Saturday, June 6, 2026

REAL TALK REFLECTION: Politics, Principles, and Our Life in Former Adventists Philippines



Let’s be real politics in the Philippines is grabe (intense). Everywhere you look, people are arguing about who is right, who is corrupt, and which side to take. It feels like the air is always thick with tension. As Christians, we live in this society, and naturally, we have our own take on what’s happening in our government.

But lately, I’ve noticed a pattern in the feedback I receive on my social media posts. The irony is that most of the criticism doesn't come from outsiders, but from within our own FAP community. When I look closely, it’s clear this pushback isn't because I’m wrong or violating any biblical principle; it’s because my posts happen to touch a nerve regarding their own political pride. It triggers their loyalty to the specific candidate or partisan they voted for. We need to be honest with ourselves: when we criticize out of political defense rather than biblical conviction, that critique is subjective and politically motivatednot based on an objective, godly cause.

This is exactly why we need to clear the air about where FAP stands and how we should carry ourselves.

The FAP Stance: Neutrality vs. Personal Freedom

First off, let’s get this straight: FAP as an organization is non-partisan. We are not here to endorse a political candidate, a party, or a specific government policy. Our purpose is deeper than that. As the founder of FAP, I have never, and will never, use our gatherings, events, or official platforms to push a political agenda. I want our space to be safe for everyone, regardless of who you voted for or what you think of the current administration.

However, being part of FAP doesn’t mean you stop being a citizen of this country. You have every right to be informed, to be concerned, and to speak up. I believe in Christian freedom. Your personal social media profile is your space. You aren't required to stay silent just because someone else disagrees with your political stance. If you see injustice or dishonesty in the government, you have every right to call it out.

The "Silent War" vs. Respectful Diversity

Here is where it gets tricky. In some circles, they practice "forced silence" or "uniform voting" like what you see in cult-like organizations. We are not that. We don't control your vote, and we don't police your conscience.

But there is a boundary. When we enter our FAP community, we leave the political boxing ring at the door. If a fellow member posts a political opinion you disagree with, do not turn the comment section into a place for a debate or a heated argument. That is a sign of immaturity.

Our policy is simple:
  • Freedom to express: You are free to post your views on your own timeline.

  • Respectful engagement: If you disagree with a member's post, keep your comment to yourself. If you really want to show support or acknowledgment, use a "like" or "heart" emoji. That’s it.

  • No public conflict: Confronting a brother or sister publicly creates division, "silent wars," and a toxic culture. It destroys the image of the organization. If you can’t handle a disagreement without causing heat, it’s a sign that your pride is getting in the way of our unity.

The True Test of Maturity

Let’s be honest: some people have left FAP or decided to stop being active because they couldn't stand that other members had different political views.

If your loyalty to a political personality is stronger than your commitment to the body of Christ, we need to talk. Walking away from fellowship just because of politics shows that for those individuals, politics has become their priority, perhaps even their idol over the teachings of Christ. They are essentially saying, "My political side is more important than my Christian family." If you think like that, you are free to leave, because you’re creating problems instead of solutions, and you're failing the test of faith. You love the world more than Christ.

True Christian maturity is being able to say, "I disagree with you on this policy, but I love you as my brother/sister in Christ." Unity in FAP is moved by love, not by political partisans.

The Role of Spiritual Leaders

I was reading some thoughts recently about the position of spiritual leaders, and I came across an insight that I really agree with. As one well-known writer noted:

"The ideal stance for a spiritual leader is to remain a moral guide and the 'conscience' of society, rather than taking sides with political parties or endorsing specific statements. Their primary duty is to teach principles of justice, truth, and love to guide their flock, without getting tangled up in the divisiveness that politics often brings."

This quote is not just compatible to what I'm saying here, it is a perfect match for FAP position. It captures the essence of the "neutral but principled" approach I've established for FAP.

Here is why that quote aligns so well with my views for FAP:

1. It validates my role as a "Conscience."

I believe I have both the right and the responsibility, as a citizen and a leader, to call out lies and injustice. This quote identifies the "ideal stance" for a leader as being the "conscience of society," which perfectly justifies my approach. I’m not here to fight for a political party; I’m fighting for truth and justice. This allows me to speak on moral issues without being branded as a partisan player.

2. It reinforces FAP’s institutional neutrality.

My stance has always been clear: FAP as an organization does not endorse candidates. The quote explicitly advises against "taking sides with political parties." Adopting this perspective gives me a clear, objective reason for why FAP stays out of the political fray it’s not out of indifference, but because my primary duty is to the principles of justice, truth, and love, rather than to politics.

