Saturday, January 01, 2011

The Battle of Ricky's: Dr. Kingpin and The Demon Chaser


Langley Castle, Hexham, England (All article photos from trekearth.com)

To quote the previous post...'This is the last post for this blog for 2010.' So, in order to keep plans I will date this article of December 19, 2010, January 1, 2011. I did not want to do another post so close to Christmas as some people may become busy and forget about blogs, but there is the saying 'The Lord leads' and I am led I reason to write this post and I will date it 2011 and hopefully receive several comments after the New Year, and hopefully before. But it may well be a post that receives more attention in 2011.

So, once again Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

A. Non-Exhaustive Background

J.R. Williams states that the charismatic movement began in the 1950s and was often termed 'neo-Pentecostal'. Williams (1996: 205). In recent times participants known as charismatics are described often as being involved in 'charismatic renewal'. Williams (1996: 205). Williams explains the immediate background of this movement is 'classical Pentecostalism' which dates from the early twentieth century. Williams (1996: 205). Classical Pentecostalism emphasized strongly baptism in the Holy Spirit as an endowment of power subsequent to/after conversion and the continuation of the spiritual gifts (1 Corinthians 12) in post New Testament times is considered valid. Williams (1996: 205). Baptism with the Holy Spirit is understood as an experience where a Christian believer is filled with the presence of the Holy Spirit. Williams (1996: 205). It is thought to occur at conversion or it can occur after. Williams (1996: 205). This would be a very strong spiritual guidance of a believer by the Spirit of God.

Robert Faricy designates a charismatic as one in the Christian community guided by the Holy Spirit and believing in a working within the gifts of the Spirit through love. Faricy (1999: 91). There are the spiritual gifts and manifestations from the New Testament era still in existence today, is the reasoning.

B. Dr. Kingpin and The Demon Chaser

A family friend wanted me to meet an older gentleman that my friend states considers himself a prophet and works in demonology. The gentlemen was seemingly a Christian man working within the charismatic movement. We met for brunch at a Ricky's restaurant in Langely, BC. This was my second bust-up that week as I also got into short one with a Professor in California via email. Take a shot at the new PhD week? By God's grace I was ready.

Is Ricky related to Denny? Just wondering.

Before I continue, I do not consider myself a charismatic.

I do reason spiritual gifting and guidance does exist today. But, I do not think that there are Apostles and Prophets today as their place and ministry was in the Biblical eras. The miraculous that took place in the New Testament, and also in the Hebrew Bible, was primarily a foreshadowing of the healing and blessings of the future culminated Kingdom of God.

Therefore, Christians should not typically expect miraculous types of events to occur in the post-New Testament era.

Further, this gentleman that I will call The Demon Chaser seemed like a very sincere Christian man and we parted on good loving terms, agreeing to pray for each other. We did agree on certain issues concerning the Church being in trouble in regard to theology and obedience. My disagreements with him are not primarily because I view him as charismatic, but because his views are extreme and what I would deem as hyper-charismatic.

My three academic advisors for my Wales MPhil and PhD theses work were are charismatic and quite scholarly. I am not criticizing charismatic theology primarily here, but a hyper-charismatic theology.

B1. Free will and Determinism

The primary debate in our friendly but at times heated interaction took place concerning the topic of free will/determinism in regard to human salvation. I took the compatibilistic Reformed limited free will stand that I took in my MPhil, strengthened and understood better in my PhD and have taught on both of my blogs, especially this one. The gentleman took a libertarian free will stand. If this subject interests please look in search and you will find several articles related.

A problem with his approach however was his admittance that he only sees things in black and white. There is no grey/gray he stated. This is not surprising for someone that would take an extreme viewpoint that I would deem as hyper-charismatic. A related problem is that with a complex subject like free will/determinism, that I just spent over ten years of my life studying in the context of academic theology and philosophy, is that it requires an understanding of intellectual subtleties. He indicated he did not care about the term 'libertarian free will' and implied he just basically wanted to deal in terms of human choice or no choice.

Therefore, the end result is he is left with two extreme choices, in my view, libertarian free will or hard determinism, and he makes the choice of the first although he refused to call it by that name.

My goal in this article is not to argue my views on free will and determinism. That has been done often on this blog, but here are some definitions for context, especially for my newer readers. I do not want to go on and on with the same debates, and do not want to bore the reader with similar type presentation far too often, but I present these definitions for context.

