Driscoll is a Maverick. He redefines scripture to fit his personal agenda and makes a mockery of the New Testament church. He is a typical New Calvinist that wants to live in the world and views God as a good old boy drinking a beer dragging a Mary Jane.
freegracefull said, on September 24, 2013 at 10:24 AM
“I secretly wish that these two verses were my elders’ favorite verses. They’re not my life’s verse, but I wish that my elders had these two verses for their favorites. One’s from the pastoral epistles where it says: Reject a factious man after the second admonition (Titus 3:10). I wish that was my elders’ life verse. How much heartache is caused in a church by elders who forebear, for the sake of friendship, with a factious man?
Reject a factious man after the second admonition. Now reject him doesn’t mean he has to sit halfway back. Okay. Reject him means you can’t come here any more. “Well, I’m sorry.” Okay, that means you get to go to a different church. Reject! Do I need to spell that out? ”Why, why, why? That’s so cold.” It’s so wise…
A factious man is a danger to the church and you are released by Scripture to release him. And I am releasing you to a take a small portion of your church’s budget, build a catapult, put it in the church parking lot and load it regularly. “I think we can shoot this one right out of our county.”…
I wish that my elders’ life verse was: Reject a factious man after the second admonition. And I wish their other life verse from Proverbs was: Cast out the scoffer and the strife will cease (Proverbs 22:10).”
Driscoll is a Maverick. He redefines scripture to fit his personal agenda and makes a mockery of the New Testament church. He is a typical New Calvinist that wants to live in the world and views God as a good old boy drinking a beer dragging a Mary Jane.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p07ZYXbokvg
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Just reeks of, “Sixties burnout.”
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Greg Laurie will prostitute himself to anyone that will give him an audience.
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“I secretly wish that these two verses were my elders’ favorite verses. They’re not my life’s verse, but I wish that my elders had these two verses for their favorites. One’s from the pastoral epistles where it says: Reject a factious man after the second admonition (Titus 3:10). I wish that was my elders’ life verse. How much heartache is caused in a church by elders who forebear, for the sake of friendship, with a factious man?
Reject a factious man after the second admonition. Now reject him doesn’t mean he has to sit halfway back. Okay. Reject him means you can’t come here any more. “Well, I’m sorry.” Okay, that means you get to go to a different church. Reject! Do I need to spell that out? ”Why, why, why? That’s so cold.” It’s so wise…
A factious man is a danger to the church and you are released by Scripture to release him. And I am releasing you to a take a small portion of your church’s budget, build a catapult, put it in the church parking lot and load it regularly. “I think we can shoot this one right out of our county.”…
I wish that my elders’ life verse was: Reject a factious man after the second admonition. And I wish their other life verse from Proverbs was: Cast out the scoffer and the strife will cease (Proverbs 22:10).”
James MacDonald
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