Jump to content
GreaseSpot Cafe

"I must be right because everyone is insisting I am wrong!"


WordWolf
 Share

Recommended Posts

10 minutes ago, Mike said:

There is also, smack dab in the middle of this ancient thread, another surprise endorsement of some things by Raf.

Once again, because you name drop Raf and because you guys agree on something doesnt mean you are credible by association.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, waysider said:

Hyperbole is lying if you lead people to believe it's literally true.

 

4 hours ago, waysider said:

https://www.dictionary.com/browse/hyperbole

"Hyperbole is not supposed to be taken literally."

 

4 hours ago, Mike said:

RIGHT ! 

That is what I posted above.

If the literal understanding is made available by the author, then the figurative is acceptable, and not misleading.

Nope! That's not what you said.

Mike said: "If the literal understanding is made available by the author, then the figurative is acceptable, and not misleading."

So, can you point to places in the Bible or in the PFAL class, where the author gives a literal understanding of a hyperbole just used in the immediate context. for instance, whether in the Bible or in PFAL it might sound something like this:

PFAL: "Where I just said it was the fear in the heart of that mother is what killed that little boy, I was exaggerating. More than likely the mother knew her child liked to play in traffic, and he wasn't very cautious when crossing streets anyway - she probably worried all the time about that drunken pastor who drove by the neighborhood frequently. So, let's not blame it on the drunken pastor who ran over the kid. "

 

Matthew 5 hyperbo-shonta-fied: "If thy right hand offend thee cut it off...uhm okay guys, I don't mean literally cut it off."

 

No essays please.

 

4 hours ago, Mike said:

The Bible uses figurative language a times, but not in a misleading way for the diligent reader.  Since it interprets itself (same Author; 66 books) somewhere the Author supplies the necessary literal understandings.

We were not diligent enough to seek out and find the ALL literal understandings to the figurative parts of the PFAL teaching.  Many of us barely graduated from the film class audio soundtrack to the written form; many not at all.

How does the Bible interpret itself regarding hyperbole? 

Please give specific passages.

No essays please.

 

 

4 hours ago, Mike said:

I vaguely remember that Oldiesman or johniam opined once that PFAL has some figurative teaching in it.   Did they?  If you are reading, did yous guys opine that?

I know I tried to chase down the literal understanding of the Great Principle, AND I also know from asking around, that almost no one else did. 

I did, however, neglect plenty of other chase-downs. 

I just happened to be interested in the GP because it looked like a computer interface, and I was also real interested in the comparisons of human to animal consciousness levels and abilities.  It wasn't until 1998 that I got more systematic at how I attempt to master the material.

the Great Principle looks like bull-$hit to me. Pure speculation by a preacher that knew how to fake speaking in tongues.

where is biblical support for wierwille's Great Principle?

Just Scripture references - no essays please.

 

 

4 hours ago, Mike said:

Opining that PFAL was sometimes figurative was all I was knowledgeable enough to come up with myself on that ancient 2003 thread I found in the archives.  I did not know very well, the word "hyperbole," at that time.

I will soon, maybe today, post a smoothed out version and the URL to the original thread where this very thing came up, sans the word "hyperbole."

There is also, smack dab in the middle of this ancient thread, another surprise endorsement of some things by Raf.  I was stunned again. I had no memory of his comments on that same old thread.

So, you admit that you were fooled by your own bull-$hit. amazing!

"smack dab in the middle of this ancient thread" huh? 

  do you mean that literally?

Edited by T-Bone
the Rise and Expansion of Thelonious' post
Link to comment
Share on other sites

30 minutes ago, Mike said:

We were not diligent enough to seek out and find the ALL literal understandings to the figurative parts of the PFAL teaching.  Many of us barely graduated from the film class audio soundtrack to the written form; many not at all.

Complete Bullshonta! If the fake pastor teaching the class had made plain the figurative parts as he taught them then you wouldnt have had to waste 50 years of your life trying to make sense of it. He failed the teachers task and mislead on purpose.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Mike said:

Hyperbole is not lying if the literal understandings are also supplied.

Then what's the point of using a figure of speech? Weak communicators, amateurs, neophytes employ hyperbole and then provide the literal. It's cutting the legs out from under the figure of speech - it renders it useless and ineffectual. It's pointless. It's awkward. It can only elicit embarrassment from the reader. It's cringe.

