Honestly, it sounds like they responded to their past in a really mature way, where a lot of other groups or institutions would try to cover it up. Props to them
The question is: Is what they have cited in support for their previous position in the bible or not. I found most churches (and Christians) to be dishonest on this. It's quite shocking once one realizes this.
@@metapolitikgedanken612 Their interpretation of Shem, Ham and Japheth was cited by other Christians in the past also, but it is not supported by the Bible.
@@Mojo32 That's like getting a new name or secular identity when you get baptized. You can run from your sins all you want, but they will still remain until washed away by God.
@@cowel8734 That was kind of my point. From Alma Mater (i.e. your school). That is to say: she was nourished/from White. Just seemed fitting for a white supremacist.
@@cedarwaxwing3509 The term "woke" is a subjective terminology that can vary and morph. I hate that term because it is an elusive delusion of self-grandeur.
@@thomasc9036 OK …. Not sure I understand “elusive delusion of self grandeur” in the context of your dislike of the word, but I certainly agree that it is a word that I wish had never been coined, mainly because it has been weaponized by right-wingers to smear any action or effort to accept people as they want to be accepted. It’s become a derisive (and incorrect) synonym for “tolerance” and the idea of leaving people or groups alone to live their lives as they are comfortable with or taking up for themselves when persecuted.
So my roommate and friend from college grew up in that church. We had many talks about the crazy backstory to Zarephath. As an Evangelical Charismatic myself, they have completely changed. Probably a lot like an E Free church now. There are stories of tunnels underground connecting some of their buildings. Crazy stuff. This year, I have realized time and time again, what you believe will shape the outcome of your choices, whether it is conscious or not.
Christians are not racists. "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature" (Mark 16:15, KJV). When the Lord Jesus Christ SAID "every" creature, He MEANT "every creature"--blacks as well as whites.
@@davidlafleche1142 you mean Christians in general right? Because there are definitely some people who wholeheartedly believe in the Christian Bible, and are also undeniably racist.
@@Numbabu Christians could never be racists. I even wrote a story about an interracial relationship ("Catch a Falling Star"--homepage/about). Roman Catholics could be racists (i.e., the Irish and Italians in Boston), but never Christians.
@David Lafleche Racism is the low hanging fruit of bigotry. IF some denomination accepts interracial congregations, it doesn't free them from recognizing the issues OF racism and it's history in this country and, honestly, the world. From racial bigotry to anti-semitism to any of a HOST of other rejections of ethnicity, culturalism, creed, and sexuality, religious fundamentalism stands at the heart of bigotry of each and every one.
@@justaguy6100 You can't judge them for the past. Funny how Biden has a racist past, but everybody ignores it; but you make up false accusations and think they'll stick.
@hasan Jesus was not ambiguous about who He is. He forgave sins (which only God) can do. He declared that he would judge the world for its sins. Only God may render final judgment.
Dude, I always appreciate your videos. Informative, well-researched content. As someone that loves theology, the church, and history, I always look forward to new stuff from you.
Christians are not racists. "Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God" (Matthew 5:9, KJV). It's likely that those fakers were/are Freemasons, not Christians.
I worked at one of their Christian schools in California. I had no idea about their past until a high school student told me to look it up. Quite fascinating. How diverse the school was , I would never have guessed about it's racist past. I enjoyed your video and seeing Pillar of Fire's history played out.
@@justaguy6100 My race is human. My creed ? I don't even know what you mean by that. Creed sounds like an irrelevant excuse for exclusion of others. Frank Zappa once said " The only difference between a church and a cult is that a church owns more real estate " Can't argue with that. Others have said the only difference between a church and a cult is 150 years. Can't argue with that either. I personally feel the only difference is one of perspective, from inside, it always looks like a church, political party, corporation, union,trade group, army, even a ' social reform movement '. But from outside the organization, it's always painfully obvious that it is just another chaos spewing cult.
@@sciencedavedunning3415 I like Zappa. And maybe you personally have no racist or religious bigotry. It's possible for individuals, I'll grant that. Creed is simply another term for a religious or faith tradition, and I think it includes agnosticism and atheism, the lack of a belief in some supernatural agency. I'm wondering from your comment if, by including a "social reform movement" among the organizations you listed, you feel that identifying an issue and describing it that is somehow just more cultish chaotic behavior. My view of that would be it's so broad based that even sitting where you sit and admonishing the rest makes your position equally cultish and chaos-spewing. I mean by that, the metric is too vague. It sounds like, and do expand on my explanation if you feel I haven't grasped your meaning well enough, at any point where you establish a beachhead of some organized thinking, whether religious, political, militaristic, or from social concern (in theory also political but I'll separate it) then it's a cult. And without a tighter definition of your position then it seems to imply that establishing an external observational critique of any social construct and it's potential or real harm is establishing the ideological groundwork for a cult. AND of course, among these social constructs, religion is unique in that it demands absolute adherence based on faith, belief in lieu of proof and don't ask for proof either. Also, don't judge results. The benefits of community and the comfort that faith gives some people is worthwhile, but the bigotry and stigmas it can be very harmful, especially when it bleeds into political and governmental systems. THEN it is a powerful tool of oppression. To me, ignoring that just to avoid being another voice doesn't track with my conscience.
I do not recall ever hearing any of this before, fascinating. Thank you for straightforward and comprehensive information without prejudice. I'm always desirous of historical knowledge of all things concerning Christianity in the USA but, also, as it has manifested in other countries. Your efforts are a valued resource.
Well...it's so ugly as Christians, so hard to be open about it. There were few SBC pastors who "encouraged" killing Charles Spurgeon due to his stance against slavery. The reality is that while the Pillar of Fire may have had unbiblical stances, the denomination was extremely charitable to battered women and poor blacks. We need to look at it from a historical context. KKK was holding massive rallies in NYC back then and many people didn't know about the violent actions.
Blatant racism has been an issue from time to time with every denomination and even non-Christian religions. Racism has been particularly a point of theology with many churches coming out of the Reform tradition or those influenced by some of Calvin's teachings. The Dutch Reformed Church of South Africa, SBC, Mormons to name a few held fervently to racial superiority at some point. Other denominations have had deliberately segregated congregations.
Indeed it is a sad truth but we can not change that past, but must instead strive for both individual and collective repentance and be better than those who proceeded us lest we suffer the same fate as them
@@Nemesistyx The concern was that different nations worshipped false gods. It was about mixing religions. I doubt God is concerned if a Polish Catholic marries a Brazilian Catholic; a Russian Jew marries an English Jew, or a Swedish Lutheran marries a Finnish Lutheran.
@@tomkoon4260I thought it was clear when Jesus said “So in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.”
It's sad when such terrible ideas were attached to being a follower of Christ. Nonetheless, it's good to see when those ideas are repented of publicly. May the Lord draw a straight line with what was once a crooked stick.
It's what happens when sinful people (which we all are) add their own human ideas to a sinless Christ! NO single denomination is 100% correct (even the one I am said to "belong" to). Whenever humans add their interpretations, things get convoluted. The main thing is, that Jesus Christ stands in our middle. That we acknowledge Him as our only savior and redeemer, True man and True God, send by the father, from the father to redeem humanity unto himself by dying on the cross for our sins, passing through and overcoming death itself, so that ALL that believe in him shall have everlasting life! It's about People finding to Jesus Christ, regardless how they experience or understand Him. ALL other things are just man-made gibberish!
Unfortunately there are a lot of racist tares in western Christianity. Tares pretending to be Christian have been infiltrating Christian churches and bringing in a lot of satanic racist poison into the churches for a long time. Racists are not Christian, they may claim to be Christian but they are not Christian at all. They are Pharisees hindering the gospel from reaching as many people as possible. On judgement day Jesus will say to all the racist "Christian" tares, "I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Satanic filth like alma bridwell white and other racist demons like her will never see heaven.
An interesting insight into the history of Christianity in the USA. We have certainly had our share of fringe churches, some of which have renounced the more objectionable oddities associated with their founding.
