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Mike Morrison of Worldwide Church of
God replied to On Apostasy--A Radical Proposal.
This is the rebuttal to Morrison's letter from Edgardo Meneses.
This letter was begun on October 25,
2006 and
mailed to ESN November 24, 2006. It was later sent to over 300 WCG ministers and members.
Also read:
email reply
from author Brian Flynn to a WCG Philippine deacon concerning how we must
be discerning concerning false teachings.

October 25, 2006
Dr. MICHAEL MORRISON
Worldwide Church of God
Glendora, California
Dear Dr. Morrison:
Thank you for replying to my letter dated September 11, 2006 which I
titled "ON APOSTASY -- A Radical Proposal." I
addressed the letter to Worldwide Church of God Philippines National
Director Eugene M. Guzon and to seven Filipino pastors working with and
under him. They have not replied; that's why I have decided to send the
letter to other WCG ministers, and also because I believe WCG churches
should be aware of the contents of the letter. So far, you are the only
one who has made an answer to the issues I raised.
You said you were "set[ting] the
record straight" for the people I sent my message to. And you said
it would not be a profitable use of our time to debate these issues. If
you still feel that way, it's your prerogative to ignore this second
letter. I'm doing this for the sake of the same people to whom you
forwarded your letter and for others who might benefit from this rebuttal.
For the sake of clarity I will enumerate your statements and comment
on each of them.
1) "First, we do not teach replacement theology. See the attached
document on that topic."
I read your attached document a number of times because I was
looking for a proof that would show that the WCG does not teach
replacement theology. But what I saw are statements that prove that the
WCG does indeed teach replacement theology. How's that for a cognitive
dissonance in a short document?
First, your document has the phrase, "The church as the 'Israel of
God' (Galatians 6:16)." If the WCG believes that the Church is the Israel
of God, then the WCG accepts replacement theology (RT) because that
concept is exactly the essence of RT.
Galatians 6:16 does not mean that the Church is spiritual Israel or
the Israel of God. Simply put, "the Israel of God" refers to believing
ethnic Israelites in the Christian Church, i.e., the Jewish remnant
according to God's gracious choice, as contrasted with "Israel after the
flesh" (1 Cor. 10:18).
Galatians 6:16: "And as many as walk according to this rule [the
rule of faith] peace on them [the Gentile Christians in the Church], and
mercy, AND upon the Israel of God [the converted Jews who followed the
same rule of salvation by faith]."
Second, your document says, "Is there a future role for Israel as a
nation? . . . The Bible talks about Israel as a people, as an ethnic
group, not specifically as a nation . . . it is clear that to focus on the
Jewish nation state in terms of some role, rather than on Israel as a
people, is too simplistic." This statement is simply not true. The Bible
talks about Israel as a nation:
"Hearken unto me, my people; and give ear unto me, O
my nation . . . " (Isaiah 51:4).
"If those ordinances [the sun, the moon, the stars, and the waves of the
sea, v.35] depart from before me, saith the LORD, then the seed of Israel
also shall cease from being a nation
before me for ever" (Jer. 31:36). ETC., ETC.
And here is some role for Israel as a nation during our time now and
in the near future: "Behold, I will make Jerusalem [capital of the Jewish
nation] a cup of trembling unto all the people round about, when they
shall be in the siege both against Judah and against Jerusalem. And in
that day will I make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all people; all that
burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the people of
the earth be gathered together against it" (Zech. 12:2,3).
Third, Your document says, "In a Christian context, various Old
Testament prophecies concerning the blessings and restoration of Israel
are understood in a spiritual sense, as the promises of God in Christ --
first to the Jew and then to the Gentile . . . In conclusion, Old
Testament prophecies about Israel's salvation and great national glory are
generally seen in Christian theology as having been spiritually fulfilled.
. . . " If this is not replacement theology I have yet to hear another
name for it.
2) "It is simply poor scholarship on your part to quote as proof a
10-year old article from In Transition.
Since In Transition was a
hostile newspaper1 you cannot expect it to quote Mike Feazell accurately."
I sent my letter to Dr. Mike Feazell the same day I sent it to you.
Weeks have passed since then, but I am not aware of any denial from him.
