Wednesday, December 22, 2010

"Liberate Yourself from the Package" (Promo Video)

By Hazel Holland 

(Written by Keith Fredrick Allen Tuesday, December 14, 2010 at 2:17am)


"How to advance from religion into the Kingdom of God's Son.

How to be a real lion and get your roar back.

How to live in Jesus the Way instead of living in The Package."


Watch Video here:  The Naked Truth VIDEO


Order book here:  http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Truth-Exposing-Deception-Adventism/dp/143926662X/ref=sir.

Order Kindle copy here:   http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004FPZ506.

Order E-Store here:  https://www.createspace.com/900000430.  

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Without Limitation (Book Review from Amazon)

By Isaiah 61

A loving, unremitting and uncompromising account of how Adventism is bound within the belief that the New Covenant is the Old Covenant. It explains why Adventist renewal groups that come into the gifts of the Spirit can, if not vigilant, remain stalled under a glass ceiling. This limitation being the constriction on God's infinite authority through man - a restriction that remains in place as the result of remaining in an Old Covenant regime of thinking and doing. 

See: Other Amazon Reviews

Hidden Bondage Revealed (An Excerpt from "The Naked Truth: Exposing the Deception of Adventism"

by Hazel

..."Beyond its obvious sexual connotation, incest in essence is an abuse of the legitimate authority that a parent or guardian has over a child. It is a generational family dysfunction, passed down through the generational genes, destroying trust and distorting the healthy parent-child relationship.

For example, in the normal order of things, a parent or guardian is in the position of exercising control and authority over a child by virtue of age, knowledge and experience. The parent is presumed to know better than the child does what is right and wrong, what is safe and unsafe— essentially what is good for the child. Until the child is old enough to be accountable for his or her own decisions, choices and behavior, the parent or guardian stands in the place of God for the child.

Following this line of reasoning we begin to see that parental authority becomes abusive when the parent uses the position of power to satisfy selfish wants or needs at the expense of the child. Because the child is dependent upon the parent or parent figure, the child becomes the victim. Since the victim has generally been taught to admire, trust and respect the one who has abused him, the victim unknowingly becomes a collaborator in the abuse cycle. The conflicting emotions of love and hate, courage and fear, trust and distrust, towards the offending parent leave an indelible mark of fear and shame on the child as the child is forced to deny his or her own reality.

... Just as incest was a generational sin, passed down through the generational genes on both sides of my biological family, so spiritual incest is a generational sin passed down through the denominational genes of the SDA church. As incest is the abuse of parental authority, spiritual incest is the abuse of spiritual authority exercised by spiritual parents and those in authority over us in the church.

Another way of saying this is, “Spiritual abuse is the misuse and abuse of spiritual authority by church leaders who set themselves up as gate keepers, using religious performance rather than faith in Jesus as the criterion for accepting or rejecting their followers.”1

For the purposes of this book I am dealing specifically with the generational sin of spiritual incest in the SDA church. In fact generational spiritual incest has been the best-kept secret within the SDA church for the past one hundred and fifty years. Understanding our spiritual roots and the process our spiritual forbearers used to arrive at their system of beliefs will help us understand why this present generation of Adventists shown in the dream is behaving like incest victims.

As we look at our church history it will become crystal clear how our spiritual forbearers set themselves up to become not only victims but also perpetrators of spiritual incest, and why this cycle of spiritual abuse continues to be experienced in the lives of many of its members to this day."

*Book may be ordered through the following links: 
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Truth-Exposing-Deception-Adventism/dp/143926662X/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1287621413&sr=1-1
CreateSpace: https://www.createspace.com/900000430

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Don't be afraid to look (Book Review from Amazon)

By Ramone Romero (Agapetos)

God is sending many, many prophetic dreams to Adventists because He cares so much about His beloved children in Adventism. This book shows *why* He is doing that, why He cares so much about them. It may not be easy for Adventists to read or to even consider at the beginning. But being in Adventism (especially growing up in it), you notice things here or there --little alarm bells-- like hypocrisies or inconsistencies. And someone says not to pay attention to them, or that no church is perfect. So you try to ignore them, you try to pull yourself up by your bootstraps and be good like the church tells you, but as you sit there singing hymns you find yourself in your good suit just going through the verses emptily.

*GOD CARES* about you and about every beloved, precious child (adult or child!) in Adventism. He doesn't want you to have to sing and feel empty. He doesn't want you to have to pretend that everything is okay or try to ignore negative things for fear of the whole package collapsing. God is not afraid of our imperfections, but rather calls us to embrace them and embrace Him, allowing Him to come and cleanse us. If we're afraid of recognizing our dark spots, then we're afraid of letting in His light and we're then choosing to hold onto a piece of darkness (which allows the enemy room to traffick in our lives). But if we come into the light --warts and all-- we allow His blood to cleanse us.

This book may be a nervous step for you if you are Adventist. But you've already seen the "spots" in your life and in your church. Don't be afraid. God loves you and will not abandon you. Read, trust Him, and let Him set your heart at rest more than you ever imagined possible! Bless you in Jesus' name!

See: Other Amazon Reviews

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Silent Pain (Book review from Amazon)

By Cherry Brandstater "Prayerchild"

Adventism is a complex and perplexing subject for Christians to parse out. In the current age of tolerance and emergent attitudes no one wants to be seen as the thrower of poison darts. Sometimes, however, it becomes necessary to take apart the elements of a church's anatomy to understand the impact of its beliefs and culture. In "The Naked Truth," Hazel Holland dissects some little known facts about the inner workings of an organization that is not what it appears to be on the surface.

The Seventh-day Adventist Church is known world-wide for its philanthropy and state-of-the-art medical institutions. The people themselves are upwardly mobile, well-educated and intellectually inclined - in a word, outstanding. There is a strong sense of community among its members built around commonly held beliefs, shared social consciousness and unique practices. There is much to commend the Adventist life-style.

Over the past several decades there have been a number of exposés revealing the not-so-Christian foundational pillars of the Seventh-day Adventist Church. Various methods have been used to secret these unsavory facts from the Christian world at large. Even the well-known cult-buster, Walter Martin, was deceived into giving the Adventists a provisional nod as fellow believers.

Ms. Holland's book comes at this knotty problem from a new perspective in that she delves into the human wreckage caused by untiring efforts to hide the family's dirty laundry from outsiders. In doing so, she also gives permission for its victims to name the confusing dysfunction they've come to see as normative and turn toward the process of integration. Her vision of the incestuous family system provides a working model that becomes a starting point for the journey toward wholeness. Chapter Four is a particularly apt insight into the psychological and spiritual dynamics of a church system gone awry.

If you know Seventh-day Adventism from a distance, this book will read like a case history of a dysfunctional family. If you have been a part of that family it may uncover some of the roots for behaviors and attitudes that have puzzled you and thwarted your attempts toward healthy intimacy with God.

Cherry Brandstater
Editor, GentlyBroken.com

See: Other Amazon Reviews

Wednesday, September 22, 2010