Christian Churches of God
No. 3b
Questions and Answers
on
the Christian Faith
(Edition 1.0 20120101-20120101)
Many people will be surprised to find out that what they
believe is not in the Bible and not supported or believed by the historical
church. Answer this quiz and see how close you are to the true faith once
delivered to the saints.
Christian Churches of God
PO Box 369, WODEN
ACT 2606, AUSTRALIA
Email: secretary@ccg.org
(Copyright © 2012 Christian
Churches of God, ed. Wade Cox)
This paper may be freely copied and distributed provided it
is copied in total with no alterations or deletions. The publisher’s name and
address and the copyright notice must be included. No charge may be levied on recipients of
distributed copies. Brief quotations may
be embodied in critical articles and reviews without breaching copyright.
This paper is available from the World
Wide Web page:
http://www.logon.org and http://www.ccg.org
Questions and Answers on the
Christian Faith
God
1) Is God the Father the One True God alone or is Jesus True God as God
is?
A.
Yes, God alone is the One True God.
(1Tim. 2:5; 1Cor 8:4; Gal 3:19-20 ; Deut. 4:35,39; Eph. 4:6; John 17:3; Deut. 32:39; Mal. 2:10; Ps. 90:2; Ps. 93:1).
2) Did God alone create the Heavens and the Earth or did God create the Heavens
and the Earth through Jesus Christ?
A.
Yes, God alone created the Heavens and the Earth (Is. 44:24; 51:13;
40:22; Prov. 30:4; Job 9:8; Job 38:1-7; Ps. 104:2; Jer. 51:15; Gen. 1:1;
1Cor. 8:6a; Rev. 10:6).
It was when the
Earth became tohu and bohu that Jesus Christ and other elohim created by the
command of God in order for Mankind to live there.
3) Was God seen by any man and did
any man hear His
voice?
A.
No, the One True God is invisible
(Col. 1: 15;
1Tim. 1:17; 6:16),
and no man has seen the One True God
or heard His voice
at any time (John 5:37, 1John 4:12,
John 1:18, 6:46).
4) Is the One True God the God of
Christ, even after Christ was resurrected and placed at the right hand of God?
A. Yes, the One True God is the God of Christ (Eph. 1:17; Eph 4:6; Ps. 45:7; Heb. 1:9;
John 17:3). Even after Christ's resurrection from the dead, the One True God is the God of Christ (John 20:17).
There is only one
God and Father of all and He
is the God of Christ (Rom. 15:6; 2Cor.
1:3; Eph. 1:3;
Col. 1:3; 1Pet.
1:3).
The Holy Spirit
1) Is the Holy Spirit God?
A.
No, the Spirit of truth that proceeded from the Father and
sent by Christ is not God (John 15:26;
John 16:13).
2) Is the Holy Spirit a person in the Godhead?
A.
No, the Spirit of God is not a person
in the Godhead (Apo. 5:6; Ex. 31:3; Ex. 35:31;
Micah 3:8; Luke 1:15;
Acts 4:8; Acts 7:55;
Acts 13:9; Acts 4:31; 2Chr. 24:20).
3) Can we pray to or worship the Holy Spirit?
A.
No, Christ said that it is His Father
who is seeking to be worshipped (John 4:23;
1Cor. 6:19).
4) What is the Holy Spirit?
A. The Holy Spirit is the power of God (John 20:22; Acts 8:17-21; Acts 1:8; Acts 2:4; Acts 4:25; Luke 4:14;
Rom. 15:19; 1Cor.
2:4).
The
Holy Spirit is God's nature (2Pet.
1:3-4).
Jesus
1) Is Christ co-equal with God?
A.
No, Christ is not co-equal with
his God (John 14:28; 1Cor. 15:27; Phil. 2:6; Acts 7:56;
1 Pet. 3:22).
2) Is Christ co-eternal with God?
A. No, Christ is not co-eternal with his Father
and his God (Prov. 30:4; Micah 5:2; Ps.
45:7).
3) Did Christ have a beginning?
A.
Yes, Christ had a beginning (Rev. 3:14).
4) Was Christ created by God?
