Blog of Page’s

Chief apostle Eric vonAnderseck and his school of Errors

Posted in Christianity, Holiness, Jesus, Religion, church, fals apostle Eric vonAnderseck, false teaching by stevepage on September 22, 2009

I recently had the displeasure of running across a false apostle on one of my favorite forums. I was banned by the forum for my strong language that I used in denouncing his fallacies and outrageous claims. His name is Eric vonAnderseck, and he will tell you that he is the chief apostle over all of the United States. Eric vonAnderseck, on his web site, gives himself the title of Chief apostle.

Eric vonAnderseck teaches some dangerous things at his self-founded Second 8th Week Apostolic Institute of Theology, but before I bore you to death and while I still have your attention I want expose the most blatant error he teaches.

Eric vonAnderseck wrote:

If your soul stands in doubt of your salvation can the scriptures in-of-itself birth the experience of your salvation.The scriptures can validate the experience, but not produce it.

Honestly, I’m so sickened I almost do not know what to say. Does this man who dares to call himself an apostle, truly believe that Scripture cannot produce salvation?

Let’s take a look at what Scripture says.

Let’s first look at John chapter 1 and we see that the Word is Jesus and Jesus is God. “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning.” (John 1:1-2)

When Eric vonAnderseck states that scripture cannot produce salvation he is, in effect, saying that God cannot produce salvation. (The Word is God.)

But maybe that’s not what Eric meant; it’s possible I’m making something out of nothing. Let’s look at what other scriptures say and see if the Bible or Scripture can produce salvation. Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.” (John 5:24) Jesus is pretty clear that his Word brings salvation. We hear the Word, believe it and are saved. This is how the Word produces salvation.

The Apostle Paul had something to say about this idea that the Word can produce salvation. He wrote, “Consequently, faith comes from hearing the message, and the message is heard through the word of Christ.” (Romans 10:17) We see that Paul wrote, what he learned from Jesus. In short we hear the Word, we believe or have faith in the Word and we are saved by the.

The self proclaimed apostle, Eric vonAnderseck and what he teaches at his Second 8th Week Apostolic Institute of Theology are dangerous and anti-Scriptural. What he teaches denies the power of our Lord’s Word to save. Is heresy to strong a word?

I hope you will join me in praying for him and for those he has deceived.

Now, brothers, I want to remind you of the gospel I preached to you, which you received and on which you have taken your stand. By this gospel you are saved, if you hold firmly to the word I preached to you. Otherwise, you have believed in vain.
(1 Corinthians 15:1-2)

I hope I still have you attention.

While looking over Eric’s web page I saw the he had many titles. On one page he calls himself “Dr. Eric vonAnderseck, ThD, DD, Chief Apostle of Jesus Christ for the Second 8th Week of Righteousness.”

I’m sure that you would agree that, that is quite an impressive title. I asked Eric several times where he got his degree. Actually, by several, I mean to say that I asked him 30 to 40 times over the course of three or four days. He refused to answer me.

I later received an email from a person who had seen my posts to Eric asking for the source of his degree. I learned that Eric founded his own school “Second 8th Week Apostolic Institute of Theology.”

It seems that the self appointed apostle Eric vonAnderseck created his own school and then wrote himself and his wife, Marie, a couple of degrees. I can only suppose that his wife, Dr. Maria vonAnderseck, taught him and he taught her.

The apparently false apostle Eric vonAnderseck wrote, on his thesis, that Dr. Maria vonAnderseck helped him greatly with writing it. Are we to suppose that she evaluated his thesis that she helped write? Who evaluated hers, and who helped her write it? Did she sign his degree and he signed her?

This is taken from the Bio page on Eric’s web site.
“Dr. vonAnderseck’s lifetime work and philanthropy has earned him a Doctor of Divinity award from Second 8th Week™ University, where he serves as …. At Second 8th Week University …”

Also from the same article:

“……Dr. Maria vonAnderseck serves as full professor at Second 8th Week University where she earned her PhD degree in Theology for her work with Dr. E. vonAnderseck”

Again, please join me in prayer for these guys and those who they have deceived or may deceive.

