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TessAldana 40F
15 posts
3/30/2011 5:50 pm
Project in Logic


Physical Content:

The book is entitled THE PURPOSE DRIVEN LIFE. The title gives me that this will explain my existence. At the front cover, there is a tree. I think it symbolizes life. A tree started in a seed, then it grows and eventually will die. We know the pupose of the tree, but what about life? Theres a scribble below the tree and it says " What on Earth Am I Here For?" This question was often asked by many and the book will try to help us answer this question.

Rick Warren emphasized in the introduction that this is more than just a book. Its a spiritual journey we can read with a partner or with a small group of person covering 40 days which is a significant time period. At the end of every chapter is a section called "Thinking About My Purpose" which features a"A Point to Ponder", "A Verse to Remember" and "A Question to Consider". In addition, there is a discussion we will find in the appendix.

There are a lot of resources to accompany the book in order for us to grasp its real meaning and to better interact with it. We can also log on to their website or email them for free resources.

We are also encourage not to stop after 40 days of spiritual journey. Several books are recommended at the back of the book for further readings.


Evaluation:

They say that the books purpose is to enlighten whoever reads it, make them realize their purpose in life and make them closer to God. But in my case, I became more confused. I don't know why. Maybe its because of the authors choice of words or maybe I'm just a negative person. Written below are few instances why i said it so.

Warren said that God doesnt need to create you for his own enjoyment, his delight. This statement makes me feel that Im not worthy of anything at all. What am I to him, a clown? Living to amaze him? And theres a line there too that says I have toworship Him.Well yes maybe I have to show that I'm grateful to Him for creating and giving me all the things I wanted and needed, Its all for my benefit anyway but it also made me think that He created all of this not because he loved me or anything but He badly needed to be worshiped for the things He did. A bit of a boastful little fellow, don't you think so?

Warren said that those people who don't accept these are those who wanted to be like God equally. I don't want to be like God, who wants to be? I can't replace or equally be like Him. I've accepted and treated Him as my best friend since I've received my first communion. I talked to Him a lot in everywhere I go as if He's with me but after i read this book, my views towards Him change drastically for the worst and it doesnt feel good and right. I need to have a spiritual journey again to restore the broken fellowship but where should I start? My trust in him was wrecked and Im a little skeptical to take the said journey because I'm afraid that my belief in Him may worsen.

020207/ms.tabin

Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:31 am

Purpose Driven is not Christian based, but New Age. That is why it is confusing.


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:33 am

Google: The Sacred Sandwich, Rick Warren


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:35 am

Critics of The Purpose Driven Life have already pointed out Warren’s tendency to promote the teachings of Catholic mystics like Henri Nouwen and John of the Cross, his mixing of New Age techniques with Bible-based prayer and meditation, and his use of Jungian occult-based psychology to identify a Christian’s personality and spiritual gifts. (For more information, see our links on the left.) But our primary concern at The Sacred Sandwich is focused on how Warren has wrested the Scriptures to lend biblical credence to his misguided teachings.

Participants in the Rick Warren “Forty Days of Purpose” need to be warned that Warren’s use of scriptural paraphrases, the citing of half-verses, and the wrenching of verses out of their intended context are all evidence of mishandling God’s Word. And though we do not necessarily believe that Warren is doing this intentionally in every situation, we do feel it is important to make Christians aware that the use of this haphazard scriptural “proof-texting” in Warren’s teaching materials is sadly deficient and misleading, especially to those who are new to the faith and less than discerning.
From the onset of Warren’s “Purpose Driven” ministry, he has made no bones about using Bible paraphrases to prove his positions. On page 68 of The Purpose Driven Church, for example, we see how Warren uses a verse from The Living Bible to biblically prove his conviction that intelligent Christians should be open to “new ideas”:

“The intelligent man is always open to new ideas. In fact, he looks for them” (Proverbs 18:15).

For the undiscerning Christian reading his book, this verse would be taken at face value and accepted as biblical proof for Warren’s assertion that pragmatic innovation in the church is necessary, and conversely, that traditional thinking in the church should be scrapped for these “new ideas.”