A.
Yes, Christ was created in the image of
God (Col. 1:15).
5) Did Christ exist before becoming a human? If so, what was he?
A.
Yes, Christ existed before becoming a human (John 8:58; 1Cor.
15:47; John 17:4,24;
John 3:13). Before he was made man, Christ was in the
form of elohim (Phil.
2:6; Ps. 45:7),
i.e. Son of God (from John 10:33-36).
Christ was identified by the Apostle as
the Angel of the Lord, the mediator who appeared to Moses and gave him the Law of God (Acts 7:35,38;
Heb. 2:2; Gal.
3:19-20; 1Tim. 2:5).
6) Is Christ the only Son
of God?
A. No, Christ is a Son of God. God created many sons (Job 1:6; 2:1; 38:4-7; Ps.
86:8-10; 95:3; 96:4;
135:5), and God
became God the Father from
the creation of these spiritual sons (Heb. 12:9).
Thus, Christ was the being that came as the
only son of the Father. That is
to say, he is the only son of God who was born
of the flesh.
7) Was Christ raised from the dead?
A.
Yes, God the Father raised Christ
from the dead (1Cor. 15:15; Rom. 4:24;
Acts 2:24,32; 1Cor.
15:3-9).
8) Can we pray to or worship Christ?
A.
No, Christ taught us to whom we
should pray and how to pray. And
it is to God the Father alone that we
pray and sing hymns, or worship (Mat. 6:9;
John 14:13; Rom. 16:27;
Heb. 13:15-16).
9) Did the Angels worship or pray to Christ?
A. No, angels or men have proskuneo
before Christ (Heb. 1:6; Mat. 2:11), as in Revelation
3:9 where those of
the synagogue of Satan have proskuneo in
front of the elect; it is the same term. Such action is an act of
enslavement, but is not in itself worship.
We
have to worship God the Father and no other god
(Luke 4:8; John 4:21-24;
Phil. 3:3; Eph.
5:19-20; Rev. 22:9).
Christ
said that it is His Father who is seeking
to be worshipped (John 4:23; 1Cor. 6:19).
10) Did God give the law to Moses at Sinai?
A. Yes, God gave
the Law to Moses.
11) Did God give the law Himself or through others? If so who
were they?
A. No, the One
True God did not appear to Moses at Sinai. It is clearly stated that the being
that had spoken and appeared to Moses was given the title of ‘angel’, and that
being is none other than Jesus Christ (Acts 7:35-38; 1Cor. 10:4; Acts 7:53;
Gal:3:19; Heb2:2).
12) Who does the Bible say was the Great Angel that
was with Israel in the Wilderness that fed them?
A. The Bible
clearly states that Jesus Christ is the angel who was in the bush who spoke to
Moses and the angel with whom Moses spoke with on Mount Sinai, and is confirmed
elsewhere in scripture on many accounts. The word angel or malak means
messenger. Genesis 48:15-16 reads, “And he blessed Joseph, and said, God,
before whom my fathers Abraham and Isaac did walk, the God which fed me all my
life long unto this day, The Angel which redeemed me from all evil, bless the
lads; and let my name be named on them, and the name of my fathers Abraham and
Isaac; and let them grow into a multitude in the midst of the earth.” This god being, “The Angel” that redeemed
Israel from all evil” was a messenger of the ONE TRUE God. This angel was Jesus Christ (see the paper The Angel of YHVH (No. 24)).
13) Is it blasphemy to refer
to Christ as an angel?
A. No, on the
contrary – it is scriptural. Jesus Christ IS the Angel of the Lord who spoke
with Moses.
Day
of worship
1) What day has God commanded us to be assembled to worship or adore
Him?
A.
It is the Seventh day
of the week which has always been
Saturday (Ex. 20:10-11; Heb. 4:3-40).
2) Are we allowed to assemble on Sunday in order to adore or worship God?
A.
No, the day called Sunday is not the Seventh day of
the week; it is correctly the
first day of the week (Mat. 28:1).
3) Are we permitted to assemble together on another day of the week to worship
God?
A.
