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  #31  
Old 07-19-2008, 06:41 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

Quote:
Originally Posted by cneasttx View Post
It's not about religion or even doctrine, so much as turning all control over to an unseen God. There is really one choice as I believe it. It's not just believing in God, as it is believing God. There is a difference.
When one describes God in any way that is doctrine.
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  #32  
Old 07-19-2008, 06:59 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

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Originally Posted by freeatlast View Post
The only thing UPC about me is that my pastor holds a upc license.

We are not affiliated with the UPc as a church.
Niether are we - nor most churches having a UPC Minister for that matter.
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I am a firm believer in the Old Paths

Articles on such subjects as "The New Birth," will be accepted, whether they teach that the new birth takes place before baptism in water and Spirit, or that the new birth consists of baptism of water and Spirit. - THE PENTECOSTAL HERALD Dec. 1945

"It is doubtful if any Trinitarian Pentecostals have ever professed to believe in three gods, and Oneness Pentecostals should not claim that they do." - Daniel Segraves
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  #33  
Old 07-19-2008, 07:30 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

It seems to me that there has to be a line ex-pentecostals cross in their minds that takes them from someone who is questioning the things they've been taught to someone who no longer believes truth.
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  #34  
Old 07-19-2008, 07:37 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

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Originally Posted by Rico View Post
It seems to me that there has to be a line ex-pentecostals cross in their minds that takes them from someone who is questioning the things they've been taught to someone who no longer believes truth.
Truth = Code word for Apostolic doctrine? If so, which ones?
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  #35  
Old 07-19-2008, 08:13 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

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Originally Posted by A_PoMo View Post
Truth = Code word for Apostolic doctrine? If so, which ones?
How about that one where they talk about speaking in tongues? Is that apostolic enough for ya?
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  #36  
Old 07-19-2008, 09:11 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

So much to say, so little time.

I will try to post later tonight, or maybe tomorrow, or ... well, we'll see. Busy getting ready for a business trip Monday.
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  #37  
Old 07-19-2008, 09:12 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

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Originally Posted by Timmy View Post
So much to say, so little time.

I will try to post later tonight, or maybe tomorrow, or ... well, we'll see. Busy getting ready for a business trip Monday.
And there's another thread I've promised to add my thoughts to, related to this topic. Something about how the church can keep people. I'll have to hunt it down.
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  #38  
Old 07-19-2008, 09:47 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

We are attached to our various social groupings in a variety of ways. We will often choose to leave one of those groups when it is no longer in our best interest to remain.

Many people remain in Pentecostal churches (or whatever church they attend) long after they have broken their philosophical attachments because remaining in the church is in the best interest of their family attachments.

Others simply have no choice except to remain because they are under age or - as I've seen at times - because they have an employment within the church body that they are reluctant to lose.

For myself, I had an employment, a position with some status, and a family network within Pentecost. But when I refused to "backslide" along with a few of those around me I lost my job, my position - which I was willing to accept, but then they turned at my family to continue and even intensify their attacks against them. This really disgusted me to the point that I had no fight left in me and I left.

I am somewhat disappointed with myself today, many years later. I have found out how that I had let down many other people who were still in the church and I handicapped the district leadership in the ability to govern affairs that they were charged with overseeing. I should have stayed and fought.

However, simultaneously to all of this; I was wrestling with the core belief system of the group. Jesse Williams, a man I had admired, had said something at about that time. He has said, "If you no longer believe the doctrine, then be a gentleman and leave." So for me at the time, the 'easy way out' was to "be a gentleman" and that made my departure a little easier.

The speaking schedules that I was tasked with arranging were now in the hands of men wanting to cover up the adultries of their Okalahoma buddies. Those Oklahoma buddies were given time to make the financial arrangements so that their pending divorces and loss of pastorates would not be as expensive as it would have been if I had spoken up.

Somehow, these guys were the "faithful" while I was the "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm still against pandering to adulterers and using church resources to enable what amounts to essentially a sex club. But this view makes me an "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm against "moving money around" to defraud the wife you've abandoned and I have some serious question about whose money that might have been - the church's? I don't know. All I know was that 13 weeks were required to make all of the arrangements after the wife found out. I was fired during the second week when I began to figure things out. The reason I was fired was because I was "hindering revival."

There are folks who may be reading this now who will remember a storied 13 week revival. I saw many of you dancing in those services. I didn't dance. Because you did dance, you are Pentecostals. Because I could not bring myself to dance, I am an "Ex Pentecostal."

That's the way it happened for me.
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  #39  
Old 07-19-2008, 09:49 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

Quote:
Originally Posted by pelathais View Post
We are attached to our various social groupings in a variety of ways. We will often choose to leave one of those groups when it is no longer in our best interest to remain.

Many people remain in Pentecostal churches (or whatever church they attend) long after they have broken their philosophical attachments because remaining in the church is in the best interest of their family attachments.

Others simply have no choice except to remain because they are under age or - as I've seen at times - because they have an employment within the church body that they are reluctant to lose.

