Jeff Fugate approves!
https://twitter.com/drjefffugate/status/544851614570647554
https://twitter.com/drjefffugate/status/544851614570647554
Duh!AmazedbyGrace said:Jeff Fugate approves!
https://twitter.com/drjefffugate/status/544851614570647554
subllibrm said:When the "point" needs to be made, biblical support takes a back seat. :-\
Tom Brennan said:Boomer said:...
Your thoughts, FFF?
Such messages are a classic two fold example of the rot that still prevails in entire segments of our movement. 1) a complete mishandling of Scripture, and 2) an inappropriate exaltation of men. I'm on your side, Boomer, all the way. I am done with shoddy hermeneutics and the cult of personality.
...which doesn't mean I cannot learn from great men in the past. Indeed, I seek to do so conscientiously. But to bring such an emphasis in this way as you have described is inexcusable. And I am weary of it.
subllibrm said:When the "point" needs to be made, biblical support takes a back seat. :-\
rsc2a said:When I teach topically, I use plenty of passages to support the point. I am intentional about reading the surrounding verses aloud for those passages , and I would NEVER use a single verse with no context as a teaching point.
rsc2a said:When I teach topically, I use plenty of passages to support the point. I am intentional about reading the surrounding verses aloud for those passages , and I would NEVER use a single verse with no context as a teaching point.
One practice is to exhaust the topic (an impossible task, I'm sure.rsc2a said:When I teach topically, I use plenty of passages to support the point. I am intentional about reading the surrounding verses aloud for those passages , and I would NEVER use a single verse with no context as a teaching point.
Tom Brennan said:Boomer said:...
Your thoughts, FFF?
Such messages are a classic two fold example of the rot that still prevails in entire segments of our movement. 1) a complete mishandling of Scripture, and 2) an inappropriate exaltation of men. I'm on your side, Boomer, all the way. I am done with shoddy hermeneutics and the cult of personality.
...which doesn't mean I cannot learn from great men in the past. Indeed, I seek to do so conscientiously. But to bring such an emphasis in this way as you have described is inexcusable. And I am weary of it.
In short, no. Fugate doesn't have enough Biblical understanding to see the gross misrepresentation of Scripture's truth. This guy has zero formal education from anywhere, quotes the American founding fathers more than the Bible, proclaimed to his church that "Yes, Jefferson was a deist. But that just means he believed in the deity of Christ!" (I was visiting family there and heard it myself), defended a blackface skit to the media and is so accustomed to trying to find a few words strung together that he can twist to fit his desired topic that he makes Jack Hyles look like an exegetical scholar.Boomer said:Tom Brennan said:Boomer said:...
Your thoughts, FFF?
Such messages are a classic two fold example of the rot that still prevails in entire segments of our movement. 1) a complete mishandling of Scripture, and 2) an inappropriate exaltation of men. I'm on your side, Boomer, all the way. I am done with shoddy hermeneutics and the cult of personality.
...which doesn't mean I cannot learn from great men in the past. Indeed, I seek to do so conscientiously. But to bring such an emphasis in this way as you have described is inexcusable. And I am weary of it.
The thing that bothers me so much is that it is so obvious. How could Sheldon Smith look at that sermon and think, "This is good, biblical preaching. I'm going to stake my reputation on this and print it"? And then men like Jeff Fugate regurgitate it on Twitter. Cannot the president of a Bible college discern the mangling of Jeremiah 5?
It does not take a scholar to see what Hamblin did to that passage (I'm no scholar!). Anybody with basic reading and comprehension skills could understand what that passage really means! This is what I find so disturbing.
Binaca Chugger said:In short, no. Fugate doesn't have enough Biblical understanding to see the gross misrepresentation of Scripture's truth. This guy has zero formal education from anywhere, quotes the American founding fathers more than the Bible, proclaimed to his church that "Yes, Jefferson was a deist. But that just means he believed in the deity of Christ!" (I was visiting family there and heard it myself), defended a blackface skit to the media and is so accustomed to trying to find a few words strung together that he can twist to fit his desired topic that he makes Jack Hyles look like an exegetical scholar.Boomer said:Tom Brennan said:Boomer said:...
Your thoughts, FFF?
Such messages are a classic two fold example of the rot that still prevails in entire segments of our movement. 1) a complete mishandling of Scripture, and 2) an inappropriate exaltation of men. I'm on your side, Boomer, all the way. I am done with shoddy hermeneutics and the cult of personality.
...which doesn't mean I cannot learn from great men in the past. Indeed, I seek to do so conscientiously. But to bring such an emphasis in this way as you have described is inexcusable. And I am weary of it.
The thing that bothers me so much is that it is so obvious. How could Sheldon Smith look at that sermon and think, "This is good, biblical preaching. I'm going to stake my reputation on this and print it"? And then men like Jeff Fugate regurgitate it on Twitter. Cannot the president of a Bible college discern the mangling of Jeremiah 5?
It does not take a scholar to see what Hamblin did to that passage (I'm no scholar!). Anybody with basic reading and comprehension skills could understand what that passage really means! This is what I find so disturbing.
What did you expect?
Web said:Bob H said:If I may digress, IB aren't the only ones who preach bad sermons.................
Carry on.
If I were still IFB, I would more concerned about the bad teaching in my own "camp" and less so about the Joel Osteens of the world. If I were still IFB, I'd try to get my own group straightened out and then enable and equip them to educate "outsiders" about the error with Osteen, (pick your favorite demon....) etc.
Bob H said:I don't know. The Op was about the Sword and bad preaching. Hamblin, who ever he is wasn't mentioned in it. I just made the comment that it's in all flavors. I grew up new evangelicalism and it's no better there.
Web said:Bob H said:I don't know. The Op was about the Sword and bad preaching. Hamblin, who ever he is wasn't mentioned in it. I just made the comment that it's in all flavors. I grew up new evangelicalism and it's no better there.
Quoting the OP:
Beginning on the front page, the sermon by John N. Hamblin