If indeed he was misquoted in the newspaper that I quoted, he should come
out and straighten things out, as this pertains to an important doctrinal
issue.
Dr. Feazell was quoted by Steve Sheppherd, WCG pastor of Elhart,
Indiana from December 1990 to March 1995. The interview happened at
the FOT
1992 in Wisconsin Dells, Wis. Mr. Sheppherd took notes from his almost
four hours of conversation with Dr. Feazell (two hours in a restaurant and
another one and a half hours or more at the Feazells' lodging). Mr.
Sheppherd said, "I know the value of taking notes as quickly after an
event as possible, and I began these notes within a half hour of the end
of the conversation" (same source).
3) "The article you quoted from our website was about Revelation 7,
and was not saying that the church replaces Israel in all biblical
passages."
You don't have to replace Israel with the
Church in all biblical
passages where Israel is mentioned in order to be said that you teach
replacement theology. At any rate, you therefore imply that the WCG
teaches that the Church replaces Israel in
some biblical passages. What is
this? Partial Replacement Theology? I once read a minister use
"semi-millennialism." As there is no such thing as semi-millennialism,
there cannot be a partial-replacement theology.
The quote from the article that I put in my letter reads, "It seems
clear that the vision in Revelation 7 has the church in view, not the
ancient nation of Israel . . . The church is the extension of national
Israel, or better, its replacement, elevated to a spiritual plane." I
will now copy from the article the greater part of what I omitted from
between the two sentences: "The emphasis in the New Testament is on the
spiritual people of God or HIS CHURCH. It is not interested in racial
distinctions (Galatians 3:28) . . . The believer in Christ is the true Jew
(Romans 2:29). Peter speaks of THE CHURCH as a holy nation and chosen
people (1 Peter 2:9). Paul said of THE CHURCH: 'It is we who are the
circumcision, we who worship by the spirit of God, who glory in Christ
Jesus' (Philippians 3:3). These are phrases and ideas taken from the Old
Testament and APPLIED TO THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH" (emphases mine). Do
the foregoing sentences talk about the Church as "Israel" in Revelation 7
only? Of course not. At the end of the article ("Who Are the 144,000?")
it says, "Since Israel is a SYMBOL FOR THE CHURCH, we should not take the
144,000 as a literal number either" (emphasis mine). All these are the
language of replacement theology no less.
4) "I wrote that one out of 260 chapters in the New Testament is
about the millennium, showing the relative importance of the millennium.
You then conclude that I meant it was not important. That is not what I
said and not what I meant. Every word is important, but if we preach one
chapter each week, we preach Revelation 20 once every 5 years."
Am I correct if I say now that you meant the Millennium was less
important? If you believe every word is important, what do you mean by
"relative importance"? Obviously, you downplay the Millennium. Would
you also downplay John 3:1-21 because this part of one chapter -- the
story of the Lord Jesus and Nicodemus -- is preached only once every 5
years if we preach one chapter of the New Testament each week? Would you
downplay 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18 for the same reason? (The WCG not only
downplays, but rejects, the preTribulation Rapture doctrine.) The same
could be asked of other chapters in the New Testament.
I believe that frequency of mention in the Bible of a certain
doctrine is not the "gauge" by which to measure or evaluate its
importance. And I believe your dialectic against the Millennium springs
from your preferred theology which you don't want to admit openly for
reasons I could only surmise.
By the way, Revelation 20 also contains the doom of Gog and Magog,
the judgment of Satan, and the Great White Throne Judgment. Would you
consider these future events relatively unimportant because if we preach
the New Testament one chapter each week we get to preach these doctrines
only once every 5 years? Why should I wonder? I remember your generous
leader calls these doctrines "peripheral items."
5) "Your 'proofs' of the millennium are inadequate."
If Revelation 20:1-10 is not an adequate proof of the Millennium for
you, nothing more can be adequate a proof for you. You have concluded
that there will be no Millennium.
6) "I say that the New Testament does not talk about a temporary
kingdom."
Who is talking about a temporary kingdom?
7) "You respond by 1) quoting Luke 1, which clearly says that the
kingdom will last forever, not that it is temporary."