Unfortunately there are a lot of racist tares in western Christianity. Tares pretending to be Christian have been infiltrating Christian churches and bringing in a lot of satanic racist poison into the churches for a long time. Racists are not Christian, they may claim to be Christian but they are not Christian at all. They are Pharisees hindering the gospel from reaching as many people as possible. On judgement day Jesus will say to all the racist "Christian" tares, "I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Satanic filth like alma bridwell white and other racist demons like her will never see heaven.
Wow. I have to hand it to you. You have the courage to post this. If you can. Do a nice thoughtful video about the origin of the AME Church and their positive contributions to American Christianity. That would be greatly appreciated
As always thanks for an articulate and balanced post. When I was growing up in NW Ohio in a "mainline" denomination, a favorite aunt was always described as having been a "holy roller." It was used in a way that led me to think it was a dismissive term that meant she came from a charismatic tradition. It was also said that her mother was a preacher so maybe there's something to it. Unfortunately anyone who could she'd any light on this has passed and I've lost the opportunity for any serious questions to be asked, but again thanks for giving me something to think about.
@@stevenv6463 It wasn’t because of racism, God created one race which is the human race. read the verse afterwards which explains it. Deuteronomy 23:4 “because they did not meet you with bread and water on the road when you came out of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam the son of Beor from Pethor of Mesopotamia, to curse you.”
@@JESUS_IS_KING777_12 But doesn't this contradict the idea that everyone is put to death for their own sin? That the sin of the fathers doesn't get visited on the son?
@@stevenv6463 no it doesn’t because no one is being put to death because of the sins of their fathers nor is a father being put to death because of the sins of his son. They are just prohibited to enter the assembly. God is Holy therefore the assembly must also be Holy.
I can attest to the overall accuracy of this video with regard to the Zarephath Church. I do not know much of anything about the associated churches, including the ones outside the USA. I personally knew Rob Cruver back from when we were both young adults (late 1970's), long before he was senior pastor there, though I have not had contact with him for many years. His mom taught my eldest son in 1st grade at Temple Christian. I was disappointed with their radio station removing much of the sound biblical teaching from pastors from outside of the pillar of fire, like Alistair Begg as well as removing the hymns and replacing them with mostly contemporary "Christian" music (They use HD radio and I believe the side bands may still have some of that). I was surprised that they were able to buiid such a large edifice to worship in. I never personally attended there (my church is a stones throw away and much more modest in its trappings) but I have heard Rob preach on occassion.
The Curse of Ham was limited to the Canaanites and ended with them thousands of years ago. Even if black people are decedents of Ham, this curse has never applied to them.
And LDS had (have) similar racist beliefs. Blacks are said to bear tbe "mark of Cain" and slavery seen as fitting for Africans/blacks. LDS reluctantly began to allow black men into their priesthood in 1978, under threat from tbe IRS to remove their tax exempt status.
@@stevedealy8571 the Pearl of Great Price, their source authority for their views of Blacks, was re-translated by a Mormon Egyptologist and found to be a fraud.
Their change from supporting to opposing polygamy, as well as their views toward Black people, were both due to "visions" by the LDS President. And both times, the Federal government influenced them (the polygamy change was so Utah could join the USA, the Black person change was after Bob Jones University lost tax-exempt status for its racist views, and BYU was the next target of the IRS).
You may not be aware, but since Armstrong's death that church has repented and become an orthodox, trinitarian church. And yes, there were elements of racism in his teaching.
The church had a little mission congregation on East Capitol Street in Wahington, DC in the early 1960s. The wife of the preacher was a relative of ours and we stayed in their townhouse while visiting the city. We never knew any of this history and I find it fascinating.
It always stupefies me how bad intent and bad ideas can twist verses to suite their ideals. This is why doctrine matters and why context is king. Revelation clearly states God’s people are from every race and every nation.
If supposedly that church repented for their actions and the people who were personally responsible are "long gone," then why doesn't the chirch simply change their name??
What a shame. This is why I say that speaking in tongues is not evidence of being filled with the Holy Spirit. Those truly filled with God’s Spirit are known by their fruit. If you love not, you know not God for God is love.
Speaking in tongues is considered a gift, and is a sign of the Holy Spirit. The caveat is supposed to be that, it's not beneficial to speak in tongues without an interpreter.
@@kensmechanicalaffair : Blatant falsehood. The Bible specifically speaks about praying in the spirit, which is praying in tongues, on your own with no interpretation needed. Corinthians and Ephesians and other address this issue clearly. You are in gross spiritual error.
What an interesting piece of history! I had no idea that this lady ever lived, or the denomination ever existed. This is a good lesson for us today. We can't change our past but, by the grace of God, we can transcend it!
One of the reasons why I left the SBC was because of their past with slavery in the Deep South. I find more ancient, liturgical , and historic denominations more appealing theologically anyway. I don't like these one-off revelations people get and assume they can start their own church congregations without a council, synod, magisterium, or review board of any kind. Church doctrine and practices, as well as beliefs were standardized for a reason.
You completely misunderstand what the SBC is. I'm a baptist but in England so I'm not apart of the SBC. The SBC is a collection of churches who chose to identify together with common distinctives, but the SBC isn't a denomination and holds no authority over the local church. Baptist churches have histories attached to the time of Christ (although by different names). Theological positions between baptists are also not collective, there are modern and traditional, Arminian and Calvinist etc churches within different baptist groups. In England, many non denominational, baptists groups ect were founded by those who were inspired by Presbyterians in Scotland but we're congregational because every church is apart of the catholic church, but that doesn't mean a review body should exist over every church. I hope this helps, much loved brother in Christ.
Theology is independent of liturgy and liturgy often contradicts theology, which is a form of heresy (by that I mean error, not necessarily of the damnable kind). The understanding of scripture should always be the first goal, man's traditions are to be viewed with suspicion until show to be in keeping with God's word (Colossians 2:8).
Jared, I wonder if you keep miles away from the Democrat party? Democrats were the protectors of slavery and discrimination, and the party of the KKK. Even as late as the late the 1960s, most Democrats voted against Civil Rights laws. And, now, in a different fashion, they still are obsessed with practicing racial discrimination.
Scotland? Secular? You guys tried to invade London several times because your king wore a white cockade like a pansy and the English a black one. You guys invaded the world and forced people to learn English and read the Bible. Your Scottish country men genocides thousands of natives across canada
Very informative. Thank you for putting out these informative videos. This is the first time I heard about this group. Thankful the original ideology is no longer a part of this group.
Their church is still near the Colorado Capitol. I had no idea about their origins... embracing the Klan. Their were multitudes of Klan at marches in Denver early last century.
I was taught all that racism in the 70's at Hyde Park Southern Baptist in Austin Texas except for the promotion of the kkk and women teachers. They started a school in 1968 in response to desegregation. I don't go there anymore, most members refuse my testimony, but the congregation, school board still lookkks the same.
Wow, I just happened to stumble upon this video. It is eye-opening. I never learned any of this in grade school. And they do not push this curriculum in colleges and universities. You would have to take this subject as an elective. Thanks you so much for this education.
It is unfortunate that racist elements of America’s past have been pushed under the rug for much of our history, especially religious justification for racism. It is getting better in recent years with efforts to include it in education. That’s the good news. I find the push-back to that disheartening, though. It seems that the older generations were brought up with an edited version of US history that left out much of the race-based past, and they are having to come to terms with the fact that their education was incomplete. Many of them simply refuse to believe it, reflexively assuming they are being lied to. Usually, the first phase in any adjustment to change is: denial.
If they are still falsely teaching the Curse of Ham, that Black people are destined to be enslaved, then they haven’t deviated from their origins. Indoctrination in plain sight. Yes, some Black people do subscribe to this incorrect teaching of scripture. The curse of Ham was between Noah and HIS sons, NOT all humanity. Nowhere did God authorize Noah to curse all humanity. Noah could do something even Jesus didn’t do? No. If the curse was to still have power, then the Bible is a lie and Christ died for nothing.
