What if I think BelieveTheSign is wrong?

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    We believe that all of the evidence presented on this website is trustworthy. We have tried to provide detailed footnotes which reference where we obtained our information so that you, our readers, can confirm it independently on your own. Look at the evidence, verify it, and try to answer the questions that we have raised.

    If you think our facts are wrong?

    OUR PROMISE - If you are aware of any errors/problems/concerns with information in any article on this website, please let us know by email or by a message to us on our Facebook page. We will correct any factual errors as quickly as possible.

    To date, we have only had a couple of people contact us regarding errors on the site. They have all been relatively minor in nature but they have been corrected.

    Is there another reason you disagree with us?

    When we started asking sincere questions, we received no answers from people we knew in the message that made any sense. In retrospect, this was probably due to cognitive dissonance. But it only caused us to ask more questions. Other than Jesse Smith and an anonymous message minister, no one even tried to give us any valid answers to the questions that we raised.

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    Generally, the responses we get today from message followers are as follows:

    1. "It's a revelation."
    2. "If you're predestinated, you'll see it."
    3. "The Bible says we should cast down reasoning."
    4. William Branham was vindicated by God so it has to be true.
    5. William Branham was just a man.
    6. No one dared oppose William Branham when he was alive.

    But the apostle Peter stated:

    ...but in your hearts honor Christ the Lord as holy, always being prepared to make a defense to anyone who asks you for a reason for the hope that is in you; yet do it with gentleness and respect...[1]

    The Greek word apologia is found seven times in the New Testament (Acts 22:1; 25:16; 1 Cor. 9:3; Phil. 1:7, 16; 2 Tim. 4:16; 1 Pet. 3:15). The English equivalent of apologia is defense (literally, “a speech for the defense”). In the original Greek language, apologia had a definite legal connotation. It was a technical term in ancient Greek law. When apologia is used in the New Testament, it describes a public defense of the gospel, as illustrated in Acts 22:1. Sometimes, in fact, this defense was carried out in a court of law (Acts 25:16; 2 Tim. 4:16).[2]

    If you feel any conclusions or other similar statements are wrong, we would simply invite you to prove us wrong!


    Footnotes

    1. The Holy Bible: English Standard Version (Wheaton: Standard Bible Society, 2001), 1 Pe 3:15.
    2. Dan Story, Defending Your Faith (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1997), 2.


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