It's analogous to a comedian explaining the joke, or a magician explaining the card trick. If it must be explained, it's a bad joke, a bad trick.

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

27 minutes ago, Nathan_Jr said:

There are some "super" posts on this thread that cause the knees to buckle and the head to explode in their nonsense and stupidity.
 

So many words, so little said.

https://www.write4fun.net/view-entry/39196

 

Quote

 

The incredibly long and pointless story

  •  Chris Forbes, Grade 7
  •  
  •  Short Story
  •  
  •  2006

Once or maybe 1 000 000 000 times there was a boy called Ben. Ben had a dog that he had dressed up in an alpaca suit and then he had eaten it. Then all of a sudden Australia floated down up into the sky and then all the computers went feral and started eating cheese. They and ate and ate and ate and ate and then they all blew up. Then Ben sneezed and the world blew up and the Adam Sandler (In the movie Click) used his remote to rewind time to the age of dinosaurs and he got eaten up by a piece of dirt. The piece of dirt then used the remote to go back to the present day where all the fish were trying to protest so they could go to school and become institutionalised young piranhas who ate all the people who weren’t tree huggers and then they hugged the tree huggers. Soon all the tree huggers got shotguns and blew up themselves and the piranhas. Unlickily or maybe just a tiny bit luckily there was one piranha left that looked like this: ()(but the fish had a face lift so it looked like this: [][. Then Ben went to the park and ate pizza that was falling from the ground and then he saw retarded monkeys saying things like “gurgle gurgle flippity gloo cobble wobble shingy shong”. Ben got thirsty and hungry so he bought heaps of coke and slabs of chocolate from Idiotic Green Antelopes (I.G.A.). Then Ben went sugar high and chopped off his head so he could go to level 7 at Princess Margaret Hospital in Western Australia. The End!

This is the second paragraph. Please take your time reading because there is a very funny joke in it. After painstaking surgery, Ben was as good as new. Ben went to a penguin suit shop and bought a penguin suit. Then he went to a pet shop and bought two Siamese fighting fish who were mauling each other. Soon one got killed and the victor called Victor said “Hooray I won so I will have an extreme makeover so I can look like this: {}{!” But then the dead fish called Dead Fish said “Then I want to have a makeover so I can look like this: ()(!”Then Ben downloaded pirated music onto his I-pod and went to jail. Then his Siamese fighting fish bashed up all the guards in the jail and Ben could go home. Suddenly the world crashed into Venus which crashed into Mercury which crashed into the sun and made the whole multi-verse explode.

THE END

By Chris Forbes Year 7

 

 

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, Rocky said:

Seriously? If you don't grasp grammar, you can't effectively communicate. You ought to know that by now.

Too bad we’re all not telepathic - grammar and the meaning of words wouldn’t matter - we would all just know what each other really meant :wink2:

  • Upvote 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, T-Bone said:

...for instance, whether in the Bible or in PFAL it might sound something like this:

PFAL: "Where I just said it was the fear in the heart of that mother is what killed that little boy, I was exaggerating...

Actually, when you see my analysis, this story is NOT hyperbole but literal. I will try to post it soon.  It needs a lot of cleaning up to make it readable.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Mike said:

Actually, when you see my analysis, this story is NOT hyperbole but literal. I will try to post it soon.  It needs a lot of cleaning up to make it readable.

Fear doesn't kill no more than believing appropriates....magical thinking...Christian witchcraft.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

57 minutes ago, Nathan_Jr said:

"This is the second paragraph."

 

That was considerate of the writer.  I had lost count.

Nonsense can be silly and wake up your brain cells, according to Dr Suess.  

Or it can just waste your time.  

Must be a fine line.  I once got lost in this analogy and tripped over it.  Wasn't sure what side I was on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Mike said:

Actually, when you see my analysis, this story is NOT hyperbole but literal. I will try to post it soon.  It needs a lot of cleaning up to make it readable.

Hmmmm…previously I thought you said it was hyperbole. Now you’re changing you’re opinion and saying it’s literal?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Nathan_Jr said:

So much effort to MAKE it fit is your sign that it doesn’t.

Some people don’t know this - but there are 2 kinds of logic:

1. There’s logic logic 

and then there’s 

2. cult-logic

  • Like 1
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

To say or imply or suggest or insinuate that the mother killed that boy is not a subtle form of exaggeration. No matter how (H-O-W) one parses the language, it’s NOT a figure of speech.

