Note:

Society tends to trust and accept every alluring words that the preachers of today would inculcate in their uninformed minds. Satisfied and gratified with these superficially attractive truths, these people don’t frequently find time examining and dissecting whether the word that they have received is based on unsullied truth.

The blog desires to poke the minds of its readers and create in their humble reasoning the query of whether or not their belief are truly what God wants them to believe. Also, the blog longs for its readers to discover the actual truth basing solely from the Holy Word of the Sovereign God.

Monday, May 19, 2014

False Hopes


IMAGINE FINDING OUT that the business partner you invested your money with ran off with all the capital; or, that the recruiter you paid to help you get a job messed up; or, that the expensive watch you saved for and bought turned out to be fake.
           
            Such disappointing situations are what we want to avoid in life. It certainly hurts to put your trust in someone and expect something good only to be deceived in the end. So, we strive to be careful with the people we deal with as they, for all we know, can be agents of deceit ready to ensnare us with dangerous lies.

            But deception comes not only in the guise of honest people whom we transact or do business with. Also abounding these days are people who claim to have supernatural powers, offering false hopes of spiritual guidance, cure, and salvation. We need to be extra cautious in dealing with them for, more than the financial and emotional investments, it is our soul that is ultimately at stake.

‘I had a dream!’
            News about so-called divine apparitions has become an ordinary event that stirs the interest of many nowadays. Every once in a while, self-styled prophets would come forward from out of the blue claiming that God appeared and spoke to them through dreams and visions. Such prophets are similar to what the Lord God forewarned long ago as recorded in the Book of Jeremiah:

“I have heard what the prophets say who prophesy lies in my name. They say, ‘I had a dream! I had a dream!’ How long will this continue in the hearts of these lying prophets, who prophesy the delusions of their own minds?” (Jer. 23:25-26, New International Version)

            Unfortunately, many preachers today are exactly like these false prophets. They dare to preach messages of hope and foretell the future, for allegedly they dreamt that God mandated them to do so. Armed with courage and full of enthusiasm, they oftentimes sound sincere and convincing. The Lord, however, has only bitter words for them, calling them lying and delusional.

            That such false prophets are able to attract hordes of followers is not an indication that God had sanctioned them. If they do have such a potent and convincing power, it is because of the material content of their message:

“This is what the Lord Almighty says: ‘Do not listen to what the prophets are prophesying to you; they fill you with false hopes. They speak visions from their own minds, not from the mouth of the Lord. They keep saying to those who despise me, ‘The Lord says: You will have peace’. And to all who follow the stubbornness of their hearts they say, ‘No harm will come to you’.” (Jer. 23:16-17, Ibid.)

            False prophets speak of beautiful and pleasant messages meant to attract people. They proclaim gratifying promises that most people are pleased to hear. Thus, they say, “You will have peace,” “No harm will come to you,” or, “You will become rich!” “You will be healed!” – much to the delight of their unwary audiences.

            God warns us, however, that the engaging words self-proclaimed prophets speak are but products of their own minds and do not come from the mouth of the Lord. Those sweet-sounding pledges, therefore, are nothing but false hopes set to deceive and break people’s hearts in the end:

“Indeed, I am against those who prophesy false dreams’, declares the Lord. ‘They tell them and lead my people astray with their reckless lies, yet I did not send or appoint them. They do not benefit these people in the least’, declares the Lord.” (Jer. 23:32, Ibid.)

            Self-appointed prophets or preachers lead people astray. Hence, destruction awaits not only them but everyone enamored with their sugarcoated lies. People, therefore, should avoid falling for the treachery of these preachers whom God did not send or appoint, lest they become His enemies, too.