The fact that the Millennium is 1,000 years does not mean the
Kingdom is temporary. The Millennium has its place in the plan of God,
but His Kingdom goes on after the 1,000 years into eternity.2
In ancient history, a kingdom was ended when its government and/or
its people were destroyed. In recent history and current events, a "coup d'etat" can overthrow a regime and we can say that that regime has ended
if the coup is successful. An
election can put an end to a "kingdom." But the future Kingdom of God is
different. Daniel the prophet describes the Kingdom: "And in the days of
these kings [the future ten kings, 7:24-27] shall the God of heaven set up
a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be
left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these
kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever" (Dan. 2:44).
8) "Second, you quote John the Baptist, who said that the kingdom
'is at hand.' That in no way proves that Jesus would establish a kingdom
more than 2000 years later."
Well, John the Baptist was not given that revelation, but another
John was.
9) "Third, you say the kingdom was postponed. You seem to be
saying that Jesus' announcement was incorrect -- that he could not foresee
the Jewish rejection of his message and therefore he talked as if they
would accept."
The Messiah came to Israel in due time to fulfill the prophecies.
In Nazareth, the Lord Jesus, in a synagogue, read from the book of Isaiah,
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he hath anointed me to preach
the gospel to the poor; he hath sent me to heal the brokenhearted, to
preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty them that are bruised, To preach the acceptable year of
the Lord" (Luke 4:18,19). The fact that the Lord did not finish Isaiah's
sentence that includes "the day of vengeance of our God" [pointing to the
Second Advent] shows that He could foresee the future. He knew Psalm 2,
Isaiah 53, and other scriptures that foretold His sufferings and death.
But the offer of the Kingdom was genuine. We cannot question the love of
the Lord Jesus towards His own people (John 1:11; Matt. 23:37-39).
10) "Fourth, you mention the regeneration. This in no way says
that the kingdom will be temporary."
There again is your "temporary." Of course, the Kingdom will not be
temporary.
11) "Same with point 5,6, and 7. You are simply assuming the
millennium where it is not stated."
In points 5,6, and 7 I quoted from Luke 22:28-30, Matt. 20:20-28,
and Acts 1:6-8. These scriptures talk about a coming literal Kingdom on
earth, which is the Millennium as revealed in Revelation 20. I prefer to
take the Lord's words at their face value. I'm afraid too many Bible
teachers -- particularly in big-name seminaries -- are teaching their
students how to disbelieve the
scriptures. I'm reminded of 2 Timothy 3:7.
12) "Contrary to what you imply at the beginning, we do not teach
amillennialism. But we do not teach premillennialism, either."
What do you teach, then? Postmillennialism? "If you don't stand
for something you will fall for anything." The Bible is a dogmatic book.
I don't see any reason why we should not be dogmatic about doctrines.
Unless we want to remain ecumenical . . .
13) "You are worried about ecumenism for the strangest reasons."
One "strange" reason why I worry about ecumenism is that the
doctrines of the Bible are being set aside for the sake of unity. God's
Word enjoins the unity of believers, not the unity of believers and
unbelievers.
14) "When we invite Richard Foster to speak, or when we quote him
on our website, it does not mean that we endorse, believe, or teach
everything he teaches. We are simply saying that he has something that we
can benefit from."
You select the gems from the trash?
How sure are you that what you take from Foster's teachings is really
good? Here are some of his teachings. Pray tell, which of
these are beneficial?
1. Approval of New Age teachers and Catholic mystics
2. Occultic use of imagination
3. Open theism
4. Promotion of visions, revelations and charismatic gifts
5. Endorsement of rosary and prayer wheel
6. Mystical journaling
7. Embracing pop-psychology
8. Promoting Roman Catholic practices such as the use of
"spiritual directors," confessing, penance
9. Spiritual disciplines as a means of grace
10. Contemplative prayer
Granting that Richard Foster3 has something good to offer, would it
be right to take his services? The Bible is very clear on this. We are
to separate from false teachers (2
Cor. 6:14-7:1; 2 Tim. 2: 20,21). Continuing to foster impostor teachers will cause shipwreck of faith in members (cf. 1 Tim. 1: 18-20).
15) "We are not joining his church, the Quakers, or the Catholics."
Why should you? On the contrary, you would do anything to preserve
the firm, este, the church.
