XXXIX - 6(06) “Watchman, what of the night?” "The hour has come, the
hour is striking and striking at you,
A Response Page 2 Our Postal Box Page 3 Muslim Silence Page 4 The Holy Spirit Page 5
Editor's Preface
This will be the last monthly
issue of WWN. The next issue will begin a bi-monthly schedule and the first
issue will be numbered as July-Aug 06. As I have noted previously our mailing
is in two parts, Periodical Mailing for all out of country addresses, and Bulk
Mailing for all In the second article
of this issue, we discuss two items which we have received in our postal box,
one of them being the Rosary. The idea of "mystery" dominates the
prayers of the Rosary. It is also biblical. Our word "mystery" is
transliterated from the Greek. Paul wrote - "Without controversy, great is
the mystery (musthrion) of godliness." (I Tim 3:16) How are we to relate
to true Biblical mysteries? For example - God is a mystery; the Incarnation is
a mystery; sin is a mystery, it cannot be justified; the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus can be experienced but not fully understood, it will be the theme
of eternity. But how do we relate to the study of these "mysteries"
now, such as the Holy Spirit? How do we perceive - "in beginning, Gods (Elohim - plural) created (bara-singular)? How do we understand - "This is life
eternal to know the only
true God" (John 17:3),
Page 2 A Response Soon after the April
issue of WWN was placed in the postal system, I received an E-mail via the
Webmaster from a doctor in My observation is that Sabbatarian organizations, all
of them, other than SDA'S are withering on the vine, so to speak. Sabbatarianism just isn't accepted by the great mass of
Christians. Why, should be most obvious - just read the NT over and over! Other
Christians have many intelligent and capable analysts of the Bible and
translators from its ancient manuscripts. No translators have ever become noted
Sabbatarians - this is significant to me - and
obviously to the rest of the Christian world. Nothing (is) wrong with Sabbath worship. Sunday is
never commanded, I fully agree. What is commanded is "TODAY" (meaning
every day!) in Hebrews 3 and 4. To declare that Heb. 4 reinforces Sabbath
observance of the fourth commandment of the Decalogue is a certain error. One
has only to read the build up to that text. Unbelief in Him and His grace was
what was lacking in the Israelites. Christ (was to be) their Sabbath
"Rest" - not the seventh day! . . . (No I am not supporting Sunday over any other day and I
have not joined with Sunday worshippers. Most of them are not concerned with
Sunday replacing the Sabbath from a God commanded point of view. Many of them
work on Sundays too, at least some times, and still consider themselves
Christian in good standing. They "love" God To this letter, I
replied. (While I will reproduce what I wrote, it will be enlarged and
annotated.) Dear Dr. --- You will observe that I am replying on
Sabbath, which some years back I probably would not have done. As I read the
New Testament Scriptures, I observed that the issue was not which day is the
Sabbath, but how does one use that sacred time. (Which
day was the seventh day, - none other was commanded to be the day of rest - was
settled at the beginning of the establishment of The Sabbath controversies that are noted in the Gospel
of John involve the keeping of the Sabbath, not which day is the Sabbath. For
example, see John 9:14-16, which records the restoring of sight on the Sabbath
to one born blind. Jesus forever settled the question of the day to be observed
as the Sabbath in the gospel dispensation. He declared, "The Sabbath was
made for man" (Mark In preparing the issue (WWN 4-06) I personally received
a blessing and some new insights. The seventh day is God's day, not man's day.
It was God who rested. Man was merely invited to join Him. It was only man's
second day of existence. At the very dawn of human history, even though Cain and
Abel brought different gifts, they came with those offerings on the same day -
"at the end of the days" (Gen. 4:3, margin). After the flood, the
beginnings of profane history are marked by the As the canon of Scripture closes, The doctor in his
E-mail to me observed that "to declare that Hebrews 4 reinforces Sabbath
observance of the 4th commandment is a certain error." I am not so
"certain." Paul wrote that "God did rest the seventh day from
all His works" (Heb. 4:4), and then stated that "he that is entered
into His rest – the
Page 3 “rest"
of salvation - he also hath ceased from his own works as God did from His"
(ver. 10). Paul concluded "There remaineth
therefore a keeping of the Sabbath (sabbatismoV) to the people of God" (4:9). The people of God
will do as God did! Our Postal Box – In any given week, the
mail received in our box, other than first class, would overwhelm a shredder.
