Ask Your Preacher - Archives
Day 176 - 2 Timothy 1
Tuesday, September 05, 20175 minutes a day 5 days a week - a year of Bible Wisdom
Exhorting The Exorcist
Tuesday, September 05, 2017Do evil spirits really exist, or is it something people over the years have made up, and we fall into it and allow ourselves to believe, therefore, allowing our minds to play tricks on us? I need and want to know this. If they do exist, do they just linger around in some homes causing harm (emotional or physical) to people? And if they do exist, and do this, why and how can we make them go away?Sincerely,
Haunted
Dear Haunted,
Evil spirits are real, but they were cast out and their powers greatly reduced by Christ and the apostles. Demon possession ended not long after the days of Christ. Jesus made it clear that one of His jobs was to bind the devil and take His strength away by casting out his demons (Matt 12:28-29). When Jesus’ disciples had come back from their evangelism trips and related to Him that they had cast out many demons, Jesus told them that they were defeating Satan by getting rid of Satan’s demonic minions (Lk 10:17-18). When Jesus and His disciples cast out demons, they did it permanently (Lk 8:30-33) and bound Satan by their acts. We no longer have to deal with such overt attacks by the devil because he has been bound by Christ's sacrifice (Rev. 20:2). Demon possession no longer exists; the devil must use subtler methods to deceive us now. If you would like a more in-depth answer to this question, one of our AYP writers taught a class on the subject. It can be found HERE.
Day 175 - 1 Timothy 6
Monday, September 04, 20175 minutes a day 5 days a week - a year of Bible Wisdom
Hoo-Don't
Monday, September 04, 2017Hi. My grandmother does hoodoo; I know the name after researching the things she owns. Is she going to hell; is hoodoo a sin? The biggest thing is that she is a christian, a very godly woman; she attends church every Sunday and even gives one hundred dollars every month.Sincerely,
Grandma Grief
Dear Grandma Grief,
Hoodoo is wrong and is a warping of the Scriptures. Hoodoo is a term used for those who use the Bible like a magic spell book and protective talisman. Instead of treating the Bible like an instruction book for life (which is the right attitude – 2 Pet 1:3, Rom 1:16, Rom 10:17), Hoodoo treats the Bible like a lucky rabbit’s foot. If you open to the right Psalm or the read the proper verse at the proper time, you will be given special protection, health, or powers. This is totally opposite of what the Bible teaches. In fact, during the days of Paul, there were exorcists that tried this tactic. A group of Jewish exorcists saw that Paul had power from God, so they tried to talk and act like Paul in order to receive the same powers Paul had… it didn’t work (Acts 19:13-16). The Bible isn’t a tool to gain magical powers; it is a pattern for living (2 Tim 1:13). No matter how much money your grandmother gives and how regularly she attends services, this practice is sinful.
Confident, But Not Careless
Friday, September 01, 2017Where in the Bible does it talk about whether or not a saved person can or can't lose their salvation?Sincerely,
Insurance Policy
Dear Insurance Policy,
Yes, you can lose your salvation – but not by accident. There are two extremes when it comes to discussing salvation.
One extreme is the Calvinistic view that your salvation is never in jeopardy, regardless of what you do. This view is called ‘Perseverance of the Saints’ – the belief that if you are saved, you will always persevere without ever needing to worry about your salvation. This view is simply not biblical. Consider several verses from the book of Hebrews. Heb 6:4-6 talks about ‘enlightened partakers of the Holy Spirit’ (certainly this refers to saved christians) who then ‘fall away’ and ‘crucify afresh the Son of God’. There can be no doubt that this is talking about people losing their salvation. Heb. 10:26-27 talks about knowledgeable christians rejecting the gospel and the terrifying expectation of judgment to come upon them. Paul said he feared that his preaching had been in vain to the Galatian brethren because they were turning away from the pure word of God (Gal 4:11, Gal 1:6). Yes, we most certainly must watch how we live and act so as to not miss the prize of heaven (1 Cor 9:25-27).
The other extreme is to have zero confidence in your salvation. This is the attitude of “unless I am living perfectly, I am going to be lost.” This view is also wrong. Christ died to save sinners (1 Tim 1:15), and it is His blood that pays the price for your entrance into heaven (1 Pet 1:18-19). Your salvation is not dependent upon perfect living but FAITHFUL living (Eph. 2:8): hearing God’s word (Rom 10:17) and then living by that Word (Jas 2:14-18) to the best of your ability. Perfection is not a requirement of salvation in Christ – commitment is. A committed christian, though he often may fall short of who he wants to be, can be confident in his eternal reward.