Libertarian free will is usually viewed as a form of indeterminism. The concept in libertarian free will is that a person is able to perform another action in the place of one that has been committed. This action cannot be predetermined by any circumstance or desire. It would also be considered as a form of incompatibilism.

Here is an explanation of hard determinism and my compatibilist position of soft determinism.

Philosopher Louis P. Pojman explains that within determinism or hard determinism, an outside force causes an act and no created being is responsible for his or her moral actions, while for compatibilism or soft determinism, although an outside force causes actions, created beings are responsible where they act voluntarily. Within hard determinism an outside force would be the only cause of human actions, while with soft determinism an outside force would be the primary cause of human actions and persons the secondary cause. Pojman (1996: 596). God would be the primary cause within Christian theism of a Reformed tradition.

B2. Deliverance Ministry

The gentleman appeared to verify my friend's statement that he considered himself a prophet.

He claimed to have:

Met Jesus Christ.

Predicted as in prophesied 911.

He claimed:

That Christians could live sinless enough lives to avoid death, as did Enoch (Hebrews 11: 5).

That Christians should be seeking lives of perfect health. He reasoned that demonic beings were behind certain health problems.

So:

Could he have met Christ? Possible, but it would be very difficult to prove. Frankly, his theological errors make this questionable from my perspective.

Could he have predicted as in prophesied 911? Possible, but one would need to see solid evidence for this that was more than a prediction/deduction, but something clearly from the Holy Spirit as prophecy.

I agree with what Hebrews states about Enoch, but this gentlemen attempted to prove his point by naming a man within the modern age that disappeared walking and was never found. The gentlemen stated some persons thought the man was killed and eaten by an animal, but the body was never found. I would conclude that without inside knowledge, a person would have no idea what happened to this man and would have no reason without much stronger evidence to reason that he was taken to heaven as was Enoch.

This gentleman implied that my health issues, which I am not going to get into here, but are typical type of human ailments we all generally have, could be due to demonic beings and that I perhaps needed a deliverance. Well, I do not want to be mean here, but this man was older and seemed a little hunched over in the back. In other words, he did not look perfectly healthy. Should I assume this is the work of demons?

In the fall (Genesis 3 forward), we human beings will all (virtually accepting Enoch, for example) die and suffer previously in body and spirit.

God wills all things.

One would need a divine supernatural healing from God, 'deliverance' or not, to have perfect health.

Therefore, I see no reason to necessarily tie demonic beings into human health issues.


Langley, BC


Langley, BC


Fort Langley, BC

FARICY ROBERT (1999) 'Charismatic', in Alan Richardson and John Bowden (eds.), A New Dictionary of Christian Theology, Kent, SCM Press Limited.

POJMAN, LOUIS P. (1996) Philosophy: The Quest for Truth, New York, Wadsworth Publishing Company.

WILLIAMS, J.R. (1996) ‘Charismatic Movement' in Walter A. Elwell (ed.), Evangelical Dictionary of Theology, Grand Rapids, Baker Books.

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Defining 2010


Hohenschwangau Castle, Bavaria, Germany (trekearth.com)

Merry Christmas.:)

This is the last post for this blog for 2010. The future Christmas post over on satire and theology will feature a written section and audio post which I invite readers to listen to when it is ready.

Within this article I thought I would define and explain in a personalized way a few terms which some of my readers may wonder about. I want to make sense to my readers.:)

Philosophical Theology:

A rare term. I recently looked it up on the web and this blog came up #8 as reference. Now being as I am not 'yet' famous my point stands. I would state it is the secondary use of the discipline of philosophy within the primary discipline of theology, which are studies (that could be called philosophical!) concerning God and religion. In my case, with the disciplines I have dealt with, theodicy (Leibniz) and the problem of evil, historically as academic disciplines primarily these arose within secular philosophy and then went into Christian theology. My Wales MPhil and PhD theses could have been done in Philosophy departments, but as my first two degrees were in Biblical Studies and Theological Studies my research degrees were done in Theology and Religion Departments.

In my case I am both a theologian and a philosopher, but a theologian in a much more broad sense, such as not only as a philosophical theologian but also a Biblical and systematic theologian being familiar with Reformed theology in both my MPhil and PhD work and my MTS. I am not a classical philosopher. I am not an expert on Greek and Continental philosophy, but I am a philosopher only in the sense of having done MPhil and PhD research degrees in the philosophy fields of theodicy and the problem of evil even though not in a Philosophy department.

