Why The Reformation Online Website Isn't Good Theology
It's Reformation month and I think one of the best websites to be careful about (aside from David J. Stewart's "Jesus-is-Savior") is "Reformation Online" - a website managed by Patrick Scrivener. Something's really not right especially if its claims are too good to be true. If you entered the index page - you may notice the following words:
Scrivener of Reformation Online wants you to believe or so it seems. While the site does contain some truth (such as "Jesus-is-Savior") - it does contain some dangerous misinformation that it wants to present as truthful. How does Reformation Online stand as the "most timely and truthful" site on the Internet? Is it real or is it just false advertising? It's a common tactic by businessmen to gain more sales even when their claims get disproven by reality. Just remember that no dishonest businessman will ever tell you that the are lying through their teeth. They may even pull stunts just to make it look like that they're supposedly telling the truth! If the claim is too good to be true (such as a quick return in gains in such a short amount of time) then don't you believe it!
There are sources cited every now and then but there are some questionable claims on the website. Here are just some questionable claims by "Reformation Online":
See also:
YOU ARE BLESSED FOR VISITING THE REFORMATION ONLINE—THE MOST TIMELY, TRUTHFUL, AND FEARLESS SITE ON THE INTERNET!
Scrivener of Reformation Online wants you to believe or so it seems. While the site does contain some truth (such as "Jesus-is-Savior") - it does contain some dangerous misinformation that it wants to present as truthful. How does Reformation Online stand as the "most timely and truthful" site on the Internet? Is it real or is it just false advertising? It's a common tactic by businessmen to gain more sales even when their claims get disproven by reality. Just remember that no dishonest businessman will ever tell you that the are lying through their teeth. They may even pull stunts just to make it look like that they're supposedly telling the truth! If the claim is too good to be true (such as a quick return in gains in such a short amount of time) then don't you believe it!
There are sources cited every now and then but there are some questionable claims on the website. Here are just some questionable claims by "Reformation Online":
- The writer claims that the name Jesus is supposedly derived after Zeus. This is really laughable for one reason. Do they bother to study Greek hard enough to know that Jesus is Joshua and Zeus means something entirely different? If they bother to re-read the King James Version which they use - they will realize that the Greek is Jesus. Just because they sound alike doesn't mean that they mean the same thing!
- The writer also believes in the serpent seed doctrine. They believe in a pre-Flood world that would be found only in Hollywood movies (such as the blasphemous "Noah" movie a few years ago) or in classical mythology. How can you even have animal hybrids in the pre-Flood world when God already designed animals to reproduce according to its kind? Just where the are the fossils? It's too riddled in the fantasy of sinister Hollywood movies and pagan mythology than the truth found in the Scriptures and science.
- The writer believes that Buddha is born on December 25 while comparing Buddhism and Catholicism. The Dalai Lama is not the Buddhist Pope since there are many schools of Buddhism which often clash with their ideals. Buddha is not born on December 25 (in fact, his birthday according to Buddhist and Hindu traditions differ) and neither was Jesus. December 25 was only assigned as a supposed date of Jesus' birth but that's not even confirmed or denied! What's important is that Jesus was born so He can save us from our sins!
- Note that the same article claims Mao Zedong an atheist was supposedly a devout Buddhist. I find that claim ridiculous! Mao was devoted to destroying religion so why would he even be a Buddhist?
- Another page of the said website says that Mao Zedong is a Muslim. Wait, didn't the same site said earlier that Mao was a devout Buddhist all his life when he was an atheist?
- The writer believes that John the Baptist was Elijah while blatantly lying that he doesn't believe that the latter was reincarnated into the former. Let's consider Hindu mythology on how reincarnation happens. Did Vishnu die before he became any of his incarnations? He didn't die at all before he became different persons in different lifetimes. Instead, Vishnu took the form of several people even getting born in a human body other different human mothers in different lifetimes. I wonder do they not understand that calling John the Baptist as Elijah is a figure of speech just like Jesus called the bread His body?