But what is the literal translation of this verse? In the King James Version it reads:

“The heart of the prudent getteth knowledge; and the ear of the wise seeketh knowledge.”

In the more contemporary New American Standard it similarly reads, “The mind of the prudent acquires knowledge, and the ear of the wise seeks knowledge.” To surmise, therefore, that this verse is advocating being “open to new ideas” is wildly off the mark... and dangerous.

Open to new ideas? You mean we should be open to “new ideas” like homosexual pastors or New Age mysticism in the church? How careless a translation!

According to the literal understanding of this verse in the context of Scripture, any “knowledge” that a prudent man seeks is based on the objective truth of God’s Word and does not imply any use of “new ideas.” The terms “knowledge” and “new ideas” are not synonymous, and it is irresponsible of Warren to suggest otherwise by using this paraphrase. Yet in an attempt to bolster his pragmatic arguments, Warren has ignored the plain meaning of the text and found a dubious translation that adds a foreign element that is in line with his presupposition. Is this not similar to how Joseph Smith rewrote certain verses to prove his theological position in the Mormon religion?

In an appendix to The Purpose Driven Life, Rick Warren defends this disregard for the clear meaning of God’s word by pronouncing two reasons why he uses so many various translations, including paraphrases:

1) To avoid missing nuances and shades of meaning.
2) To "see God's truth in new, fresh ways."

This explanation, however, does not come without its difficulties. For starters, as some have rightly pointed out, the two objectives offer a much-too-broad spectrum of biblical interpretation. It is one thing for Christians to find edification in the subtleties of biblical text, but another to interject new interpretations into the reading for the purpose of so-called “fresh” understanding. This kind of irresponsible hermeneutics leads to eisegesis, where the reader is prone to force his personal opinions into the biblical text instead of letting the text speak for itself.

Sadly, Warren’s philosophy for viewing Scripture is promoting a subtle, yet dangerous method in which to deny thousands of years of clear biblical understanding in the Church. Worse yet, Warren seems to be proclaiming that he, alone, understands God’s truth in “new, fresh ways.” The problem with this thinking is that many false teachers throughout the history of Christendom have tried to present God’s truth in “new ways” and have found that in trying to alter our perspective of God’s truth, they have mistakenly altered the very essence of God’s truth instead.


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:36 am

In the heading of Chapter 7 from The Purpose Driven Life, for another example, Warren uses the following verse:

"The Lord has made everything for his own purposes." (Proverbs 16:4, NLT)

Again, to the undiscerning reader this verse would be allowed to stand on its own merit. However, this is not the complete verse, even though it is falsely cited as such. In the New Living Translation, Proverbs 16:4 fully reads, “The Lord has made everything for his own purposes, even the wicked for punishment.” The KJV reads, “The LORD hath made all things for himself: yea, even the wicked for the day of evil”, and the NASB reads, “The LORD has made everything for its own purpose, even the wicked for the day of evil.”

The full force of this verse lies in the truth that God has made ALL THINGS for his own purpose, even making the wicked for the purpose of punishment!

So why does Warren present this verse with a sentence-ending period as if it is cited in its entirety when clearly it is not? Why did he not accurately note the reference as “Proverbs 16:4a” to avoid confusion? Could it not be fairly surmised that the second half of that verse did not fit in with Warren’s watered-down, feel-good theme of the book and therefore he felt the necessity to deliberately leave it out?

Warren does the same thing on page 76 with Psalm 14:2, where he chooses this weak rendering from The Living Bible:

“The Lord looks down from heaven on all mankind to see if there are any who are wise, who want to please God.”

By singling out this verse, without qualifying or contextualizing it, Warren is guilty of presenting a half-truth. Yes, God may be looking on all men to see who understands, but what Warren doesn't tell us is that God doesn't find one single person who fits that description! Look at the context of both verses as seen in the more literal rendering of the ESV:

Psalm 14:2: The Lord looks down from heaven on the children of man, to see if there are any who understand, who seek after God. 14:3: They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt; there is none who does good, not even one.