@@adamprice3466 Judaism is an ethnic religion that doesn’t pretend to be for everyone. I too have an ethno-religion and we don’t go around converting non-Kikuyus to become religious Kikuyus because we understand our religion to be a binding glue for our ethnicity only. Whereas Christianity claims to be a universalist religion for everyone. “Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” Seems like you want to convert Christianity into an ethno-religion, which would be hard to do give Jesus’ intended mission statement. My advice would be for you to go find out what your ethnic religion is, because your ancestors were most likely ethnic religionists before they converted to Christianity - whether willingly or not. In Europe I hear that European paganism is going through a revival as non-Christian Europeans have dropped Christianity and tried to reclaim their ancestral religions. Maybe you should look into that. I personally think ethnic-religion is superior to universalist nonsense taught by Islam and Christianity. My parents tried to raise me up to be a Christian but it always sat wrong with me that God was a white guy lol, or that a white American southerner with a sister for a wife and I were somehow praying to the same God. No way no how!
She wasn’t entirely wrong either on the immigrant front. Many of the governance problems faced today are linked to some of our past immigration decisions.
@@iretirotimi6961Excessive political division for one. That’s why the government has trouble getting things done. The more complicated the ethnic mix has gotten, the more civil unrest has grown.
@@phil3924 Yup. If there were only First Nation people, everything would be sorted out at a Pow-Wow over a Pipe of Peace. Those scalp-collecting bigots from Old England with their guns 'n ammo caused all the problems.
I live near Cincinnati and I know people who go to one of the churches (Invictus Church). Never would’ve thought that it was founded endorsing the Klan.
Suddenly an incident that happened to me 30 years ago makes perfect sense. Back then I was a Seventh Day Adventist and was trying to convince a friend to come to church with me. She declined, saying that our founder was a racist and supporter of the KKK. I was horrified and told her that this was an obvious lie. But now that I’ve seen this video, I finally understood her position. The Seventh Day Adventist Church was also founded by a woman, one named Ellen White. Ellen White - Alma White… I can see how a mistake could’ve been made. Incidentally, I’m no longer with the SDA church, come to find out that Ellen White had a few nutty beliefs of her own.
You can take anything you want from any religious text, shape it in any way you want to shape it and claim it as some divine truth. I like watching these though. I need to watch some more of these on other religious beliefs.
"I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence(1 Tim 2:12). Every Church that has a woman as the head in violation of the Word of GOD, always lapsed into heresy
@@thursoberwick1948 Veneration of a saint is completely different from having an individual in charge of anything. Neither group believe that Mary ever commanded them to do anything or had any position of leadership in the early Church.
@@classicallpvault She is put above all people bar Jesus and called Queen of Heaven. So if you want to moan about female heads of the church you can look closer to home.
@@thursoberwick1948 That's an entirely baseless accusation, because I never stated my own opinion regarding female church leadership. What you describe is called veneration. She holds no authority in the Church and this is for a reason, because we don't know of a single instance when Mary took a position on any issue regarding church doctrines. You cannot have someone be an authority figure without having a single instruction to follow and that is by definition so.
This is why I am Presbyterian. We have a governing structure so that no one person can come in and do crazy stuff. Why this denomination still exists, and shares the same name, is so bizarre.
@@WHR0306 But the leadership of the Presb did nothing much to oppose the Klan. The Klan was actually stronger in the north and west, it was old hat in the south.
Went to school there from 69-79 and never experienced any klan activity, the church grew because much of this happened during the Great Depression and POF had food jobs. My grandfather grew up in Manville, was a Baptist, and was constantly harassed by the Catholic community that lived there so there was no love between Catholics and Protestant.it’s to bad that POF is haunted by this legacy which ended so many years ago
God bless you and save you all! "Struggle with all your power to gain Paradise. And do not listen to those who say that everyone will be saved. This is the trap of Satan so that we won't struggle." - Saint Paisios the Athonite
Thank you very much for your scholarship and factual, historical evidence. Well done!!! Your efforts provide me deeper, evidence based reasons for my continued atheism…
Truth is good. I was born into a Baptist Christian family. I then learned to read and research. Today, I stay away from religion and stay Spiritual. Afrikan Spiritual. Ubuntu Ma'at Ase'🇬🇼🇰🇪🇿🇦🇺🇸🙏🏿 Uhuru
I too have turned to read and research, and 'Christianity' should be a spiritual religion, in a spiritual church, with a spiritual communion with Christ. There is one truth and one religion in the Holy Bible, and I do sympathise with your disillusionment as there is so much false teaching and no attempt to correct errors, even in Baptist. Anyway I have a Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', with 23 videos you might relate to, I hope you watch because I aim to bring the truth.
This does raise the question of WHY they were such avid racists in the past. The passage about Noah and his sons can't be the core of it, given how it doesn't mention skin color or race, it was added with editorial brackets. HOW did they conclude Japheth was the progenitor of the 'whites' and Ham the progenitor of all the 'blacks'. It seems there is a thread of theology and philosophy there that hasn't been discussed yet. I suspect alot of it has to do with the then booming ideas of Darwin, which has inspired most racism of the 19th, 20th and 21st century.
As long as they repented of wrong doctrine, embraced the bible and put Christ back as the center, the past will never matter, not even the human leaders and founders would matter.
In 1966 I stood at Hyde Park Speakers' Corner in London observing the various speech makers. It was one of the most entertaining Sunday afternoons of my life. One of the speakers was screeching behind a small black podium that said "Pillar of Fire Society" on it. He was calling down fire and brimstone upon everyone standing around. Of course, at Hyde Park, he was just one of many very entertaining speakers. But the name stuck with me. This is the first I've heard of it since. Apparently they'd been evalgelizing Brits.
Since ZIP codes didn't begin until 1963, I sincerely doubt that the church's headquarters in New Jersey in the first half of the 20th Century "...had its own ZIP code...".
But none of those people in genesis like Noah and his children were white. They were Jewish Israelites. Jesus wasn’t white either he was born of a Jew. A young Jewish made me the cracks me up when you hear about Christian churches having racist roots, and they portrayed Jesus as the hippie surfer from California with blonde hair and blue eyes and white skin and that’s so inaccurate.
There's no evidence even biblical that the Canaanites were in fact black they probably were Brown not black, the land of Canaan AKA Palestine has been controlled by both Semitic peoples to Jews Israelites as well as Arabs and has been controlled by the descendants of japheth which according to the Bible would include the Greeks the Persians Etc
Not hard to see a connection between Alma White and Jack Chick. My great-granddad was a Methodist circuit rider and embraced none of the ideas of Pillar of Fire.
I'm not American, all I can say is the American Christianity seems really really strange loopy bizarre weird & wacky to me. Maybe it's just that the most extreme stuff gets noted. Maybe it's that whenever someone says they are Christian, they get seen as part of the definition of what a Christian is. Maybe we should start from a well defined definition such as what Christ taught, then measure their rhetoric & actions against that standard to see if they are what they claim to be.
@@baneofbanes Quite possibly, It's hard to tell because the ones doing the wrong thig are the loudest, getting in the public eye & big noting themselves for publicity, political advantage and so on. Presidential candidates invariably go for the Christian vote of course. On the other hand, Jesus taught his followers to do their good works in secret so that they will receive their reward in heaven. If anyone makes much of the good works publicly, they have already received their reward & will have none in heaven. So, the genuine believer will largely be unnoticed, except by those directly benefited & sometimes not even then. While Jesus did uphold the law, he introduced salvation by grace, not legalism. So, it's complicated. He taught the parable of the sheep & the goats. He also said "Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." There are Christians involved in charity, often overseas aid etc & some who are not. You probably won't see that. Personally, I see no point in Christians being involved in politics, except as a voice for others, the poor, the needy , the sick and the refugee etc. It is pointless them trying to impose their morality on others, because that won't save anyone. Faith in Jesus will save them, but reluctantly obeying laws under duress will not, because the central issue of the heart has not improved, in fact it has become worse. So all that effort that the right wing church put into that achieves nothing except making people angry with them & with God. The main issue is divine transformation of the person through the indwelling Spirit who is received by faith. Once that has happened, the issue of morality is God's business & will develop naturally over a life. It cannot be imposed, but must be entered into willingly. The Church has no business forcing anything on anyone. People who do that are working against God, setting themselves up as his enemy IMO.
