Playlist:

playlist Go to the Earth, Worship of (topic) playlist

The Global Environmental Ethic (Part Three)

Commentary by Martin G. Collins

The UN Environmental Project espouses an environmental ethic, an eco-spirituality designed to enforce a global reference for earth and an international earth sabbath.


The Religion of Climate Change

Feast of Tabernacles Sermon by Mike Ford

Being good stewards of the earth should not lead to the imbalanced practice of making mother-earth our goddess. Rejecting the Creator brings calamity.


The Bible and the Environment

'Prophecy Watch' by Richard T. Ritenbaugh

Is God an environmentalist? Should Christians care about the ecological health of the earth and its inhabitants? Here's what the Bible says about the environment.


Animal Idolatry

'Prophecy Watch' by Mike Ford (1955-2021)

Have the animal rights groups gone too far? This movement borders on—if not transgresses—the line between concern and idolatry.


Climategate

Commentary by Richard T. Ritenbaugh

The e-mails of Climategate have exposed the sham and hypocrisy of leftist pseudo-scientists who have fudged the data, clearly lusting after government grants.


Tisha b'Av

Sermonette by Clyde Finklea

The 9th of Av commemorates major historical tragedies. When it occurs on a Sabbath during a Shemitah (year of release), horrible things occur.


Creation Stewardship

Feast of Tabernacles Sermon by Martin G. Collins

We as Christians should strive to be the most conscientious environmentalists or creationists in the world because the earth and its fullness are the Lord's.


The Occult

Sermon by Martin G. Collins

The Bible condemns divination, necromancy, soothsayers, sorcery, spiritism and witchcraft, identifying all these practices as abominations, based on demonism.


The Life Which I Now Live

Sermonette by Martin G. Collins

God is putting the us through trials to determine if we will remain loyal to the covenant we made with God, living a life of sacrifice.


The Post-Resurrection Last Words of Christ (Part Two)

Sermon by Martin G. Collins

It is presumptuous to cast aspersions on Thomas, using the cliché 'Doubting Thomas,' as he was braver than most of us would have been in his circumstances.