Part
7 – The Coming One-World Religion
Equipping
God's Saints (Believers of Christ) through the Prophecies of the
End Times …
We
are learning what interfaithism is
~ Your religion is as valid as my religion ~ I respect yours, you
respect mine. The end goal is to remove religious conflict so,
supposedly, we can have peace on earth, good will toward men. Before
we really understand interfaithism, we are going to look at the
forerunner of interfaithism, ecumenism.
Ecumenism
is simply the movement promoting unity amoung Christian churches of
denominations. The effort to unify all Christians and all Christian
denominations began in earnest, with Vatican Council II in 1962. From
that Council called by Pope John XXIII, the Roman Catholic Church
issued the call for all of her departed daughters, speaking of the
Protestants, to come home. The compelling argument behind the call to
the Protestants was the words of Jesus, Himself, found in John 17:21:
“That
they all may be one, as thou, Father, art in me, and I in thee, that
they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast
sent me.”
And
John 13:15 says,
“By
this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if ye have love one
to another.”
The
Catholic Church said, “Look, how can we ever win the world when we,
as Christians, are so divided?” There was a powerful appeal to this
because, after all, who wouldn't want all Christians to be together.
There
was a problem. The fatal flaw of the ecumenical movement from the
outset was that this call to unity was based on compromise rather
than on the truth. Long-held Biblical truths that our religious
forefathers had worked and died for were cast aside like so much
ob-solute baggage.
If
the call to unity had been based on truth ~ all of the religious
people come together ~ let's deal with the cardinal doctrines of the
Christian faith ~ let's pray and study until we believe this is
correct and that this is what the Bible teaches. Then we all agree
together. Then we could have had a true Christian rebirth.
But
it wasn't based on truth. It was based on compromise. Doctrine became
almost a dirty word. But this was a bad thing because the Apostle
Paul wrote to Timothy in 1 Timothy 4:16:
“Take
heed unto thyself, and unto the doctrine, continue in them, for in
doing this thou shalt both save thyself, and them that hear thee.”
So
Paul taught Timothy that doctrine was essential for salvation. But
the ecumenical movement doctrine became the blockade to unity.
It
worked because from 1962 until 1994 the ecumenical movement advanced
rapidly. By 1994, Catholics, Lutherans, Methodists, Baptists, and
even Jews, began to exchange chruches, synagogues, pulpits.
Finally
in 1994, it was sort of the culmination of all the ecumenical
efforts. On March 29, 1994, it was announced that an agreement had
been signed between leading evangelicals such as Pat Robertson,
Charles Colson and Bill Bright, the founder of Crusade for Christ,
and certain theologians in the Roman Catholic Church. A statement
called “Catholics and Protestants Together” says, “since any
person confessing faith in Jesus Christ is saved, Catholics,
Protestants and Evangelicals should no longer target each other's
members for conversion. This agreement obviously presupposes that
long-held doctrinal differences are no longer important and are
merely divisive hindrances to Christian unity.”
This
statement announcing the signing of this document appeared in an
article in the Indianapolis Star on March 30, 1994. It was titled,
“Catholics, Evangelicals Affirm Ties That Bind”.
In
June 1994, the Southern Baptist National Convention, America's
largest Protestant denomination, voted, overwhelmingly, to endorse a
declaration of unity with Catholics despite theological differences.
The report in the June 17, 1994 edition of the Indianapolis Star
titled, “Southern Baptists Embrace Catholics” and said, “In a
major step toward ecumenism, the Southern Baptist Convention said
born again believers may be found in all Christian denominations, and
endorsed Baptist-Catholic dialogue.”
In
1999, the capstone of the ecumenical movement was put in place.
Lutherans and Catholics signed a joint declaration on justification
by faith. The October 31, 1999 announcement titled,
“Lutheran/Catholic Joint Declaration On Justification read, “It
is a blockbuster agreement, a crowning achievement of the ecumenical
dialogue spawned by Vatican II and it almost didn't happen. Despite
his public image as an ecumenical roadblock, the man credited by
sources on both sides with saving it is none other than Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger, the head of the Vatican's Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith.” As we know, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
became Pope Benedict XVI.
The
signing took place on the anniversary of Martin Luther's nailing of
his 95 thesis to the door of the Wittenberg Cathedral, which is
credited with unleashing the Protestant reformation. The Prostetant
reformation was over justification by faith. Martin Luther made the
phrase famous, “The just shall live by faith”.
Now,
Lutherans and Catholics have put together a theological paper
agreeing on what that means. The very thing that caused the
reformation, now, is put aside and agreed upon, so why shouldn't the
churches reunite? The issue that sparked the reformation had been
resolved. Most Christian denominations considered other Christian
groups as saved. Ecumenism was considered, by most, to be an
accomplished fact.
Now
the focus shifts from ecumenism to interfaithism. The first
Parliament of the World's Religions was held in Chicago in 1893. Its
stated goal was to cultivate harmony among the world's religions and
spiritual communities and foster their engagement with the world and
its guiding institutions in order to achieve a just, peaceful and
sustainable world. Actually, it was way ahead of its time because not
much else happened on interfaithism for 80 years or so.
In
August 1985, Pope John Paul II visited Morocco at the invitation of
King Hassan II. He made the stunning announcement that he believed
Muslims and Christians worship the same God. Pope John Paul II became
the first Pope to visit and officially Islamic country at the
invitation of its religious leader.
There
at a historic meeting with thousands of Muslim youth in Cassablanca
Stadium, he emphasized that, “We believe in the same God, the one
God, the living God.”
Now
think about this …
- CHRISTIANS believe Jesus is God
MUSLIMS
DO NOT believe Jesus is God.
- CHRISTIANS believe Jesus died on the cross and that the only plan of redemption is through the blood of calvary.
MUSLIMS
deny Jesus even died on the cross.
We
are taking huge leaps of blind faith here.
This
continued because in 1986, Pope John Paul II convened the World Day
of Prayer. Pope John Paul was convinced that prayer could bring
believers together, an idea that inspired the 1986 World Day of
Prayer for Peace in Assisi, Italy. That unprecedented gathering at
the Pope's invitation drew leaders of Jews, Buddhists, Shintoists,
Muslims, Zoroastrians, Hindus, Unitarians, traditional African and
Native American religions and may others together under the roof of
the Basilica of Saint Francis. They all prayed side-by-side with
Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant leaders for world peace.
There
is something feeling good about that. All of us, I think, would say
that would be a nice thing that everybody would drop their barriers
and just get together and pray to whatever God they happen to believe
in.
Before
we decide this is good, though, I do want to ask you this question.
Can you imagine the Prophet Elijah in the Old Testament meeting for
an interfaith prayer service with the Prophets of Baal? I don't think
so. You know he wouldn't do it, if you know your Bible. The question
has to come to us, “Was Elijah wrong then, or are we wrong now?”
We need to ask ourselves that question because mankind has many times
gone astray.
Resources:
The anointing of the Holy Spirit and God Almighty, who I am
accountable to. I have prayed diligently and am led to follow and
support the teachings of Pastor Irvin Baxter from Endtime Ministries
and his teachings of Understanding the End Times. I encourage you to
visit his website at endtime.com.
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