The scripture in Genesis regarding God's pronouncement against Canaan was fulfilled when the Hebrews conquered the Canaanite nations, who then used them as slaves. The reference made to Japheth's future dominance was something Almighty God knew would eventually happen, not that He authorized or approved of it.
@Kathleen Calhoun The Most High recently revealed to me what you posted regarding the prophecy regarding Japheth inhabiting the tents of Shem. Noah was stating something that would happen. It wasn't what The Most High wanted to happen. He gave each brother their own territories and set the boundaries. There was no need for Japheth to inhabit the tents of Shem. Peace and blessings.
3:56 what in the world did I just read. I know that there are different interpretations of the Bible but this one is just wrong in every way shape and form
No we aren't all "one family". Humanity is diverse and there's beauty in that. Just because some people used to believe in racial supremacy, doesn't mean we have to go in the opposite direction.
Fascinating... but this was a general view amongst most white denominations either spoken or unspoken which is why so many separate black denomination sprung up...
Christ Community Church in Zion, Illinois is another church that is today a solidly evangelical church that downplays its past. It (and indeed the town itself) was founded by a complete loony and continued by his possibly crazier successor. The large church building (not the original) in the center of the town is at the head of the wide Shiloh Boulevard (spot the tabernacle reference), which runs down to Lake Michigan. Unfortunately the town is rather run down and poor quality buildings (including a decommissioned nuclear power plant) now flank the boulevard. Some of the church's international outreach today is to African communities that have retained the original teachings of the founder. The Zion church is the head of a small denomination called the Christian Catholic Church.
Judaism has it's own country for Jewish bloodlines and people overlook it. Perhaps it's not as evil of a thought as media propaganda makes it out to be.
They have a racist past but reformed and became non-racist. That is good. Paul was once a Christian persecutor but was touched by God and became a Christ disciple. There are stories of men, women of sordid past but come to the fold of the Lord.
One would think the leadership would completely disband and restart from scratch the denomination given their creepy past. I also fear that given the desire to repent of their denonations past racism they might drift into Wokeism.
They won't, at least not in the immediate future. Liberia is a very conservative society, and with the majority of the church's members coming from there (including the head of the church itself), that kind of drift will be almost impossible to initiate. On the other hand, they did go from the KKK's number one fan to a majority black church, so who knows.
Honestly, it sounds like they responded to their past in a really mature way, where a lot of other groups or institutions would try to cover it up. Props to them
The question is: Is what they have cited in support for their previous position in the bible or not. I found most churches (and Christians) to be dishonest on this. It's quite shocking once one realizes this.
@@metapolitikgedanken612 Their interpretation of Shem, Ham and Japheth was cited by other Christians in the past also, but it is not supported by the Bible.
They were so far out there with it , there was no way to cover it.
Why don't they simply change their church's name in another act of actually distancing themselves?
@@Mojo32 That's like getting a new name or secular identity when you get baptized. You can run from your sins all you want, but they will still remain until washed away by God.
Her birth name was Alma White? Man, if that's not nominative determinism I don't know what is.
Oh I agree very ironic Name by the way Alma is in Latin means soul
@@bobbystclaire No, it means mercifull
Alma in latin = nourishing , kind
I googled it
@@cowel8734 That was kind of my point. From Alma Mater (i.e. your school). That is to say: she was nourished/from White. Just seemed fitting for a white supremacist.
@@rbarnett3200 Lol Yes I agree its a pretty accurate naming.
We should never forget the past. We should learn from it and do better.
"Woke" is not about changing history but about understanding history from multiple viewpoints . . . and learning from it . . . Just as you say!
@@brettbarager9101 You seem pretty set on defining the term "woke" for others when others want to define it for themselves...
@@thomasc9036 so your definition would be???
@@cedarwaxwing3509 The term "woke" is a subjective terminology that can vary and morph. I hate that term because it is an elusive delusion of self-grandeur.
@@thomasc9036 OK …. Not sure I understand “elusive delusion of self grandeur” in the context of your dislike of the word, but I certainly agree that it is a word that I wish had never been coined, mainly because it has been weaponized by right-wingers to smear any action or effort to accept people as they want to be accepted. It’s become a derisive (and incorrect) synonym for “tolerance” and the idea of leaving people or groups alone to live their lives as they are comfortable with or taking up for themselves when persecuted.
So my roommate and friend from college grew up in that church. We had many talks about the crazy backstory to Zarephath. As an Evangelical Charismatic myself, they have completely changed. Probably a lot like an E Free church now. There are stories of tunnels underground connecting some of their buildings. Crazy stuff.
This year, I have realized time and time again, what you believe will shape the outcome of your choices, whether it is conscious or not.
Christians are not racists. "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature" (Mark 16:15, KJV). When the Lord Jesus Christ SAID "every" creature, He MEANT "every creature"--blacks as well as whites.
@@davidlafleche1142 you mean Christians in general right? Because there are definitely some people who wholeheartedly believe in the Christian Bible, and are also undeniably racist.
@@Numbabu Christians could never be racists. I even wrote a story about an interracial relationship ("Catch a Falling Star"--homepage/about). Roman Catholics could be racists (i.e., the Irish and Italians in Boston), but never Christians.
@David Lafleche Racism is the low hanging fruit of bigotry. IF some denomination accepts interracial congregations, it doesn't free them from recognizing the issues OF racism and it's history in this country and, honestly, the world. From racial bigotry to anti-semitism to any of a HOST of other rejections of ethnicity, culturalism, creed, and sexuality, religious fundamentalism stands at the heart of bigotry of each and every one.
@@justaguy6100 You can't judge them for the past. Funny how Biden has a racist past, but everybody ignores it; but you make up false accusations and think they'll stick.
I guess they didn't like Galatians much.
Perhaps, given they recognize that there is such a thing as male and female.
A lot of churches hate Galatians
The Epistle to the Galatians is a major problem to a lot of fundamentalists.
@@HasanUnknown Jesus called himself The Truth. Take that as you may.
@hasan Jesus was not ambiguous about who He is. He forgave sins (which only God) can do. He declared that he would judge the world for its sins. Only God may render final judgment.
Seeing my local radio station tied to this weirds me out 😳
Dude, I always appreciate your videos. Informative, well-researched content. As someone that loves theology, the church, and history, I always look forward to new stuff from you.
Thanks so much!
@@ReadyToHarvest the Lightning Cross is not to Desecrate but to REVER
Christians are not racists. "Blessed are the peacemakers: for they shall be called the children of God" (Matthew 5:9, KJV). It's likely that those fakers were/are Freemasons, not Christians.
I worked at one of their Christian schools in California. I had no idea about their past until a high school student told me to look it up. Quite fascinating. How diverse the school was , I would never have guessed about it's racist past. I enjoyed your video and seeing Pillar of Fire's history played out.
HOWever would you say that they continue to have an affinity with Christian Nationalism? Diversity isn't just a matter of race but of creed as well.
@@justaguy6100 My race is human. My creed ? I don't even know what you mean by that. Creed sounds like an irrelevant excuse for exclusion of others. Frank Zappa once said " The only difference between a church and a cult is that a church owns more real estate " Can't argue with that.
Others have said the only difference between a church and a cult is 150 years. Can't argue with that either.
I personally feel the only difference is one of perspective, from inside, it always looks like a church, political party, corporation, union,trade group, army, even a ' social reform movement '. But from outside the organization, it's always painfully obvious that it is just another chaos spewing cult.
@@sciencedavedunning3415 I like Zappa. And maybe you personally have no racist or religious bigotry. It's possible for individuals, I'll grant that. Creed is simply another term for a religious or faith tradition, and I think it includes agnosticism and atheism, the lack of a belief in some supernatural agency.
