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Perisseuo
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A Call to Separation |
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Pink's article gave an idea of being 'unequal yoke' that I haven't thought of before. That is the church we attend. Although it may be
difficult in setting a firm rule of when a church becomes an 'unequal yoke', what would be some of reasons that a church would fall into that
category? On the flip side, what would be some reasons that we may ascribe to a church being 'unequal yoke' but in actuality not being so?
John Chaney
"having been firmly rooted and now being built up in Him and established in your faith . . ." (Colossians 2:7 NASB) |
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5 Solas |
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Interesting observations. I'm not sure we can lay down specifics. I was unequally yoked to a church for a
while teaching the pastor/elders Reformed theology. In general the church was Arminain and did not understand the "faith once delivered to the
saints." After some conversations with the pastor, my wife and I visited the church weekly for months. I critiqued the pastor's sermons, their
theology on the web, etc. The pastor and I met for 2-4 hours per week - basically him learning reformed theology. Though I still would be hesitant in calling
this a Reformed church (there is more than the 5 points to be considered Reformed) - it is now more reformed than when I first visited it (4 out of 5 ….of
course if 1 goes then …., but most here have had this conversation before).
In Christ,
5 Solas
Last Edited By: 5 Solas 05/01/08 15:09:56.
Edited 1 time.
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| A Call to Separation | 05/01/08 08:36:19 | Perisseuo |
| Re: A Call to Separation | 05/01/08 14:12:45 | 5 Solas |
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