I have started a web site. I hope to eventually post everything I can find, that exposes vonAnderseck’s false teachings, in one place. “apostle Eric the Apostate apostle”

If you know of links to any such places please paste them here in the comments.

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The attack of the anti-Christian

Posted in Christianity, Holiness, Jesus, Religion, church, theology by stevepage on September 19, 2009

Endeavor, as much as you can, to keep clear of everything, which may prove injurious to your soul. People may say you are too conscientious, too particular, and ask where is the great harm of such and such things? But don’t listen to them. It is dangerous to play tricks with sharp tools: it is far more dangerous to take liberties with your immortal soul. ~J.C. Ryle

I warned earlier about preaching that is weak on the subject of sin. I now want to warn about something that is even worse. I want to expose those among us who are no better than anti-Christians. They are those who throw water on the fire that the Holy Spirit sparked in you.

These are strong words I know, but it’s true, and these anti-Christians have affected most of us in a terrible way at one time or other. These people are people we love and people who love us. Those I am speaking of are those who convince us that it’s OK to compromise. I’m also speaking about those people in our lives who convince us to tone down the talk about Jesus and who make us feel guilty or extreme if we live by scripture and follow the Word of God for all we are worth. In reality they convince us that it’s normal and proper to not “love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” (Matthew 22:37)

How many of us were once on fire for God and refused to compromise what we believed, only to have our resolve chipped away by “well intentioned” others, who convinced us to “tone it down.” Some of us never had the chance to live uncompromised lives; we may have lived in a compromised position, around compromised Christians, our entire Christian walk. If we fall into either group it’s time for us to turn around and start living lives of uncompromised purity and righteousness. No matter what the anti-Christians and the world have convinced us of, Christ still calls us to a different standard.

We live in a world where Christians are taught early not to be dogmatic about their beliefs, because it may offend others. We feel embarrassed about telling others about Jesus. We feel that it is improper to tell others that He is the only way and the Hell awaits those who do not believe in Him. Christians explain that they do not witness to unbelievers because they “do not feel led to.” The Holy Spirit of God did not stop them from witnessing, what stopped them was the cowardice that is born from compromise and complacency. Compromise broke their will and complacency sapped them of their boldness.

Christians have been taught that it’s OK to walk with one foot in the world. Many of us know Christians who compromise themselves, in small ways, to save or make some amount of money. We know those who spend more time watching world events on the news, playing video games or being entertained by sports than they do praying or reading God’s Word. We see our Christian brothers covering themselves with tattoos, and our Christian sisters wearing cloths designed to highlight their sexual parts. To many Christians this is perfectly normal and acceptable. Anti-Christians have convinced them, in conversation and by example, that these things are quite acceptable.

These or other compromises are not acceptable, except by the world. Christians must redefine what is acceptable and what is not. Many of us define what is acceptable by whether or not it is sinful, or whether or not we will get caught. That is legalism. Some allow modern culture to define what is right or wrong. Fear of being unacceptable to friends and the world motivate us. That is worldliness.

To us Christians those things that are acceptable should be those things that bring glory to God. Acceptable things are those things that we know would please God and best represent the nature of God. Our obedience should come from love and not fear of reprisal.

God loves us as we are. He loves us though we are still sinners; God’s love for us is not in question. The questions are these. Do we love God as He loves us? Have we been convinced to love both Him and the world? Are we convinced that we must live our lives for our own comfort, our own self-image and our own sake? For whose or what’s sake do we make our choices?

We must live our lives and make our choices only for the honor of His name. We must die to the expectations of the anti-Christians and the world, and we must begin to live for the sake of His name. What we do to our bodies, what we watch and listen to, what we say and do; these things all represent Christ to every one who sees us.

Spiritual Maturity

Posted in Charismatic, Jesus, Religion, What's God's Will?, church by stevepage on September 19, 2009
I was speaking to a young man, who I admire and love, the other day when he said something that was startling to me. He told that he had gone to his friend’s church and he said something to the effect that the Spirit wasn’t there. I took what he said to mean that the Holy Spirit was not present at his friend’s church, at least not as powerfully as He is at this young man’s church.

In the past I have been associated with, and for a while, I was taught in the same “belief system” that the young man is now in. It is common to hear those in that “belief system” to say things like “I went this or that church and I didn’t feel the Spirit there” “that church doesn’t have the Spirit” or “We didn’t feel the Spirit when we sang in that church.”

