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Walter Martin #fundie books.google.ca

These things happen. They are real. Denying them does not make them go away, and the skeptcism of modern society has no power to dismiss them;it simply amuses them.Viruses are naked to the invisable eye, but we know they exist because he devloped the equipment that enabled us to see them. We may not be able to but a demon under a microscope, but God gave us the means to see them.
1.Demons speak in mulitaple voices and in muplitaple languages unknown to the person that they possess
2. Demons exbit superhuman strength
3.Demons hav access to private infromation that a possessed person could never know
4. Demons respond to and obey the authoirty and the name of Jesus Christ
This expirment has been repeated countless times and it has been proved beyond a doubt that,evil sentient beings called demons do exist

James De Young #fundie books.google.ca

Exposing Universalism: A Comprehensive Guide to the Faulty Appeals Made by Universalists Paul Young, Brian McLaren, Rob Bell, and Others Past and Present to Promote a New Kind of Christianity

In recent decades universal reconciliation (UR) has sharpened its attack on evangelical faith. By their fiction and nonfiction, and by film (The Shack), universalists such as Paul Young, Brian McLaren, Rob Bell, and others are propagating the idea that the love of God trumps all other attributes of God including his holiness and justice. From this starting point universalists believe that all people are born as children of God, that all are going to heaven, that all must embrace God’s love. Those who reject God in this life will repent after death and escape hell. Even the devil and his angels will repent from hell and go to heaven.

Universalism is an old idea. Christians have confronted UR since the third century and refuted it as heresy—heresy because UR believes that faith in Jesus is unnecessary. Thus, the death of Jesus Christ as an atonement for sin becomes unnecessary.

Through his acquaintance with Paul Young, De Young is increasingly concerned that Young and other universalists are misleading many. In this book De Young challenges all the arguments that universalists make—their appeals to the Bible, to logic and reason, and to church history—and shows that they are unconvincing.