- The writer also has some questionable science going on. They believe that vaccination and pasteurization are harmful - which may be solely based on the fact that Edward Jenner and Louis Pasteur were Roman Catholics. I'm against Roman Catholicism but I won't dismiss any truth that the average Roman Catholic today may be saying even if I disagree with his or her theological beliefs. He thinks that both practices have allegedly created an Inquisition.
- The claim that raw milk is supposedly "better" hasn't been backed up by any real studies at all. He thinks that raw milk was outlawed thanks to an ongoing medical Inquisition. Does he even know the dangers of raw milk? Does the writer himself know how pasteurization actually works? I guess he should dismiss Louis Pasteur's proofs against Darwinian evolution too, right? Only today, we've found better, more effective methods than Pasteur could've dreamed of. I wonder does he even drink his milk raw or does he hypocritically drink pasteurized milk behind our backs? If he does more research then he will realize boiling milk was already a practice of preservation before the term pasteurization was ever invented.
- If he does enough research - he may realize that Louis Pasteur is mentioned by "Answers in Genesis" and "Creation Ministries International" (CMI) as an outstanding scientist.
- Apparently, the writer of the site doesn't do much scientific research and is guilty of using the fallacy of genetic fallacy together with guilt by association. Would he dismiss the Gregorian Calendar because a Pope invented it or the principles of Mendelian genetics because a Roman Catholic monk wrote down the study? He might as well reject modern mathematics because much of its foundations are from Greece and Egypt. I guess engineers today should reject Trigonometry which was heavily used by the Egyptians and Greeks.
- The printing press which lately benefitted the Reformation was invented by a Roman Catholic named Johannes Gutenberg. Sadly, his invention was later outlawed by the Vatican itself!
- You may consider reading "CMI, vaccines, and vaccination" from CMI. While there are indeed cases of people who create epidemics to sell vaccines but there are also honest people who administer vaccination for a good cause.
- The writer carries on the same lie that Jesuits supposedly invented futurism. He does believe that the Antichrist is a dynasty. What makes it laughable is that he uses 1 John 2:18 to justify it while ignoring that there's a difference between many antichrists and the Antichrist. Clear distinction yet he can't get it like how Roman Catholics just don't get the distinction between Peter as a rock and the Rock (Matthew 16:18-19). So much for criticizing Roman Catholics for not being able to discern the differences if he too can't discern!
- The writer also has had made some claims about knowing certain Vatican "secrets" from various sources which may be questionable at best. While I don't deny that the Vatican is indeed the evilest covert organization ever - this site tends to feed on anti-Catholic hysteria more than it focuses on winning Catholics to the Lord. I do believe that the Jesuits and the Illuminati are causing trouble here and there but you can't blame them for all the troubles in the world. Does this guy even think that both the Jesuits and the Illuminati can now even control the weather? Is the writer even watching too many Hollywood movies that his claims tend to be too fantastic at times?
It's best to just avoid using that site as a reference. It should be treated like Stewart's "Jesus-is-Savior" - as a site that's full of misinformation mixed with the truth. It's a common tactic to mix truth and lies to confuse people and make yourself look authentic. The best thing to do is to dismiss it as a spurious source of information. Christians need to stay clear of this site because it clearly needs to reform away from its conspiracy theorist, full of fantasy mixed with reality approach!
- Being Careful of the Pitfall of Believing Conspiracy Theory Messages on Text and Social Networks
- Christians and Conspiracy Theories: Discernment or Distraction?
- Conspiracy Theories Usually End Up Nowhere But Endless Speculations
- Conspiracy Theorists Are Usually Just Close Minded People with Wide Open Mouths
- Discerning Against Some Books and Websites Supposedly Meant to Help Christians
- Never Mind the Conspiracy Theories
- Overanalyzing and Overdoing Stuff Then Mixing Them Up With Conspiracy Theories
- Stop Reading David J. Stewart's Jesus-is-Savior Website, Okay?
- That Reptilian Conspiracy Nonsense