THE ANXIOUS INQUIRER AFTER SALVATION
DIRECTED AND ENCOURAGED
by John Angell James, 1834
“What must I do to be saved?”
“Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and you shall be saved.”
Act 16:30-31
Directions for profitable reading
Deep solicitude about salvation,
reasonable and necessary
Religious impressions, and the importance
of retaining and deepening them
On the importance of gaining Scriptural
knowledge, and clear views of divine truth
REPENTANCE
FAITH
MISTAKES in which inquirers are apt to fall
PERPLEXITIES which are often felt by inquirers
DISCOURAGEMENTS which present themselves
at the commencement of a pious course
CAUTIONS
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Cult Exit: Problems, Detention, and How-Tos by Pastor David Cox. In this article, I explain how to identify a cult through the difficulty in leaving it.
Excerpt: One of the clearest elements identifying a cult is simply what happens when somebody wants "out." A biblical church will see a person leaving because the group doesn't meet their needs, doesn't serve them, or doesn't meet their biblical expectations as a tragedy and failure on the GROUP'S PART. Their attitude is first sadness in losing the person, but they want to correct what they have done wrong. (Note: This attitude will never appear without first accepting that they, the church, have somehow failed. Cults will rarely admit this of themselves, or never will they admit it. It takes a spiritually mature person to admit this.)
A biblical church will simply ask questions like Where? How? Why? Where did we go wrong? How can we keep this from happening again? Why did we lose this person? A biblical church is more concerned about their own error in dealing with this member that retention.
Read the Article: Cult Exit: Problems, Detention, and How-Tos.