16) "I had to laugh when you said that two members gave you a copy
of Rick Warren's book, and you concluded from that that now you know the
church endorses it. That was poor logic."
You jumped to a conclusion, and that
was bad logic. I concluded that the WCG endorses Warren's book not from
the fact that my sister and I received gift copies. You didn't see the
rambled syllogism. I merely put my stronger premise after my conclusion: "There are
Purpose-Driven seminars [in WCG churches] based on Warren's spiritual
growth strategy."
17) "We are aware, as you are, that the book contains errors. You
also comment that 'there are purpose-driven seminars based on Warren's
spiritual growth strategy.' So what does that have to do with us? What
does it have to do with ecumenism?"
What does the WCG do with the errors in Warren's book? Probably
they are included in the seminars without discrimination. Instead of
warning against Warren's books, the WCG encourages the members to read
and follow them. It's like serving food with cyanide in it. Only, in
Warren's books the amount of cyanide is proportionately greater than a
criminal would put in a deadly food serving. The WCG has a number of such
"caterers" that "serve" the members. The poor members (victims) may not
be able to detect these spiritual poisons being given to them.
"But whoso shall offend [cause to stumble] one of these little ones
which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged
about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea" (Matt.
18:6).
Of course, Rick Warren4 has a lot to do with the WCG. Isn't
Spiritual Formation the theme of the 2007 Ministerial Conference?5 Dr. Joe
Tkach says so. And Rick Warren is a formidable promoter of SF. Why is he
not invited to the Conference (maybe he has been invited) along with
Richard Foster and Dallas Willard?6 Maybe because he is so busy -- travelling around the world promoting his PEACE Plan. And you're asking
what Warren has to do with ecumenism?
18) "The WCG does not 'endorse' the Message Bible by Eugene
Peterson. Every Bible translation . . . has errors in it. The fact that
we give someone a Bible, or a paraphrased Bible, does not mean that we
endorse every rendition in it. We are just saying that it is helpful."
Do you actually say to the recipient of
The Message Bible, "The fact that
we are giving you this Bible does not mean that we endorse every rendition
in it"? Do you put a tag on the front cover, "Caution: Reading this
paraphrased Bible could be dangerous to your spiritual health"? But you
should do these precautions if you are really concerned about a person's
spiritual well-being. Better still, you ought to give him a trustworthy
translation. Or, give him the money and let him buy a Bible for himself;
at least, this way you would not be an accomplice. A copy of
The Message is the same
cyanide-laden food we talked about above.
"Helpful"? A distorted Bible's helpfulness, if any, is negated by
its soul-damning renditions and theology.
19) "Wow. People attended Franklin Graham's crusade. You admit
that you don't know much about him, but you say that his dad has been apostasizing.
[sic] You say he is the number one promoter of ecumenism. Just
because he doesn't condemn everyone who believes exactly like he does,
does not mean he is promoting ecumenism."
Why would Billy Graham condemn everyone who
believes exactly like he does? That would be poor logic on his part,
to say the least. Worst, he would be thought insane should he do
that. You mean he is not promoting ecumenism? I will let him
speak for himself:
"I am very comfortable with the Vatican. I have been to see the
Pope several times. In fact, the night -- the day that he was
inaugurated, made Pope, I was preaching in his cathedral in Krakow. I was
his guest . . . [and] when he was over here . . . in Columbus, South
Carolina . . . he invited me on the platform to speak with him. I would
give one talk, and he would give the other . . . I like him very much . .
. He and I agree on almost anything." -- Interview with Larry King,
January 1997
Billy Graham's Crusade policy: "If Catholics step forward there
will be no attempt to convert them and their names will be given to the
Catholic church nearest their homes" (Vancouver Sun, Oct. 5, 1984).
Do the above quotes sound like Billy Graham7 is not promoting
ecumenism? I have yet to hear a denial of ecumenism
from him.