No. The day of rest, the Sabbath, is a holy day to the Lord (Ex. 35:2;
Ex. 31:14; Neh. 13:22) and it is the only weekly day appointed for a holy convocation (Lev. 23:3; Is. 56:2).
4) Do we have a choice to work or not to work on the day which God has
set apart to worship Him?
A.
No, we do not have a choice. We are commanded to work six days a week (Ex. 23:12). Whatever
your hand finds to do with your
might, do it (Eccl. 9:10).
There
should be no work on the
Sabbath by any individual (Mark
2:27).
5) Is it permissible to make people work for us on the Sabbath day?
A.
No. We all have to rest on the
Sabbath, from Friday at dark to
Saturday until dark.
The Seventh
day is a Sabbath to the LORD your God; in it you shall not do any work, you, or
your son, or your daughter, or your manservant, or your maidservant, or your
ox, or your ass, or any of your cattle, or the sojourner who is within your
gates, that your manservant and your maidservant may rest as well as you (Deut. 5:14).
6) How do we profane
the Sabbath?
A.
By doing our own work, by having others working for us (such as going
out to a restaurant to eat), by being preoccupied with our own ideas and
interests and by not making God the centre of our attention that day (Isa. 58:13).
The
Feasts
1) What are the Feasts of God?
A.
There are only Three annual Feasts:
• The Passover/Unleavened Bread
• Pentecost
• The Feast of Tabernacles or Booths
(Ex. 23:14-19; Deut. 16:1-17; Lev.
23:1-44)
2) Should we leave our homes to celebrate the Feasts of God?
A.
Yes, we do withdraw
from the world and three times a year we go to where God places His Name to
keep the Feasts of God (Deut. 16:2,6-7).
The church
has the responsibility of declaring the place of the Feast and preparing for
it. We cannot keep the Passover within our gates (Deut. 16:5-6).
3) Should we stay at the place where God's Feast is celebrated throughout
the period of the Festival (the whole 7 days of the Passover/Unleavened Bread
and of the Feast of Tabernacles and the 2 days of the Pentecost)?
A.
Yes, (Acts 20:6; 1Cor.
5:8; Acts 2:1). We
are not to go back home or go to work until the
days of God’s Feasts are completed.
4) Are we commanded to give an offering at these three feasts?
A.
Yes, we are not to appear before God empty-handed at the feasts. Every
man is to give as he is able according to the blessings he has received (Deut.
16:16-17).
5) Is it permissible to celebrate Christmas?
A.
No.
Jeremiah
10:2-5 [2] Thus
says the LORD: "Learn not the way of the nations, nor be dismayed at the
signs of the heavens because the nations are dismayed at them, [3] for the customs of the peoples are
false. A tree from the forest is cut down, and worked with an axe by the hands
of a craftsman. [4] Men deck it
with silver and gold; they fasten it with hammer and nails so that it cannot
move. [5] Their idols are like
scarecrows in a cucumber field, and they cannot speak; they have to be carried,
for they cannot walk. Be not afraid of them, for they cannot do evil, neither
is it in them to do good." (RSV)
6) Should we take part in the Easter celebrations?
A. No. Easter is the pagan festival of the goddess Ishtar
whose consort (husband) died on a Friday and was resurrected on a Sunday.
Passover was changed to Easter when there was a dispute in the church over the
date of the Lord’s Supper.
7) Should we celebrate birthdays?
A.
Nowhere in the Bible are we commanded to
observe birthdays. In fact, the examples in the Bible indicate that we should not observe birthdays (Gen.
40: 20; Job 1:4;
Mat. 14:6; Mark 6:21).
We
are told to remember the death of Jesus (Luke 22:19), and we do that every year
at Passover; we are not told to
celebrate the birth of Jesus.
8) Is it permissible to celebrate the New Year in January?
A.
No, God tells us not to learn or imitate the ways
of the nations (Jer. 10:2;
2Kings 17:33; 1Kings
14:24; Deut. 18:9).
9) What is the New Year according to the Scriptures?
A.
It is the new moon nearest the spring returns at Jerusalem (or in the northern hemisphere) (see Ex. 23:15; Ex.
