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Max Luder
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Max Luder
@MaxLuder
I love God, family, and country. Christian. Husband. Father. Army combat Vet. American patriot. 🇺🇸
Katılım Şubat 2017
502 Takip Edilen376 Takipçiler
Max Luder retweetledi

God redeemed me from
Alcoholism
Drug addiction
Pornography
Promiscuity
Lying
Hate
Stealing
Swindling
Backbiting
The list goes on….
I will tell the world unashamed for the rest of my life. My shame has been covered by the blood and there is NO condemnation for those in Christ Jesus. There are others living in shame that need to know they are not alone and Christ can do the same for them.
Share your testimonies far and wide, the world needs to hear that Christ came for the sick not the well.
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Max Luder retweetledi

Mormons claim that God the Father was once a man and that he then progressed to godhood (that is, he is a now-exalted, immortal man with a flesh-and-bone body).
Mormons believe that humans, like God the Father, can go through a process of exaltation to godhood.
Mormons believe that the Trinity consists not of three persons in one God but rather of three distinct gods.
According to Mormonism, there are potentially many thousands of gods besides these.
Mormons believe that Jesus Christ was the firstborn spirit-child of the heavenly Father and a heavenly Mother.
Jesus then progressed to deity in the spirit world.
He was later physically conceived in Mary’s womb, as the literal “only begotten” Son of God the Father in the flesh (though many present-day Mormons remain somewhat vague as to how this occurred).
Mormons believe that Adam’s transgression was a noble act that made it possible for humans to become mortal, a necessary step on the path to exaltation to godhood.
Mormons believe that Christ’s atonement secures immortality for virtually all people, whether they repent and believe or not.
Mormons believe that God gives to (virtually) everyone a general salvation to immortal life in one of the heavenly kingdoms, which is how they understand salvation by grace. Belief in Christ is necessary only to obtain passage to the highest, celestial kingdom—for which not only faith but participation in Mormon temple rituals and obedience to its “laws of the gospel” are also prerequisites.
Mormons claim that “total” apostasy overcame the church following apostolic times, and that the Mormon Church (founded in 1830) is the “restored church.”
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I made a comment on this post. They decided to delete it. So now I'm going to share it on ALL my socials where ten times more people will see. Try deleting it now:
Actually... I understand unnecessary division and slander. But I'd say the greatest danger to the body of Christ are wolves in sheep's clothing and the wolves protecting the other wolves at the expense of the sheep by shaming and manipulating the sheep.
It's not divisive to call out bad theology and false teachers who harm people. It's divisive to teach bad theology that hurts people.
Kathryn. 🧐
Apostle Kathryn Krick@kathrynkrick
The greatest danger to the body of Christ is when believers fall for the devil’s scheme to turn against one another—judging, attacking, falsely accusing, and hating fellow believers.
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Max Luder retweetledi

@Protestia Unfortunately, none of this is new for him and it’s part of why he finds a following amongst some Provisionists and Open Theists.
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@Protestia Craig has long held these views. It’s well known.
In Quest of the Historical Adam is a more recent example where he’s made such views of his known.
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"It is contrary to professional etiquette"
Tense moment during a recent William Lane Craig debate, after his opponent, Michael N. Keas, cites a conversation he had with OT scholar Jack Phillips to discuss Craig's view that Eve may have been a genetically modifed primate that lived 750,000 years ago.
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Max Luder retweetledi
Max Luder retweetledi
Max Luder retweetledi
Max Luder retweetledi

Wow. So you can reject Christ’s teachings, redefine sin, and still claim the name Christian. That’s… a remarkably convenient religion.
Hillary Clinton@HillaryClinton
I believe that Christians like me—and people of faith more generally—have a responsibility to stand up to the extremists who use religion to divide our society and undermine our democracy. My new piece in @TheAtlantic: theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/01/…
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