Some Fantastic Heretics I Have  Known
by Thomas R. Horn
Posted: February 21, 2010
Recently while searching for a particular document  that I had placed in an old photo album years ago for safe keeping (usually how  we wind up actually losing things, right!?), I took an unexpected stroll down  memory lane.
I had gone through at least a dozen books of images,  old newspaper clippings, seeing members of churches we had pastored and records  of events frozen in time from nearly 30 years inside institutionalized  Christianity, when finally between dusty storage bins and spider webs I found  what I was looking for. I placed the coveted item among the research notes for  the new book on Spiritual Warfare that my wife Nita and I plan to write later  this year, then returned everything else to the  closets.
That should have been that, but for the next week the  old memories in those boxes kept calling to me about things and friends I had  nearly forgotten—people who represented the true mission of the Church and were  wonderful examples to my wife and I about what it means to be a Christian. Their  names would not be recognized by most today—dedicated believers like O.R. Cross,  Henrietta Stewart, Lorraine Morgan, Wyoming Rosebud Dollar, C.K. Barnes, Eugene  & Evelyn Fuller, Annie Walton, and others of the New Testament  clan.
And then there was that other group, hiding in plain  sight among the believers, sometimes even leading  them, the ones the Bible calls “clouds without water, carried about of  winds; trees whose fruit withereth, without fruit, twice dead, plucked up by the  roots” (Jude 1:12).
Among this second class were—and still are—some  fantastic heretics I have known.
Take our old friend Carlton Pearson for instance. When I was  pastor of Life Center and then Family Worship Center near Portland, Oregon  during the 80s, my church was the host for TBN’s West Coast broadcasts and  special events where some of America’s top evangelists appeared almost nightly  for a while, including Carlton on numerous occasions. In those days, the Church  was in flux. The Great Generation with its Faith of the Fathers was getting  older, and errant doctrines made delicious by nasty end-time agents known as  demons were finding more and more willing hearts who were having the time of  their lives abandoning solid theology in exchange for such teachings as “The  Doctrine of Inclusion” (in which nobody goes to hell) eventually branding such  false prophets as heretics  (including Carlton Pearson) among thoughtful evangelicals. I can tell you  Carlton didn’t start out that way. He was a sweet man with a heart of gold who  unfortunately not only lost his way, but embraced delusion. God only knows how  many he has since led astray.
Then there were those who embraced things far worse  than “Inclusion.” For instance, “Kingdom Age” theology (also known as  Reconstructionism, Kingdom Now Theology, Theonomy, Dominion Theology, and most  recently, Dominionism), which singularly has wrought some of the most  far-reaching destruction within the Body of Christ this century.  
Dominionism is a form of hyper-Calvinism (though  supported by both reconstructionists and non-reconstructionists) that ultimately  seeks to establish the Kingdom of God on earth through the union of politics and  religion. Though ravenously popular among most talking-heads for the Religious  Right, combining religious faith with politics as a legislative system of  governance such as Dominionism would do, hearkens the formula upon which  Antichrist will come to power. Note how in the book of Revelation, chapter 13,  the political figure of Antichrist derives ultra-national dominance from the  world’s religious faithful through the influence of an ecclesiastical leader  known as the False Prophet. Similar political enthusiasm exists among  dominionists despite the fact that neither Jesus nor His disciples (who turned  the world upside down through preaching the gospel of Christ, the true “power of  God,” according to Paul) ever imagined the goal of changing the world through  supplanting secular government with an authoritarian theocracy. In fact, Jesus  made it clear that His followers would not fight earthly authorities purely  because His kingdom was “not of this world” (John 18:36). While every modern  citizen—religious and non-religious—has the responsibility to lobby for moral  good, combining the mission of the church with political aspirations is not only  unprecedented in New Testament theology—including the life of Christ and the  pattern of the New Testament church—but a tragic scheme concocted by sinister  forces that seek to defer the Church from its true power while enriching  insincere bureaucrats. So... let me take this moment to also add that, while I  personally appreciate the values represented by such people as Sarah Palin (and  I vote!), my prayer for believers is that they will not be fooled (again) into  believing in 2012 that they can fulfill the will of God by pulling a voting  lever.
While great heresies like “Dominionism” and  “Inclusion” are, or should be, self evident, other contenders for the most  spectacular heresies in the world today would have to include the Prosperity  Movement, Ecumenical Modernism, and Dual Covenant (wherein Jews do not need to  accept Jesus as Messiah) espoused by such well-known preachers as John Hagee .  Yet those aged voices that called out to me recently from my fading boxes of  memories also reminded that, while it’s easier today to get an “amen” while  condemning the BIG LIE of Dominionism, the most insidious doctrines are those  “smaller lucifers,” which are often harder to perceive. For instance how easy it  is (and was) to see through the glaring examples of self-serving and lavish  lifestyles that some of my old televangelist friends sought support for, while  overlooking or even excusing Luciferianisn (selfishness) that is measured in the  tiniest of portions, minute amounts so cleverly concealed within subtle and  popular doctrines today that they are nearly impossible to  detect.
Ask any evangelist who has tried to take the Gospel  outside the four-doors of the local assembly what I mean and hear them repeat  stories of how quickly certain members arose to resist the plan and to grumble  over the resources that could otherwise be used to benefit them. This is the  cancer that two decades of prosperity preaching, inward focusing and me-ism has  produced. Of course most of these anti-evangelists wrap their Luciferianism in  nifty religious phrases—like Judas Iscariot did when he pretended to care for  the poor but secretly wanted to steal the value of the oil that was used to  anoint the feet of Jesus (John 12:1-6).  These types resemble Judas in another  way as well; they don’t even know how they are thus being used as fleshy gloves,  the earthen hands of that invisible spirit, the master of waterless clouds  operating within or behind them that hates true fishers of men. But for those  with eyes to see, the father of lies always gives himself away through his envy  of others, seeking what he can gain from believers and religion, not what he can  give, then pretending that there is something wrong with those he cannot  control, those that get things done like Jesus did, disparaging them, while he  himself accomplishes nothing but division, diversion, and  destruction.
Perhaps you have seen this spirit in the actions or  heard it in the mouths of people you thought were your partners. When once you  (or somebody you knew) had nothing more to give them, they turned away from you,  or worse, against you and revealed the awful truth: their religious spirit had  only come for what it could get, gain, take, absorb, and then turned “to kill  and to destroy” (John 10:10a).
Thankfully the verse above goes on to describe the  true spirit of Christ, which comes so that people might have life, and that they  might have it more abundantly. This is why it is wise to observe what religious  people do, not only what they say, so that ultimately it becomes clear what  spirit is operating within them. “Ye shall know them by their fruits,” Jesus  said in Matthew 7:16.
Yes, it’s true, I have personally known some fantastic  heretics. But as I get older and the institution that I served so long breathes  its final breaths and crumbles beneath the mighty tsunami of Dominionism,  Prosperity Cultism and other doctrines of demons, I wonder about the survivors,  where they will go now and how they will persevere, and I find that my pastor’s  heart is concerned most of all with those little lucifers still lurking in plain  sight among them.
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos Liberabit

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