Browning page 367

Philosophy of Religion:

I am more properly stated a philosopher with two philosophy degrees as in a philosopher of religion. In my mind this in the secondary use of the discipline of religion studies/theology within the discipline of philosophy. This was an aspect of my MPhil and PhD work, especially my Doctorate. Perhaps as much of 50% of the work was philosophy of religion and it is difficult to measure but the after viva revisions increased the amount of philosophy of religion in the PhD greatly.

Blackburn page 327

Biblical Studies:

This is an academic term for the study of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament and New Testament and related texts, commentaries and lexicons.

I am a Biblical scholar in a sense that I can do Greek exegesis to do Biblical and systematic theology at an academic level, but I am not a linguist. A PhD in Biblical Studies would tend to be more concerned with languages, text and backgrounds and less with philosophical and theological issues than a PhD in Theology and Philosophy of Religion.

I doubt very much I would ever consider attempting a PhD in Biblical Studies. I would find it fascinating but would have to be paid to do it and be given 'no hassle' guarantees that I was not given the first time around with my UK research degrees.

And since I would never do formal course work again I would only do a research only degree which would only leave a UK or European degree as an option. The odds of me writing another degree are not only very small because of the hassles but because I can teach Biblical Studies without having a Doctorate in Biblical Studies.


Danish winter (trekearth.com)



BLACKBURN, SIMON (1996) Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy, Oxford, Oxford, University, Press.

BROWNING, W.R.F. (1997) Oxford Dictionary of the Bible, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

LEIBNIZ, G.W. (1710)(1998) Theodicy, Translated by E.M. Huggard Chicago, Open Court Classics.

Google Tip

Basically all Google accounts, Blogger, Gmail, Yahoo and other can be used to sign in for Google/Blogger followings, also known as Google Friend Connect. So, if any of you fellow Bloggers out there want to give yourself some more Google/Blogger followers you can use all Google associated accounts. I chose to place my two theology blogs and comic art blog on different accounts for marketing purposes and so I have three Blogger accounts plus a Gmail account and one Yahoo account. The Yahoo account can be difficult to access for Google/Blogger however. So, yes I am following myself five times, and yes I would appreciate multiple followings and would return the favour if informed.:) I leave thekingpin68 and satire and theology blog followings for reciprocal followings only and use the Gmail account for promotion and gifting.

Red Santa, Blue Santa

Like Manchester United, Santa Claus in his home and away kit. But, sponsored by Coca-Cola. I heard a rumour which I cannot document to my attempted high academic standards, that the blue suit may be physically cooler and is used by Santa to fly over the Southern Hemisphere to deliver presents in the Summer to places like Brazil, Argentina, Australia and New Zealand. But again, I cannot officially document this at all.

Yes, I realize there is more to Christmas....and I suggest the curious read through the Gospels over the holidays.

My framed PhD degree document will stay wrapped up until after my graduation party in March.

From my friend Carmen in Spain at:


Caceres Mountain Slideshowountain Slideshow

Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Paradise in the New Testament (Non-Exhaustive)




Hawaii (trekearth.com)




Australia, Victoria

November 20, 2010

This post was completed in writing on November 20th, but the post date is December 1. Why? Well, I only want to generally publish four articles per month, two per blog. My last Biblical Studies post on this blog did better than I expected as far as public response. In December things may slow down due to Christmas time and so I very well may want to have my some of my 'December' public blog interaction done in November. With my new scanner recently purchased, I actually have a scanner once again, my old scanner was broken two years ago. I can now scan the New Testament Greek rather than having to look it all up online. This makes writing Biblical Studies posts more reasonable in my opinion. Also the work is now much less of a hassle than searching the web for a Greek root word with the proper ending and then copying and pasting, but still it is a hassle with scanning the books again and again with the machine and looking up technical words. A different kind of hassle than theological and philosophical posts but still a hassle. But hassle is my middle name apparently, well actually it is Norman, but at least now it starts with Dr.;)

Paradise from the New Testament Greek


Strong page 1035.


Strong page 72. The scan is not perfect but the best of several attempts! I do not have a personal assistant, nor is my scanner huge.


Marshall page 257. Paradise from Luke 43.


