logo
Published on thebereancall.org (http://www.thebereancall.org)

Is Christianity Taking Over the Planet?

By
Created 2005-08-28
Body:

Search the Scriptures Daily Program 3605b.mp3 Transcript follows: This is Search the Scriptures Daily, a radio ministry of The Berean Call.  Still ahead, answers to your questions in Contending for the Faith, and, in Understanding the Scriptures, Dave and Tom will resume their conversation on God’s salvation.             It’s on the horizon, it’s almost in view, get ready for Judgment Day, Islam, Israel and the Nations, the new book from Dave Hunt and The Berean Call.  Is God about to judge the world over issues related to Israel?  This highly informative and revealing work cuts through the political to the prophetic alerting us to the judgment about to befall this planet.  Hans Kristian, President of the International Sakharov Committee calls it the most important book on the issues of the Middle East and the Holy Land.  Joseph Farah, founder of WorldNetDaily.Com, says:  Dave Hunt has nailed it.  This book is a wake up call to a sleep-walking world trying to make sense of events that were foretold in the greatest book ever written, the Bible.  Lecturer and co-author of The Seduction of Christianity, Dave Hunt:  Judgment Day is the most important book I have written.  God’s judgment is coming upon this world.  The leaders of this world are defying what God has said about Israel and about that land that belongs to them and they are taking the side of people who pretend that that land belongs to them, and it does not.  And God is going to punish this world and we document that in the book.             This treatment of the topic offers no room for political correctness or ecumenical accommodations.  The truth is more devastating than fiction.  Judgment Day, Islam, Israel and the Nations, the latest by Dave Hunt is now available from The Berean Call in e-book and hard cover.  Information on how to order in just a moment.  In addition to this radio program, we publish a monthly newsletter, which we make available free of charge.  We also produce and distribute a wide variety of teaching materials, including books, video and audio tapes and other items to encourage the serious study of God’s Word.  For a complete list of materials, or to get a copy of today’s broadcast, write to us at PO Box 7019, Bend, Oregon 97708, call our toll free order number 877-882-4253, that’s 877-88Bible, or visit our website at www.thebereancall.org [1].  If you would like a copy of this broadcast, ask for Program #3605, and be sure to mention the call letters of this station.  We’ll repeat this information at the end of the program.             RELIGION IN THE NEWS Now, Religion in the News, a report and comment on religious trends and events being covered by the media.  This week’s item is from worldnetdaily.com April 28, 2005, with a headline:  Christianity Taking Over Planet?  New book makes case its fastest growing faith on earth.  What is the fastest growing religion on earth?  Most news reports suggest it is Islam, but a new book makes a compelling case.  It is a new, or perhaps old form of biblically inspired, evangelical Christianity that is sweeping through places like China, Africa, India and Southeast Asia.  In Megashift, author Jim Rutz coins a new phrase to define this fast growing segment of the population, he calls them, “core apostolics,” or, the new saints who are at the heart of the mushrooming kingdom of God.  The growing core of Christianity crosses theological lines and includes 707 million born-again people who are increasing by 8% a year, he says.  So fast is this group growing that under current trends, according to Rutz, the entire world will be composed of such believers by the year 2032. There will be pockets of resistance and unforeseen breakthroughs, writes Rutz, still at the rate we are growing now, to be comically precise, there would be more Christians than people by the autumn of 2032, about 8.2 billion.  According to the author, until 1960, Western evangelicals outnumbered non-Western evangelicals, mostly Latinos, Blacks and Asians, by two to one.  As of 2000, non-Western evangelicals outnumbered Westerners by four to one.  He says, by 2010, the ratio will be seven to one.  This trend, says Rutz, has been missed by Westerners because the explosive growth is elsewhere.  Hundreds of millions of these Christians are simply not associated with the institutional churches at all.  They meet in homes, they meet underground, they meet in caves, they meet, he says, in secret, and what is driving this movement? Miracles, he says.  Megashift attempts to document myriad healings and other powerful answers to the sincere prayers of this new category of believer, including, believe it or not, hundreds of dramatic cases of resurrections, not near-death experiences, but real resurrections of actual corpses.  