As you can see, the third verse of Psalm 14 is pivotal to understanding God’s truth about the complete sinfulness and rebellion of natural man, but Warren fails to cite it. Instead he chooses to present a weak translation of a single verse to imply that God is actively seeking out “purpose driven” God-pleasers. What Warren doesn’t tell us, however, is that God finds NONE who do good, NOT EVEN ONE. This is such an important truth about man’s utter sinfulness that Paul reiterated it in Romans 3:10-12 to emphasize the point. So why did Warren leave that part out? Because it would negate his “purpose driven” argument.

Clearly, God’s Word should not be trifled with in this way. Under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit this verse was presented to offer God’s truth as He saw fit, and for a Christian leader to decide to edit the inspired text as he wishes, is to play fast and loose with God’s inerrant word. In reality, Warren presented a half-truth, which in some cases is really presenting no truth at all.

And lest we be condemned for being overly critical of Warren’s sloppy hermeneutical methods, let me point out other instances where Warren has mishandled Scripture to prejudice his readers and promote his presuppositions. (For the purpose of brevity I will compare Warren’s scripture references with the more recent, yet highly literal English Standard Version, though I could readily use any of the literal translations available, including the cherished KJV.)

Today’s English Version (TEV)

Isaiah 26:3 (from pg. 32) “You, LORD, give perfect peace to those who keep their purpose firm and put their trust in you.”

English Standard Version

“You keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on you, because he trusts in you.”


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:37 am

Undoubtedly, Warren preferred the TEV translation because it uses one of his favorite buzz words, “purpose.” But again we ask: how is “keeping a man’s purpose firm” the same as “staying his mind on the Lord”? One phrase is promoting man’s personal pursuits, the other is presenting a mind that is completely subservient to God’s will and direction. Which translation is correctly expressing God's truth?

The Message

Romans 8:6 (pg. 1 “Obsession with self in these matters is a dead end; attention to God leads us out into the open, into a spacious, free life.”

English Standard Version

“To set the mind on the flesh is death, but to set the mind on the Spirit is life and peace.”

Again, The Message seems content to couch this verse in terms of temporal activity, and in the process misses the whole point. Paul is talking about real physical and spiritual death because of minds set on sin, not just a dead end on the road of life because of selfishness. The Message makes Paul sound like a motivational, self-help guru instead of an apostle of Christ teaching on the deadly life-or-death implications of sin.

The Message

John 4:23 (pg. 103) “That’s the kind of people the Father is out looking for: those who are simply and honestly themselves before him in their worship.”

English Standard Version

“But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him.”

There is nothing wrong with being “simply and honestly themselves” in worship, but is this the meaning of the verse? The Message completely ignores Christ’s specific choice of words “in spirit and truth” and seems more intent on giving worshipers the green light to worship as they please. While worshiping in spirit does involve a sincere response from the heart and mind, worshiping in truth is based solely on God’s truth as revealed in Scripture and not on someone’s definition of truth for themselves. To worship outside of God’s truth is not what the Father is seeking, no matter how “honest” you are about it. Mormons may be “simply and honestly themselves” when they worship, but are they really worshiping in TRUTH?

The Message

Matthew 16:25 (pg. 19) “Self-help is no help at all. Self-sacrifice is the way, my way, to finding yourself, your true self.”

English Standard Version

“For whoever would save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.”

Jesus is speaking of eternal life, not some psychobabble about “finding yourself.” The Message has taken the verse out of its two-fold context of self-denial and finding salvation in Christ and twisted it into an issue of personal self-discovery. Notice that the proper rendering of the verse is not about sacrifice for your “true self,” but about sacrifice for “my (Christ’s) sake.” Why does Warren prefer a rendering that elevates the aspect of “self,” instead of Christ?

Lastly, one of the most disingenuous ways in which Warren uses Scripture is when he rips God’s word out of context and misapplies it as a general proclamation to all people. Look at how he uses Jeremiah 29:11:

“I know what I am planning for you…. “I have good plans for you, not plans to hurt you. I will give you hope and a good future” (p. 31).