This bitch-a$$ story of victor’s is abject wickedness and a huge “spiritual liability.” I’d hate to be him on THAT day. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

31 minutes ago, Mike said:

Actually, when you see my analysis...

Your aspirational desire is dependent on YOUR ability to effectively code the message you want to send in a manner readers could possibly recognize AS your intended message.

The likelihood of such success is greatly enhanced when you view your intended audience with love rather than contempt.

Edited by Rocky
Link to comment
Share on other sites

what killed that little boy


Here is a section of a thread dealing with the topic from the film class “what killed that little boy.”   This thread is almost exactly 20 years old.  In this thread and several others I had been discussing  genuine fear and genuine believing, as opposed to milder versions of same, that we were taught.  I was asserting often that real solid fear is pretty rare, and most of what we see is far milder, like doubt and worry, or anxious concern.

The general solution to the problem people have with this section of the class is to see that the fears we have in every day life, and the concern for loved ones safety and health are not really the kind of power fear VPW was talking about in the class.

 By not relying on memory for my stand on this, and going back to read the book and transcript, plus listen to the audio and watch his face and body language in the video, I can confidently say that the woman in this story was accurately depicted by VPW as operating genuine, law of believing style FEAR.   I’m thinking even possibly analogous to the manifestation of believing, which I have been calling “power believing.”

So keep in mind the major attitude I was writing about 20 years ago here: genuine believing and genuine fear are rare in real life.  We tend to inaccurately label all sorts of milder mental operations as “believing” and “fear” that are NOT the kind VPW was talking about in the class.

I often keep in mind Jesus’ mention of “believing with no doubt in the heart.”

*/*/*/*

I had to smooth out this text to make it more easily readable and I did a BARE MINIMUM amount of editing  to make things more readable.  Plus I highlighted a few things with bold fonts and/or color fonts.  I honestly did not change anyone’s arguments any. You can check me out by comparing with the originals, which are a big chunk of page 70 in the “Ubiquitous…” thread, back in the Summer of 2003.

https://www.greasespotcafe.com/ipb/topic/1005-the-ubiquitously-hidden-teaching-of-vpw/page/70/

 

[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][[][][][][][[][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][][]

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

I've always seen the law of believing as being more powerful on the positive side than the negative. On the other side, I've never seen anything to the effect that the fear of a mustard seed will bring results.

The same way we sometimes label our own mental assent (or agreement) as believing, we sometimes see worries and concerns as if they were full-blown fears.

We were taught in the 70’s that the feeling you get from a speeding car headed in your direction is NOT genuine fear. It is natural protective biology.  A shot of adrenaline and high heart rate in such an emergency is normal, natural, and part of God’s design in the human body. I think there was a verse to this effect that goes: “Be not afraid of sudden fear.”

In order to align our vocabularies with Dr’s, we need to recognize that the milder mental operations of mental assent, agreement, worry, concern, and sudden fear, are just that: mild precursors to the stronger operations of believing and fear.

When we get to the story of the mother and her little boy, we’ll see which mental operation she had cooking.

The red drapes are interestingly not in the book, and I don’t yet know what to make of that. Another change going from film class to the book, regarding needs and wants, is that the word “parallel” was changed to “in balance” in a few places.

As far as receiving something from another source, other than God, it does seem to be possible, but not as reliable, due to the untrustworthy nature of the adversary.

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

The most efficient, maximum yield, spiritual use of the law of believing requires a promise of God.

Sure, there are 5-senses applications of all sorts, but they are not as powerful. Having a positive attitude on a job interview is going to help score points, but not miraculously.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Raf Posted July 12, 2003

Have you noticed that you have to re-write the law of believing into a "maybe it will happen and maybe it won't" thesis in order to establish its veracity? That's not what Wierwille wrote, and you know it.

"Having a positive attitude is going to help..." is NOT the "law of believing."

"Whatever you believe for or expect, you get," is the law of believing.

If receiving something from a source other than God is not reliable, then believing is not a law.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

How about this:?

It's a law designed BY God to be operated WITH God. Any operation of it outside God is doomed to anything from partial results to counterfeit harmful results.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Raf Posted July 12, 2003

FINE!

But it's still not what Wierwille taught.