I'm wondering from your comment if, by including a "social reform movement" among the organizations you listed, you feel that identifying an issue and describing it that is somehow just more cultish chaotic behavior. My view of that would be it's so broad based that even sitting where you sit and admonishing the rest makes your position equally cultish and chaos-spewing. I mean by that, the metric is too vague.
It sounds like, and do expand on my explanation if you feel I haven't grasped your meaning well enough, at any point where you establish a beachhead of some organized thinking, whether religious, political, militaristic, or from social concern (in theory also political but I'll separate it) then it's a cult. And without a tighter definition of your position then it seems to imply that establishing an external observational critique of any social construct and it's potential or real harm is establishing the ideological groundwork for a cult.
AND of course, among these social constructs, religion is unique in that it demands absolute adherence based on faith, belief in lieu of proof and don't ask for proof either. Also, don't judge results. The benefits of community and the comfort that faith gives some people is worthwhile, but the bigotry and stigmas it can be very harmful, especially when it bleeds into political and governmental systems. THEN it is a powerful tool of oppression.
To me, ignoring that just to avoid being another voice doesn't track with my conscience.
@@sciencedavedunning3415 Your race isn't only human, your race is also what you were born as. Ignoring that would be ignoring actual racism, just fyi.
@@Raytheman581 I do try to ignore racism, but it just seems to crop up over and over, year after year. I wish people would grow up.
I do not recall ever hearing any of this before, fascinating. Thank you for straightforward and comprehensive information without prejudice. I'm always desirous of historical knowledge of all things concerning Christianity in the USA but, also, as it has manifested in other countries. Your efforts are a valued resource.
You're welcome Chuck, glad you found the channel.
Well...it's so ugly as Christians, so hard to be open about it. There were few SBC pastors who "encouraged" killing Charles Spurgeon due to his stance against slavery. The reality is that while the Pillar of Fire may have had unbiblical stances, the denomination was extremely charitable to battered women and poor blacks. We need to look at it from a historical context. KKK was holding massive rallies in NYC back then and many people didn't know about the violent actions.
I'm always desirous of historical knowledge of all things concerning black Christianity in the USA today. Very anti-white racist.
This was very informative and interesting. Thank you for all the work you do to make these videos 🙏
Well done presentation in it's research, balance, fairness, and perspective. I will look forward to viewing your other videos.
Blatant racism has been an issue from time to time with every denomination and even non-Christian religions. Racism has been particularly a point of theology with many churches coming out of the Reform tradition or those influenced by some of Calvin's teachings. The Dutch Reformed Church of South Africa, SBC, Mormons to name a few held fervently to racial superiority at some point. Other denominations have had deliberately segregated congregations.
Indeed it is a sad truth but we can not change that past, but must instead strive for both individual and collective repentance and be better than those who proceeded us lest we suffer the same fate as them
The bible literally commands you to be different nations of people... Gen 1:12, 3:15, 24:7 and Numbers25:7-11
@@Nemesistyx The concern was that different nations worshipped false gods. It was about mixing religions. I doubt God is concerned if a Polish Catholic marries a Brazilian Catholic; a Russian Jew marries an English Jew, or a Swedish Lutheran marries a Finnish Lutheran.
@@tomkoon4260I thought it was clear when Jesus said “So in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is neither Jew nor Gentile, neither slave nor free, nor is there male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.”
So true asb lack Christianity in the USA today and for some time is very anti-white racist.
It's sad when such terrible ideas were attached to being a follower of Christ. Nonetheless, it's good to see when those ideas are repented of publicly. May the Lord draw a straight line with what was once a crooked stick.
It's what happens when sinful people (which we all are) add their own human ideas to a sinless Christ! NO single denomination is 100% correct (even the one I am said to "belong" to). Whenever humans add their interpretations, things get convoluted. The main thing is, that Jesus Christ stands in our middle. That we acknowledge Him as our only savior and redeemer, True man and True God, send by the father, from the father to redeem humanity unto himself by dying on the cross for our sins, passing through and overcoming death itself, so that ALL that believe in him shall have everlasting life!
It's about People finding to Jesus Christ, regardless how they experience or understand Him. ALL other things are just man-made gibberish!
This is the case in most black churches today and for decades. White hate and blame is off the charts.
@@pepjrp As someone who only attend black churches this is 100% a lie.
This is because the yankees were & still are obstinate heretics.
Unfortunately there are a lot of racist tares in western Christianity. Tares pretending to be Christian have been infiltrating Christian churches and bringing in a lot of satanic racist poison into the churches for a long time. Racists are not Christian, they may claim to be Christian but they are not Christian at all. They are Pharisees hindering the gospel from reaching as many people as possible. On judgement day Jesus will say to all the racist "Christian" tares, "I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Satanic filth like alma bridwell white and other racist demons like her will never see heaven.
Really fun to stumble upon this after attending Sunday Mass lol
An interesting insight into the history of Christianity in the USA. We have certainly had our share of fringe churches, some of which have renounced the more objectionable oddities associated with their founding.
Personally, I don't associate Christianity with a loon and cult hating fellowship.
@@mikefinley4367 fair point, but still an interesting historical perspective. It's good that they have left the 'looniness' behind.
Unfortunately there are a lot of racist tares in western Christianity. Tares pretending to be Christian have been infiltrating Christian churches and bringing in a lot of satanic racist poison into the churches for a long time. Racists are not Christian, they may claim to be Christian but they are not Christian at all. They are Pharisees hindering the gospel from reaching as many people as possible. On judgement day Jesus will say to all the racist "Christian" tares, "I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity." Satanic filth like alma bridwell white and other racist demons like her will never see heaven.
Wow. I have to hand it to you. You have the courage to post this. If you can. Do a nice thoughtful video about the origin of the AME Church and their positive contributions to American Christianity. That would be greatly appreciated
As always thanks for an articulate and balanced post.
When I was growing up in NW Ohio in a "mainline" denomination, a favorite aunt was always described as having been a "holy roller." It was used in a way that led me to think it was a dismissive term that meant she came from a charismatic tradition. It was also said that her mother was a preacher so maybe there's something to it.
Unfortunately anyone who could she'd any light on this has passed and I've lost the opportunity for any serious questions to be asked, but again thanks for giving me something to think about.
There would be information through research…old newspapers, archives at county historical society
I’ve watched a lot of your videos and this may be my favourite. Fascinating history
Thank you Ian!
Glad I was recommended this by the algorithm. Very informative. 👍
This channel is awesome
@@TestifyApologetics It really is. And yours is pretty awesome too! Keep up the good work.
Normie
There is nothing Christian about racism and bigotry.
Doesn't the mosaic law say that certain Canaanite groups can't enter the assembly for generations?
@@stevenv6463 It wasn’t because of racism, God created one race which is the human race. read the verse afterwards which explains it. Deuteronomy 23:4 “because they did not meet you with bread and water on the road when you came out of Egypt, and because they hired against you Balaam the son of Beor from Pethor of Mesopotamia, to curse you.”
@@JESUS_IS_KING777_12 But doesn't this contradict the idea that everyone is put to death for their own sin? That the sin of the fathers doesn't get visited on the son?
@@stevenv6463 no it doesn’t because no one is being put to death because of the sins of their fathers nor is a father being put to death because of the sins of his son. They are just prohibited to enter the assembly. God is Holy therefore the assembly must also be Holy.
@@JESUS_IS_KING777_12 Isn't being cut off from the assembly the same punishment for major sins under the Mosaic law like breaking the Sabbath?
I can attest to the overall accuracy of this video with regard to the Zarephath Church. I do not know much of anything about the associated churches, including the ones outside the USA. I personally knew Rob Cruver back from when we were both young adults (late 1970's), long before he was senior pastor there, though I have not had contact with him for many years. His mom taught my eldest son in 1st grade at Temple Christian. I was disappointed with their radio station removing much of the sound biblical teaching from pastors from outside of the pillar of fire, like Alistair Begg as well as removing the hymns and replacing them with mostly contemporary "Christian" music (They use HD radio and I believe the side bands may still have some of that). I was surprised that they were able to buiid such a large edifice to worship in. I never personally attended there (my church is a stones throw away and much more modest in its trappings) but I have heard Rob preach on occassion.