3. It addresses the issue of divisiveness.

I have been very vocal about how political debates often create "silent wars," tampuhan, and division within the body of Christ. This quote acknowledges that politics brings unnecessary friction and argues that a leader should avoid getting "tangled up" in that mess. It perfectly supports my policy of keeping political debates out of our FAP gatherings and encouraging members to handle their differences with grace on their own personal social media pages, rather than turning our ministry into a battlefield.

4. It prioritizes the "flock" over the "party."

My core argument that our unity in Christ is far more important than our political differences is mirrored in this quote’s focus on the "primary duty" to "teach principles of justice, truth, and love." It shifts the focus from the who (which politician) to the what (the Christian principles of love and truth).

In short: Using this quote gives my position a strong, professional, and spiritual foundation. It proves that my stance isn't based on a personal whim, but on a balanced, time-tested understanding of what a spiritual leader’s role should be in society. It effectively shuts down the idea that I am "against" anyone it clarifies once and for all that I am simply for the truth.

This is the goal. When we focus on the Word, we don't get trapped in the tampuhan (sulking) or the division. We keep our eyes on Jesus, and we let Him be the center. Politics will pass; the Kingdom of God remains.

Real Talk Reflection

Bible Verse:

"Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." (James 1:19)

Call to Action: Before you hit "Post" or "Reply" on a political thread, pause and breathe. Ask yourself: "Is this post adding light to the situation, or just creating more noise?"

If you see a post from a fellow FAP member that really gets under your skin, don’t turn the comment section into a boxing ring. If you must talk, do it through a private message with humility and grace. Let’s remember that our bond as a family in Christ is way bigger than any political disagreement. We can be passionate about the truth without losing our kindness.

Pray for our country, pray for our leaders, and pray for each other. Things will settle down eventually let’s make sure we still have a family to come home to when they do.

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Does Hebrews 4:9 Mandate the Saturday Sabbath?"



INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Does Hebrews 4:9 Mandate the Saturday Sabbath?"


"So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God," Hebrews 4:9(ESV)


Question:
I often hear from my Seventh-day Adventist friends that Hebrews 4:9 is the "proof text" for keeping the weekly seventh-day Sabbath. They say the word "sabbatismos" proves that the Sabbath remains for the people of God. How do we answer this from a New Covenant Theology perspective, especially considering the context of the entire book of Hebrews?

The Real Context: The Danger of Going Back

To understand Hebrews 4:9, we cannot just look at one verse in isolation. We have to look at the why. Why was the book of Hebrews written?

The audience was a group of Jewish Christians who were terrified. They were under intense persecution for leaving the Jewish religious system. Because of the pressure, they were seriously considering "apostasy" meaning, they wanted to head back to the Temple, back to the Levitical priesthood, and back to the old covenant rituals to stay safe and "blend in" with their Jewish neighbors.

The whole point of the book of Hebrews is to tell them: Don’t go back!

The author spends chapters 1 through 10 demonstrating that Jesus is better than everything in the old system. He is better than the angels, better than Moses, and better than the priesthood. If you go back to those things, you aren't upgrading your faith; you are abandoning the substance for a shadow.

The Problem with the SDA Argument

If we accept the interpretation that Hebrews 4:9 is commanding these Christians to return to the weekly seventh-day Sabbath, we are essentially saying the author of Hebrews is undermining his own argument.

Think about it:
  • The author is pleading with these believers to leave the Jewish system (the shadows) because Christ is the substance (Hebrews 10:1).

    "For since the law has but a shadow of the good things to come instead of the true form of these realities, it can never, by the same sacrifices that are continually offered every year, make perfect those who draw near." Hebrews 10:1(ESV)
If the author were telling them, "You must keep the Saturday Sabbath," he would be telling them to hold onto the very system they are trying to leave.

That would turn the book into a confusing mess. He would be saying, "Everything about the Old Covenant is obsolete (Hebrews 8:13), except for this one ritual, which you must keep or you are sinning."

That doesn't fit the flow of the book at all. The author is consistently pushing them forward to Christ, not backward to the law.

The Meaning of Sabbatismos

The word used in Hebrews 4:9 is sabbatismos. The Seventh-day Adventist argument relies on linking this word to sabbaton (the weekly Sabbath). However, the author of Hebrews was a careful writer. If he wanted to talk about the weekly seventh-day Sabbath, he knew the word sabbaton as used in Mark 2:27.

"And he said to them, “The Sabbath (sabbaton) was made for man, not man for the Sabbath (sabbaton)." Mark 2:27(ESV)

"So then, there remains a Sabbath rest (sabbatismos) for the people of God," Hebrews 4:9(ESV)

Why switch words?