12:2).
10) What is the New Moon?
A.
It is when the moon is
aligned between the sun and the
earth (Ps. 81:3).
The word Kehseh in
this verse 3 is derived from the root which is Kacah.
It has nothing to do with the full moon, but rather a moment when the moon
is "hidden" from our
view.
11) Can we work on the days of the New Moon?
A. No, the New Moons are days
when we have to stop working (Amos 8:5).
12) Is it permissible to make people work for us on the days of New
Moon?
A. No trade was allowed on the Sabbaths and New
Moons (Amos 8:5).
Foods
1) In the New Covenant, does God allow us to eat of everything?
A.
No. Christ said: Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have
come not to abolish them but to fulfil them (Mat. 5:17).
2) Are the clean and unclean foods abolished?
A.
No. Every creature of God, sanctified by the word of God
is good to eat and nothing is to be
rejected (see 1Tim. 4:4-5).
The state of the dead
1) When a man dies does his soul go to heaven if he was good or to hell
if he was evil?
A.
No, the dead are as if asleep or unconscious (Luke 8:49-56; 1Thes. 4:13-18) awaiting
the resurrection (Dan. 12:2,13; 1Cor. 15:20-22).
No
one has ascended into heaven except he
who descended from heaven, the
Christ, who is in heaven (John
3:13).
NO
ONE goes to heaven, not now, not ever. It is God who descends here on the Earth when
all is restored (Rev. 22).
2) Does the parable of Lazarus and the Rich man mean that the wicked ones will
burn forever, suffering in hell?
A.
No, because God wants all men to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth (1Tim. 2:4). Thus, all human
beings have the opportunity to
repent (1Tim. 4:10).
3) Can the soul die?
A.
Yes, the soul can perish or be destroyed (Ezek. 18:4).
Christ
said: And do not fear those who kill the
body but cannot kill the soul; rather fear him who can destroy both soul
and body in hell (Matt. 10:28).
Man
can cause the loss of life but he cannot destroy it – only God can do that.
4) What is Hell?
A.
The word for Hell is Sheol, and means the grave where the
dead are buried. Hades was the Greek word used for the Hebrew, also
meaning the grave. The third word translated as hell in the Bible
is Gehenna, which was the rubbish pit outside Jerusalem where they burnt
dogs and other rubbish. Another word used in the Bible is tartaros or tartaroo,
which was the pit reserved for the angels in their containment. There is no
such thing as an ever-burning Hell.
5) What is Paradise?
A.
It is the House of God, the holy Mountain of
God, Mount Zion, the City of the
Living God, the Heavenly Jerusalem (2Cor. 12:2,4; Rev.
4:2-11; Rev. 21; Rev. 2:7; Heb. 12:22;
Ps. 125:1).
6) What is the Second Death?
A.
The Lake of Fire is simply a means of cremation
of the dead bodies of those who refuse to accept the way of God at the end of
the period of the Second Resurrection and Great White Throne Judgment.
Death and
Hades will
also be destroyed and cease to exist forever (Rev. 20:14).
7) Can angels die?
A.
Yes, angels can die, and the heavenly
Host that rebelled will die (Ez. 28:16,18;
Is. 14:15) as mankind.
The
Resurrection
1) Will all human beings who ever existed rise
from the dead?
A.
Yes, as by a man came
death, by a man, has come also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all
die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive (1Cor. 15:21; 1John
2:2; Rom. 11:32).
2) How many resurrections are there?
A. The Bible says there will be
two resurrections of the dead.
·
The First Resurrection (Rev. 20:6) is only for the saints,
that is, those who keep the commandments of God and the faith or testimony of Jesus (Rev. 14:12; 12:17), and who loved not their lives even unto death (Rev. 12:11).
·
The other resurrection is the resurrection of Judgment (John 5:24,29).
All of humanity not resurrected in the First Resurrection, which is the better resurrection (Heb. 11:35), will be raised from the dead for the judgment of correction and not of condemnation.
The
angels, at that time, will also
be granted salvation in Christ (1Pet. 3:19; 2Pet. 2:4) in order that they come to the knowledge of truth and turn to God (1Cor 6:2-3;
Jude 6).
