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Teaching in Costa Rica
This past January I and my wife and our four-month old baby daughter
Noël traveled to Costa Rica on our frequent-flyer miles. Our stay was
for 12 days, during which I taught a course on Worldviews at Seminario
ESEPA in San José in the evenings, spoke to local pastors in the
mornings during the first week, and spoke at the Language Training
Institute on Friday morning of the first week. During our only weekend
there we traveled to the Caribbean side of the country and stayed in a
hotel at the beach. (The hotel had a bamboo ceiling and a tin roof!)
Seminary Course
My course on Worldviews ran for 10 days—two weeks of Monday-Friday,
6:00-9:00pm classes. Twelve wonderful, attentive and bright students
attended. I covered the subjects of Theism, Naturalism/Atheism, Deism,
Agnosticism, Existentialism, Nihilism, Postmodernism, Polytheism,
Pantheism, and Panentheism. There was, of course, a faculty member (Mark
Padgett) who translated for me into Spanish. His skills were a gift to
me.
Mornings with Pastors
In Costa Rica there is a great need for theological education for
pastors, and for cult-awareness. On each morning I gave an Introduction
to the Cults and opened up our time for Q&A and discussion. On many
faces appeared looks of appreciation for gaining a theological and
Christ-centered approach to discerning truth and error. Judging from
what I heard from pastors, as well as during some personal
conversations, the Word-Faith Movement (represented by such teachers as
Kenneth Copeland, Kenneth Hagin, and others) is quite prevalent in Latin
America, not only because of visits by Word-Faith teachers, but because
of Trinity Broadcast Network (TBN). TBN brings to hundreds of thousands
of viewers (if not millions) the teaching that Jesus was the first
person to be born again, that faith is a power force, and that the words
we speak carry the force of faith to obtain healing and prosperity,
among other heretical doctrines.
Language Training Institute
Literally across the street from the Spanish Language Training Institute
(which is Christian) are the Jehovah’s Witnesses and the Mormons. Many
of those in training at the institute were not equipped in reaching out
to a mission field right across the street! Prior to my visit I
arranged, with the director, a morning talk during which I shared on how
to reach out to Jehovah’s Witnesses. Armed with a bit of knowledge on
what the Jehovah’s Witnesses believe about certain essential areas of
doctrine, and with the Scripture to share in refutation, Christians are
able to share with Jehovah’s Witnesses exactly where it is they are
unbiblical, and to apply that toward effective evangelism. I was
grateful for the time I had at the institute, brief though it was.
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A Mormon Encounter
After my first week of teaching, on Saturday we headed with our hosts to
the Caribbean for a relaxing weekend. (By the way, it takes five hours
by car to make the 110-mile trip!) As we began our trip we headed past
the Language Training Institute and, of course, the Mormon Ward across
the street from the institute. In the parking lot was a group of
Mormons. My host stopped his car nearby, and I went over to engage the
Mormons in dialog. I introduced myself, and, to my surprise, one of the
Mormons spoke English! I knew my time would be short, for they were
grouping in order to do something together. I asked the Mormon if he
believed he could become a god some day. He answered yes. I then shared
Isaiah 43:10 with him (“before Me no god was formed; neither will there
be after Me”). I asked him to comment on the verse. But he had no
answer, accept to say that he would look at it more in depth at a later
time. I then shared with him the Mormon teaching that Jesus was the
firstborn spirit-child to God the Father (an exalted man with body
parts) and heavenly Mother (an exalted woman with body parts), and that
the spirit-child Jesus became a god when he was a spirit-child. Further,
this Jesus came to earth to take a body in the womb of Mary because the
Father himself came down and had intercourse with Mary. He said that he
had never heard of the teaching that Jesus was the firstborn
spirit-child. I shared with him some official sources that teach that
doctrine, and asked him to research it for himself. He said he would,
but in the meantime I shared that Jesus always was God the Son (John
1:1), and that he was conceived in the womb of Mary “by the Holy Spirit”
(Matt. 1:18, 20). I then appealed to him on the basis of Jesus’ words in
John 8:24 (“unless you believe that I am, you will die in your sins”) to
accept the biblical Christ, and to forsake the counterfeit Christ of
Mormonism. “I share this with you,” I said, “because I love you for the
sake of Christ.” I then thanked him for the time he gave to me and
invited him to accept the biblical Christ as savior. He would not do so,
stating to me that he believed the Mormon Church teaches the biblical
Jesus. I then asked to check out what I had shared with him, shook his
hand and said goodbye.
Well, needless to say, it was a fruitful trip, one I will never forget.
Please pray for the students, pastors, language students, and for this
Mormon man. Also, please consider making a donation to SDM’s “Costa Rica
Fund.” See details on the flip side of this issue of The Sounding Board.
Steven Tsoukalas |