Paul's Passing Thoughts

TRUTH is still important to some: PPT’s Top Ten Truth Warriors

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on February 23, 2012

10.5 Richard Barcellos

Contribution:  “In Defense of the Decalogue.” Confronts New Covenant Theology.

Denomination:  Reformed Baptist

Ministry association with Tom Ascol.

 

 

10. Sam Waldron

Contribution:  Contends  against New Covenant Theology.

Denomination:  Reformed Baptist

Ministry association with Tom Ascol.

 

 

9. Mike Fabarez

Contribution:  Aggressive Sanctification blog. Church has strong view of exegesis/(8) distinctives.

Denomination:  Non-Denominational

Has at least one New Calvinist elder on staff, but in his defense, I don’t think he is aware of  it.

 

 

8. Chad VanDixhoorn

Contribution: Wrote a notable treatise against Sonship Theology when most were asleep at the switch.

Denomination: Presbyterian

 

 

7.  Timothy F. Kauffman

Contribution: Trinity Review; Jan-Mar 2012  Sanctification, Half Full: The Myopic Hermeneutic of the “Grace” Movement (Maybe the best article ever written on the subject).

Denomination: Presbyterian

 

 

6.  Jason Hood

Contribution: Writings against  sanctification by justification/Gospel Sanctification

Denomination: United Methodist

 

 

5.  Terry Johnson

Contribution: Strongly opposes Sonship Theology. Seems to care more about the truth than keeping friends.

Denomination: Presbyterian

 

 

4.  Dr. Peter Masters

Contribution: Has been very outspoken against New Calvinism specifically and names the names.

Denomination: Calvinistic Baptist

 

 

3. Cynthia Kunsman

Contribution: Spiritual abuse/cult specialist.  Researches theological movements. Under Much Grace blog

Denomination: Non-Denominational Evangelical Reformed

 

 

2. Donn Arms

Contribution: Director of the Institute for Nouthetic Studies. Gatekeeper of the truly orthodox “first generation of biblical counseling.”

Denomination: Calvinistic Baptist

 

 

1.  Dr. Jay E. Adams

Contributions:  “Biblical Sonship: An Evaluation of the Sonship Discipleship Course.” Opponent of Gospel Sanctification and author of the INS Gospel Sanctification archives. Author of over 100 books on the subject of sanctification.

Denomination: Presbyterian

Unbelievable: Someone From Christian Academia Other than Adams/Arms Finally Cuts it Straight on Gospel Sanctification/New Calvinism

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on February 18, 2012

Two Important Posts by Donn Arms

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on January 30, 2012

Some Passing Thoughts About Jay Adams

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on January 23, 2012

As I work out my own salvation with fear and trembling, I find that Jay is right: strengthening one area of your life contributes to the other areas in strengthening them as well. So, be encouraged, one area isn’t isolated among a long list of others—it all works together.

Jay has done some significant heavy lifting in regard to sanctification principles, and for our day, his materials are a vital help to God’s people. Any pastor or church that does not tap into his studies is passing on a vital gift to the church.

In the past thirty years, if there has been any kind of a reformation at all, it was born from the book, “Competent to Counsel.” Let go and let God, or meditate harder and longer and hope God will do something because it would be better if nothing happened rather than God not getting all the glory—is a message of hopelessness. I could also argue that keeping our own salvation intact by doing nothing other than meditation is a form of works salvation and a false gospel. Jay’s teachings accentuate the precious promises of the Bible that we are NOT  helpless in our situations if we will do things God’s way. We can do something! And God will help us!

Jay is a master encourager. There is one of his books that I think defines him as a person. The title is, “The Case of the Hopeless Marriage” Jay delights in the opportunity to show what God will do if we obey him. The bigger the problem, the more glory for God.

I am now well past what I was originally going to write, but another thing that is indicative of Jay’s ministry is his desire that the saints have their questions answered. Yes, I know, it’s blaspheme in our day—to not believe that “what should I do?”  is the wrong question. Supposedly, the right question is always, “what has Jesus done?” That’s why his recent book, “Fifty Difficult Passages Explained” is so Jay-like (and I have a hunch that they are not all about the gospel).