3) Will God send Christ a second time here to
Earth?
A.
Yes, God will send Christ a second time here on
Earth (Heb. 9:28; John 14:3; Acts 1:11; Acts 15:16).
4) Will Christ then take the saints with him to the
place where God is in Heaven and they will be there with God?
A.
No, the saints will be with the Lord
Jesus, where he is (John 14:3; 1Thes. 4:17;
Rev. 14:1). Christ
will take his place in Jerusalem (Rev.
14:1) from where the world will be ruled.
5) What will be the work of Christ on his return to Earth?
A.
Christ (with the
resurrected saints) is to rule the whole earth from Jerusalem (Rev.
11:15; Rev. 19:11-16;
Rev. 5:10; Rev.
20:4).
6) How long did God give Christ to do this job?
A.
Christ is to reign here on Earth for a thousand years (Rev. 20:6).
The
Church
1) Who or what is the church?
A. The church is a body of people that make up the
congregation of God. It is not a building. Christ said he would build his
church on the rock and God is that rock Ps. 18:1-2). The church is pastored by
elders and deacons, chosen by the brethren (Acts 1:22,26,
6:3,5-6, 15:22; 1Cor. 16:3; 2Cor. 8:19,23). The Holy Spirit makes them overseers of the flock which is the Church of
God (Acts 20:28).
2) What is the commission of the church?
A. The Church has one commission given to it by Jesus
Christ.
Matthew 28:18-20 And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. 19 Go
ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: 20 Teaching them to observe
all things whatsoever I have commanded you: and, lo, I am with you alway, even
unto the end of the world. Amen. (KJV)
3) Are Christians obligated to tithe to help fund the work of the Church of God?
4) Are the baptisms of Trinitarian churches considered valid?
A.
No, baptism by immersion in the name
of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit (Mat. 28:19) means that baptism is
done in the Name of the Father
in the body of the Son, asked in the name of the Son, in the power and by the power of the Holy Spirit.
This
is the correct meaning of the declaration of Christ, and it has
nothing to do with the Trinity.
5) Should Trinitarians be rebaptized?
A.
Yes, as well as those who were baptized in the Binitarian or Ditheist churches etc.
6) According to the Bible is it permitted to baptize a child or youth
under 20 years of age?
A. No. According to the
Scriptures we must be an adult to
go to war and adulthood is 20 years according
to the Scriptures (Num. 1:1-3,18; Ezra 3:8).
The elect do not have to fight against flesh and blood and they are waging a war against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of this dark world, against
spiritual hosts of wickedness in high places (Eph. 6:11-13; 1Tim.
6:12; 2Tim. 4:7;
Rev. 3:21; Rev.
12:11; Rev. 15:2).
7) According to the Bible, at what age can a man be a minister in the
Church of God?
A.
We shall assume office as a teacher
in the temple of God from the age of thirty years in accordance with
the Law of God (Num. 4:3,23,30; 1Chr.
23:3). The elect are now the Temple of God (1Cor 3:16; 2Cor. 6:16).
8) Can a man who is legally married to more than one wife be ordained as
a minister of the Church of God?
A. No, the New Testament sets the limit of one wife for the elders.
No man can be an elder if he has more than one wife (1Tim. 3:2,12; Titus 1:6).
The
elders should marry, since
marriage is the responsibility given
to all men under the charge given to Adam.
9) Are women allowed to be ordained as ministers in order to conduct Worship
Services in the Church of God?
The conduct of services in CCG is
to be uniform throughout the world.
To that end the procedures are to
be as follows.
All activity is commenced by ‘Opening
Pray’ first, then a hymn or hymns.
Hymns are a form of
worship.
The papers are then to
be read for study.
Questions are taken at the end of
the study usually, but the person conducting the study may take a
question if it is considered important for clarification if no recording is
being done.
Both men and women may ask
questions in the Question and Answer period as there are women who do not have
husbands with them in services and so Paul's injunction is not fully applicable
to us.
Women are to consult their
husbands where possible.
The closure of the service is
with a hymn and then a prayer.