  • Sabbaton: Refers to the seventh day of the week, the ritual Sabbath day.
  • Sabbatismos: This is a distinct term meaning "Sabbath-rest." It refers to the rest of God the eternal, spiritual rest that believers enter by faith.
In Hebrews 4, the author is comparing the rest that the Israelites failed to enter (the Promised Land) with the spiritual rest that we enter when we trust in the finished work of Christ. Verse 9 is not about a calendar day; it is about the total, finished rest we have in Jesus. We stop "working" for our salvation (the legalistic treadmill) and rest in the completed sacrifice of Christ. That is the sabbatismos that remains for the people of God.

The "Real Talk" Conclusion

If the Sabbath were still a moral obligation binding on the New Covenant church, the book of Hebrews would be the perfect place to clarify that. Instead, it does the opposite. It shows that the entire Old Covenant framework the types, the shadows, and the day-based observances has been fulfilled in Christ.

To insist that Hebrews 4:9 commands the weekly Sabbath is to ignore the "big picture" of the book. The author isn't trying to help them keep the law; he is trying to liberate them from it so they can cling to the only thing that saves, Jesus.

Real Talk Reflection

"There remains, then, a Sabbath-rest for the people of God; for anyone who enters God’s rest also rests from their works, just as God did from his." Hebrews 4:9-10 (NIV)

Call to Action: Are you still trying to "work" for your standing before God? Whether it is by keeping certain days, following dietary laws, or performing religious rituals to earn favor, remember that Hebrews 4 tells us we can stop. We don't rest on a calendar day; we rest in a Person. Today, stop striving. Acknowledge that the work of salvation is finished by Christ, and let that truth give you true, deep, daily peace.

Friday, June 5, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Ang Fallacy ng "Sinful Nature is Not Sin" at Last Generation Theology (LGT)"



INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM Q&A: "Ang Fallacy ng "Sinful Nature is Not Sin" at Last Generation Theology (LGT)"


Welcome back sa ating deep dive. " We engage directly sa mga theological claims ng SDA church. Ngayon, hihimayin natin ang argument na "Ang Sinful Nature ay hindi Sin" at ang "Last Generation Theology" (LGT) na nagsasabing kaya nating mag-live ng sinless life para i-vindicate ang character ni God.

Let’s be precise. Gagamit tayo ng historico-grammatical hermeneutics para makita kung ano talaga ang sinasabi ng original Greek at Hebrew, at kung bakit logical fallacy ang mga arguments na ito.


1. Ang Fallacy ng "One Definition of Sin" (1 John 3:4)

Sabi ng SDA argument: “There is ONLY ONE definition of sin: ‘Sin is the transgression of the law.’”

Ang Exegetical Error:

Mali ang pag-isolate sa 1 John 3:4. Oo, ang salitang Greek dito ay anomia (lawlessness). Pero ang Biblia ay gumagamit ng mas malawak na term para sa kasalanan: hamartia (missing the mark).
  • Ang Problema: Kung sinasabi ninyong ang kasalanan ay act of transgression lang, paano ninyo ipaliliwanag ang Romans 5:12-19? Sabi ni Paul, "sin entered the world through one man" and "by the one man’s disobedience, the many were made sinners (hamartƍloi)." Hindi lang tayo naging makasalanan dahil sa gawa; tayo ay ginawang makasalanan (a state of being).

  • Reductio ad Absurdum: Kung ang "Sinful Nature" ay hindi sin, ibig sabihin, hindi tayo inherently sinners by birth. Kung ganun, hindi natin kailangan ng bagong nature (regeneration), behavioral modification lang ang kailangan. Pero diba sabi sa Jeremiah 17:9, ang puso ay "deceitful above all things"?

    "The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately sick; who can understand it?" Jeremiah 17:9(ESV)

    Ayon sa Psalm 51:4, ipinapakita na makasalanan na tayo mula pa sa sinapupunan ng ating ina, hindi dahil may nagagawa na tayong personal na kasalanan bago ipanganak, kundi dahil sa likas na makasalanang kalagayan ng tao.

    "Behold, I was brought forth in iniquity,and in sin did my mother conceive me." Psalms 51:5(ESV)
Analogy: Kung may bulok kang puno ng mangga, ang problema ba ay yung pagiging "Puno" (nature) o yung bunga lang? Ang puno mismo ay bad tree (Matthew 7:17).

"So, every healthy tree bears good fruit, but the diseased tree bears bad fruit." Matthew 7:17(ESV)

Kung ang nature mo ay corrupt, natural lang na corrupt din ang bunga. To say na nature is not the problem is to ignore the source of sin.

2. Ang Maling Pananaw sa "Sinful Nature" ni Jesus

Sinasabi niyo na si Jesus ay nagkaroon ng Sinful Nature gaya natin base sa Romans 8:3.

