SPECIAL PRICE When Cultists Ask: A Popular Handbook on Cultic Misinterpretations
Proceeds through the Bible book by book showing where cultists misinterpret passages. The authors then give the orthodox interpretation of the passage in question.
Book Info:
During 2014, LDS members will be studying the latest manual published by their church, Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Fielding Smith.,Remembering a Soldier of the Cross Excerpts from Dr. Walter Martin’s Memorial Service,Wicca: A Biblical Critique. Michael Gleghorn. Please Note: Each coloured link within the article will lead you to a related topic on a different page on this site.,Probe’s Michael Gleghorn examines some of the fundamental doctrines of Wicca, offers a biblical critique of those doctrines, and highlight the differences between ,See American Family Foundation, below. Note: Paul Carden of Apologia will be a presenter at the AFF 2002 Conference. APOLOGIA [Rich Poll, Paul Carden, Ron Rhodes] is ,MissionShift: Global Mission Issues in the Third Millennium (B&H, 2010) Evangelicals Engaging Emergent: A Discussion of the Emergent Church Movement (B&H, 2009),Any spelling, editorial, grammatical, or . theological errors found herein are strictly . the fault of the author. Copyright © James G. Arthur 2000,The Christian countercult movement is a social movement of Christian ministries and individual Christian countercult activists who oppose religious sects thought to ,ApoloWHAT?? ApologetiX gets their unusual name from the word “apologetics” which means “the defense of the Christian faith.” It’s based on the Greek word for defense, ,A cult is a religious group or other organization with deviant and novel beliefs and practices. However, whether any particular group’s beliefs are sufficiently
* Books Details:
- Sales Rank: #1378394 in Books
- Published on: 1997-10-01
- Released on: 1997-10-01
- Original language:
English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.18″ h x
6.32″ w x
9.32″ l,
1.42 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Cult – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cult is a religious group or other organization with deviant and novel beliefs and practices. However, whether any particular group’s beliefs are sufficiently
ApologetiX- Apologetics Resources
ApoloWHAT?? ApologetiX gets their unusual name from the word “apologetics” which means “the defense of the Christian faith.” It’s based on the Greek word for defense,
Anti-cult movement – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Christian countercult movement is a social movement of Christian ministries and individual Christian countercult activists who oppose religious sects thought to
Cover and Bibliography – Jude Ministries
Any spelling, editorial, grammatical, or . theological errors found herein are strictly . the fault of the author. Copyright © James G. Arthur 2000
About Dr. Geisler
MissionShift: Global Mission Issues in the Third Millennium (B&H, 2010) Evangelicals Engaging Emergent: A Discussion of the Emergent Church Movement (B&H, 2009)
American Family Foundation & Cult Awareness Network
See American Family Foundation, below. Note: Paul Carden of Apologia will be a presenter at the AFF 2002 Conference. APOLOGIA [Rich Poll, Paul Carden, Ron Rhodes] is
Wicca: A Biblical Critique – Probe Ministries
Probe’s Michael Gleghorn examines some of the fundamental doctrines of Wicca, offers a biblical critique of those doctrines, and highlight the differences between
Wicca: A Biblical Critique
Wicca: A Biblical Critique. Michael Gleghorn. Please Note: Each coloured link within the article will lead you to a related topic on a different page on this site.
Walter Martin’s Religious InfoNet – In Memory of Walter Martin
Remembering a Soldier of the Cross Excerpts from Dr. Walter Martin’s Memorial Service
Chapter 1: Our Father in Heaven | Mormonism Research Ministry
During 2014, LDS members will be studying the latest manual published by their church, Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Fielding Smith.
- Sales Rank: #1378394 in Books
- Published on: 1997-10-01
- Released on: 1997-10-01
- Original language:
English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 1.18″ h x
6.32″ w x
9.32″ l,
1.42 pounds
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Proceeds through the Bible book by book showing where cultists misinterpret passages. The authors then give the orthodox interpretation of the passage in question.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Correcting misinterpretations
By Mike Parks
Geisler & Rhodes have placed together a rock solid book with answers to some commonly misinterpreted passages. These men are scholars and their clear communication comes through. They begin by explaining what makes a cult, and the essentials of orthodoxy.The remainder of the book (98%) is setup from Genesis to Revelation. They walk their readers through some of the most misunderstood passages. They begin with the text of scripture, explain the misinterpretation, and then correct the misinterpretation. Some of questions answered are…Ezekiel 37:16-17–Is this passage a prophecy of The Book of Mormon?2 Timothy 1:18–Does Paul’s prayer for Onesiphorus support the Roman Catholic doctrine of praying for the dead?Philemon 16–Does the apostle Paul approve of the institution of slavery?James 1:5–Does this verse indicate we should pray about the Book of Mormon to see if it’s true?There are answers to hundreds of questions, you can read all the way through or just flip to the text you are questioning. I have used this book repeatedly and highly recommend it.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Book written entirely by Rhodes, not Geisler!
By Daniel Knepshield
This book claims to be written by Norman Geisler and Ron Rhodes, but it clearly is not. In fact, this book is nothing but an index of the book series “Reasoning From The Scriptures” by Ron Rhodes. There is nothing original in this book. Everything was simply lifted, usually verbatim, from Ron’s previous RFTS books. For some reason, Norman Geisler allowed his name to be used in the marketing of this book, but I do not believe he wrote one sentence. I have read many of Rhodes’ books and I can cleary recognize his writing style and it appears unmistakably in every paragraph in this book. At best, perhaps Mr. Geisler acted as an editor or consultant to Mr. Rhodes. In that case , he should be listed as such, not as an author. Maybe the publisher thought the book would sell more copies with Geisler’s name attached. In any case, I find such a practice to be deceiving and unacceptable.This book, I am sure would have been much better if Norman Geisler had more to do with it. I like and recommend Geisler’s other books, but not this one. Once again, this is really just a Ron Rhodes book with Norman Geisler’s name attached. If anyone has any of Ron Rhodes’ Reasoning From The Scriptures books, then this book is not needed, because it is simply the same exact material reprinted almost verbatim.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Good format, but a re-hash for ‘old heads’.
By A Customer
Norm Geisler and Ron Rhodes provide a good reference in this volume. The material is easy to read and they deal with tons of texts which everyone from the Mormons to New Age to JW’s to Ken Copeland and company take out of context. If you’re new to cults and counter cult apologetics, buy this book. If you’ve already spent time dealing with fasle teachings on all the aforementioned groups and others, this book will be a re-hash of old information that you should already be familiar with. If you own Walter Martin’s Kingdom of the Cults, Hank Hanegraaf’s Christianity in Crisis or any similar books, you’ll see a lot of the same material. Still, a good book!
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