Wierwille taught "what you believe for or expect, you get."

Not, "what you believe for within God's will..."

Not, "What God promises and you believe..."

Not, "What you believe for or expect you might maybe get if the conditions are right."

I agree with what you're saying. I do not agree that it is a reasonable approximation of what Wierwille taught.

Like I've said before and I'll say again, Wierwille often got "believing" right. But he also got it wrong from time to time. Your reliance on your own words and dismissal of his words (as we've quoted them repeatedly) proves it.

*/*/*/*/

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Rafael,

I’m not dismissing Dr’s words. I’m dismissing the implications you see in them.

From my perspective I’m absorbing Dr’s books exclusively, and daily for 5 years. I’m posting back to you what I’ve been able to ‘rightly divide’ from Dr’s books. Some of this believing stuff I’ve posted goes back to the 70’s when I first started noticing that some people were slipping into teaching the abbreviated form of the law, and not it’s fuller God based, promise based version.

I read Dr a little differently, some things I take in a figurative sense, while you look at them literally. There are other factors that go into this, but my “agreeable-to-you” reformulation of this law is as straight from what Dr teaches as I can get it. Not all in one location, though.

The ‘iffy’ aspect that I acknowledge is due to how ‘iffy’ our believing can be, and how easily it can actually be only mental assent. Dr acknowledges this ‘iffy’ aspect when he finally does teach mental assent, later on. But in these earlier sessions of the class he teaches on the NON-iffy aspects of the law and God’s part.

I’m presenting the same message as Dr, only in a different order, and with emphasis or focus slightly rearranged.

The reasons my presentation looks different from Dr’s to you is because of your exposure to the TVTs, and the resulting different way you look at the books. My motivation to find something good in the books is different than yours, because I saw a ten year period (1970s) where it all worked very well. I have a different attitude toward the books, more time in recent years with them, and some exceptionally mature teaching from others on these matters.

As we communicate more on all these matters, more will be untangled.

***

I have another thought as to the difference between believing and mental assent and how believing is of a higher intensity. Look at how long it took Abraham to get his believing together. It was a task for him that took time. Some things are easy to believe for.  But it’s when we face challenges to our believing persistently we get stronger to get to real believing. The things that are easy to believe for now may be difficult later, unless this believing muscle is flexed and exercised like Abraham did.

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Another thought on the intensity requirements for believing or fear, Job said it was what he GREATLY feared that got him. If it’s not intense and leading to actions, it is probably not genuine believing or genuine fear.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Has anyone noticed in the class anything about the intensity levels of the woman's fear regarding her little boy’s safety?

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

 karmicdebt Posted July 12, 2003

"Another thought on the intensity requirements for believing or fear, Job said it was what he GREATLY feared that got him."

He DID NOT!!!

He said the thing he greatly feared happened. You act as though because he feared it it happened...that is not what it says!!!

To take a belief and bend scripture around it is not right. To take a verse and give it power is not right. Fear is a survival mechanism built in us to protect us. It is not a metaphysical power used to trip us up.

Other places in the Bible teach us that there was a connection between Job’s GREAT fear and his catastrophe.

*/*/*/*/**

 

karmicdebt   Posted July 12, 2003

"Has anyone noticed anything about the intensity level of the woman's fear regarding her little boy’"

Yeah, they are not real people. They are imaginary people designed to prove an imaginary point…

*/*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike  Posted July 12, 2003

The point I was bringing out with Job was how the word "greatly" indicated intensity.

The point of Dr's story rests on the intensity of her fear.

It was the intensity I was bringing attention to.

***

As far as who gets the credit for when the law of believing works? I'd say it all goes to God, who designed the law, who inspires great operation of it, and who stands by to execute His promises, and energize the operation of His laws, as He watches over His Word.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Ginger Tea,

Why didn't people get up and walk out on the little boy story? Because of how well Dr paints the picture that this was an EXTREME case, not something we have to worry about in our own lives. THAT came much later, but it's not in the class.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

shaz,

You're right about a certain type of fear being a useful survival mechanism built in us to protect us. That was what I was getting into when I mention "sudden fear" above.

But there is ALSO a more intense mental ability of people to believe metaphysically or in the supernatural.  This second type of fear is the more intense stuff Dr is talking about.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

While reading this below, please pay close attention to the intensity and persistence of the negative believing portrayed here. This is the film class transcript for the story with my commentary in square brackets regarding its differences with the book:

.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.

