Why I turned off that radio preacher

On the highway the other day and flipping through the radio dial, I came across a Seventh Day Adventist preacher in the middle of a sermon. Within five minutes, he had made two errors that revealed either his biblical incompetence or his spiritual presumption.

So I turned him off.

In the first instance, in trying to make the case for Christians today keeping the Sabbath, he equated the Ten Commandments with all our Lord’s statements in the Gospels about “keeping my commands” and “breaking these commandments.”  In John chapters 14 and 15, for instance, several times our Lord says things like, “If you love me, you will keep my commandments” (14:15,21,23 and 15:10,14).  That preacher said Jesus was referring to the Ten Commandments.

Not even close.

Jesus was not talking about the Ten Commandments!  He was talking about His own teachings, those found throughout the gospels. If you need proof, consider that when someone asked Jesus to name “the greatest commandment” (Matthew 22), He listed two that are not part of the “Ten”–loving God supremely (Deuteronomy 6) and loving one’s neighbor as oneself (Leviticus 19).  So much for Jesus being fixated on the Ten Commandments the way that preacher is.

He must be so disappointed with Jesus.

As a matter of fact, nowhere does the Bible call those ten laws of Exodus 20 “The Ten Commandments.” That is what we call them. The Hebrews called them the “ten words.”

Furthermore, nowhere does the New Testament make the Ten Commandments binding for believers today.  Not in a single place.

Secondly, the preacher said, “Nowhere does the New Testament properly interpreted say Sabbath observance is no longer required.”

I laughed out loud at that one, because I knew what he was doing.  There is one text Seventh Day people cannot handle and are stuck with.

Colossians 2:16-17 reads, “Do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration, or a Sabbath day. These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ.”

That one really stops the Adventist doctrine in its tracks. So, preachers like the one on the radio have to create all kinds of explanations as to what Paul meant. One such preacher argued to me that Paul was talking about a particular kind of Sabbath and not the seventh day of each week.  I said, “Really? Read the context. Where would one get that idea?  Not from anything in Colossians.”

“Properly interpreted” to that radio preacher means, “Let me interpret it the way I want to.”

The Lord’s people must beware of coming to Scripture with our doctrine and trying to make the Bible conform to it.  That is the way of Jehovah Witnesses and the Mormons.  No self-respecting student of the Word and no obedient disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ should be accused of such shenanigans.

Anyone in the audience where that preacher was attempting such foolishness would have been justified in getting up and walking out.

The best gift we can give to one preaching falsehood is to leave them with an empty auditorium. Let them see that God’s people will not abide such heresy.

Someone is wondering why I don’t send these criticisms to the preacher instead of posting them here.

First, I have no idea who the preacher is or even the station I was listening to. Most of these thoughts have come later as I reflected on what the man said.

Second, in most cases such a preacher is not open to hearing someone disagree with him.  Since he’s playing his little games with Scripture, he has closed himself off from any further insight.

I have no trouble respecting the teacher or pastor who is sincerely trying to understand God’s Word and expound it.  We all “see through a glass darkly” and none of us has it all figured out.

But once I realize the preacher is dishonest and is trying to deceive his hearers, I’m through.

One thought on “Why I turned off that radio preacher

  1. I enjoyed this article. Have only recently looked for you online, after realizing that the cartoons in the Alabama Baptist were yours. They remind me of the cartoon you drew for my mother when you were at the FBC in Columbus.

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