‘In the Lord’s name …’

                Exploiting the name of the Lord Jesus Christ is another selling point used by false prophets to influence and victimize innocent people. These deceivers identify themselves as Christians by using the Lord’s name in curing the sick, casting out evil spirits, and performing miracles and wonders. This method is not surprising since Christ Himself foretold about it during His time. But apparently, the only thing that these cunning tactics prove is the certainty of God’s punishment to fall on them on the day of Judgment:

“At the Judgment many will tell me, ‘Lord, Lord, we told others about you and used your name to cast out demons and to do many other great miracles’. But I will reply, ‘You have never been mine. Go away, for your deeds are evil’.” (Mt. 7:22-23, Living Bible)

                Many people tend to be so amazed by miracles and signs that they easily give ear to and follow any professing prophet who claims to have such powers. They mistakenly assume that such wondrous signs are proofs that such miracle-workers are God-sent. The Lord Jesus, however, blatantly rejects them even as they utilize His name and perform wondrous works. This only proves that miraculous powers do not necessarily translate to divine authority. For, even the devil can pull off marvelous wonders:

“The Wicked One will come with the power of Satan and perform all kinds of false miracles and wonders, and use every kind of wicked deceit on those who will perish. They will perish because they did not welcome and love the truth so as to be saved.” (II Thess. 2:9-10, Today’s English Version)

                Not all miracles come from God, just as not all miracle-workers are sent by God. In fact, Apostle Paul warned that false miracles, signs, and wonders are some of the tools satan and his advocates would use to deceive people in these last days. Thus, the assertion that preachers are heaven-sent by virtue of the miracles they perform is as counterfeit as the miracles false prophets perform.

                Pitiful are the great number of people duped by the miraculous undertakings of such preachers. The Bible states that they will “perish” for not adhering to the truth that really matters for salvation.

                True enough, in this life alone, the ill-fated consequences of trusting in false hopes incur observable manifestations. Many exposés have unmasked numerous frauds involving alleged miracle-workers and their bickering victims. Religious followers who have sensed the hoax carried out by self-proclaimed preachers have either sent the matter to court or publicly demanded vindication.

‘But it’s real!’

                Some swear by their hearts that the miracles they witnessed from certain preachers are for real. Tears roll down their faces in awe as they recount how the predictions came to pass, how the promises of material success took place as foretold. How should such situations be confronted?

If a prophet, or one who foretells by dreams, appears among you and announces to you a sign or wonder, and if the sign or wonder spoken of takes place, and the prophet says, “Let us follow other gods” (gods you have not known) “and let us worship them,” you must not listen to the words of that prophet or dreamer. The Lord your God is testing you to find out whether you love him with all your heart and with all your soul.” (Dt. 13:1-3, NIV)

                Human emotions should not be used to measure the authenticity of a miracle. To detect whether a miracle is genuine or not, it is necessary to discern where the sign leads. If a prophet’s visions and wonders come to pass, yet head toward the worship of other gods, they are clearly not from God. This is commonly found in most miracle stories today. We hear of reports about a statue of a “saint” weeping blood, the alleged face of Jesus appearing in a tree branch or marble floor, and so on. Behind every healing and prophesying usually stands a graven image or idol to which all those who desire hope are to bow down.

                Refusing to acknowledge the Lord God and obey His laws end in eternal punishment (II Thess. 1:8-9). If it is to this end that miracles, signs, and wonders ultimately lead, then all the hopes they generate in the hearts of blind followers can only be classified as false.

                Thus, we should not be enticed into putting our faith in religions that turn people away from the one true God. In case their promised miracles do happen before our very eyes, we should look at them as a way by which the Lord God tests the faith and loyalty of His servants. We must not be blinded by the wiles and trickery of satan. Our hope and trust should remain in no one else but God:

“It is the Lord your God you must follow, and him you must revere. Keep his commands and obey him; serve him and hold fast to him.” (Dt. 13:4, NIV)

A matter of truth

                The best defense against any form of deception is the truth. Going back to Apostle Paul’s message to the Thessalonians, we should note that those who will be deceived and perish are the ones who “did not welcome and love the truth so as to be saved.” One must, therefore, abide by the truth in order to evade the deadly trap of religious deceivers.

                Thus, in his letter, Apostle Peter encouraged the members of the Church of Christ to always be firm in the truth they have already received (II Pt. 1:12, Ibid.).