All opening and closing prayers
are to be done by men where present.
In women only sessions, women
obviously give opening and closing prayers and conduct studies and answer
questions.
Studies are always to be given
with an opening and closing prayer as we are asking God to be present in the
Holy Spirit.
10) Which of these calendars should the Church of God follow: God's
Calendar according to the conjunction of the New Moon, or the Gregorian Calendar, or the Hillel Calendar, or the Islamic Calendar?
Do we have to observe barley in Jerusalem to determine the New Moon of Abib?
A.
a) No, we do not observe the barley in Jerusalem to determine the New Moon of Abib. Noah entered
and the Ark was
closed (Gen. 7:16), but at
the end of the flood, he knew when
the New Year was. He then removed the
cover of the Ark (Genesis 8:13). This knowledge of the New Year was not based on visual signs and it was
certainly not based on a harvest
of barley near Jerusalem at the end of the flood or anywhere.
The
Beginning of the year DOES NOT DEPEND on the maturity of
the barley in modern Israel.
It can vary from several weeks to one year to another
and it makes it impossible to
publish a calendar with the
identification of the Holy Days.
Today, people use modern seeds that
mature at different rates and
differ greatly from the primitive
grains. Some plant
them, in fact, in protected environments to try to accommodate their
assumptions. Even then, certain
conditions can change their desired
effects.
The seventh year of the
seven-year cycle is the sabbatical year during which we do not make annual plantations according to
the commandments of God. In the
Millennium, no one will have sown annual grain
such as barley. As a result,
nobody will be able to see what the
status of the growth of barley
is during March or April, in a Sabbath year and Jubilee.
This knowledge is not and cannot be required to start the year and identify the Feast and
subsequent Holy Days.
b)
We are not allowed to postpone the Holy Days, New Moons and Sabbaths. Therefore, the Hillel Calendar is an aberration and
abomination.
c) The Gregorian calendar
is a creation of man, and does not stem
from Scripture.
d) It's a matter of historical fact that Christ and the Church of God have always followed the Temple Calendar which was determined by the Conjunction of the New Moon occurring in Jerusalem.
Marriage
1) Did Christ allow a
couple to live
in de facto
relationship?
Christ gave clear instruction as
to marriage and he did not recognise a common law or de facto marriage as a
valid marriage. When speaking to the woman at the well in Sychar Samaria Christ
said: “Go call your husband and come here.” The woman answered him, “I have no
husband.” Jesus said to her: “You are right in saying ‘I have no husband’ for
you have had five husbands and he whom you now have is not your husband; This you said truly” (John. 4:16-19).
Christ thus knew that this woman
was in a de facto relationship living with this man as signified by the phrase
“he whom you now have is not your husband.”
The prohibition to marry is a
doctrine of demons (1Tim. 4:1,3).
The Lord's Supper
1) Who are the only people allowed to be
present in the room booked to take the
bread and wine?
2) Can grape juice be used instead of wine at the Lord’s Supper?
A. No. Grape juice was never used at the Passover by any Jews or Israel, including Christ, the Apostles or the New Testament Church. Grape juice is dead, whereas wine has life and symbolises the living blood of Jesus Christ as a man.
3) What is the Night of Watching or the Night to be Much Remembered (Ex. 12:42)?
A. The concept of watching comes from the passing over of
the death Angel and the watching for the deliverance of our people. Christ died
at 3 p.m. at the time the lambs were killed for the Passover meal that evening
which commenced the Night to be Much Remembered on the
Fifteenth of the First month. The intention is not that we spend this night
watching but rather the night is prolonged in study and vigil. It is not
appropriate to go to bed early on this night.
4) What is the significance of the Wave Sheaf Offering?
A. The offering of the he-lamb and the waving of
the first-fruits symbolised Christ as a first-fruit ascending into Heaven to
his Father (Lev. 23:9-14). It was the first of the first-fruits of the barley
harvest and the beginning of the harvest of all mankind and Host into the
family of God. The Wave Sheaf also marks the beginning of the count to
Pentecost and always occurs on Sunday during the days of Unleavened Bread.
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