Buddygate: The Debate Kirk Was Afraid to Have

“Despite the claim by Cameron’s son that they had “flown in…the best from all across the world,” in truth, Cameron merely brought in a group of buddies from the world of micro-apologetics. Date, Copan, and Paterson are friends and frequent collaborators, whose cordial disagreements on issues like annihilationism are used as fodder for the “one more event” apologetics circuit.”

(David Morrill) Over the last couple of months, we’ve been unfortunate witnesses to Christian actor Kirk Cameron’s public, epistemological and theological deconstruction, made most evident by his subversive promotion of the heresy known as annihilationism – sometimes called conditional immortality. As this sentence has made several serious charges (deconstruction, subversion, heresy), I will not leave readers without a thorough, evidence-based demonstration of these charges, nor a straightforward explanation of both where Kirk has erred theologically and by what well-worn path he was led away from biblical truth.

While Kirk Cameron’s public ministry has been all over the map (evangelizing with solid brothers like Ray Comfort, then appearing alongside TBN heretics), his embrace of annihilationism is the first time he has publicly advocated for a heretical doctrine held primarily by cults like the Seventh Day Adventists and the Jehovah’s Witnesses, and aligned with Mormon ontology. View article →

 

Related

Is Hell Really Endless? John MacArthur

DISCLAIMER

CRN has compiled a list of false teachers and several other professing Christians we’ve warned you about over the years. The list also contains those we must keep an eye on plus movements, organizations and “frauds, phonies and money-grubbing religious quacks” to mark and avoid as per Romans 16:17-18 such as some of those mentioned in the article.

Join Marsha West on Facebook and MeWe