Christianity Today evaluates
Billy Graham's work thus: "It would be difficult to overestimate Billy
Graham's importance in the last 50 years of evangelicalism. . . . Graham
personally embodied most of the characteristics of resurgent
evangelicalism. . . . de-emphasizing doctrinal and denominational
differences that often divided Christians. . . . For evangelicalism, Billy
Graham has meant the reconstitution of a Christian fellowship transcending
confessional lines -- a grassroots ecumenism that regards denominational
divisions as irrelevant rather than pernicious." -- Oct. 5, 1992, as
quoted in Billy Graham and Rome by
David W. Cloud, 1997
20) "Christians should be known for being gracious, not throwing
stones and calling names and condemning for every difference in beliefs."
You mean fellowshipping with the Pope and not condemning his
soul-damning teachings is "being gracious'? What saith the scripture?
"And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather
reprove them" (Ephesians 5:11). Billy Graham has been disobeying God for
decades. A question has been asked if he is a regenerate person after
all.
In my letter I referred to a number of scriptures that command
Christians to reprove, avoid, reject, and separate from false teachers
(Acts 20: 29-31; Rom. 16: 17; Titus 3: 10,11; 2 John 10; 2 Cor. 6:14 -
7:1). You did not comment on them. It is plain that the Worldwide Church
of God has discarded the biblical doctrine of Separation. It has embraced
humanistic Ecumenism instead.
Note: I later found out that not only that WCG members attended
Franklin Graham's Festival crusade in Manila last February, but also, the
WCG ministry had an active role in preparations for it. Let me quote from
the February 10, 2006 WCG Philippines update:
"WCG Participates in Franklin
Graham's Festival of Hope. ND Eugene Guzon and Andrew Teng were
involved as members of the Ministers Committee chaired by Bishop Fred
Magbanua . . . It was also exciting to see our WCG leaders and members
getting involved . . . A number of our leaders and members volunteered as
counsellors, co-laborers and some joined the 3,000 voices of the . . .
Choir. It was also exciting to see some of our leaders and members who
came from distant places like Pampanga, Bulacan, San Pedro, Sta. Rosa, &
other areas got involved . . . The MMFGF fostered unity among Christians
of different persuasions . . . All for the glory and honor of a loving
God!" -- Andrew Teng
Was God really pleased? Was God pleased with Franklin Graham when
he attended the inauguration of Pope Benedict XVI? Billy said, "I don't
have the physical strength to go, and I have been invited about six or
seven months ago by the Vatican ahead of time. And they've asked that I
come. So I'm asking my daughter, Anne Lotz to go. . . . And then my son,
Franklin, will be going to the enthronement of the new Pope." -- Larry
King Live, April 2, 2005
These are the people the WCG ministers are cooperating with, in
direct disobedience to God.
21) "Wow. Mr. Tkach has talked to Hank
Hanegraaf [sic]. You don't know
whether Hank has influenced him or not, but you list this as a terrible
point of ecumenism. We don't accept everything Hank says, either. In
fact, we haven't had much contact with him for several years."
Hank Hanegraaff has "outgrown" his usefulness to WCG. He has his
own problems to attend to. I included him in the list because of
his big
role in the mainstreaming of WCG. He is an example of a churchman whose
services the church should not have sought in the first place. Once the
leaders in California began to seek approval from ecumenical people there
has been no stopping treading the road toward Rome/Babylon.8
22) "Wow. We reviewed a book by Brian McLaren, supposedly an
intellectual voice for ecumenism. Last, you mention promise keepers, but
fail to say how they are relevant to us. I don't think you know what
ecumenism is."
Drop "supposedly." McLaren9 has admitted something in his letter to
Chuck Colson: "Several years back, you tried to bring Evangelicals and
Catholics together . . . an effort which I applaud and in which I am
involved myself" (quoted by Lighthouse Trails Publishing).
When a church publication reviews a book positively, it is not
superfluous to assume that that church approves of the book. Here are
some of the teachings contained in McLaren's
A Generous Orthodoxy:
1. Holistic, planetary salvation without apocalyptic
intervention of God
2. The concept of hell is disparaged.
3. The Bible is about doing good works, not about objective
truth.
4. A religion of perpetual doubt -- Deconstruction
5. Truth cannot be known. Writing systematic theologies is
foolish.
Isn't Brian McLaren the author of the book titled,
The Secret Message of Jesus? This
fact alone should be enough to alert us as to where he is getting his
teachings from. Surely not from the Bible.