Fear brings results. But they are negative results. They are results in reverse, just out of the opposite order of the positive results. [this paragraph was removed from the book]

Years ago I knew a minister whose wife had passed away and he had seven or eight children. I just do not recall how many children. About a year later he married another woman who had four or five of her own. And I suppose this gave it to them cheaper by the dozen, but I'm not sure. But they lived happily together.

And about a block and a half away lived a woman who had just one boy. And this woman who had just this one son was always frustrated, always nervous, always afraid. While this minister and his wife who had this whole bunch of children it just seemed like somehow or another nothing ever happened to them.

Oh they get a black eye once in a while, somebody comes home with a bloody nose, but they just lived. But this one woman with her one son, boy she was a nervous frustrated woman if you ever saw one. And week after week and month after month it got worse. [this paragraph was removed from the book]

When her little boy started to kindergarten she used to walk him across the street and put him in the next block where the kindergarten was for fear he might get run over. Afraid he might get hit by an automobile. When he was in the first grade she did the same thing--in the second grade--third grade.

And she called on this minister and she said, "I don't understand why I'm so nervous and so upset all the time. I have just one boy, that's all I have to care. You have got all of these children, somehow or other it just seems like nothing ever happens to them and you just live abundantly."

You know what he said to her? He said, "ma'am this is how we operate. We get them around the breakfast table. It's the only time we can get our whole family together. We get them all around the breakfast table and when we have them seated around the breakfast table I do the praying. Everybody's quiet, I pray. And I pray like this: `Lord here we are all together at breakfast; now Lord,' he said, `they're all going out to school and other places today. So what I'm going to do with this family Lord; I give them all to you right now. Amen.' Boy right after you give them to the Lord you say `amen' real quickly because you don't want to take them back." He relinquished them to the Lord. Literally, he just let go and let God and those children just did amiably.

About a year and a half or two later this son of this woman was coming home from school early once. Mother hadn't met him at the street across the block. He came home from school and they were living on a road where not more than three houses were located at the time. And when they came back from school that day the boy walked out in that street and got hit by an automobile and killed outright.

I went to the service of that boy and you know what the minister preached on? That God now had another rose petal in heaven. My God people! To think of it, that God Almighty, who created the heavens and the earth, that he should want to kill a little boy like that because God needed another rose petal in heaven. Oh my God when are we going to learn something? That's blasphemy! Do you know what killed that little boy? You just quit yakking about anything else. You know what killed him. God didn't kill that boy. You know what killed that boy? The fear in the heart in the life of that mother--because that mother was just desperately afraid something was going to happen to her little Johnny. And she kept that fear and kept it, till one day it happened.

Why? Because it's a law! It's a law. That which you are afraid of is what you are going to receive. She was afraid of her boy, she was afraid he was going to get killed. She was afraid she was going to lose him and she did just that. God didn't do it! She did it with her own negative believing. Her own fears were the contributing factors that ultimately made possible the death of that little boy. [this paragraph was removed from the book]

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

I'm not sure what you mean, shaz, so I’ll guess.

We all have bouts of fears, but we fight it off mostly. The woman in the story is a rare type who zones into a negative expertise with little to no resistance.

When bad things DO happen to us, I don't think we need compare ourselves to this woman in the story, though.

Sorting through an inventory of where we often blow in our believing is NOT what we should be doing, although that is what things degenerated to at times.

Sorting through an inventory of the promises of God is what we were encouraged to do in the class.

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

karmicdebt Posted July 12, 2003

how many children do you have, Mike? Tell us how you can promote "truths" that you cannot really comprehend, having no reference point or experience...

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

karmicdebt,

I've had fears and I've had loved ones.

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

karmicdebt Posted July 12, 2003

And with reference to promises of God...how many of your enemies did God actually, smite? I have submitted my list to God in triplicate at least and those bast*rds are still here and doing well I might add...

And doing the works and greater works of JC. Man, I still haven't walked on water. Please tell me after 5 years of daily working this stuff....how many promises do you have down pat? Cuz' if these "promises" are in you that you don't even need to consider...you know, just realized, like the all 9 all the time...then maybe you really do have something to offer us...

Signs, miracles and wonders follow them that believe, right....well let us see your trail...

