Jude 1:4
“For certain persons have crept in unnoticed, those who were long beforehand marked out for this condemnation, ungodly persons who turn the grace of our God into licentiousness and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.” Jude 1:4
“For certain persons have crept in unnoticed, those who were long beforehand marked out for this condemnation, ungodly persons who turn the grace of our God into licentiousness and deny our only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ.” Jude 1:4
False teachers do not knock on your door with a brief case full of literature, and say, ‘Hello, I am here from the devil, and I have come to lead you into eternal torments.’ That kind of stuff never makes it into the brochures.
Douglas Wilson
One qualification for pastors: 1Tim 3:7 “…And he must have a good reputation with those outside the church…” I’m thankful for my pastor
— Noel Leithart (@NLeithart) February 24, 2017
I wonder if some would think that Bathsheba was at fault for David’s actions…
— Noel Leithart (@NLeithart) February 26, 2017
If a man is driving more people away from the Church, than gathering them in, maybe he shouldn’t be a pastor
— Noel Leithart (@NLeithart) February 27, 2017
The whole point is to shock and insult those who don’t know that they are being played. Take that away and the whole game collapses.
Douglas Wilson
vile
1 a : morally despicable or abhorrent • nothing is so vile as intellectual dishonesty
b : physically repulsive : foul • a vile slum2 : of little worth or account
3 : tending to degrade • vile employments
4 : disgustingly or utterly bad : obnoxious, contemptible • vile weather • had a vile temper
Merriam-Webster
If Wilson doesn’t want his writing to be called vile, maybe he should stop writing vile things and defending vile actions
— Rachel (@mediaeval97) February 27, 2017
Anyone in history ever have to explain himself as often as Doug Wilson? #dougsplaining
— Todd Pruitt (@ToddPruitt6) February 27, 2017
One consequence of rejecting the protection of good men is that you are opening yourself up to the predations of bad men. I fully acknowledge that this is not what such women think they are doing. They think they are rejecting the patriarchy, or some other icky thing, but when they have walked away from the protections of fathers and brothers, what it amounts to is a tacit (implicit, in principle, not overt) acceptance of the propriety of rape.
Douglas Wilson
The theology of a slut walk, however, by its outrageous embrace of slutty dress, behavior, and thought, absolutely and definitively rejects any level of moral responsibility for anything. Now lest I be misunderstood at this point — which I understand has happened before! — let me hasten to add that I am not seeking to minimize or excuse violent sexual behavior, or otherwise absolve rapists in any way. If somebody kidnapped and raped the most outrageous organizer of the worst slut pride event ever, I would want to see that rapist punished to the fullest extent of the law. I am not defending the rapist. I am simply pointing out that his victim was a person who had given herself to organizing events built on a theology that, when applied consistently elsewhere, fully justifies rape. I do not justify rape; she does.
Douglas Wilson
“Sex with a woman who is not consenting is rape whether it happens on a date or the guy hides in the woods (I would say that sex with a woman who is not your wife is a kind of rape as well, but that’s another issue). In both cases it is violent and in both cases it is a sexual act. We can talk about both of these aspects, but we must never separate them.”
Mike Lawyer
Rape is not defined as sexual intercourse. Rape is sexual intercourse that is contrary to the revealed will of God in a particular way.
Douglas Wilson
Read this and tell me why anyone is still supporting this man with a platform. Vile: https://t.co/A0HTKVbNYr pic.twitter.com/22BHDViuUF
— Aimee Byrd (@aimeebyrdhwt) February 24, 2017
The unbelievable blog post in which Doug Wilson believes sex abuse survivors to be liars and shames them. https://t.co/C9wpFSVTL3
— Julie Anne (@DefendTheSheep) February 23, 2017
What Paul says about koinonia reformation is healthy — wholesome. But some don’t consent to it (v. 3). The false teacher’s empty head does not keep him from being full of himself (v. 4). His heart and tongue are tangled — he has questions and verbal clashes. These produce envy, quarrels, verbal hostility, and jumping to conclusions about the motives of others. These men have bent minds and hearts and so they produce bent disputes. They think that piety is supposed to be a means of personal advancement, particularly theirs (v. 5). Get away from such people. This is a wonderful picture of the rabid revolutionary of the early nineteenth century, and it is a vivid picture of some of the people we had to deal with on our slavery controversy.
Douglas Wilson
“But the prophet who speaks a word presumptuously in My name which I have not commanded him to speak, or which he speaks in the name of other gods, that prophet shall die. You may say in your heart, ‘How will we know the word which the LORD has not spoken?’ When a prophet speaks in the name of the LORD, if the thing does not come about or come true, that is the thing which the LORD has not spoken. The prophet has spoken it presumptuously; you shall not be afraid of him.”
Deuteronomy 18:20–22
Are we in the middle of a new Reformation?
I believe that we are.
Is this megalomania on our part? — ‘Who do you guys think you are?’
No, we don’t think we’re anybody special; no Reformer ever has been actually.
Douglas Wilson