                A truth that many have not known is that God elects His chosen people:

“Therefore, brethren, be even more diligent to make your call and election sure, for if you do these things you will never stumble; For so an entrance will be supplied to you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.” (II Pt. 1:10-11, New King James Version)

                In the Christian era, the ones called are the members of the Church established by Christ. It was to this divine calling that Apostle Peter exhorted the brethren to be diligent for them to assure a triumphant entrance into the heavenly kingdom.

                The true Church elected by God cannot be faked, for it is backed not by deceptive human claims but by the prophetic word of the Scriptures:

“And so we have the prophetic word confirmed, which you do well to heed as a light that shines in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star rises in your hearts.” (II Pt. 1:19, Ibid.)

                So, just as there are licenses that vouch for the authority of professionals and trademarks that guarantee a product’s worth, there is likewise a distinctive trait that people must look for in religious preachers and organizations in order not to be cheated. The truth of God’s election through biblical prophecy is the genuine mark of the true religion.


                If people meticulously guard themselves against counterfeit products and professionals, all the more should they guard themselves against false religions and preachers. People should find time to scrutinize their religious preferences and search for the true path so that their souls would not be torn by the fangs of deceit.


End...


False Hopes
Published in GOD’S MESSAGE
By Marlex C. Cantor
November 2000
p.8-10


Science vs. the Bible? Or does Science actually Support the Bible?



Sir Isaac Newton, an English mathematician and physicist, once said, “There are more sure marks of authenticity in the Bible than in any profane history” (Halley’s Bible Handbook, p.19).

It may seem odd to some people that a non-theologian and a man of science like Newton would express such faith and confidence in the veracity of the Holy Book since, to them, science and the Bible simply do not blend. They point out that what the Scriptures explains every phenomenon in the context of the power of the unknown, science makes conclusions from carefully tested hypotheses derived from a series of systematic procedures known as the scientific method.

Such perception – that there is no harmony between science and the Bible – is not by any means new. Scientist during Newton’s time criticized him for his explanation concerning the apparent irregularities in the movement of the planets. Newton’s conclusion – that God must be intervening every now and then to correct such irregularities – had been dismissed by his peers as a “desperate hypothesis” because it was “outlawed by the nature and principles of science” (The Story of Civilization: The Age of Napoleon, p 324).

Indeed many are inclined to believe that science and the Bible are irreconcilable and that once science reaches the “ultimate truth” it aims to discover, the biblical word would be contradicted and disproved. Even worse, there are those who have placed more confidence in science and have rejected the Bible as an obsolete, if not mythical, book.

So we ask this question: Is there really no compatibility between science and the Bible? Which of the two is more credible and can offer the ultimate truth? Before we make any sweeping judgment, we must first establish the foundation upon which each is based. What must we understand concerning the foundation of science? A chemist, John W. Hill, admitted:

“Scientists, like other human beings, use intuition and generalize from few facts. Sometimes they are wrong.” (Chemistry of Changing Times, p. 6, emphasis ours)

Science, it should be noted, is anchored on human experience and knowledge and, therefore, is subject to error. What further proves that science is not infallible and cannot be the supreme arbiter on the “ultimate truth”? In his book entitle. “Science, God and You”, Enno Wolthvis states:

“The history of science clearly shows that what is considered scientifically true today may not be so tomorrow.” (p. 47)

Hence, it is not an exaggeration to say that today’s scientific facts may be tomorrow’s myths. John W. Hill added that science, as a theoretical framework, is constantly changing, “ for scientific models are constantly being reevaluated and revised as new data is obtained” (Chemistry for Changing Times, p. 8)

What conclusion can we draw from the above statements about science? That science is not as reliable as others may wish or claim it to be. Science, as history attests, has always been subject to change and revision.

On the other hand, how dependable are the words of God written in the Bible? Jesus Christ, in His prayer to the Father, said:

“Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth.” (Jn. 17:17, New International Version)

God’s word itself is the truth. Is His pronouncement true only for a particular time and does it change when circumstances do? Isaiah 40:8 states:

“The grass withereth, the flower fadeth: but the word of our God shall stand for ever.” (King James Version)

The words of God can withstand all scrutiny; they are error-proof and are surely bound to happen. How strong and powerful are God’s words? Christ said:

“I tell you the truth, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished.” (Mt. 5:18, NIV)

Hence, God’s word is the ultimate truth. Unlike science which is founded on the uncertainty of human experience, the Bible rests on the unlimited power and wisdom of the Almighty.


