“Moore’s behavior brought me to mind again of two critical items we should use when assessing whether a teacher who claims Jesus and teaches the Bible is false or not. These two items flow into each other.”
(Elizabeth Prata – The End Time) I enjoyed Twitter (now called X) for a long while. There used to be more ladies on it who are encouraging, sweet, and talk of homelife or share scripture. Many of those have backed off or abandoned the social media platform altogether. I’m still hanging in there, as are some nice other ladies and gents, but I’m dismayed that the arguments have gotten out of hand. They’re daily now. Everyone seems to have a flashpoint set at zero.
I usually ignore the fights. This week though, Beth Moore piped up. I wasn’t aware at the time but Moore’s comment had set off a huge argument on X. She rebuked pastor Josh Howerton, butting into a thread that had nothing to do with her and chastising his comments on godly manhood.
Moore’s influence is still large. After inserting herself into a thread that had nothing to do with her, she rebuked and chastised the pastor who made the original comment. Her admonishment caused a furor. I am dismayed that her (negative) influence is still large enough after 40 years of public life to even cause a furor, but God knows best.
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 Beth Moore.