BOOK REVIEW
Robert Guenther

    "The Buddha of Christendom" by Robert Anderson is our book in review this month.  The Reformaion that took place in the 16th century is the subject of this book.  The Reformers believed that the Bible should be the supreme standard of authority, whereas Rome taught that "the Church" was.  These two differing viewpoints are still at odds in the days in which we live.  One position is Christianity and the other is the religion of Christendom and of its Buddha.

    The first chapter points out the obvious, and that is that God is our creator.  "The fool hath said in his heart, there is no God." This knowledge of how we came into our own existence is essential.  If we miss this point that life is needed to create life we can be deceived into believing other lies.  This truth is recorded in God's Word and is the starting point of our belief about creation.

    The 2nd chapter continues with this theme and suggests that the language of Scripture allows for the theory of evolution in the lower forms of creation.  However we find no "Missing links" when God designed man.

    The 3rd chapter was the most interesting one for me.  It builds on this topic of how man was created from the dust of the ground and man is unique because he is a religious being.  We have been created in God's image and God is Spirit.  Therefore we are spiritual beings and are distinct from the other animals that God created.  Mankind has implanted in him a God-consciousness that makes him a spiritual being.  Rom. 2:14,15 R.V. "When Gentiles which have no law do by nature the things of the law, these, having  no law, are a law unto themselves; in that they show the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness therewith, and their thoughts one with another accusing or else excusing them."  So even though the heathen may be destitute of Divine revelation they still have a knowledge of good and evil, for that is inherent in man.  Another point that stands out is that being a religious man does not make one moral.  An example is given of the Apostle Paul who was according to the religious law of that day "Blameless," and yet as we read further he was a God-hater,
"a blasphemer and a persecutor."  Mere religion drags a man down spiritually.

    Chapter four adds even more weight to the fact that we should not trust in a person's religion.  We should always test it with the Word of God.  Use the Bible as a tool to measure what is truth and what is not.  It is stated that there is more self satisfaction found in religion than any other activity that man is involved with.  We do not need a mediator or an interpreter to understand God's Word.

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