The Ultimate Truth

How was it proven in the long history of man’s quest for knowledge that while scientific facts vary through the ages, God’s word had always confirmed the truth? In his book, “Why We Believe the Bible”, author George W. Dehoff notes:

“When the Bible was written it was universally believed that the earth was flat. It was argued that should one go too far toward the edge he would fall off. … Finally, Magellan and his men sailed around the earth and thus proved it to be spherical in shape.” (p. 49)

For hundreds of years prior to Magellan’s circumnavigation of the earth, the general perception was that the earth was flat. It was then accepted as a scientific truth despite the great strides man has taken in the fields of science since the birth of civilization. Only after Magellan sailed the seas was it established and confirmed that the earth is not flat but spherical in shape.

But do you know that hundreds of years before Magellan, it was already pronounced by God through His prophet, Isaiah, that the earth is round or spherical in shape? In the Book of Isaiah, this is recorded:

“It is he that sitteth upon the circle of the earth.” (Isaiah 40:22, KJV)

What else was accepted as scientific truth before its actual discovery and confirmation? Dehoff continued:

“The ancient Greeks and Romans were the most advanced peoples of their time, yet they believed that the earth was held in place by poles or by the neck of Atlas. Others believed that Atlas had the earth on his shoulders.” (Why We Believe the Bible, pp. 49-50)

The Greeks and the Romans of old had the most advanced civilizations during their time. Yet, they believed in something which today would be considered absurd, if not funny. But had the ancient Greeks and Romans consulted the Books of the Books, they would not have embraced such peculiar concept of the earth. The old testament book of Job, which Bible scholars estimated to have been written between 600 and 400 B.C. (New Bible Dictionary, p. 598), has spoken of this ultimate truth:

“He stretched out the north over the empty place, and hangeth the earth upon nothing.” (Job 26:7, KJV)

God had already stated before-hand what man discovered hundreds of years later: that nothing supports the earth contrary to man’s earlier beliefs.

What else was considered in the past as scientifically correct, only to be refuted by later research and discovery? Dehoff states:

“The ancients believed that there were only a very few stars in the heavens. In 150 B. C. Hipparchus said that there were less that three thousand. In A. D 150 Ptolemy said there were not more than three thousand. … After the middle ages and the invention of the telescope, men discovered that the stars are innumerable.” (Why We Believe the Bible, p. 56)

Did man need to wait for a Galileo to invent the telescope for him to know that the stars are countless? The Bible states the following:

“And as the stars cannot be counted nor the sand upon the seashores measured..” (Jer. 33:22, Living Bible)

What other scientific fact was established only after the telescope was invented by Galileo? Dehoff continues to say:

“Astronomers have discovered that there is a great empty space in the North. It contains no moving planets and shining stars. By turning their telescope to the South, the East, and the West, men may behold countless millions of stars invisible to the naked eye but when the telescope is set exactly to the North there is a great empty space. For this astronomers have been unable to account. They did not know until recently that there was such and empty space.” (p. 50)

Did it really require a telescope to know this phenomenon? The Bible offers this explanation:

He stretch out the north over empty space.” (Job 26:7, KJV)

Again, God had spoken of the ultimate truth long before man has discovered it.

Thanks to modern archaeology – another branch of science – many people who used to dismiss the Bible as nothing but a book of magical tales are beginning to change their perception. Recent significant discoveries made by archeologists have contributed to the growing perception that the Bible is indeed the ultimate truth. The biblical account of the Great Flood (Gen. 6: 8), the reign of the great kings of Israel like David (I Sam. 16; I Kings 2), and the life of Christ(the gospels) were all confirmed to be historically true by these findings. A journalist, Werner Keller, who took interest in the results of modern science and research, said in his book, “The Bible as History”:

“These breathtaking discoveries, whose significance it is impossible to grasp all at once, make it necessary for us to revise our views about the Bible. Many events which previously passed for ‘pious tales’ must now be judged to be historical.” (p. 23)