Requests come from charitable organizations, from missions; and much, just
promotional material, to sell a product or a service. We subscribe to
publications for the library and have them sent simply as A.L.F. Library. Some
of these subscription magazines are from Roman Catholic publishers, such as L’Osservatore Romano, and The Catholic World Report. I am sure
that their mailing lists are shared with Roman charities around the world as we
receive requests from Send forth your Spirit to this country and make it a
source of wisdom and strength, order and integrity throughout the world. The second gift was
included in a letter requesting support of: "Food for the Poor." It
was a plastic zippered "coin" case, imprinted with the words,
"My Rosary" - the first I ever possessed! Besides the crucifix
suspended from the rose-colored beaded chain, was another dime-sized medallion
holding the chain together. On one side of this medallion was the likeness of
John Paul II, and on the other an engraving of Mary with the words, "I am
the Immaculate Conception." Included with the
"gift" was a booklet, "A New Guide for praying the Rosary which
had John Paul II's addition of the "Luminous Mysteries," or "The
Mysteries of Light." The last of these five mysteries is - "The
Institution of the Eucharist" with a Biblical reference from Matt. 26:26 -
"This is My body." There are five prayers of
the Rosary closing with "Hail, Holy Queen." This prayer to Mary
reads: Hail, holy Queen, mother of mercy; hail, our life, our sweetness
and our hope. To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve; to thee do we
send our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears. Turn then, most
gracious advocate, thy eyes of mercy toward us; and after this our exile, show
unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 0 clement, 0 loving, 0 sweet
Virgin Mary! Pray for us, 0 Holy Mother of God, that we may be made worthy of
the promises of Christ. The final of the four
mysteries is called "The Glorious Mysteries." These mysteries are
listed as the Resurrection, and Ascension of Jesus, the Descent of the Holy
Spirit as well as the
Page 4 Assumption
and Coronation of Mary. For each is given a Biblical reference, except for the last
"mystery" which has the reference from the Apocryphal book of Judith.
For the "'Assumption" of Mary, the prophetic symbolism of Rev. 12:1
is cited as evidence of the actual happening. The reference from Judith reads: You are the
glory of The book of Judith
containing sixteen chapters follows the book of Tobias in the "Muslim Medievalism, Muslim Silence" This title captioned the
comments by Richard Cohen of the Washington Post Writers Group appearing in the
National Post published in What strikes me about the threat to execute Abdul Rahman, the Afghan who converted to Christianity, is not
that Afghanistan remains deeply medieval and not even remotely the democracy
that we would all like it to be, but that with the exception of the (largely)
Christian West, the rest of the world has been mostly silent. The Americans
have protested, the Brits have protested, the Canadians have protested, the The murder of a person for his religion ought to be
inconceivable. It is something we in the West stopped doing hundreds
of years ago and, while Americans continued to kill on account of race (lynchings) deep into the last century, the right of the
government to take a life on account of religion has not even been argued in
the longest time. We are way beyond that. Rahman's troubles began, as
they do for so many, with a divorce. In contesting his attempt to gain custody
of his children, his wife told the court that Rahman
would be an unfit father because he had converted to Christianity about 16
years earlier. This is what's known in football as a late hit. Nonetheless,
when the prosecutor heard of the conversion, he promptly charged Rahman with apostasy, which is punishable by death. Rahman's choices were (either) to repudiate his conversion
or plead insanity. The latter would have been the more sane choice. "The world is too much with us," Wordsworth
once wrote. This is certainly the way I feel. To be confronted on almost a
daily basis with the horrors of
Page 5 But you can say that these horrors are usually being
inflicted by a minority. You can say it is a few crazed terrorists in Then comes the Rahman case
and it is not a solitary crazy prosecutor who brings the charge of apostasy,
but an entire society. It is not a single judge who would condemn the man, but
a culture. The Taliban are gone at gunpoint and their atrocities supposedly a
thing of the past. In our boundless optimism, we consign them to the "too
hard" file of horrors we cannot figure out: the Khmer Rouge, the Nazis,
the communists of the Stalin period. Now though, this awful thing returns and
it is not just a single country that would kill a man for his beliefs, but a
huge swath of the world which would not protest. There can be only one
conclusion: they were in agreement. The groupthink of the Muslim world is appalling,
frightening. I know there are exceptions - many exceptions. But still it seems
that a man could be killed for his religious beliefs and no one will say
anything in protest. It is also frightening to confront how differently we in
the West think about such matters and why the word "culture" is not
always a mask for bigotry but an honest statement of how things are. It is
sometimes a bridge too far - the leap that cannot be made. I can embrace an
Afghan for his children, his work, even his piety - all he shares with much of
humanity. But when he insists that a convert must die, I am stunned into
disbelief. Is this my fellow man? How will this writer
react when the following verse of Scripture is fulfilled? "And he
had power to give life unto the image of the beast, that the image of the beast
should both speak, and cause that as many as would not worship the image of the
beast should be killed" (Rev. 13:15). The context of this
verse in Revelation is the time of the second beast who came up "out of
the earth" (ver. 11), the area
designated by Richard Cohen as "the Christian West." A few months back, we
quoted Ann Coulter of the Religious Right. The advertising folder for the American Compass had singled out a
statement from her book, How to Talk to a
Liberal which parallels the very concepts noted by Richard Cohen. We repeat
the statement: I am often asked if I still think we should invade
their countries, kill their leaders, and convert them to Christianity. The
answer is: Now more than ever" (p.