As correctly noted by Gary Gilley:

“this verse is a promise to Israel concerning their future, not a general promise for all people (even Christians) at all times. Just a few chapters later, the promise is reversed, Behold, I am watching over them for harm and not for good… (44:27). And in Lamentations 3:38, the same prophet writes, Is it not from the mouth of the Most High that both good and ill go forth? It is strange how people love to claim Jeremiah 29:11 and ignore passages such as these last two. I have yet to find anyone who has claimed Jeremiah 44:27 as their life’s verse.”

Sadly, this is how Warren has decided to look at the Bible in "new, fresh ways": by arrogantly ignoring the rules of credible exegesis. It is almost as if Warren simply flipped around in his Bible until he singled out various nice-sounding verses, regardless of their specific context, to make his teachings appear as if they were fully grounded in God's Word. How many Christians will swallow Warren's biblical presentation whole without realizing how badly he has twisted Scripture to suit his purpose?


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:37 am

A CLOSER LOOK AT THE MESSAGE: WHY DOES RICK WARREN EVEN USE IT?

One of the most disappointing aspects of Warren’s “Purpose Driven” teachings is his heavy reliance on the paraphrased Bible by Eugene Peterson called The Message. Though promoted as a “reading Bible” instead of a “study Bible”, The Message is a very flawed interpretation of God’s Word no matter how one uses it. In reviewing The Message, Berit Kjos wrote, “It doesn't take a Greek scholar to recognize the appalling distortions of God's holy Word. Any Bible student willing to compare Peterson's Message with a Greek/English Interlinear Lexicon and take time to look up key words in a credible New Testament Bible dictionary will discover alarming deletions, distortions and additions to the original text. If Peterson is right, then all our other Bibles - the KJV, NASV, NIV, Greek-English interlinear Bibles - are false.” (See Berit Kjos' more in-depth analysis, with comparison chart, titled What Kind of Message is The Message?)

Sadly, Mr. Warren has ignored the obvious inadequacies of this new paraphrase of the Bible and has seen fit to use it to support his biblical positions. Considering the many dangerous pitfalls of The Message, it is hard to believe that Warren would have ever used this paraphrase as a legitimate tool to help Christians better understand God’s truth, for in doing so Warren has given it his unequivocal stamp of approval. This utter lack of discernment surely brings into question the biblical integrity of Warren’s “Purpose Driven” message if he needs to rely on such an inferior resource to back up his teachings.

So what is Warren really promoting when he advocates the use of The Message as a way for Christians to see Scripture in “new, fresh ways”?

The most alarming feature of The Message is in how it has chosen to reinterpret certain scripture verses that for centuries have been mainstays of the Christian faith to combat the assault against Christ’s deity. Use any literal translation of the Bible, and any capable Christian would be able to adequately defend Christ’s divinity against the attacks of Mormons and Jehovah’s Witnesses alike. Yet, The Message has taken many of those precious scriptures and mangled them beyond recognition to the delight of the community of various cults. In fact, there is probably not a Mormon or Jehovah’s Witness that wouldn’t feel comfortable using The Message alongside their extra biblical teachings. This fact by itself should be cause for great concern.

Having seen the devastating effect Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, had in reinterpreting the Bible, many ex-Mormons are well aware of how distortions of God’s Word have been used to deceive millions to believe in a false gospel and a false Christ. Therefore, it is sad that a prominent evangelical like Rick Warren has aligned himself with a reinterpreted Bible that has watered down the pure doctrines of God to the point where it can be accepted by Mormons and other cults.

Take for example John 10:30 where Jesus proclaims:

“I and my Father are one” (KJV).

This is a pivotal verse where Jesus claims His Deity in union with the power and glory of the Father. The impact of this passage is clearly seen in the next verse (31) where the Jews who hear Jesus make this claim are immediately picking up rocks to stone Him. They were well aware of what Jesus was saying: He was claiming to be God!

Jehovah’s Witnesses would disagree with this interpretation, however. Because they believe that Jesus is a god, or an exalted created being, they would view the verse as showing that Jesus was referring to being “one” with God only in terms of their common purpose, and not in terms of their divine essence.