Not trying to bust your balls here...just want to know...

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

karmicdebt Posted July 12, 2003

Mike, I love my parents dearly, I have a dozen brothers and sisters with whom I am extrememly close. My relationships with them are not even close to what I feel about the children I gave birth to. No you can't compare the two...

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

karmicdebt,

Seeing my trail through your computer screen may be a difficult trick. Want to come to San Diego? Come and see’

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

dizzydog Posted July 12, 2003

Hi Mike,

I thought I would reenter the debate here.

You have contended on many occasions that the Bible we have in the current forms is no longer reliable. I think you called it unreliable fragments and tattered remnants.

I have contended all along that this is not the case and not the declaration of VPW. Furthermore I have contended that your relationship with Jesus Christ is affected by your attitude toward the Scriptures.

In Revelation 19:13 we read, "And he was clothed with a vesture dipped in blood: and his name is called the Word of God." In this passage of scripture "...his name is called The Word of God."

The Word of God is always the same and it is always the Word of God no matter whether it is written in Genesis or in the Book of Revelation. The Name and the Word are identical. Wherever the name of Jesus Christ is used, there you have the person of Christ and the Word of Christ as one and the same. The Bible Word, that which is written in the Book called the Bible, is God’s Word. The Written Word and the Living Word are identical. The Church has not majored this. Our hearts are not believing it. The Bible Word is God’s Word because the Bible is the Word of God.

In Luke 8:11, "..The seed is the Word of God."

In Isaiah 55:11, "So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it."

In 1 Peter 1:23, "Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the Word of God, which liveth and abideth forever."

In Ephesians 6:17, "...the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God."

Christ, the seed, the sword, are all referred to as the Word of God. The Word always produces reactions. Acts 7:54, "When they heard these things they were cut to the heart,..." Acts 2:41, "Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three thousand souls."

In 2 Timothy 2:15 is that wonderful record, "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed rightly dividing the word of truth." It does not say that I am to study to show myself approved unto my congregation. I am not commissioned as a man of God to study to show myself approved unto my community. I am to study to show myself approved unto God and God alone. Paul said, "Far be it from me to be judged by you people, because my judge is God." We must live by what the Word of God says, to be approved of God.

In Hebrews 4:12 we read "For the Word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." The word "discerner" in the Greek is the word "critic". This is the only time in the entire Bible that this word is used. It says that the Bible Word is a "critic." The Word of God is a critic of the thoughts and intents of the heart - the inner man.

We have come to a terrible day in history because so many people have set themselves up as critics of the Bible, of the Word of God; when the Bible is given to be our critic. What right does any man have to criticize the Word of God. The Word of God is our critic.

The Bible is a lamp as well as a light. In Psalms 119:105, "Thy word is a lamp unto my feet, and a light unto my path."

The Word is the Father God’s presence with us in his absence, manifested in the senses through the gift from the Holy Spirit in us. So the Word is my contact point with the Master. This makes the Word vital and alive.

The Bible is not just another book. Your attitude toward the Word is indicative of the place God holds in your life. All revivals are dependent upon the written Word becoming real in the lives of men.

It is impossible to separate a man from his words, likewise, it is impossible to separate God from His Word. So the living Word of God on the lips of a man of believing faith takes the place of the absent Christ. If a man’s word is of no value he will soon reason that God’s Word is valueless. Man’s unbelief in the Word of God is largely due to the lack of believing in his own words.

When you live in the Word and the Word lives in you, the Word once more becomes flesh among men. Let the Word of God then dwell in you richly for it will be life and health and joy unspeakable.

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Ginger,

I don’t see it as taking a shot at the woman. When God had the story of David’s great sins placed in the scriptures, I don’t see that as God taking a shot at David. David was a wonderful man. But he also had some great flaws that God knows we can learn from, so He has the story of David and Uriah in there for our learning.

The same is the case with Dr and this woman. There’s anguish in his voice about the loss of her son. It’s like he’s saying ‘if ONLY this could be prevented!? I see Dr teaching this to help us learn and understand how to get better results in our lives. Later, MUCH later, stories like this were misused and mis-taught in fear motivation schemes to keep the ministry together. The earlier is PFAL, the latter is TVT.

Let’s stop dredging up this story from memory and look carefully again at the text for a minute. There are key points that describe the intensity of the woman’s fear in this text.