Marshall page 545. Paradise from 2 Corinthians. I tried to include more text but the way the book fit on the scanner it was distorted. I will leave distortion of the Scripture intentionally to the cults and those with major agendas.;)











Marshall page 727. Paradise from Revelation 2: 7.

Commentary


Bauer on page 614 describes Paradise from Luke 23, 2 Corinthians 12 and Revelation 2 as a place above the earth. Now from my philosophical/theological perspective I do not take this plain literally, as in some place in the clouds, or above the clouds, or even beyond the solar system or beyond the physical Universe, as in a place that can be physically found via space/travel.

The Bible teaches that Paradise is a place where spirits in Christ go after death, and Old Testament/Hebrew Bible saints went to spiritually after death.

The Bible teaches this using figurative literal language.

Therefore, I would conclude Paradise is a place of the non-physical spiritual realm.

Now, in discussion at church and with my theological/philosophical friends over the years I have speculated that because human beings are used to and made for physicality, Paradise may consist of, and I state may consist of, a simulated physicality that seems like earth to the persons that are there.

On the other hand there is the school of thought that when one dies in Christ he or she may almost immediately awaken in the resurrected body making the Paradise references strongly metaphorical as opposed to figurative literal. This will not be immediate, but will seem to be.

This is certainly orthodox and possible, but I question whether Jesus meant this by the use of 'today' to the criminal on the cross. Strong notes that it has to do with now and present. Strong (1890)(1986: 87).


There is also the issue of Paul's 2 Corinthians reference and his willingness to consider departing the body to be with the Lord in Philippians 1.

BAUER, W (1979) A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, Translated by Eric H. Wahlstrom, Chicago, The University of Chicago Press.

MARSHALL, ALFRED (1975)(1996) The Interlinear KJV-NIV, Grand Rapids, Zondervan.

STRONG, J. (1890)(1986) Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, Pickering, Ontario, Welch Publishing Company.


Saturday, November 06, 2010

Woe


Spilled paint wild flowers

Woe (oὐαὶ root word) from Strong's is an exclamation of grief, woe, alas. Strong (1890)(1986: 70). The Greek word according to Bauer is an interjection denoting pain or displeasure as in woe and alas. Bauer (1979: 591). Bauer mentions that this would often be doubled for emphasize as in alas, alas and even three times as in Revelation 8: 13.

Revelation 8:13 (New American Standard Bible)

13Then I looked, and I heard an eagle flying in (A)midheaven, saying with a loud voice, "(B)Woe, woe, woe to (C)those who dwell on the earth, because of the remaining blasts of the trumpet of the (D)three angels who are about to sound!

Browning calls the 'woe' the very antithesis of 'blessed' and 'happy'. Browning (1997: 397). As examples, the rich are compared to the poor in Luke 6. Browning (1997: 397). The rich are warned with a woe that they are receiving their comfort in full verse 24 for they shall mourn and weep, verse 25.

It would appear that any actions that would be considered worthy of woe should be avoided at all costs.

I am not against persons being rich in principle, and I reason the Bible is discussing those rich persons that abuse the poor. As I consider two careers with my degrees as a professor and in media, I would like to be financially successful myself, but strictly by honourable means.

Today it seems to me in the world with certain internet scams, certain bankers, certain financiers, certain offshore persons within companies abusing cheap labour and many other examples, many persons within entities are risking woe by placing too much emphasis on earthly financial success at the expense of morality and truth while they abuse the poor, even if indirectly.

Those with the potential to be placed in woe position should ponder on the Scripture carefully. It is no good to gain the world and lose one's soul (Mathew 16: 26). Browning also explains that woe is also connected to a lack of repentance comparing two towns that may repent (Tyre and Sidon) in Matthew 11 with two towns that are doomed (Chorazin and Bethsaida). Browning (1997: 397). There are also woes described in terms of disasters for the earth as in the mentioned Revelation 8: 13. Browning (1997: 397).

And so there is also corporate woe. As in the judgment on towns and more.

BAUER, W. (1979) A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, Translated by Eric H. Wahlstrom, Chicago, The University of Chicago Press.

BROWNING, W.R.F. (1997) Dictionary of the Bible, Oxford, Oxford University Press.

STRONG, J. (1890)(1986) Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, Pickering, Ontario, Welch Publishing Company.


Abbotsford, BC


Surrey, BC (trekearth.com)








HP sent a repair disc and I figured out how to get my scanner with my new three-in-one to work. Here is a scan.