Here in the Bahamas, The Church of God of Prophecy is almost formally referred to as the Jumper Church for the same reason.
The Curse of Ham was limited to the Canaanites and ended with them thousands of years ago. Even if black people are decedents of Ham, this curse has never applied to them.
Made me think how LDS started out polygamous but have since changed too.
Mormonism is still a cult
And LDS had (have) similar racist beliefs. Blacks are said to bear tbe "mark of Cain" and slavery seen as fitting for Africans/blacks. LDS reluctantly began to allow black men into their priesthood in 1978, under threat from tbe IRS to remove their tax exempt status.
@@stevedealy8571 That is also an heresy
@@stevedealy8571 the Pearl of Great Price, their source authority for their views of Blacks, was re-translated by a Mormon Egyptologist and found to be a fraud.
Their change from supporting to opposing polygamy, as well as their views toward Black people, were both due to "visions" by the LDS President. And both times, the Federal government influenced them (the polygamy change was so Utah could join the USA, the Black person change was after Bob Jones University lost tax-exempt status for its racist views, and BYU was the next target of the IRS).
Even today, the fundamental Baptist believe the things Alma White taught especially what she said about Blacks.
And what she believed about Catholics.
Agreed
that is a full blown railing accusation. Most fundamental baptists wouldnt even listen to her, considering she is a female preacher
Please do videos on the movement started by Herbert W Armstrong. There's also elements of racism in his teachings.
I have a couple videos on them coming in March 2023. Stick around!
@@ReadyToHarvest Thanks.
You may not be aware, but since Armstrong's death that church has repented and become an orthodox, trinitarian church. And yes, there were elements of racism in his teaching.
@@MikeHammer1 his Church splintered and the splinter groups still follow his teachings till today
@@nathanjohnwade2289 Thanks for the update. It is not surprising to hear that as the main reason to splinter would be to keep to their old ways.
The church had a little mission congregation on East Capitol Street in Wahington, DC in the early 1960s. The wife of the preacher was a relative of ours and we stayed in their townhouse while visiting the city. We never knew any of this history and I find it fascinating.
It always stupefies me how bad intent and bad ideas can twist verses to suite their ideals. This is why doctrine matters and why context is king. Revelation clearly states God’s people are from every race and every nation.
Ready to Harvest always makes videos that catch my interest. God bless you.
If supposedly that church repented for their actions and the people who were personally responsible are "long gone," then why doesn't the chirch simply change their name??
What a shame. This is why I say that speaking in tongues is not evidence of being filled with the Holy Spirit. Those truly filled with God’s Spirit are known by their fruit. If you love not, you know not God for God is love.
ISay: Blasphemy.
@@wrongfullyaccused7139 Which part?
@@jsharp3165 : That part where ISay said speaking in tongues is not evidence of the Holy Ghost. That person has never studied a Bible in their lives.
Speaking in tongues is considered a gift, and is a sign of the Holy Spirit. The caveat is supposed to be that, it's not beneficial to speak in tongues without an interpreter.
@@kensmechanicalaffair : Blatant falsehood. The Bible specifically speaks about praying in the spirit, which is praying in tongues, on your own with no interpretation needed. Corinthians and Ephesians and other address this issue clearly.
You are in gross spiritual error.
Always appreciate your research and presentation! Fascinating content. Thank you!
THOROUGHLY enjoyed this presentation. Thumbs up.
What an interesting piece of history! I had no idea that this lady ever lived, or the denomination ever existed. This is a good lesson for us today. We can't change our past but, by the grace of God, we can transcend it!
Sadly, false teachers influence so many.
Extremely interesting story. Thank you.
One of the reasons why I left the SBC was because of their past with slavery in the Deep South. I find more ancient, liturgical , and historic denominations more appealing theologically anyway. I don't like these one-off revelations people get and assume they can start their own church congregations without a council, synod, magisterium, or review board of any kind. Church doctrine and practices, as well as beliefs were standardized for a reason.
You completely misunderstand what the SBC is. I'm a baptist but in England so I'm not apart of the SBC. The SBC is a collection of churches who chose to identify together with common distinctives, but the SBC isn't a denomination and holds no authority over the local church. Baptist churches have histories attached to the time of Christ (although by different names). Theological positions between baptists are also not collective, there are modern and traditional, Arminian and Calvinist etc churches within different baptist groups. In England, many non denominational, baptists groups ect were founded by those who were inspired by Presbyterians in Scotland but we're congregational because every church is apart of the catholic church, but that doesn't mean a review body should exist over every church. I hope this helps, much loved brother in Christ.
Theology is independent of liturgy and liturgy often contradicts theology, which is a form of heresy (by that I mean error, not necessarily of the damnable kind). The understanding of scripture should always be the first goal, man's traditions are to be viewed with suspicion until show to be in keeping with God's word (Colossians 2:8).
Jared, I wonder if you keep miles away from the Democrat party? Democrats were the protectors of slavery and discrimination, and the party of the KKK. Even as late as the late the 1960s, most Democrats voted against Civil Rights laws. And, now, in a different fashion, they still are obsessed with practicing racial discrimination.
@@MikeHammer1 Yes, men's traditions like liturgies and catechisms.
@@mercster Judaism not "men's traditions" which weren't forbidden by the way.
Greg Loch bringing all that stuff back into the main stream.
Racist Christian is an oxymoron. The Good Samaritan didn't think that way.
As someone from a fairly secular country 🇬🇧 specifically 🏴 America is rather backward in its religiosity, it's rather weird.
I'm not religious.
That's because the first settlers of British America were the ones you threw out because they were too religiously crazy.
Scotland? Secular? You guys tried to invade London several times because your king wore a white cockade like a pansy and the English a black one. You guys invaded the world and forced people to learn English and read the Bible. Your Scottish country men genocides thousands of natives across canada
@@dylan4964
FYI we're well into the 21st century, are you taking a trip in the TARDIS perchance 🤔
@Duncan Bryson I'm talking about the actions of your so called secular Scotland a country that covered the world in blood for God and king
@@dylan4964
Are you really this stupid? 🙄
Very informative. Thank you for putting out these informative videos. This is the first time I heard about this group. Thankful the original ideology is no longer a part of this group.
Just a quick hello as we appear to share a common surname. BTW, I live very near this church and personally knew their pastor, Rob Cruver.
Their church is still near the Colorado Capitol. I had no idea about their origins... embracing the Klan. Their were multitudes of Klan at marches in Denver early last century.
It's good to know that they repented of their vile abomination of racism.
May God redeem any and all racists from their folly.
Do you claim the Jews are the chosen people....?
I was taught all that racism in the 70's at Hyde Park Southern Baptist in Austin Texas except for the promotion of the kkk and women teachers. They started a school in 1968 in response to desegregation. I don't go there anymore, most members refuse my testimony, but the congregation, school board still lookkks the same.
Wow, I just happened to stumble upon this video. It is eye-opening. I never learned any of this in grade school. And they do not push this curriculum in colleges and universities. You would have to take this subject as an elective. Thanks you so much for this education.
It is unfortunate that racist elements of America’s past have been pushed under the rug for much of our history, especially religious justification for racism. It is getting better in recent years with efforts to include it in education. That’s the good news.
I find the push-back to that disheartening, though. It seems that the older generations were brought up with an edited version of US history that left out much of the race-based past, and they are having to come to terms with the fact that their education was incomplete. Many of them simply refuse to believe it, reflexively assuming they are being lied to. Usually, the first phase in any adjustment to change is: denial.
To bad everyone doesn’t believe it
If they are still falsely teaching the Curse of Ham, that Black people are destined to be enslaved, then they haven’t deviated from their origins. Indoctrination in plain sight.
Yes, some Black people do subscribe to this incorrect teaching of scripture.
The curse of Ham was between Noah and HIS sons, NOT all humanity. Nowhere did God authorize Noah to curse all humanity. Noah could do something even Jesus didn’t do? No.
