"Why are there so many denominations?"
In the early 1500s,
a German monk named Martin Luther was so conscious of
his sins that he spent up to six hours in the confessional.
Through study of the Scriptures he found that salvation
didn’t come through anything he did, but simply
through trusting in the finished work of the cross of
Jesus Christ. He listed the contradictions between what
the Scriptures said and what his church taught, and
nailed his "95 Theses" to the church door
in Wittenberg, Germany. Martin Luther became the first
to "protest" against the Roman church, and
thus he became the father of the Protestant church.
Since that split,
there have been many disagreements about how much water
one should baptize with, how to sing what and why, who
should govern who, etc., causing thousands of splinter
groups. Many of these groups are convinced that they
alone are right. These have become known as Protestant
"denominations."
Despite the confusion,
these churches subscribe to certain foundational beliefs
such as the deity, death, burial, and resurrection of
Jesus Christ. The Bible says, "The foundation of
God stands sure, having this seal, The Lord knows them
that are his" (2 Timothy 2:19). Thomas Jefferson
once wrote of a preacher, Richard Mote, who "exclaimed
aloud to his congregation that he did not believe there
was a Quaker, Presbyterian, Methodist, or Baptist in
heaven, having paused to give his hearers time to stare
and to wonder. He added that, in heaven, God knew no
distinctions."
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