This fear was CULTIVATED by her systematically. She had some teaching available to her by someone who was a good example in this area, and she still let this fear grow and grow.

These quotes below in red fonts are from the film class transcript that I posted above in green fonts:

this woman... was always frustrated, always nervous, always afraid.

this one woman ...boy she was a nervous frustrated woman if you ever saw one.

week after week and month after month it got worse.

in the first grade she did the same thing--in the second grade--third grade.

And she called on this minister ...He relinquished them to the Lord.

The fear in the heart in the life...

Her own fears were the contributing factors that ultimately made possible...

[Note from 2023-02-04 - Were you able to see all these intensity indicators in the green fonts? You should hear it in the original audio with this intensity idea in mind.]

*/*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

karmicdebt,

I guess I'm doomed to the same fate of ignorance Jesus seems to have had to suffer from having no DNA children.

*/*

dizzydog,

I'm off to work, and I want the story of the woman and her little boy to settle. Remind me again. Please don't forget that from 1971 to 1998 I did more Bible study than most. Plus in all my recent PFAL study, I'm seeing KJV verses on every page. Also remember that a translation of the Word of God is only as authoritative as the authority of the translator. For all your expressed believing in God giving His Word in ancient times, why does your paradigm forbid God from doing the same kind of giving to us in modern times of His Word in English?

*/*/*/*/*

 

dizzydog Posted July 12, 2003

Mike,

Do you think my post forbade God from delivering his Word to us today?

How did I disagree with you?

*/*/*/*/*

 

karmicdebt Posted July 12, 2003

Mike,

Show me other comparisons you have with JC manifested in this world. Then maybe you can be can be listed in the same company...

Do we need to list what Christ did his short time on this planet? We won't even talk historically, we can just use the stuff VPW mentioned in his books, teachings, etc.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Now that I re-read it, it only seems to imply it.

If I didn't have a better replacement of God's Word given in English as PFAL is, then I'd NEVER have complained about the "difficulties" with the ancient received scriptures. Prior to 1998 I figured that these difficulties were God's problem and not mine. I just worked what was available to the best of my ability.

I think God's answer to the difficulties in the ancient scriptures, translation being a biggie, has been to re-issue His Word in a different format, PFAL.

When I say God has delivered His Word to us today in this form of PFAL, don't you say "no" and thus forbid this kind of process’

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

karmicdebt,

I'm willing to fail your tests. Give me my "F" and let me out. I want to talk about things better than me, OK?

*/*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

It COULD be an allegory, but he seems to make it literal when he says he went to the funeral.

*/*/*/*/*

 

dizzydog Posted July 12, 2003

My post implied that God forbids this?

"When I say God has delivered His Word to us today in this form of PFAL, don't you say "no" and thus forbid this kind of process’"

How did I say that in this post’

Indeed I believe God is fully capable of keeping his Word throughout all generations.

*/*/*/*/*

 

Mike Posted July 12, 2003

Ginger,

I think the big point Dr was making was how intensely the woman in the story cultivated the wrong things.

There are religious circles where people who DON'T exhibit a fear of going to hell, then that kind of cocky attitude places them right on the edge of the pit. These circles encourage fear bigtime. Advertising and the news foster fear.

If fear isn't resisted it's damaging.

This is the whole point.

Edited by Mike
Link to comment
Share on other sites

So if Everyone insists Mike is wrong then Mike is right.

Does that mean if Mike is right about something Everyone else is wrong?

What if Mike insists HE is wrong?  Then Everyone insists he is wrong, Making Mike right?

If Everyone insists Mike is right,  . . . 

Then he must insist he is wrong 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Mike said:

Actually, when you see my analysis, this story is NOT hyperbole but literal. I will try to post it soon.  It needs a lot of cleaning up to make it readable.

 

1 hour ago, T-Bone said:

Hmmmm…previously I thought you said it was hyperbole. Now you’re changing you’re opinion and saying it’s literal?

I said some is hyperbole. I was aiming at the law of believing part before this story came up. 

I then said the story of the woman is literal.

I'm have a few doubts now about literal.  It might be allegory?  I don't have all the answers, but this is my best answer so far on this item.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Mike said:

I said some is hyperbole. I was aiming at the law of believing part before this story came up. 

You spelled hyper-bull$h!t wrong....because that all the law of believing is.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...