Technical Note on watching the video on youtube:
I had some trouble skipping back to points in the the video on youtube, so I used a software tool to download it once and for all in order to be able to go to specific time points without any freezing. Others may wish to do the same, but its possible to watch the video straight through without any technical assistance. Its just that if you miss a phrase and want to skip back more than 10 seconds you could have some buffering problems. The commands to skip forward or back in youtube are keys j and l, but I recommend not pressing them too many times at once as it causes the video playback to freeze.
On to the video:
I spare no criticism either of the pastor himself (who seems pompous to me and almost incognizant of just how pompous he sounds) or of his soteriological stance which in a way is correct but is out of context in the way that he makes it about going to his church without leaving First I make notes at specific times. Then I conclude with a paragraph on my views of soteriology.
After expressing wonder at how God has blessed the church he has pastor'd for 40 years where he is preaching and starting at 6:29 he begins in the way of many, many preachers to compliment himself on how he is so brave to speak about a passage that isn't comforting. He's quite brave, and we can all see how difficult this was for him from the look of pain on his face, testifying to the strength of his commitment to his message. Personally I feel its a little much, but the audience having heard it so many times doesn't even notice. He admits though that bravery is merely the way that God has wired him, alluding to passages of how bravery is evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit. This supposedly is for our benefit and to assure us that who stands before us is indeed a man of God and by extension that we the audience have made a smart move by coming today to hear him speak. Moving forward he goes into the difficult problem that faces the church and which it pains him to speak about.
At minute 8:56 he mentions the difficult problem that some church people have that they make the decision for Christ but have "Manifested no evidence." It seems a little off topic but this presumably is why its important to have a strong spiritual leader in your church, someone that you can count upon. It is possible that such people will be confused about whether the sermon is about soteriology or about the greatness of the pastor, but that is part of the self deception which can cause people to believe they are saved without manifesting.
Having established a firm foundation we can move on to the red meat of his sermon.
9:43 "...so, I knew that no one who was a true believer could lose his salvation..and I wasn't sure how these people fit in." (speaking of those who make a decision for Christ but who have manifested no evidence) This leads into discussion of the problems with formulaic prayers about salvation (soteriology) in which some ministers, perhaps less qualified ministers, will teach that once you pray the prayer of faith with someone you then assure them that they have been saved. Its an interesting conundrum, because obviously there are some people who have prayed the prayer of faith yet do not manifest evidence of it. That is where he begins to build part of his argument about salvation and what it really requires.
12:20 A friend of his left the faith and plunged into a life of iniquity. This was a turning point in his thinking about salvation and whether a person could be saved merely through a prayer. It took losing a friend, but he gives other examples of other friends later. His friend years later became a Philosophy professor, then a rock concert promoter and finally ended up in jail. He notes that in those days there was a pervasive theology that said you could be saved merely through making the prayer of salvation. I agree, and that pervasive theology continues today among many ministers. A good example is the very popular and celebrated ministry of Billy Graham, another man who was rich in many ways as a result of his service to God but clearly not as sharp as this minister. It goes to show how pervasive a wrong doctrine can be or at least competing doctrines. They can be strongly accepted and persistent.
14:48 He went to seminary and made friends with the dean's son who eventually became a Buddhist.
15:56 He quotes 1 John 2:19 ."...they went out from us that it might be made manifest that they never were of us..." which he takes as evidence that these people were never truly converted. What he totally ignored here though was that John was talking about some antichrists -- people who opposed Christ, people causing divisions refusing to love and living in sin. These were some bad people not merely unconverted people, opposing the communion. They were so bad and confused other Christians to the point that it had to be demonstrated that they were not Christians, and this is the reason 1John gives that they were caused (by God) to leave the fellowship. My opinion is that it does not logically follow that all people who leave churches, today, are caused to leave for this reason every time. Also just look at all the scrappy people who never leave and who cause confusion by staying, and look at how insipid it is that the believers must endure such preaching and self aggrandizement on a weekly basis? Look how judgmental you can be and how you can refuse to fellowship simply through choosing a 'Fellowship' which won't fellowship with other fellowships? Can we, today, really presume that leaving a church is evidence of never having believed? I don't think so. That would require a particularly good church wouldn't it?
17:00 Talks about the possibility of churches full of people who are self deceived, practicing lawlessness. When he first starts with this church 40 years previous he preaches this like a howitzer and finds that there are many people not truly converted to Christ. His opinion is that people should not go to church unless they are living the right way. Ok. My opinion is that he is mistaken about it. Churches should be humble, and church leaders need to allow people to pretend to be believers instead of trying to finger who is and who isn't. Otherwise they use manipulation to force people to pretend and get the same result only worse. The unbelievers don't leave. God doesn't send them out to show they aren't believers. Its not the same situation that John1 talks about, but this preacher claims he was able to determine who was and who wasn't practicing.
18:05 "It is a weighty responsibility on many fronts to be a pastor..." Oh, please spare us and get back to the point before our ears fall off. Do you know how often pastors go on about this, because anyone who doesn't obviously sleeps through sermons. Its easy to be a pastor, and they get paid for it. There are training programs, all kinds of support, every conceivable advantage. I have to call balogney and question why every sermon is always at least 20% about why everyone needs the pastor to lead the church. This man who is so certain that he is teaching doctrine is nevertheless tainted by constant fear of losing his paycheck. Can we please have a sermon that isn't about pastor retention, one time? Just one time, please. We are only at minute 18, and already he has told us at least 5 times how important he is and how much we need him.
18:26 "under my ministry" He is not kidding, either. Can we please get back to soteriology?