In reality what is being said is “our church is Spiritually superior to those other churches”
and “that other church does not give me an emotional high like mine does.” I have two things to say to this.

First, Jesus and His Spirit are wherever two or three are gathered. Our faith tells us this is true. Even though we never see the Spirit or Jesus we know that they exist, by our faith. Even though the music might be the old songs our grandparent listened to and do not stir us up, our faith should tell us that God is among the body of believers that we are with. The person who wrote Hebrews wrote, “Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.” We need to understand that the certainty of our hope is not in what we see or feel, but in the promises of God. Jesus does show up because a certain kind of music is played or clothes are worn.

The second point I would like to make is about the similarities between us thinking, “our church is spiritually superior to that church” and the parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector. The Pharisee did not know the heart or life of the tax collector and judged on what he saw and felt about the man. Another similarity is the Pharisee lacked true godly humility and the way he judged the tax collector was based in pride.

If a church or a body of believers has doctrine or teaches things that are against scripture then we must speak out against those things. But, if a church’s music and services are different than what we are accustomed to and they don’t evoke the same emotion and feelings that we are accustomed to, we need to understand that they are not wrong. They are only different. Being different is not wrong. Understanding this and accepting our brothers and sisters who are different is a sign of our Spiritual growth and our Christian maturity.

Peace, Steve

“Jesus told a story to some people who thought they were better than others and who looked down on everyone else:

Two men went into the temple to pray. One was a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood over by himself and prayed, “God, I thank you that I am not greedy, dishonest, and unfaithful in marriage like other people. And I am really glad that I am not like that tax collector over there. I go without eating for two days a week, and I give you one tenth of all I earn.” The tax collector stood off at a distance and did not think he was good enough even to look up toward heaven. He was so sorry for what he had done that he pounded his chest and prayed, “God, have pity on me! I am such a sinner.” Then Jesus said, “When the two men went home, it was the tax collector and not the Pharisee who was pleasing to God. If you put yourself above others, you will be put down. But if you humble yourself, you will be honored.”

Luke 18:9-14

Peace is Un-American

Posted in Christianity, Jesus, Religion, What's God's Will?, church, theology by stevepage on October 3, 2008

I just want say a word about living in peace.  Really it goes against everything we’re taught.  We grow up in America where competition is fed to us like a mother’s milk is fed to babies.  If you had brothers and sisters you probably felt compelled to compete with them for everything.  As a result many feel that they can’t rise to the top, without walking on others.  Some have the unspoken opinion that they only succeed when others do not. This competitive attitude makes us critical of others, aggressive, judgmental against those who appear weak or in need. It makes us arrogant, uncaring and cold hearted, unwilling to lift others up.  It’s a lie we’ve all been taught all our lives.

We should ask ourselves what it matters if we’re better and richer than anybody we know, but we lose our souls.  Jesus teaches us that the first will be last and the last will be first.  There are so many references to peace in the Bible that I couldn’t read them all at one time.

Life is not us against them, life is us and them.  Success is not rising to the top on the back’s of others, success is rising to the top together with mutual respect and help.  All for one, one for all.

Our prayer for each other and ourselves:  Father teach us to continually bless each other in deed and in prayer.  Teach us that true success comes when we learn to put others before ourselves.  Give us your wisdom and heart Oh God.  Makes us feel silly if we look down on others.  Destroy that lie, in us, that competition is good.  Heal us and destroy those ungodly strongholds we’ve been taught.

Matthew 5:9

Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called sons of God.

Philippians 2:3 Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. 4 Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too.

Galatians 6:4 Each one should test his own actions. Then he can take pride in himself, without comparing himself to somebody else…….

Mark 9:50
“Salt is good, but if it loses its saltiness, how can you make it salty again? Have salt in yourselves, and be at peace with each other.”

John 14:27
Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you.

Acts 10:36
You know the message God sent to the people of Israel, telling the good news of peace through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all.

Colossians 3:15
Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace.

James 3:17
But the wisdom that comes from heaven is first of all pure; then peace-loving, considerate, submissive, full of mercy and good fruit, impartial and sincere.