Brannons guest is Phil Johnson who works with John MacArthur at Grace to you & has his own website, teampyro.blogspot.com. Phil & Brannon discuss David Bartons radio program on which Barton declares that Glenn Beck may be a Mormon but he is a Christian. Barton & his co-host mock Brannon for saying Beck does not exhibit the doctrinal fruit of a Christian. Barton was pulled from a station in his home state in the middle of that program for proclaiming it didn't matter whether Beck was a Mormon, Baptist, or Methodist, he believed in Jesus Christ, and he is a Christian. Phil & Brannon discuss: the theological and doctrinal compromise of the new religious right in their quest to reclaim the culture, is it fair to question Glenn Beck's profession of faith, Whether (and to what degree) it is legitimate to be yoked in a spiritual partnership with unbelievers for political purposes & whether sound doctrine (especially on matters essential to the heart of the gospel) is more important than political orthodoxy.
Brannon Howse: Aired on September 14, 2011
Brannons guest is Phil Johnson who works with John MacArthur at Grace to you & has his own website, teampyro.blogspot.com. Phil & Brannon discuss David Bartons radio program on which Barton declares that Glenn Beck may be a Mormon but he is a Christian. Barton & his co-host mock Brannon for saying Beck does not exhibit the doctrinal fruit of a Christian. Barton was pulled from a station in his home state in the middle of that program for proclaiming it didn't matter whether Beck was a Mormon, Baptist, or Methodist, he believed in Jesus Christ, and he is a Christian. Phil & Brannon discuss: the theological and doctrinal compromise of the new religious right in their quest to reclaim the culture, is it fair to question Glenn Beck's profession of faith, Whether (and to what degree) it is legitimate to be yoked in a spiritual partnership with unbelievers for political purposes & whether sound doctrine (especially on matters essential to the heart of the gospel) is more important than political orthodoxy.