As for the Promise Keepers, I know that WCG ministers attend PK
conferences. PK is an ecumenical
organization10, exactly the right place
for ecumenical WCG.
If you thought I did not know what ecumenism is, you should have
defined it for my sake, then.
23) "Yes, we need to be on the side of the truth. You believe that
you have the truth, but we don't believe you."
I am not asking you to believe me. But thanks for being forthright
here.
24) "Yes, we should obey God rather than men. . . . We have to
believe what God says to us when we read his word."
That's true. Unfortunately, at the moment, I'm afraid you are not
doing that. Here is some of God's Word that you refuse to believe:
1. You refuse
to believe that there is going to be a literal 1,000-year reign of the Messiah, called the Millennium -- Revelation 20:
1-10. 2. You
refuse to believe that the nation of Israel will have a role in the plan of God in the future -- Jer. 31: 35-37; Zech. 12 -14, etc.,
etc. 3. You refuse to believe the very words of the Lord Jesus when
He says He is going to rule in the Messianic Kingdom on earth --
Matt. 19: 27, 28; 20: 20-28; Luke 20: 28-30, etc.
4. You refuse to believe in the preTribulation Rapture of the
Church revealed by the Lord Jesus Himself and by the apostles --
John 14: 1-3; 1 Thess. 4: 13-18; 1 Cor. 15: 51,52; 2 Thess. 2: 1-12; Rev.
3: 10; 5: 9,10. 5. You refuse to believe in God's command to separate from false
teachers and false brethren -- 2 Tim. 4: 2-4; Rom.16:17; 2
John 10; 2 Cor. 6: 14-7:1; 2 Cor. 11:13-15, etc.
I hope and pray that you will really believe and obey God soon.
It's sad to realize that for many it will take the wrath of God to be
poured out before they will come to their senses (Revelation 6 - 18). Or
you also don't believe that? From your writings I know that you don't
take the book of Revelation literally.
At any rate, you cannot say that you have not been warned. . .
Sincerely, in Christ,
EDGARDO S. MENESES
Cc.: ND Eugene Guzon Pastors Teng, Taniajura, Santibañez,
Dela Peña, Escara, & Melendez
Update:
Email reply from
author Brian Flynn to a WCG Philippine deacon (Cc to ESN), concerning
how we must be discerning concerning false teachings coming into the
church. Note by ESN: Replacement Theology
teaches that God is
finished with the
nation of Israel and
that the promises in
the Bible concerning
Israel have now been given
to the Church. For
further study, see the following:
The
Dangers of Reformed
Theology
and
How is the Term Israel
Used in the New
Testament?
(The last part explains Galatians 6:16: "The Israel
of God.")
Footnotes by ESN: 1
OIU 4, Pt. 2
covers In Transition (launched in 1995)
and states it was a revisionist publication
filled with distortions of events, half-truths and history revision.
2
Psalm 145:13, Daniel 2:44; 4:3; 7:27, Luke
1:33, 2 Peter 1:11, etc. state that the Kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ
is an everlasting kingdom which has no end.
3 See the exposé articles:
Richard Foster - General Teachings and Activities and
A Critique
on the Ministry of Richard Foster. (The latter goes into detail
about his New Age
teachings and connections.)
4 Rick Warren was mentored
by Robert Schuller who is tied in with New Age leaders and philosophies.
Also see the following:
The
Church Growth Movement (An Analysis of Rick Warren's "Purpose Driven" Church
Growth Strategy and
An Analysis of Rick Warren's Purpose Driven Life.
5 "Coming Events – activity
calendar for the WCG"; "Worldwide Church of God Caribbean," July
26, 2006.
6 For more on Dallas
Willard, including his connections and endorsements, see:
Dallas Willard - Promoting Contemplative
Prayer and Mysticism Through Spiritual Formation.]
WCG lists Willard's book, Hearing God, on the "Ministry
Foundations" of their website.
7 See the book,
New Neutralism II: Exposing
the Grey of Compromise.
8 For more info on WCG's
ecumenicalism, see OIU Newsletter,
Vol. 6.
9 More info can be found in
the article, The Promise
Keepers.
10 For exposé
articles on Brian
McLaren, do a search for his name on
Lighthouse Trails
Research Project (Exposing the Dangers of Contemplative Spirituality).
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