In the face of all these data gathered through scientific research, Keller concluded:

“In view of the overwhelming mass of authentic and well-attested evidence now available, as I thought of the skeptical criticism which from the eighteenth century onward would fain have demolished the Bible altogether, there kept hammering on my brain this one sentence: ‘The Bible is right after all!’”(Ibid., p. 24)

Confirming biblical truths

So we go back to our question: Is there any contradiction between science and the Bible? We have shown you the many mistakes of science. However, we can say without doubt or fear or contradiction that as long as science arrives at the ultimate truth, it will always be compatible with the Bible. Science only confirms what had long been established as absolute truth through biblical pronouncements. Hence, as far as the ultimate truth is concerned, the Bible is supreme and is second to none.

What then should we realized now that it had been established that the words of God written in the Bible are the truth? The Scriptures states:

“But the LORD is the true God, he is the living God, and an everlasting king: at his wrath the earth shall tremble,and the nations shall not be able to abide his indignation. … He hath made the earth by his power, he hath established the world by his wisdom, and hath stretched out the heavens by his discretion.”(Jer. 10:10, 12 KJV)

Everyone should acknowledge that there is one true living God who created the heavens and earth and who sustains our life and strength. What, therefore, is our fundamental obligation to Him, our Maker? In Psalms 100:2-3, this is written:

“Serve the LORD with gladness: come before his presence with singing.
Know ye that the LORD he is God: it is he that hath made us, and not we ourselves; we are his people, and the sheep of his pasture.”(Ibid.)


Reference:
Dehoff, George W. “Why We Believe the Bible”, 5th edition. Murfreesboro, Tennessee: Dehoff Publications, 1962.
Durant, Will and Ariel. “The Story of Civilization: The Age of Napoleon”. New York: Simon & Schuster, Inc., 1975.
Helley, Henry H. “Halley’s Bible Handbook”. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House, 1965.
Hill, John W. “Chemistry for Changing Times.” New York: MacMillan, 1988.
Keller, Werner. “The Bible As History”. New York: Barnes & Noble, Inc., 1995.
“New Bible Dictionary”. London: The Inter-Varsity Fellowship, 1962.
Wolthvis, Enno. “Science, God & You.” Grand Rapid, Michigan: n. p., 1966.


Published in GOD’S MESSAGE

January 2002


Saturday, May 17, 2014

Who Speaks God's Words?




THE RELIGIOUS SCENE
today is teeming with teachers and preachers claiming boldly to speak for God. History tells us of people who came out into the open believing that they had been divinely chosen and inspired by God to speak for Him. To prove their authority, they would cite their dreams or visions, claiming that they had felt a sudden urge to preach, which they believed wholeheartedly as an inspiration from God through the Holy Spirit. Today, many claim they are doing it to show their sympathy to the wretched condition of the poor and there are some who are inspired by the success of others in the field of religion.

Because these diverse claims seem as though they were true, many people believe them and they see no problem in believing these preachers either because they appear to be genuinely motivated by reasons cited above. It is not surprising then that many people are attracted to these preachers who succeed in making them believe in their "sincerity and deep spiritual devotion" in carrying out such a task of preaching what they strongly believe is a message from God.


Religious pluralism? 
Majority of preachers today say they are motivated by the mandate given by Christ to "Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations" (Matt 28:19, New King James Version), which they call the "Great Commission." As a result, we see many "Christian" sects and denominations from the United States and other countries sending missionaries all over the world. Some eastern religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism have come to the United States to propagate their faith as well. We see the proliferation of differing ideas and beliefs which adds to the confusion prevailing in this already chaotic world. Because of the preponderance of religions in the United States, many have adopted a stand which is commonly called "religious pluralism," a concept that all religions are on a par with one another. Anybody who supports this concept readily accepts the idea that God uses different media in communicating His message to people. However, with the presence of diverging, and conflicting statements from various sources, it appears as if God were a God of confusion and not of order, a situation which has led others to think that religion is an enigma with no immediate and possible solution. Because of this chaos, some have become disillusioned with religion or distanced themselves from religious people, some pronouncing themselves non-religious, and others calling themselves freethinkers or even openly denying the existence of God.