Interestingly enough, look at how The Message renders Jesus’ words:

"I and the Father are one heart and mind."

Not only would the Jehovah’s Witnesses be pleased with this interpretation, but any orthodox Mormon would be tickled to use it to defend their false concept of Jesus’ divinity as well. How sad that in the process of adding words to Jesus’ bold declaration, The Message has fallen in league with the false teachings of cults.

Why should we as Christians be appalled by the propagation of weak paraphrases of God’s Word like we find here in The Message? Here is what the apostle Peter said on the subject:

“Therefore, beloved, since you are waiting for these, be diligent to be found by him without spot or blemish, and at peace. And count the patience of our Lord as salvation, just as our beloved brother Paul also wrote to you according to the wisdom given him, as he does in all his letters when he speaks in them of these matters. There are some things in them that are hard to understand, which the ignorant and unstable twist to their own destruction, as they do the other Scriptures. You therefore, beloved, knowing this beforehand, take care that you are not carried away with the error of lawless people and lose your own stability.” 2 Peter 3:14-17 (ESV)


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:38 am

As Gary Gilley wrote in his evaluation of The Purpose Driven Life:

“Remember, we are not discussing different opinions on interpretations of certain passages. That too cannot be ignored. But of a more serious nature is this careless and wanton mishandling of Scripture that we have been discussing. To purposely ignore the proper translation of a passage and insert one that has no basis in the original languages in order to under gird a particular point of view is one of the most dangerous things imaginable. The only thing more concerning would be to discover large segments of the evangelical community being incapable of discerning this kind of problem -- and/or not caring.”

In light of this fact, we ask our Christian readers this crucial question: Do you care? Are you really so cavalier about God’s written revelation given to you that you don’t mind that prominent teachers like Rick Warren are carelessly handling the Scriptures?

If you are planning to go through the 40 Days of Purpose, individually or with a group, do not be influenced by the subtle pressure to accept Warren’s teachings and Bible references at face value. Whether it takes 40 days or 40 months, test everything in this study against God’s sacred word. Don’t be taken in by the lame argument by Warren that some of you don’t need more Bible study because you already know too much.

Christian, do not believe this lie. You can never have too much Bible study! Jesus prayed for us, “Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth!” John 17:17 (ESV). Do you see how important our Lord understood the Scriptures to be in the believer's life?


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:38 am

Good job Tess... you were hearing from the Holy Spirit


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:43 am

PAGANISM in the

PURPOSE DRIVEN TEACHING

or "WHAT ON EARTH AM I DOING READING THIS BOOK?"

“…your faith should not rest on the wisdom of men, but on the power of God.” I Corinthians 2:5
As committed Christians, we shouldn't be so cavalier about the way our popular church leaders and teachers dissect and disseminate God's word for our edification. Best-selling or not, Christian authors cannot indiscriminately recast verses to fit their inventive teachings or mix God's truth with the fanciful notions of the world. By buying into this evangelical herd mentality, today's Christians are abandoning the pure word of God for a poor imitation where deception is the likely result. Whether sincere or not, Christian teachers like Rick Warren must be held to a biblical standard. But until the evangelical community stands up for God's truth and stops placing their faith in the "next big thing" in Christian consumerism, the Bible will continue to lag behind these bestsellers in influencing postmodern Christian thought and practice. Case in point: Rick Warren's Purpose Driven Life...
INTRODUCTION:

PARDON ME, MR. WARREN, BUT SOME PAGAN ROOTS ARE SHOWING...
The logo for Warren’s “Purpose Driven” teachings is a flourishing tree that represents the purpose-driven life of a Christian; a tree that, as Jeremiah 17-8 says, has deep roots and green leaves, and produces delicious fruit. In applying this symbolism to his teaching, Warren is acknowledging the critical importance of a tree’s roots in supplying strength and vitality to the trunk and branches. Admittedly, this is a recurring illustration found throughout Scripture to depict a person’s spiritual well-being, or lack thereof.

