Robin
Lake Park, Georgia USA
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Needs to get a Life
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You might not like my choice of the word "reluctantly". However I am at a loss to know of a better way to put it. On an issue like this, when someone I respect does something that I strongly disagree with; I usually look into the matter further, mainly because I want to make certain I am not the one in error. In this case, I am very disappointed to say that Mark Dever is in serious error, based on biblical evidence and I must bow to God’s word. That is the reason I say reluctantly, because it saddens me. There might be a better word to describe it, but I am not sure what that word is.
Tom
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Annie Oakley
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Annie Oakley
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Tom, I think I do understand how you might feel about such a revelation. You certainly are not alone for I have been met with great disappointment at learning that someone I had once revered as a GIANT in the faith, has been given over to some gross error and even apostasy. I have named that feeling, GRIEF. It is humbling and has shown me that it is all of Christ.
The Chestnut Mare
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On the subject of Holy Ground, I thought I would look to see what others on the internet believe concerning 'Holy Ground'. Would you agree with the following? Question: "What does the Bible mean when it refers to holy ground?" Answer: The phrase “holy ground” is found only twice in the Bible, once in the Old Testament and once in the New. God Himself first identified the area in which He met with Moses on Mount Horeb (Sinai) as holy ground. It was there that God commanded Moses to go to Pharaoh and demand that he let the people go from bondage to Egypt. At the moment Moses came upon the burning bush out of which God spoke to Him, God gave him two commands: don’t come near and take off your sandals. Both commands were to impress it upon Moses that he was standing on holy ground (Exodus 3:5). It was not that the actual ground on which Moses stood was holy; rather, it was the presence of the holy God that made it holy. The direction to Moses to remove his shoes was in conformity with what was well known to Moses, for having been brought up in Egypt, he would have known that the Egyptian priests observed the custom in their temples. Today it is observed in all Eastern countries where the people take off their shoes or sandals before entering mosques and synagogues as a confession of personal defilement and conscious unworthiness to stand in the presence of unspotted holiness. Moses responds by not only removing his shoes, but also by hiding his face, a sign that he understood he was in the presence of the glory of the divine Majesty, and conscious of his own sinfulness and unworthiness. In fact, Moses was so aware of God’s holiness that He was afraid to look at Him (Exodus 3:6). In the New Testament, the event described in Exodus is reiterated by Stephen as he was preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ before the Sanhedrin. He recounted the history of the Jews and their dealings with the God of their forefathers (Acts 6–7). He reminded them of the incident of the holy ground on which Moses stood and spoke to God (Acts 7:33). The holy ground was rendered sacred by the presence of God, who is the very essence of holiness. The lesson for us is that we should enter the sanctuary, the place set apart for divine worship, with reverence in our hearts. Solemn awe and deep seriousness are appropriate for coming into the place set apart to the worship of God, for wherever the Lord is constitutes holy ground. http://www.gotquestions.org/holy-ground.htmlSomething stands out here as being a little off. "The lesson for us is that we should enter the sanctuary, the place set apart for divine worship, with reverence in our hearts. Solemn awe and deep seriousness are appropriate for coming into the place set apart to the worship of God, for wherever the Lord is constitutes holy ground." It is my understanding that we as Christians gathered for worship are the sanctuary, not the gathering place for worship. Though I agree we should enter worship with solemn awe and seriousness, should we go as far as this man says? Tom
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Head Honcho
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Head Honcho
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1. This person's application of the passage, whether from OT or the NT reference, which are the same, is a giant leap of something; certainly not logic. It is true that one should serve and worship God with reverence and awe [Grk: properly, godly fear] (Heb 12:28). And, it is true that one should have this attitude and heart when entering a place of worship. But it can't be found in that text.
2. Although the individual believer is sometimes referred to as being the "temple of God or Holy Spirit" (1Cor 3:16; 6:19; 2Cor 6:16), a "holy temple" (Eph 2:21,22), and a "spiritual house" (1Pet 2:5), it is also true that wherever believers gather together for formal worship it can be called a "sanctuary", i.e., the place where the presence of God can be found in a particular way, e.g., divine worship. This is a truth greatly and horribly ignored or denied by the contemporary 'church'.
simul iustus et peccator
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Needs to get a Life
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Pilgrim Great answer, I especially appreciated how you provided Scripture support. It made it easy to not only read what you said, but to look to Scripture at the same time. However, I am not sure if it was an oversight on your part, but when you said: it is also true that wherever believers gather together for formal worship it can be called a "sanctuary", i.e., the place where the presence of God can be found in a particular way, e.g., divine worship. This is a truth greatly and horribly ignored or denied by the contemporary 'church'. You didn't provide any Scripture, to support your view. Tom
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Head Honcho
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Well, if you insist...  Remember, one may also come to the truth not only by direct textual support but also, as the WCF states: "The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for his own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture". And the LBCF has a similar affirmation: "The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down or necessarily contained in the Holy Scripture:" Thus, we can find that there are numerous places in Scripture where a structure or designated place was either called a "sanctuary" or functioned in the capacity of a "sanctuary" and was so recognized and respected as such. Ex. 25:8,9; 33:7; 1Sam 1:9, 3:2-4; Num 1:49-54; 2Chron 5:5; Isa 63:18; Ps 20:2, 63:2, 68:24, 73:17; Matt 18:20 (in the context of the organized church); Acts 7:44ff; 1Tim 3:15. Okay, that should suffice to establish the fact that a "sanctuary" is also a place wherein God's presence is found and where the people of God come to worship Him. In both testaments, the people of God entered into or before the "sanctuary" which testified and demonstrated their separation from the world for the place of the one true God was "holy".