For myself, I had an employment, a position with some status, and a family network within Pentecost. But when I refused to "backslide" along with a few of those around me I lost my job, my position - which I was willing to accept, but then they turned at my family to continue and even intensify their attacks against them. This really disgusted me to the point that I had no fight left in me and I left.

I am somewhat disappointed with myself today, many years later. I have found out how that I had let down many other people who were still in the church and I handicapped the district leadership in the ability to govern affairs that they were charged with overseeing. I should have stayed and fought.

However, simultaneously to all of this; I was wrestling with the core belief system of the group. Jesse Williams, a man I had admired, had said something at about that time. He has said, "If you no longer believe the doctrine, then be a gentleman and leave." So for me at the time, the 'easy way out' was to "be a gentleman" and that made my departure a little easier.

The speaking schedules that I was tasked with arranging were now in the hands of men wanting to cover up the adultries of their Okalahoma buddies. Those Oklahoma buddies were given time to make the financial arrangements so that their pending divorces and loss of pastorates would not be as expensive as it would have been if I had spoken up.

Somehow, these guys were the "faithful" while I was the "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm still against pandering to adulterers and using church resources to enable what amounts to essentially a sex club. But this view makes me an "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm against "moving money around" to defraud the wife you've abandoned and I have some serious question about whose money that might have been - the church's? I don't know. All I know was that 13 weeks were required to make all of the arrangements after the wife found out. I was fired during the second week when I began to figure things out. The reason I was fired was because I was "hindering revival."

There folks who may be reading this now who will remember a storied 13 week revival. I saw many of you dancing in those services. I didn't dance. Because you did dance, you are Pentecostals. Because I could not bring myself to dance, I am an "Ex Pentecostal."

That's the way it happened for me.
Good post.
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  #40  
Old 07-19-2008, 10:19 PM
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Re: Becoming An Ex-Pentecostal

Quote:
Originally Posted by pelathais View Post
We are attached to our various social groupings in a variety of ways. We will often choose to leave one of those groups when it is no longer in our best interest to remain.

Many people remain in Pentecostal churches (or whatever church they attend) long after they have broken their philosophical attachments because remaining in the church is in the best interest of their family attachments.

Others simply have no choice except to remain because they are under age or - as I've seen at times - because they have an employment within the church body that they are reluctant to lose.

For myself, I had an employment, a position with some status, and a family network within Pentecost. But when I refused to "backslide" along with a few of those around me I lost my job, my position - which I was willing to accept, but then they turned at my family to continue and even intensify their attacks against them. This really disgusted me to the point that I had no fight left in me and I left.

I am somewhat disappointed with myself today, many years later. I have found out how that I had let down many other people who were still in the church and I handicapped the district leadership in the ability to govern affairs that they were charged with overseeing. I should have stayed and fought.

However, simultaneously to all of this; I was wrestling with the core belief system of the group. Jesse Williams, a man I had admired, had said something at about that time. He has said, "If you no longer believe the doctrine, then be a gentleman and leave." So for me at the time, the 'easy way out' was to "be a gentleman" and that made my departure a little easier.

The speaking schedules that I was tasked with arranging were now in the hands of men wanting to cover up the adultries of their Okalahoma buddies. Those Oklahoma buddies were given time to make the financial arrangements so that their pending divorces and loss of pastorates would not be as expensive as it would have been if I had spoken up.

Somehow, these guys were the "faithful" while I was the "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm still against pandering to adulterers and using church resources to enable what amounts to essentially a sex club. But this view makes me an "Ex-Pentecostal..."

I'm against "moving money around" to defraud the wife you've abandoned and I have some serious question about whose money that might have been - the church's? I don't know. All I know was that 13 weeks were required to make all of the arrangements after the wife found out. I was fired during the second week when I began to figure things out. The reason I was fired was because I was "hindering revival."

There folks who may be reading this now who will remember a storied 13 week revival. I saw many of you dancing in those services. I didn't dance. Because you did dance, you are Pentecostals. Because I could not bring myself to dance, I am an "Ex Pentecostal."

That's the way it happened for me.

Pel, you have quite the story. I know it is still hurtful to you. I am glad you can talk about it objectively.

How do you find yourself relating to the Pentecostal Church today? Have you managed to regain some or any of the former respect you had for the church and it's leaders?
__________________
"It is inhumane, in my opinion, to force people who have a genuine medical need for coffee to wait in line behind people who apparently view it as some kind of recreational activity." Dave Barry 2005

I am a firm believer in the Old Paths

Articles on such subjects as "The New Birth," will be accepted, whether they teach that the new birth takes place before baptism in water and Spirit, or that the new birth consists of baptism of water and Spirit. - THE PENTECOSTAL HERALD Dec. 1945

"It is doubtful if any Trinitarian Pentecostals have ever professed to believe in three gods, and Oneness Pentecostals should not claim that they do." - Daniel Segraves
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