassidy reasoning here support that assertion?
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Old 03-27-2013, 08:57 AM   #9
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Cassidy, your whole line of thinking is off-base and reflects very poor reasoning.

Just because certain things which do not reflect God's nature are recorded in the Bible as matters of record, it does not therefore follow that a whole book of direct teaching could in the same manner not reflect God's nature.

Things that are said or done in a biblical retelling of history are one thing. Direct teaching and decree are something else.

We have to surmise that when a writer of a book of the Bible, especially a NT book, in the first person makes a direct declaration of truth and decree then that declaration reflects God's thought, nature and command.

What you are doing is, again, a form of equivocation. You are mixing multiple meanings of "inspired." Yes, the entire telling of a story is inspired. No, Peter's actual claiming the Jesus should not go to the cross was not inspired. But the telling of the story and the overall lesson the story is trying to teach us is inspired. But when it comes to direct teaching, we have to conclude it is inspired, whether Solomon taught it or James taught it.
Igzy,

Here is my 50,000' view.

Witness Lee had many glowing things to say about the book of James and those may be found in the footnotes on the RcV for anyone interested in looking into the matter.

The book of James is like other books, some more, some less, in that it contains things that are God's speaking and things that are not. One can argue about specifics but there are some things which are obviously not God's speaking such as Peter's speaking, Satan's speaking in Gen 3, Job's friends. Another example is the quoting of the uninspired as Holy Writ book of Enoch in Jude.

The things that are not considered God's speaking in the book of James are very specific and they have to do with keeping the law. James apparently held a view that Christians must keep the law. That is a mixture for we know very clearly from Paul's writing that keeping the law is not in a believer's remit. That mixture about the law is recorded there for good reason and we can see the negative results in the book of Acts and Galatians and the problems that mixture created.

To regard the book of James as somehow exempt from the same considerations as other books in the Bible, that is, having parts that are not God's speaking is not rational or logical.
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Old 03-27-2013, 05:13 AM   #10
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You're dismissing again.

Ohio, I am sympathetic to folks who have concerns about dissing the book of James. However, those concerns are irrational and unfounded. Not all words in the Bible are God's, that is clear, so on what basis is the book of James held to a different standard as if everything in it were God's words?
We treat everything written by Peter as the words of an Apostle with a clear vision, the inspired word of God.

We treat everything written by Paul as the words of an Apostle with a clear vision, the inspired word of God.

We treat everything written by Mark and Luke as the words of men with a clear vision, the inspired word of God.

I treat everything written by James as the words of a man with a clear vision, the inspired word of God.

The arrogance of speaking that some writers in the NT did not have "a clear vision", they were "confused", etc. is repulsive. James said to be a doer of the word and not a hearer only. That is so true of the arrogant little pissants known as the LRC.
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