If the curse was to still have power, then the Bible is a lie and Christ died for nothing.
Do you see historically these viewpoints seeping into other denominations or interconnecting with other faith branches?
Judaism has a nation for jewish bloodlines and most people seem fine with it. Idk people act like Christians doing it is the worst thing ever.
@@adamprice3466 Judaism is an ethnic religion that doesn’t pretend to be for everyone. I too have an ethno-religion and we don’t go around converting non-Kikuyus to become religious Kikuyus because we understand our religion to be a binding glue for our ethnicity only. Whereas Christianity claims to be a universalist religion for everyone.
“Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
Seems like you want to convert Christianity into an ethno-religion, which would be hard to do give Jesus’ intended mission statement. My advice would be for you to go find out what your ethnic religion is, because your ancestors were most likely ethnic religionists before they converted to Christianity - whether willingly or not. In Europe I hear that European paganism is going through a revival as non-Christian Europeans have dropped Christianity and tried to reclaim their ancestral religions. Maybe you should look into that.
I personally think ethnic-religion is superior to universalist nonsense taught by Islam and Christianity. My parents tried to raise me up to be a Christian but it always sat wrong with me that God was a white guy lol, or that a white American southerner with a sister for a wife and I were somehow praying to the same God. No way no how!
@@mugikuyu9403
Well according to this video many sects of Christianity do not and/or historically did not pretend to be for everyone.
Outstanding commentary. You just earned a new subscriber. Keep up the good works. 👌🏾👍🏾
The stuff she said about immigrants is scarily similar to stuff we hear about immigrants today, sometimes even from Christian platforms.
She wasn’t entirely wrong either on the immigrant front. Many of the governance problems faced today are linked to some of our past immigration decisions.
@@phil3924 which government problems?
@@iretirotimi6961Excessive political division for one. That’s why the government has trouble getting things done. The more complicated the ethnic mix has gotten, the more civil unrest has grown.
@@phil3924 Yup. If there were only First Nation people, everything would be sorted out at a Pow-Wow over a Pipe of Peace. Those scalp-collecting bigots from Old England with their guns 'n ammo caused all the problems.
That's because immigrants are bringing crime today.
I live near Cincinnati and I know people who go to one of the churches (Invictus Church). Never would’ve thought that it was founded endorsing the Klan.
Suddenly an incident that happened to me 30 years ago makes perfect sense. Back then I was a Seventh Day Adventist and was trying to convince a friend to come to church with me. She declined, saying that our founder was a racist and supporter of the KKK. I was horrified and told her that this was an obvious lie.
But now that I’ve seen this video, I finally understood her position. The Seventh Day Adventist Church was also founded by a woman, one named Ellen White. Ellen White - Alma White… I can see how a mistake could’ve been made.
Incidentally, I’m no longer with the SDA church, come to find out that Ellen White had a few nutty beliefs of her own.
Yhe KKK hated Jews, Catholics and Blacks. The SDA is very anti- Catholic
Why are you not in the SDA church anymore? What nutty beliefs did Ellen white hold?
As a Southern Baptist we were always taught, and I firmly believe that the SDA is a false cult.
Thanks for sharing this very interesting video. It’s mind boggling. I wonder where her soul is at now?
You can take anything you want from any religious text, shape it in any way you want to shape it and claim it as some divine truth. I like watching these though. I need to watch some more of these on other religious beliefs.
"I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the man, but to be in silence(1 Tim 2:12). Every Church that has a woman as the head in violation of the Word of GOD, always lapsed into heresy
Like Mary for the Catholics and Orthodox then. The main figure in those churches below God himself.
Amen
@@thursoberwick1948 Veneration of a saint is completely different from having an individual in charge of anything. Neither group believe that Mary ever commanded them to do anything or had any position of leadership in the early Church.
@@classicallpvault She is put above all people bar Jesus and called Queen of Heaven. So if you want to moan about female heads of the church you can look closer to home.
@@thursoberwick1948 That's an entirely baseless accusation, because I never stated my own opinion regarding female church leadership.
What you describe is called veneration. She holds no authority in the Church and this is for a reason, because we don't know of a single instance when Mary took a position on any issue regarding church doctrines. You cannot have someone be an authority figure without having a single instruction to follow and that is by definition so.
Thank you for covering the topic.
This is why I am Presbyterian. We have a governing structure so that no one person can come in and do crazy stuff. Why this denomination still exists, and shares the same name, is so bizarre.
Lots of Presbyterians were in the Klan back in the day including ministers see the recent book he referenced.
@@johnnyplunkett8532 I realize that. Many people from many denominations were, but not our entire denomination.
@@WHR0306 But the leadership of the Presb did nothing much to oppose the Klan. The Klan was actually stronger in the north and west, it was old hat in the south.
@@johnnyplunkett8532 It depends on which Presbyterian Church you are talking about. The Presbyterian Church literally split over racism and slavery.
@@johnnyplunkett8532 I'm a member of PCUSA, and from the beginning we have always been unapologetic about our stances on social issues.
Went to school there from 69-79 and never experienced any klan activity, the church grew because much of this happened during the Great Depression and POF had food jobs. My grandfather grew up in Manville, was a Baptist, and was constantly harassed by the Catholic community that lived there so there was no love between Catholics and Protestant.it’s to bad that POF is haunted by this legacy which ended so many years ago
God bless you and save you all! "Struggle with all your power to gain Paradise. And do not listen to those who say that everyone will be saved. This is the trap of Satan so that we won't struggle." - Saint Paisios the Athonite
Wait god let's some people burn in hell forever isn't very loving but when has the Christian god ever consistent with his benevolence
Thank you very much for your scholarship and factual, historical evidence. Well done!!!
Your efforts provide me deeper, evidence based reasons for my continued atheism…
Truth is good. I was born into a Baptist Christian family. I then learned to read and research. Today, I stay away from religion and stay Spiritual. Afrikan Spiritual. Ubuntu Ma'at Ase'🇬🇼🇰🇪🇿🇦🇺🇸🙏🏿 Uhuru
I too have turned to read and research, and 'Christianity' should be a spiritual religion, in a spiritual church, with a spiritual communion with Christ.
There is one truth and one religion in the Holy Bible, and I do sympathise with your disillusionment as there is so much false teaching and no attempt to correct errors, even in Baptist.
Anyway I have a Ytube video series called 'Myths in so-called Christianity', with 23 videos you might relate to, I hope you watch because I aim to bring the truth.
@@simonskinner1450 I appreciate you, but no. I like what I have become and are becoming. Take care though. I wish you the best.
Misguided...
You are judging christianity by a racist denomniation?
@@dopamine-boost Nope.... just the people doing it.
Dont let people let you miss out on how awesome Jesus is!
I've listen to Star 99 when traveling up thru North Jersey. I never new this history. Thank God it has changed!!
She would freak out knowing the college of her name is in Newark, NJ.
Have they also denounced and repented for their anti- Catholic policies?
That's a surprise. I'm surrounded by native American people. Most of my family is native American. Way more American than any white guy.
So Pillar ministries is making progress! Finally they accepted The Rabbi Jesus Christ teaching! Lord Jesus Christ!
thank so much for these informative vids. Much appreciated.
Thank you for your service, sir. This is a subscribe-worthy video.
Could you do a video on the Antioch movement?
This does raise the question of WHY they were such avid racists in the past. The passage about Noah and his sons can't be the core of it, given how it doesn't mention skin color or race, it was added with editorial brackets. HOW did they conclude Japheth was the progenitor of the 'whites' and Ham the progenitor of all the 'blacks'. It seems there is a thread of theology and philosophy there that hasn't been discussed yet. I suspect alot of it has to do with the then booming ideas of Darwin, which has inspired most racism of the 19th, 20th and 21st century.
As long as they repented of wrong doctrine, embraced the bible and put Christ back as the center, the past will never matter, not even the human leaders and founders would matter.