21). Isn't this Islamic
thinking in "Christian" garb? --- And coming out of the "Christian
West"? The Holy Spirit The April issue of Old Paths was received this week, not
from its editor, Allen Stump, but from a friend. Stump has removed our name
from his free mailing list because of challenges to his teachings on the
Godhead. (We still send him, WWN as we have no fear of an open discussion of
truth.) In his current issue, he informs his readers that he is going to show
that the position taken by the Adult Sabbath School Bible Study Guide that the
Holy Spirit is a divine part of the Trinity "to be totally false" (p.
1). Three parts on the Holy Spirit with random comments are presented in this
issue, and we shall await further issues to see what direction Stump will
ultimately take. Our objective will be to simply point out Scriptures which help
one to define the nature and work of the Holy Spirit as well as to ask some
questions. First, we need to state
clearly that we do not believe, nor teach, the Roman doctrine of the Trinity;
however, we also recognize that the Messenger of the Lord used the concept of
"the Heavenly
Page 6 Trio"
to describe the Godhead. More
than that, she listed this Trio as "living Persons," - the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Spirit (Evangelism,
p. 615). We could simply refer our readers to the previous studies found in WWN
on the Godhead and let them speak as an answer to Stump's position. The latest
such issue was December 2005, first article, "God - Who Is He?" We
prefer this time to set forth the facts which certain texts of Scripture
reveal, and let each reader draw his own conclusion. The book of Acts marks
the beginning of the Christian Church with the out pouring of the Holy Spirit
on the Day of Pentecost, as "cloven tongues like as of fire" (2:3).
It announced the coronation and exaltation of Jesus Christ. Not only was He
exalted, but Jesus "received of the Father, the promise of the Holy
Spirit" ( Returning
to Acts: Note Chapter Eight.
First an "angel" instructs Philip to go to a certain place ( Again (Acts 13:1-4): In
the church at Let us go back to the
creation and see the revelation of God as given there. "In beginning, Gods
(Elohim,- plural) created" (bara, singular) [Gen. 1:1]. The Gods acted in unity,
or as One. The Spirit of God, the active agent moved
on the face of the waters. The NT tells us that without the Word "not
anything was made that was made" (John 1:3). Who then was the active
Agent? - Who then was "the Spirit of God"? If you need another
Scriptural comparison consider the giving of "prophecy." "Holy
men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit" (II Peter Now back to Genesis l.
It was the Elohim who said, "Let us make man in our image after our
likeness" (Gen. 1:26). What was the "likeness" of God (Elohim)
as revealed in Adam and Eve? That One was a male,
and the Other a female? Hardly.
But the emphasis in Gen. 2:24 is that "they shall be one flesh." Two
functioned as One. The incarnate Jesus echoed the same
Page 7 concept when He declared - "I and my Father are
one" (John Luke brings the
incarnation to the same point. Gabriel tells Mary that the
Pνευμα 'αγιον would
come upon her and the 'αγιον (holy) one conceived would be called "the son of
God" (Luke The Shema of Israel
also enters the picture. It reads: "Hear, 0 This conforms with other Old Testament texts such as Isaiah 44:6 which
reads: Thus saith the
Lord the King of Israel, and his redeemer the Lord of hosts; I am the first,
and I am the last; and beside Me there is no Elohim (Gods,
plural). The name
"Lord" in both instances in the Hebrew is YHWH (Yahweh), a
Biblical proper name of God known as the Tetragammaton.
The text states that there are Two of Them. Apart from Them,
there are no Gods. The self declaration as
"the first and the last" reaches through the Scriptures and finds
expression in the final Revelation. There the Almighty states - "I am
Alpha, and Omega, the beginning and the ending, . . .
which is, and which was and which is to come" (1:8). John in the Spirit
then hears behind him a "great voice" in trumpet tones proclaiming
Himself also to be the "Alpha and Omega, the first and the last"
(1:10-11). Turning, John saw "one like unto the Son of man" (
WEBSITE
E- Originally published by Adventist Laymen's Foundation of Mississippi/Arkansas
Wm. H. Grotheer, Editor
Adventist Laymen's Foundation was chartered in 1971 by Elder Wm.
H. Grotheer, then 29 years in the Seventh-day Adventist
ministry, and associates, for the benefit of Seventh-day
Adventists who were deeply concerned about the compromises of
fundamental doctrines by the Church leaders in conference with
those who had no right to influence them. Elder Grotheer began
to publish the monthly "Thought Paper," Watchman, What of the
Night? (WWN) in January, 1968, and continued the publication as
Editor until the end of 2006. Elder Grotheer died on May 2,
2009.
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