In keeping with this parable of the tree, The Sacred Sandwich asks the legitimate question: If the “Purpose Driven” teaching of Warren were viewed as a tree, then where is it rooted? Is it planted deep into the rich soil of Christ’s teachings or is it found in the rocky ground of worldly wisdom?

Sadly, Warren has planted his “Purpose Driven” tree in mixed dirt. While there may be much to commend in encouraging Christians to find their godly purpose, Warren’s teaching has grounded its authority in the world’s wisdom as much as in the Bible. As a result, he has compromised his teaching with manmade sciences that supercede the clear dictates of inspired Scripture.

Perhaps the worst of Warren’s reliance on human ingenuity comes when he directs his readers to the heart of The Purpose Driven Life teaching: “finding your SHAPE.” This is where the Christian is encouraged to complete Warren’s SHAPE program in order to find their “purpose.” By taking this assessment course, the Christian explores how God has “shaped” them for ministry through their Spiritual gifts, Heart, Abilities, Personality, and Experience. According to Warren, the SHAPE program identifies “the secret” (pg. 24 that helps you “see more clearly how God is calling us to minister in His world.”

The question must be asked, however, how did Paul and the other apostles conduct their ministry without it? In truth, the SHAPE program has little basis in Scripture, and is generally a conglomeration of business techniques, psychology, gnosticism and outright paganism.

Clearly, the fourth tenet of Warren’s SHAPE program, the personality assessment test, is fully rooted in the pagan philosophy of temperament divination. It has no foundation whatsoever in any biblical teaching, not even in part. At the risk of mixing metaphors, the SHAPE program is like a building constructed upon both rock and sand, which will soon collapse upon its shaky foundation. Regardless of whether the rock/sand mix is 90/10, it is still an unreliable and unbiblical underpinning that calls into question the judgment of Warren’s “Purpose Driven” ministry to correctly build up the body of Christ.


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:44 am

THE PAGAN AND OCCULT ORIGINS OF PSYCHOLOGICAL TYPOLOGY
“...in the latter times some shall depart from the faith giving heed to seducing spirits and the doctrines of devils...” I Timothy 4:11

Rick Warren, whether he realizes it or not, has utilized pagan and occult-influenced psychological theory to help formulate the Personality Theory section of his SHAPE program. Though we have no evidence that it is a calculated act by Warren, we do believe that his refusal to ground his teachings solely on Scripture has led to his misguided involvement with fashionable philosophies of pagan origin.

The charts at the bottom of this page have been created to give a quick overview of the clear and observable connection of the SHAPE personality theory program to historic pagan thought and practice. For the sake of expediency, we have only gone back to second century Greece to show the striking similarities between the pagan teachings of Galen, Swiss psychologist Carl Jung, and Rick Warren’s personality assessment in SHAPE.

To truly see the original roots of paganism, however, one would have to go all the way back through history to Adam’s fall when man first rebelled against the revelation of the one true God and fell into idolatry. As a deliberate religious system, paganism found its true birth in the Egyptian and Babylonian kingdoms through the development of astrology and other manmade philosophies. As a polytheistic nation, the Babylonians saw the skies as incorporating the language of their gods. Through the observations of celestial forces, they attempted to read omens and predict future events, like famine and war, that would affect their people.

As centuries passed and kingdoms came and went, pagan astrology spread to Persia and points beyond, and was eventually embraced by the Greeks. During this Hellenistic period, astrology was molded to fit more closely with Greek philosophy and religion. Thus, astrology was no longer used to predict the fate of the nation, as the Babylonians used it, but was adopted for divining more intimate and personal information. Much of the philosophical underpinnings of historic astrology were used to create the Greek sciences that pertained to the body and soul, like psychology, anatomy and pharmacology.

It was on this pagan foundation that Galen of Pergamum developed his teachings on the four temperaments, or humors, for studying and understanding the construct of the body and soul. (The Galenic temperaments, in fact, are the source for some of Warren’s teaching on personality theory in ministry.) Galen based his beliefs on the earlier work of Empedocles and Hippocrates. Empedocles believed the universe was made up of four elements: fire, air, earth and water, with each having its own god or goddess. Hippocrates, known as the Father of Medicine, believed that these four elements had four corresponding body fluids or “humors.” These were defined as blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm; each one designating personality types. Galen took this premise and further developed the temperament theory into the four categories of melancholic, phlegmatic, sanguine, and choleric.