"For God has done what the law, weakened by the flesh, could not do. By sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin, he condemned sin in the flesh." Romans 8:3(ESV)

Ang Biblical Correction:
  • Ang sabi sa Romans 8:3, God sent His Son in the likeness (homoiƍmati) of sinful flesh.

  • Ang Nuance: Jesus had real human flesh, pero hindi fallen flesh. Kung si Jesus ay nagkaroon ng "sinful nature" (yung may fomes peccati o bent toward sin), then He would have had indwelling sin. Pero sabi sa 2 Corinthians 5:21, He "knew no sin." Kung may sinful nature Siya, awtomatikong magiging makasalanan din Siya.

    "For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God." 2 Corinthians 5:21(ESV
Logical Fallacy: Ang pag-equate sa "being human" at "having a sinful nature" ay isang false equivalence. Si Adam, tao siya sa Garden, pero wala siyang sinful nature hangga't hindi siya nagkasala. Christ was fully human, but He didn't share in our fallen nature na may inklinasyon maghimagsik.

3. Ang Pagkakamali sa Judgment at "Blotting Out"

Sabi niyo: "Bakit hindi naisulat ang Sinful Nature sa aklat ng Dios? Kasi hindi ito sin."

Ang Theological Reality:
  • God judges the heart, not just the behavior (Hebrews 4:12).

    "For the word of God is living and active, sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing to the division of soul and of spirit, of joints and of marrow, and discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart." Hebrews 4:12(ESV)
  • Ang Blind Spot: Ang focus niyo sa "works" (Rev 20:12) bilang basehan ng judgment ay malaking pagkakamali sa New Covenant. Tayo ay declared righteous (Justified) dahil sa imputed righteousness ni Kristo.

  • New Covenant Perspective: Hindi tayo tumatayo sa harap ni God base sa "cleansed behavior." We stand in the finished work of Christ. Kung ang kailangan para maligtas ay ang pagiging "sinless" sa gawa, you are not living under Grace; you are living under the Law. And remember, "by the works of the law no one will be justified" (Galatians 2:16).

    "Yet we know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, so we also have believed in Christ Jesus, in order to be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be justified."  Galatians 2:16(ESV)

4. Ang Bitag ng Last Generation Theology (LGT)

Sinasabi niyo na kailangan nating maging "without spot or wrinkle" para maligtas sa end times (Rev 14:5).
  • Exegesis ng 144,000 (amomos): Ang salitang amomos (without blemish) ay ginamit din sa Ephesians 5:27 at Jude 24. It is a positional status na ibinigay ni Christ sa Church, hindi isang achievement na inabot natin.

  • Ang Panganib: Kung ang Church ay kailangang mag-vindicate sa character ni God sa pamamagitan ng pagiging sinless, ibig sabihin ba ay insufficient ang Atonement ni Kristo? Parang sinasabi niyo na kailangan ni God ng ating "perfect performance" para ma-finalize ang salvation. That is the ultimate work of the flesh.

Tatlong Cross-Examination Questions:

Kung may makausap kang proponent ng ganitong turo, itanong mo ito para ma-test ang lohika nila:

#1) Tungkol sa sufficiency ni Kristo: "Kung si Jesus ay talagang nagkaroon ng 'sinful nature'na dine-define niyo bilang weakened state prone to temptation paano Siya nanatiling 'holy, harmless, and undefiled' (Hebrews 7:26)? Kung pareho tayo ng nature, bakit hindi Siya nangailangan ng Savior gaya natin?"

#2) Tungkol sa definition ng Sin: "Kung ang 'sinful nature' ay weak body lang at hindi sin, paano mo ipapaliwanag ang Romans 5:19: 'For as by the one man's disobedience the many were made sinners.' Kung ang pagiging 'sinner' ay base lang sa gawa, bakit sabi ng Biblia ay 'made sinners' (a state of being) tayo bago pa man tayo gumawa ng kahit anong transgression?"

#3) Tungkol sa Last Generation Theology (LGT): "Kung ang 144,000 ay 'without fault' dahil na-achieve nila ang sinless behavior, paano sila naiiba sa lahat ng ibang ligtas sa langit na umaamin na sila ay saved by Grace lang? Kung sila ay saved by their own perfect performance, are they still relying on the blood of the Lamb, o nagre-rely na sila sa 'power of God' na lumabas sa sarili nilang sinless life?"

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REAL TALK REFLECTION: Politics, Principles, and Our Life in Former Adventists Philippines

Let’s be real politics in the Philippines is grabe (intense). Everywhere you look, people are arguing about who is right, who is corrupt, an...

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