When I was a kid in Sunday school I was really impressed that 3,000 people were saved on the day of Pentecost, he writes, I thought, wow that will never happen again.  But, Rut says, it now happens around the globe every 25 minutes.  By tomorrow there will be 175 thousand more Christians than there are today, he writes.  The essence of Rutz’s book is about how Western Christians can tap into what he sees as a mighty work of God on earth.       Tom: This is really confusing.  On the one hand I have no doubt that there are salvations and we can think of what’s going on in the Sudan for example, and people coming to Christ, certainly in China and underground churches.  So, that seems reasonable, but to say it’s based on the signs and wonders that we’ve seen in the church.  See, this to me, smacks of kingdom dominionism, we’re going to take over, we’re going to be in big numbers, God is pouring out His Spirit in these last days, and my questions is, Dave, how does that relate to prophecy, to what the Word of God says the last days are going to be like?  Christians going to take over?       Dave: No, and instead, the opposite, Tom.  It’s a time of an apostasy and that raises a point.  We have polls, Barna poll, and so forth.       Tom: Gallup.       Dave: Yeah, in the U.S. and what do they indicate?  I’m trying to rack my brain, and the last one I remember seeing, it seems to me that 35%of the people who call themselves born-again Christians do not believe in the resurrection and about an equal number do not believe Jesus was God.  So, this is not real Christianity.  You may get excited about seemingly  signs and wonders, now Tom, we have had signs and wonders going on in America.  I have no gotten over into Africa, well, I’ve been in Africa a number of times but I haven’t checked up on the signs and wonders personally, but I have talked to many people who have told me, in fact, I remember one friend, he followed Rheinhart Bonkey through Africa and  he tried to document—these were thousands of healings, thousands of salvations, and he tried to find these people and talk to them and document it and it just was not happening.  So now, if you took every report, and I’ve read many of these reports, Tom, from people coming back from the mission field, charismatics, Pentecostals, it’s not that that’s all bad, but there is considerable exaggeration going on and talking about healings and resurrections, and so forth.  Tom, if you added them all up, everybody in the world is already saved, by the numbers that they give.  Now maybe, Jim Rutz has been accepting some of these exaggerated figures from these evangelists.  We have a saying you know, not only politically correct but evangelically speaking, you know what that means, exaggerating.  So, I have serious questions about this.  In his book he doesn’t seem to exercise any discernment, he doesn’t seem to question, well, are these really Christians, is this really a move of God?  Or is this some kind of hysteria?  We had it here, you know, in Brownsville Assembly of God, in Pensacola, we had it at the airport in Toronto Blessing.       Tom: Where people were barking like dogs.       Dave: For example, at Brownsville, they claim, this was Steve Hill and the pastor put out these kinds of statements, they said that this revival had stopped the drug movement in Pensacola, that it had stopped crime, and so forth.  Well, if you took that and wrote about it in a book it sounds fantastic, but when you checked up on it, which the local newspaper did, that was not happening at all.       Tom: Dave, on the other hand, let’s say that there are these numbers and they don’t truly become born-again Christians, but we have these numbers.  You have Christianity on the increase, or a false Christianity, that seems to be prophetic.       Dave: I would say so, the apostasy.  Well, Tom, I’m in favor of it, I’d like to see everybody saved.  God Himself is not willing that any should perish, He wants all to be saved, but it doesn’t happen quite like this.  And I’ve been all over the world, not every place, I haven’t been to China yet, but I have been to most other countries, I have not found any evidence of this.  I have seen the opposite, and you know how many people write to us and say, Tom, Dave, we can’t find a church that teaches the truth—oh there are some of these huge growing churches— but it’s all fluff and they are not presenting the gospel really and people are really not getting saved and we don’t want to attend a church like that, we’re looking for one that really goes by the Bible.  So, I think maybe Jim Rutz didn’t check that out thoroughly enough.       Tom: Well, the other thing is, there is a red flag, as we indicated, if somebody is working toward the church taking over they could, unwittingly be participating in what the adversary is doing in the last days, creating a false church.


Source URL:
http://www.thebereancall.org/node/1740