It is no coincidence, perhaps, that Galen was from Pergamum, a city mentioned by Jesus Christ in Revelation (Rev. 2:12-17). Pergamum was the renowned site of the temple of Asclepius, the Greek god of healing. In his early formative years, Galen was an attendant in that pagan temple and was schooled there in the knowledge of Greek medicine.


Tropical_Man 68M
6389 posts
3/31/2011 5:45 am

People from all over the Roman empire came to seek healing in the temple of Asclepius: the shrine area was inhabited by thousands of non-poisonous snakes that were believed to bring healing to those who were touched by them. To the Greeks and Romans, medicine and science were worshipped as gifts from the gods, and the symbol of this worship was the serpent. The “caduceus,” the staff entwined with a snake, was the healing scepter of the god Asclepius, and is still used as the preeminent symbol of the medical arts community today. (The engraving on the left shows the god Hermes and a merchant approaching Asclepius, who is holding his large caduceus.)

Indeed, Pergamum, Galen’s hometown, was the center of many pagan cults. It was the seat of Babylonian sun worship, and home to many splendid pagan statues and temples to nature and the gods, most notably Zeus. For this reason, Jesus called Pergamum the abode of “Satan’s throne” (Rev. 2:13).

Clearly the religious atmosphere in Pergamum was not conducive to the Christian life, and as a result, the church in that city was sharply admonished by Christ for compromising itself with her surrounding pagan culture. In reaction to this compromise, Christ corrected them by bearing the “sharp sword with two edges,” which is symbolic of the penetrating word of God that is the “discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart,” and from which nothing in creation is hidden (Hebrews 4:12-13).

Sadly, like the church at Pergamum, Warren has seen fit to compromise his biblical principles with the surrounding secular culture of our day. Whether Warren devotees want to admit it or not, Warren’s SHAPE program for personality classification is directly tied to Galen’s (and Jung’s) pagan teachings on temperament and psychological typology. The facts seem to show that Warren has compromised his Christian beliefs with the ways of the pagan world. Therefore, it would do well for Warren and his followers to heed Christ’s eternal admonition for the churches to ground their faith in the “two-edged sword” of God’s word, see the error of their ways, and not be “overcome” by the current paganism in our midst.

For any Christian who defends Warren’s approach and sees no harm in applying Greek or Jungian psychological typology to their lives, you should be informed of the blatant pagan origins of these manmade theories. Not all “truth” is God’s truth, despite the prevalent sentiment of evangelical circles to profess such an idea. Just as Paul wisely resisted the temptation to apply Greek philosophy to the Christian faith in his day, so, too, should contemporary Christian leaders be wary of using the world’s “wisdom” as a proper tool to build up the body of Christ. As Paul taught us, “Do not be unequally yoked with unbelievers.”


By_My_Spirit 54M

3/31/2011 5:21 pm

    Quoting Cathoholic:
    I just would not bother seeking any spiritual guidance from a non-Catholic pastor. Since they work outside Christ's true Church one cannot trust their interpretations of the Bible.
Hi, I just want to say some things. First, I don't want to argue with you.
But, if you are willing. Let's talk about Scripture, but more importantly the Word of God.

Do this on your blog or mine, only if you will listen and offer what you have. I will do the same. I will listen and offer what I have.

I do not want to argue, but your comment here just doesn't sit well with me.

First question, when Jesus called Peter a rock, was this the Rock that the church would be established upon?

I say that the Rock was that Peter had heard from the Holy Spirit
Mt 16:17 And Jesus answered and said unto him, Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-jona: for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in heaven.

And that as Christians we can all hear from the Holy Spirit, and the Holy Spirit is the Rock.
That through the Holy Spirit we have "Revelation" just like Peter did.

I suggest you do a post, so as not to interfere with this blogger's post.
And for here, I purchased the book you mentioned. Then after reading it a little bit, I tossed it away.