In 1966 I stood at Hyde Park Speakers' Corner in London observing the various speech makers. It was one of the most entertaining Sunday afternoons of my life. One of the speakers was screeching behind a small black podium that said "Pillar of Fire Society" on it. He was calling down fire and brimstone upon everyone standing around. Of course, at Hyde Park, he was just one of many very entertaining speakers. But the name stuck with me. This is the first I've heard of it since. Apparently they'd been evalgelizing Brits.
You know what they say; "Follow the money"
Very Excellent historical and balanced presentation
Sometimes you need a conversion story particularly from someone who thought he or she was righteous before. Like Paul.
Since ZIP codes didn't begin until 1963, I sincerely doubt that the church's headquarters in New Jersey in the first half of the 20th Century "...had its own ZIP code...".
I was gonna say......
But none of those people in genesis like Noah and his children were white. They were Jewish Israelites. Jesus wasn’t white either he was born of a Jew. A young Jewish made me the cracks me up when you hear about Christian churches having racist roots, and they portrayed Jesus as the hippie surfer from California with blonde hair and blue eyes and white skin and that’s so inaccurate.
I grew up in New Jersey, I absolutely remember Star 99.1. Holy moly, I had no idea.
I have heard of that Japeth race stuff. Interesting the twists and turns they've taken.
There's no evidence even biblical that the Canaanites were in fact black they probably were Brown not black, the land of Canaan AKA Palestine has been controlled by both Semitic peoples to Jews Israelites as well as Arabs and has been controlled by the descendants of japheth which according to the Bible would include the Greeks the Persians Etc
Zondervan's Bible concordance states that Ham is the father of the African and not the negro. It states that Shem fathered the negro. Pretty wild huh
Not hard to see a connection between Alma White and Jack Chick. My great-granddad was a Methodist circuit rider and embraced none of the ideas of Pillar of Fire.
I'm not American, all I can say is the American Christianity seems really really strange loopy bizarre weird & wacky to me.
Maybe it's just that the most extreme stuff gets noted. Maybe it's that whenever someone says they are Christian, they get seen as part of the definition of what a Christian is. Maybe we should start from a well defined definition such as what Christ taught, then measure their rhetoric & actions against that standard to see if they are what they claim to be.
Most Christian’s of most denominations wouldn’t be Christian then.
@@baneofbanes Quite possibly, It's hard to tell because the ones doing the wrong thig are the loudest, getting in the public eye & big noting themselves for publicity, political advantage and so on. Presidential candidates invariably go for the Christian vote of course.
On the other hand, Jesus taught his followers to do their good works in secret so that they will receive their reward in heaven. If anyone makes much of the good works publicly, they have already received their reward & will have none in heaven. So, the genuine believer will largely be unnoticed, except by those directly benefited & sometimes not even then.
While Jesus did uphold the law, he introduced salvation by grace, not legalism. So, it's complicated. He taught the parable of the sheep & the goats. He also said "Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." There are Christians involved in charity, often overseas aid etc & some who are not. You probably won't see that.
Personally, I see no point in Christians being involved in politics, except as a voice for others, the poor, the needy , the sick and the refugee etc. It is pointless them trying to impose their morality on others, because that won't save anyone. Faith in Jesus will save them, but reluctantly obeying laws under duress will not, because the central issue of the heart has not improved, in fact it has become worse. So all that effort that the right wing church put into that achieves nothing except making people angry with them & with God. The main issue is divine transformation of the person through the indwelling Spirit who is received by faith. Once that has happened, the issue of morality is God's business & will develop naturally over a life. It cannot be imposed, but must be entered into willingly. The Church has no business forcing anything on anyone. People who do that are working against God, setting themselves up as his enemy IMO.
Why is it so wacky? Judaism has it's own nation for jewish bloodlines right now in 2022. It's not really that strange of a notion
@@adamprice3466 because Christianity is a religion explicitly not supposed to be limited to one race or nation.
Look dude just say you’re a racist.
@@baneofbanes
That isn't wackyness just because someone interprets a religion differently than you.
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing this information.
"Hate speech is fine because the bible says so."
Thanks for the heads up
Australia: dumping ground for criminals worked out pretty well for us 😂
The scripture in Genesis regarding God's pronouncement against Canaan was fulfilled when the Hebrews conquered the Canaanite nations, who then used them as slaves. The reference made to Japheth's future dominance was something Almighty God knew would eventually happen, not that He authorized or approved of it.
@Kathleen Calhoun The Most High recently revealed to me what you posted regarding the prophecy regarding Japheth inhabiting the tents of Shem. Noah was stating something that would happen. It wasn't what The Most High wanted to happen. He gave each brother their own territories and set the boundaries. There was no need for Japheth to inhabit the tents of Shem. Peace and blessings.
The curse was lifted at the Cross of Jesus.
As many say, the fact that they are honest about their past, to the extent of always informing prospective members about it, is to their credit.
Can you have some kind of intro. The first part is always cut off.
No it isnt
It is on many
@@edwinholcombe2741 It sure is.
You have to rewind and you still don't here the first few words.
3:56 what in the world did I just read. I know that there are different interpretations of the Bible but this one is just wrong in every way shape and form
One World. One Humanity. ONE FAMILY.
Amen.
Now if only others would realize this truth. We could live a far better world.
Amen!!!!!!!!!!!!!🙏
There is no Jew or Greek for we are all one in Christ !
No we aren't all "one family". Humanity is diverse and there's beauty in that. Just because some people used to believe in racial supremacy, doesn't mean we have to go in the opposite direction.
As for Liberia, its first black Episcopal bishop was from Charlleston, SC and was baptised at St. Philip's Church.
Fascinating... but this was a general view amongst most white denominations either spoken or unspoken which is why so many separate black denomination sprung up...
ProfessorBlackTruth YT Channel emphasis more this topic check his YT Channel out
@@creativefantasybox2462 thank you. I will.
@@Keonny77 @We as BLK Folks shouldn't be caught up in this Left/Right Wing bubble
Take care
Christ Community Church in Zion, Illinois is another church that is today a solidly evangelical church that downplays its past. It (and indeed the town itself) was founded by a complete loony and continued by his possibly crazier successor. The large church building (not the original) in the center of the town is at the head of the wide Shiloh Boulevard (spot the tabernacle reference), which runs down to Lake Michigan. Unfortunately the town is rather run down and poor quality buildings (including a decommissioned nuclear power plant) now flank the boulevard. Some of the church's international outreach today is to African communities that have retained the original teachings of the founder. The Zion church is the head of a small denomination called the Christian Catholic Church.
Thanks for sharing. I used to live near there. I will probably make a video about them someday. Put it on my to-do list.
Judaism has it's own country for Jewish bloodlines and people overlook it. Perhaps it's not as evil of a thought as media propaganda makes it out to be.
fascinating
They have a racist past but reformed and became non-racist. That is good. Paul was once a Christian persecutor but was touched by God and became a Christ disciple. There are stories of men, women of sordid past but come to the fold of the Lord.
They call themselves Christian as if they have No Idea who Christ was or what he stood for.
A woman with the last name "White" who started a controversial church in the late 80s... any relation to EG white of the SDAs?
A very common surname.
For what it’s worth I had neighbors with the last name “White”… and they are Black. I think it is just a very common last name
NN,....I also found this idea and possible coincidence to be very interesting.
@@shadowbannedforspeakingtru1436 Maybe if we can find some Protestant denom founded by someone called Smith they will be related to Joseph Smith.
I see. Thank you, all.
It's a very interesting coincidence, indeed
I mean, if you want evidence that God works in mysterious ways, this church's history is about as close as you can get.
One would think the leadership would completely disband and restart from scratch the denomination given their creepy past.
I also fear that given the desire to repent of their denonations past racism they might drift into Wokeism.
They won't, at least not in the immediate future. Liberia is a very conservative society, and with the majority of the church's members coming from there (including the head of the church itself), that kind of drift will be almost impossible to initiate.
On the other hand, they did go from the KKK's number one fan to a majority black church, so who knows.
Wokeism is racism…
I don't what you mean they would drift into "wokeism"
I wouldn't say Evangelical Christianity has entirely fallen yet, but it's certainly having a major decline in recent years.