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=William Branham and Doubt= | |||
William Branham admitted that we had a right to doubt him. This is the correct approach. If Paul commended the Bereans in Acts 17:11 for not simply accepting his word but going to the Bible to prove it, why wouldn't we take the same approach to William Branham? | |||
:''...'''you have a right to doubt me''', but not God.<ref>MY.ANGEL.SHALL.GO.BEFORE.THEE_ TALLAHASSEE.FL MONDAY_ 53-0216</ref> | |||
:'''''Have you got any right to doubt me? Not a bit.''' Because I come here the first of this service and I told you of what God had said. Now, you, as a man, you had a right to disbelieve me. But when God turns around and speaks that I've told the truth, then you shouldn't disbelieve me anymore. Because if you disbelieve me now, you disbelieve Him.<ref>PRAYER.LINE 53-0500</ref> | |||
:''You've heard me never, as far as speaking, I'd say, "God made me His prophet." I've heard people say, on tape they picked it up when the inspiration was on, but that was Him speaking, not me. See? Better for Him to tell you that, than for me to tell you that. See? More you can believe Him; '''you got a right to doubt me.'''<ref> COME.LET.US.REASON.TOGETHER CHICAGO.IL 55-1004</ref> | |||
:'''''And you have a right to doubt me''' if you wish to.<ref>THE.JUNCTION.TIME STURGIS.MI 56-0122</ref> | |||
:'''''They could doubt me; it would be all right'''... <ref>JESUS.CHRIST.THE.SAME.YESTERDAY.TODAY.AND.FOREVER_ SIOUX.FALLS.SD 56-0225</ref> | |||
:'''''Now, you can doubt me, I'm a man. You got a right to.''' But you mustn't doubt God.<ref>THE.WORKING.OF.THE.HOLY.SPIRIT_ PRINCE.ALBERT.SK 56-0816</ref> | |||
William Branham at times confused doubt with unbelief, but they are actually two different things. | |||
:''The first time that the devil met Jesus Christ, he doubted Him. '''Doubt always is of the devil.''' That's where the first sin come. There is no other sin but doubt. Unbelief is the original and only sin.<ref>ALL THINGS ARE POSSIBLE TO HIM THAT BELIEVETH SHREVEPORT.LA 56-0722</ref> | |||
:'''''You have no right to doubt me.'''<ref>I.PERCEIVE.THAT.THOU.ART.A.PROPHET CONNERSVILLE.IN 53-0614E</ref> | |||
=The inevitability of doubt= | =The inevitability of doubt= | ||
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:''Then Abraham fell on his face and laughed, and said in his heart, “Will a child be born to a man one hundred years old? And will Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?”<ref>New American Standard Bible: 1995 Update (LaHabra, CA: The Lockman Foundation, 1995), Ge 17:17.</ref> | :''Then Abraham fell on his face and laughed, and said in his heart, “Will a child be born to a man one hundred years old? And will Sarah, who is ninety years old, bear a child?”<ref>New American Standard Bible: 1995 Update (LaHabra, CA: The Lockman Foundation, 1995), Ge 17:17.</ref> | ||
So how do you think you’re going to do? | So how do you think you’re going to do what Abraham could not do? | ||
Probably, you’re never going to get past it. '''That means there will always be to some level of doubt in anyone’s life.''' There has to be. Doubt, in a sense, is a problem that never goes away. It is an inevitable thing, but look at this incredible balance the Bible has here and everywhere. What an incredibly nuanced, balanced view of doubt. | Probably, you’re never going to get past it. '''That means there will always be to some level of doubt in anyone’s life.''' There has to be. Doubt, in a sense, is a problem that never goes away. It is an inevitable thing, but look at this incredible balance the Bible has here and everywhere. What an incredibly nuanced, balanced view of doubt. | ||
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What Jesus is saying in Matthew is simply that an enslavement to visible things calls into question our faith in invisible things. Enslavement to visible things radically calls into question our real faith in invisible things. If you know there’s a God who’s taking care of you, who owns everything, that changes you totally in your attitude toward other things.<ref>Timothy J. Keller, The Timothy Keller Sermon Archive (New York City: Redeemer Presbyterian Church, 2013).</ref> | What Jesus is saying in Matthew is simply that an enslavement to visible things calls into question our faith in invisible things. Enslavement to visible things radically calls into question our real faith in invisible things. If you know there’s a God who’s taking care of you, who owns everything, that changes you totally in your attitude toward other things.<ref>Timothy J. Keller, The Timothy Keller Sermon Archive (New York City: Redeemer Presbyterian Church, 2013).</ref> | ||
=References= | =References= | ||
<References/> | <References/> |