In my own life, my divorce situation was an over-the-top bizarre situation. Pastors flippantly told me that I could remarry, but couldn’t back it up with definitive biblical wisdom. I read Adams’ “Marriage, Divorce, And  Remarriage In The Bible” without any hope that the 100-page book would address my situation specifically. Wrong! I was amazed that such a definitive answer could be obtained in my situation.

Frankly, any pastor or church that is not utilizing the INS program in totality is missing the boat in a big way, and passing on a powerful resource for helping God’s people.

paul

My Plea: Support a Light in the Midst of Counseling Darkness

Posted in Uncategorized by Paul M. Dohse Sr. on December 16, 2011

 

“INS is now a true light of God’s truth in this dark age of New Calvinism.”

I don’t like to talk about it, much less write about it. In, or about 1989, I sought counseling from a biblical counselor for serious depression. Though stunned that it could happen to a Christian, I knew better than to go to the psychiatric community that was never much help to me or others I knew that suffered from depression before I was a Christian.

Funny, back then, I would have scoffed at the idea that I believed in let go and let God theology, but the depression, when confronted with real truth, revealed that I functioned that way in life:

“Hi Paul, did you get your homework done?”

‘Sure did, and I also read Scripture and prayed all day on my day off!’

“Paul, I’m not going to tell you not to do those things, but the power is in the doing.”

‘Wha, what do you mean? You mean doing things will get me out of this mess?’

“Paul, your goal isn’t to ‘get out of this mess,’ your goal is to please God. That’s your new goal Paul. Also, according to the book of James, you are to work with God to let this trial do its perfect work.”

‘[Speechless, though a pastor at the time].’

“Look, I’m not saying that obedience isn’t curative, it is, that just can’t be your primary goal. Your primary goal is to please God and let the chips fall where they may.”

As I was driving home, this revelation filled me with hope. I knew medication wasn’t the answer, so when my mind was racing, I could put that energy to work to please God, and only take medication if I absolutely had to. I went to work to please God with a new perspective spoken by the apostle Paul: “We make it our goal to please Him.” I immediately started taking half of whatever my medical doctor told me to take.

With the help of that counselor who modeled his ministry after the counseling taught by Dr. Jay E. Adams, I learned more in that one year about the Christian life than I had in the five years I had been saved. And Frankly, I don’t think I have ever learned that much, that fast, since.

And today, my wife tells me that she has learned more about being a Christian in the year that we have been married than the fifty years that she’s been a Christian. By the way, it’s because we have been studying through the INS correspondence course authored by Adams. Not only that, Susan and I held hands and walked into what was perceived to be an impossible mixed family situation. Pastors and Christians looked at Susan like she was nuts when she told them what direction we were taking in our situation from what we had learned, but the results speak for themselves.

INS is now a true light of God’s truth in this dark age of New Calvinism. CCEF, NANC, and the upstart, “Biblical Counseling Coalition” are all based on Sonship Theology. Don’t deny it, unless you want to deny that David Powlison is the major figure behind CCEF, which infiltrated NANC, and then started BCC. Unless you want to deny what Powlison said himself concerning who his “mentor” was (Dr. John Miller, the undisputed father of Sonship theology). Unless you want to deny what Powlison said himself concerning the fundamental differences between him and Jay Adams. Gospel differences. See chapter 9 of TTANC.

Every day, while thousands are referred to gurus of Gospel Contempaltionism masquerading as biblical counselors for their real problems, few seem interested in maintaining Dr. Adams’ legacy, except Donn Arms. Many others who have seen the results of what Adams says the Bible teaches about life problems are strangely silent lest they lose a few friends and some speaking invitations. New Calvinists reward their cowardly Koolaid drinking yes-men well.

Think about it. Please, think about. We are talking about how real Christians get real help for real problems. We are talking about the blessed truth of God’s word. I will now share the opportunity INS has before them, and I plead with everyone who may read this: be a part of something that really helps our precious brothers and sisters in Christ. It will help more people in more ways than you will ever realize this side of home.

THE OPPORTUNITY LINK:  Click on this link to help God’s people.

Because only truth sanctifies,

paul