Learn to continue in ministry despite hardships.Increase your effectiveness as a Christian. Discover why mentoring is a pivotal part of the faith journey.Realize you've been entrusted with the gospel and gifting to serve.Support other believers in Christ, as they in turn encourage you.Additional articles by Melissa Moore, Beth’s daughter and ministry partner, included.5 personal study segments with homework to complete between 6 weeks of group sessions.Biblically-rooted and gospel-centered content.Because in this journey of joy and hardship, we need each other to stay the course and live a life of faithfulness. In this 6-session Bible study, Beth will encourage you to guard what God has entrusted to you, further His kingdom by sharing Christ with others, and pour into future generations just as Paul once mentored Timothy. God has entrusted us with the great and mighty gift of the gospel, something too precious and life-giving to keep to ourselves. In the meantime, if all it takes to be a “hyper-fundamentalist” is to believe homosexuality is a sin, I suppose there’s a lot of us.We were never meant to take this journey of faith alone or in secret. As my irritable neighbor Nigel Paulsgrove is wont to say, “If something bites you it’s more likely to be female” (biologically speaking). Essentially, Moore is insulting those of us who have a Biblical sexual ethic and is implying that we are all stuffy, KJV-only, kill-joys, party-poopers, and Victorian zounderkites. While some of us aren’t afraid of the term “fundamentalism,” for many evangelicals the term has a negative connotation. The moral smellfungus Moore, who has done nothing but defend and promote her friend, Jen Hatmaker, after she came out for “gay marriage,” (in fact, Beth Moore supported Hatmaker when she was baptized into the liberal Episcopalian church by a gay bishop), is upset that some evangelicals consider her compromise on homosexuality to be kind of a big deal.Īccording to Beth Moore, if you think that backpeddling on homosexuality is wrong, you are a “hyper-fundamentalist”, if not a colorless clump of gnashnabs. Of course, the thing about a witch hunt is that sometimes you actually find a witch. In response to those dismayed that she has expunged remarks critical of homosexuality from her books, Moore said the following on Twitter: The Yankee zounderkite-Moore-has since taken to playing the victim, claiming that the “attacks” (read that: requests for a clarification on her position) have “almost made cry.” Her cumberworld friends in the Southern Baptist Convention have been out in full force attacking her critics today, with one ERLC board member claiming that “ discernment blogs are a big threat to the SBC.” However, it was revealed over the Independence Day holiday that Moore has deleted anti-homosexuality passages from newer Kindle versions of at least one of her older books, thus covering up any evidence that she opposed homosexuality. Her fans (all three of them) claimed that Moore had been sufficiently clear in past writings, and therefore didn’t need to repeat herself. While viewing them as a bit of a gobermouch, Moore sidestepped the issue and refused to say whether or not she viewed homosexuality as a sin. Moore was referencing Christians who have repeatedly asked her to clarify her position on homosexuality, noticing her leftward drift. In a continued social media meltdown, similar to the one that had the unstable and hysterical feminist take a break from Twitter back in May, Beth Moore labeled Christians explicitly opposed to homosexuality as “hyper-fundamentalists.” I fear the lass may have had a bang on the head. It’s a bit raucous out there in Houston ! Mouse here, weighing in on the clinically hysterical Beth Moore as she exchanges her previously biblically-correct views on homosexuality for a besotted new rainbow version.
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