simul iustus et peccator
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Pilgrim Thank you. By the way it is partly your fault that I am getting picky in my old age.  Tom
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Head Honcho
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Pilgrim Thank you. By the way it is partly your fault that I am getting picky in my old age.  Tom There's therefore hope for you yet, Tom! ![[Linked Image]](http://the-highway.com/Smileys/giggle.gif)
simul iustus et peccator
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Needs to get a Life
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I hope I am not expecting too much, by asking this. Unless I am missing something, I think you have established beyond a reasonable doubt concerning this issue that Scripture teaches it.
That being the case, I would expect that although this view might be rejected in a lot of today’s Churches. Would I be correct to say that this is the classic (if I may use that word) Reformed view on the issue? If so, can you give me a few examples of this teaching?
Tom
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I'm beginning to feel like the "Shell Answer Man" Calvin's Institutes Book 4, Chapter 1, Section 17. Fourth objection and answer. Answer confirmed by the divine promises. Since they also argue that there is good reason for the Church being called holy, it is necessary to consider what the holiness is in which it excels, lest by refusing to acknowledge any church, save one that is completely perfect, we leave no church at all. It is true, indeed, as Paul says, that Christ "loved the church, and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be holy and without blemish," (Eph 5: 25-27). Section 19. Appearance of the Church in the days of Christ and the apostles, and their immediate followers. Then what kind of age was that of Christ and the apostles? Yet neither could the desperate impiety of the Pharisees, nor the dissolute licentiousness of manners which everywhere prevailed, prevent them from using the same sacred rites with the people, and meeting in one common temple for the public exercises of religion.
R.C. Sproul clearly promotes the concept of "Holy space" in the last chapter of The Holiness of God, entitled "Holy Space & Holy Time", Sproul writes, In our contemporary experience, we experience holy space in church sanctuaries. The biblical word church refers to people, not buildings. Yet when people gather for worship, they need a physical place of meeting. Because the church building is the place deigned for worship, we have come to abbreviate the term church building as simply church. In this sense, churches are designed and built to serve as a kind of sacred space reserved for a place of encounter with the holy. ... It can be argued that such threshold thinking obscures the biblical truth that God is omnipresent and that all creation is sacred as the theatre of God's operations. But the Bible is much more positive about the idea of space. The consecration of sacred space does not end with the close of the Old Testament. it is rooted and grounded in the act of creation itself, and something profoundly important to the human spirit is lost when it is neglected. What I am saying, and what Sproul is teaching is NOT that a building, a physical structure nor a particular plot of ground is now INHERENTLY and ACTUALLY "sacred/holy".  Rather, wherever the true people of God gather for worship, that place and time is sacred/holy. God is omnipresent to be sure and always has been, yet it is written how He has manifested Himself in a special way as well and particularly in places of worship, whether they were an earthen altar, in the desert, in a tent/tabernacle or a stone temple. And although no one particular place or physical structure is now designated as "holy", as is the belief of the Jews, nevertheless, places of true worship are "holy ground" and need to be recognized as such by giving due respect to them when worship is performed among the gathered saints. Then there is the testimony of the WCF, Chapter XXI: VI. Neither prayer, nor any other part of religious worship, is now, under the gospel, either tied unto, or made more acceptable by any place in which it is performed, or towards which it is directed:[27] but God is to be worshiped everywhere,[28] in spirit and truth;[29] as, in private families [30] daily,[31] and in secret, each one by himself;[32] so, more solemnly in the public assemblies, which are not carelessly or willfully to be neglected, or forsaken, when God, by his Word or providence, calleth thereunto.[33] 27. John 4:21 28. Mal. 1:11; I Tim. 2:8 29. John 4:23-24 30. Jer. 10:25; Deut. 6:6-7; Job 1:5; II Sam. 6:18, 20 31. Matt. 6:11; see Job 1:5 32. Matt. 6:6; 16-18; Neh. 1:4-11; Dan. 9:3-4a 33. Isa. 56:6-7; Heb. 10:25; Psa. 84:1-12; 100:4; 122:1, Luke 4:16; Acts 2:42; 13:42, 44 Yes, there are many today who would reject this view but I am not deterred in holding it as truth when understood correctly. 
simul iustus et peccator
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