See the short two-minute read “What is Reformation Day?” below my brief comments:

For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith for faith, as it is written, “The righteous shall live by faith.”

Romans 1:17-18 — English Standard Version

Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.

Romans 12:2 — English Standard Version

Tragically tens of thousands, millions of people professing to be Christians this day, Monday, October 31st, 2022 will be celebrating and partaking of one of the evilest and most abominable of pagan beliefs and practices thinking it harmless, dictated to partake using their offspring for an excuse, using their lust and love of self-driven pleasure as their excuse. To partake of Samhain, All Hallows Eve. One of the highest of pagan days. Rebranded to appear like dress up and beg for candy day. Party day. Harmless fun day.

No, not harmless, nor benign, nor disguised as something other than what it really is. Partaking of one of the highest pagan times of the year.

Anyone partaking does so by flaunting their selfish fleshly pleasures while denying the truth. For this there are consequences.

Individuals claiming to be Christian and churches claiming to be Christian that have or hold any part of this pagan “celebration” will face consequences. Before the Lord. According to what is in the Word of God. Not due to what I or any other person may say or write.

I am confident the greater percentage of these while looking forward to, preparing, spending money, making plans, and taking actions to fulfill their desires on this day in their pagan ways while professing to be disciples of the Lord Jesus Christ, a.k.a. “Christians” these haven’t a clue it’s Reformation Day.

Their fleshly lusts and desires, their selfishness, their love of the world, accommodating sin and evil, their being still in darkness and enslaved to the Evil One and sin keep them from the light and the truth. The way to live. Transformed within. Changed within. By the power of the Holy Spirit of God.

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Ken Pullen, A CROOKED PATH, Monday, October 31st, 2022

 

What Is Reformation Day?

 

By Stephen Nichols

Reprinted from Ligonier Ministries

 

2-minute read:

 

A single event on a single day changed the world. It was October 31, 1517. Brother Martin, a monk and a scholar, had struggled for years with his church, the church in Rome. He had been greatly disturbed by an unprecedented indulgence sale. The story has all the makings of a Hollywood blockbuster. Let’s meet the cast.

First, there is the young bishop—too young by church laws—Albert of Mainz. Not only was he bishop over two bishoprics, he desired an additional archbishopric over Mainz. This, too, was against church laws. So Albert appealed to the pope in Rome, Leo X. From the De Medici family, Leo X greedily allowed his tastes to exceed his financial resources. Enter the artists and sculptors, Raphael and Michelangelo.

When Albert of Mainz appealed for a papal dispensation, Leo X was ready to deal. Albert, with the papal blessing, would sell indulgences for past, present, and future sins. All of this sickened the monk Martin Luther. Can we buy our way into heaven? Luther had to speak out.

But why October 31? November 1 held a special place in the church calendar as All Saints’ Day. On November 1, 1517, a massive exhibit of newly acquired relics would be on display at Wittenberg, Luther’s home city. Pilgrims would come from all over, genuflect before the relics, and take hundreds, if not thousands, of years off time in purgatory. Luther’s soul grew even more vexed. None of this seemed right.

Reformation Day celebrates the joyful beauty of the liberating gospel of Jesus Christ.

Martin Luther, a scholar, took quill in hand, dipped it in his inkwell and penned his Ninety-Five Theses on October 31, 1517. These were intended to spark a debate, to stir some soul-searching among his fellow brothers in the church. The Ninety-Five Theses sparked far more than a debate. The Ninety-Five Theses also revealed the church was far beyond rehabilitation. It needed a reformation. The church—and the world—would never be the same.

One of Luther’s Ninety-Five Theses simply declares, “The Church’s true treasure is the gospel of Jesus Christ.” That alone is the meaning of Reformation Day. The church had lost sight of the gospel because it had long ago papered over the pages of God’s Word with layer upon layer of tradition. Mere tradition often brings about systems of works, of earning your way back to God. It was true of the Pharisees, and it was true of medieval Roman Catholicism. Didn’t Christ Himself say, “My yoke is easy and My burden is light”? Reformation Day celebrates the joyful beauty of the liberating gospel of Jesus Christ.

What is Reformation Day? It is the day the light of the gospel broke forth out of darkness. It was the day that began the Protestant Reformation. It was a day that led to Martin Luther, John Calvin, John Knox, and many other Reformers helping the church find its way back to God’s Word as the only supreme authority for faith and life and leading the church back to the glorious doctrines of justification by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone. It kindled the fires of missionary endeavors, it led to hymn writing and congregational singing, and it led to the centrality of the sermon and preaching for the people of God. It is the celebration of a theological, ecclesiastical, and cultural transformation.

So we celebrate Reformation Day. This day reminds us to be thankful for our past and to the monk turned Reformer. What’s more, this day reminds us of our duty, our obligation, to keep the light of the gospel at the center of all we do.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published October 26, 2020.

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