3rd Edition Now Available: Hath God Said? Emergent Church Theology

Hath God Said_ Emergent Church Theology - Elliott Nesch

Hath God Said? Emergent Church Theology (3rd ed.) is now available: free PDF, paperback available for order from HBP or CreateSpace, Kindle Edition available from Kindle.

In this new edition, content has been added and updated (now 300 pages). Major additions include a chapter entitled “A Better Atonement,” and a section entitled, “The Faith Once Delivered to the Saints.”

The labels Emergent Church, Emerging Church, Emergence Christianity, and New Christianity all imply innovative and progressive understandings of Orthodox Christianity. Like nailing jello to a wall, many have attempted to understand and define the Emergent movement only to be frustrated and confused.

At the heart of the Emerging movement is the worldview of postmodernism which teaches that truth is relative and subjective. This book by Elliott Nesch demonstrates how postmodernism is incompatible with a biblical worldview of absolute truth and the authority of the Scriptures on various topics including feminism, homosexuality, hell, mysticism, eschatology, Jesus Christ and the Gospel of the Kingdom of God and more.

In Hath God Said? - Emergent Church Theology, the teachings of the Emergent movement are exposed in light of Scripture. Also by comparing early Church writings with Emergent writings, it becomes evident that the Emerging Church is not preaching the faith once delivered to the saints.

Lying Signs & Wonders

Tim Wirth has just released a series of video interviews on his YouTube channel, a channel dedicated to exposing the false Signs and Wonders Movement. I have embedded below Lying Signs & Wonders - James Jacob Prasch & Sandy Simpson - Pa$$ the Plate and Let Us Prey. They have also released a review of the recent Holy Ghost movie called Holy Ghost Movie Exposé -Tim Wirth and Sandy Simpson.

Real Roots of the Emergent Church Documentary: Updated!

Here is the 3-hour Updated Director’s Cut of The Real Roots of the Emergent Church documentary:

Because diversity characterizes the Emergent Church movement, it is difficult to paint everyone in the movement with a broad brush. Some have observed that defining the Emergent Church is like nailing jello to a wall. All participants agree on their disillusionment with the institutional church, but do not all agree on where the church is destined to go from here. They share a common concern with many evangelicals over the state of the modern church, especially the mega-church phenomenon and “seeker-friendly” churches. For this reason, many evangelicals who observe the Emerging Church are fascinated by it, drawn to its creative approaches to worship, genuineness of many of the leaders and desire to reach Gen Xers. However, these evangelicals fail to look beyond it to understand its underlying theology, or lack thereof. [Read more...]