This sad situation is due to people who claim to speak for God yet are wanting in authority. However, their existence does not disprove the fact that there are indeed people today who genuinely speak for God. The Bible proves that there are those who truly speak for God. In the olden times, Moses and the prophets were sent to reveal God's will for the people during their times:

"God, who at various times and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets." (Heb. 1:1, Ibid.)

     In the New Testament times, the first one to be sent was John the Baptist. The Bible records that "God sent his messenger, a man named John" (John 1:6, Today's English Version), whose function was to preach repentance and to prepare the way for the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ (Mark 1:2-3, Contemporary English Version). When Christ came, Apostle Paul testified that, "God sent his Son to bring his message to us" (Heb. 1:2, Ibid.). Apostle John wrote that "The Son was sent to speak God's message" (John 3:34, Ibid.).

     When Christ ascended into heaven, He commissioned His apostles by telling them, "I am sending you, just as the Father has sent me" (John 20:21, Ibid.). To these apostles, Christ gave a specific command to "Go throughout the whole world and preach the gospel to all mankind" (Mark 16:15, TEV).

     So the Bible teaches clearly that since the beginning there have been people who truly speak for God, the ones who have been divinely commissioned or appointed to preach His words. Apostle Paul bears witness to this when he said:

"We are Christ's ambassadors, and God is using us to speak to you. We urge you, as though Christ himself were here pleading with you, 'Be reconciled to God!'" (II Cor. 5:20, New Living Translation)

     Paul, speaking on behalf of the ambassadors or those who were sent to speak for Christ, said, "God is using us to speak to you." Therefore, the messengers of God are the ones who speak for God or preach on behalf of God. What about if a preacher is not sent by God? What is lacking or wanting in a preacher who is not commissioned by God? Apostle Paul answers by saying, "how can they preach unless they are sent?" (Rom. 10:15, New International Version) Unless a person is sent by God, he has no authority to preach and he is not the true harbinger of His will.


Law and testimony
 In view of this, we could see that many preachers today are claiming boastfully that they are His representatives on earth now. However, it behooves us not to believe and accept what the false prophets say. In conjunction with this, how could we distinguish a genuine messenger from the false claimants? What is the yardstick that the Bible teaches by which to measure one’s claim to be a genuine messenger of God? The prophet Isaiah provided us with the answer:

“To the law and to the testimony! If they do not speak according to this word, they have no light of dawn.” (Isa. 8:20, Ibid., emphasis ours)

          A preacher must have both the law and the testimony. One who lacks any of these two essentials cannot be a genuine preacher. The light of God does not guide preachers who lack the law and the testimony. What is the law? The law refers to the words of God:

“They made their hearts as hard as flint and would not listen to the law or to the words that the Lord Almighty had sent by his Spirit through the earlier prophets…” (Zech. 7:12, Ibid., emphasis ours)

          Many would be very quick to jump to the conclusion that they are indeed true preachers because they have the law. They thing that holding the Bible while preaching is proof of being a genuine preacher of God. However, this by itself does not guarantee that a preacher is speaking the true words of God. And even if he recite verbatim the words of God in the Bible, that still does not qualify him to be a genuine preacher. Aside from having the law, a preacher must have a testimony.

          When the Bible says that a preacher must have the testimony, others understand it as a “self-testimony.” Evidently, we see preachers telling their audience about their “confessions” or stories on how they came to be preachers. On the contrary, this testimony is not what the Bible is talking about because “self-testimonies” can also be fraudulent, misleading and self-serving.

