Political Theology

A single shaft of light illuminates a worn, leather-bound bible lying open on a rough wooden pew. dust motes swirl in the beam, and a scrap of faded red cloth lies forgotten on the floor. the pew's dark, weathered grain contrasts sharply with the bible's pristine pages and the red cloth, a silent rebuke.

When Justice Replaces Jesus: A Review of ‘Sunday Service’

The sermon is a pretextual, topical address driven entirely by recent political events. The core message substitutes the biblical Gospel with a Social Gospel framework, defining 'sin' as systemic oppression and 'salvation' as political activism. The substitutionary atonement of Christ is absent, and He is presented merely as an exemplar for social resistance. Furthermore, the pulpit was given to a guest speaker who claimed direct, extra-biblical revelation from God to guide her political career, a serious violation of the sufficiency of Scripture.

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A weathered anchor, its chains wrapped in fraying rope, sits submerged in murky shallows beneath a darkening sky.

Prophecy or Politics? A Review of ‘What God Is Saying in This Hour’

The sermon is founded upon a critical error: the elevation of extra-biblical, subjective prophecy to the level of scriptural authority. This foundational failure in Bibliology leads to a cascade of further errors, including a conflation of a political movement with a work of the Holy Spirit, a flawed understanding of regeneration, and a hermeneutic that uses Scripture as a pretext for a political narrative. The core message is not the Gospel of Christ, but a call to trust the speaker's prophetic insight into a nationalistic revival.

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