          According to the Bible, whose testimony should a preacher have, or who must testify for a preacher during the Christian era? The testimony of Jesus Christ, as it is written in Revelation 19:10, thus:

“At this I fell at his feet to worship him. But he said to me, ‘Do not do it! I am a fellow servant with you and with your brothers who hold to the testimony of Jesus. Worship God! For the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy’.”(Ibid., emphasis ours)

          Notice that the testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy. Therefore, one who claims to be a genuine messenger of God must be backed up fully by a prophecy to authenticate his claim. Why is prophecy important? How did prophecy come? Apostle Peter proved the importance of prophecy by stressing the point that:

“For prophecy never came by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit.” (II Pet. 1:21, NKJV)

          Prophecy came from God and not from man. It came through the holy men of God who were moved or inspired by the Holy Spirit. In view of this, not everyone could give his own explanation of the prophecy. Even though a person is learned and possesses tremendous human knowledge, he cannot readily understand and explain the prophecies of the Scriptures. Even if others take the scientific approach, such as by doing an exegetical analysis of biblical texts, diligent study alone does not guarantee understanding of the truth written in the Bible because according to Apostle Paul, there are those who are “always learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth”(II Tim. 3:7, Ibid.).


Testified by biblical prophecy
 Who are examples of true messengers of God who possessed not only the law or the words of God but also biblical prophecy which gave authenticity to their being genuine preachers? The Bible testifies that John the Baptist, Paul the Apostle, and even our Lord Jesus Christ, long before they appeared on the religious scene, had already been prophesied. The book of the prophet Isaiah contains some of the prophecies about them. John the Baptist was mentioned in the prophecy as “the voice of one crying in the wilderness” (Isa. 40:3; John 1:19-23), Jesus Christ was the fulfillment (Luke 4:16-21) of the one prophesied in Isaiah 61:1 who says, “The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me, Because the Lord has anointed Me to preach good tidings to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the opening of the prison to those are bound” (NKJV), Paul was to be the “light to the Gentiles” (Isa. 49:6; Acts 13:39).

          There is no contention about the cited biblical facts that the three preachers mentioned above were prophesied. No diligent student of the Bible will ever question their authority to preach inasmuch as they were prophesied to fulfill such a divine function. The bone of contention today among preachers is “who truly speaks for God today?” Who has the right and authority to speak for Christ today? In response, we go back to what Christ said about His messengers, thus:

“He who listens to you listens to me; he who rejects you rejects me; but he who rejects me rejects him who sent me.” (Luke 10:16, NIV)

          Christ’s messengers speak for Him today. By listening to them, one listens to Christ. His messengers, therefore, are the ones who speak for God, who sent Christ. If people do not listen to them, they commit the sin of rejecting both God and Christ.

          The Church of Christ believes that Brother Felix Y. Manalo is the messenger commissioned by God to preach the gospel in these last days. His commissioning has been attested to by numerous prophecies written in the Bible, one of which says:

“You whom I have taken from the ends of the earth, And called from its farthest regions, And said to you, ‘You are My servant, I have chosen you and have not cast you away: Fear not, for I am with you; Be not dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, Yes, I will help you, I will uphold you with My righteous right hand’.” (Isa. 49:9-10, NKJV)

          The chosen servant of God mentioned in the prophecy would emerge from the “ends of the earth” which refers to the period of time when the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ is near, the beginnings of which is signaled by a world war (Matt. 24:3,33, 6-7; Isa. 34:1-2). On July 27,1914, the First World War broke out (The Nations at War, p. 8) indicating the beginning of the period “ends of the earth”. It is in this very date that the Church of Christ was officially registered by Brother Felix Y. Manalo with the Philippine government.

          This prophesied messenger of God was likewise likened to a bird of prey:

“Calling a bird of prey from the east, The man who executes My counsel, from a far country. Indeed I have spoken it; I will also bring it to pass. I have purposed it; I will also do it.” (Isa. 46:11, NKJV)

          The “bird of prey” mentioned in the verse is a man who executes God’s counsel or words (Ps. 107:11). Hence, he has God-given authority and right to preach God’s words. The place of his origin is “a far country” in the “east”, particularly in the “far east” (Isa. 43:5, Moffatt Translation). The Philippines, where Brother Felix Y. Manalo began preaching the Iglesia ni Cristo, is “almost at the geographical center of the Far East” (Asia and the Philippines, p.169).


          The fulfillment of the many biblical prophecies in Brother Felix Y. Manalo proves that he, indeed, is the commissioned messenger of God in these last days.






Who Speaks God's Words?
by Jose J. Ventilacion
Published in GOD’S MESSAGE
September 2005, p. 28