Question 1
4 out of 4 points
Michael Brown’s conclusion in the book Can You Be Gay
and Christian? is that a Christians can be committed to
Jesus and serve Him faithfully while still having
homosexual attractions—recognizing those attractions
as contrary to God’s design and resisting them as sinful.
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Question 2
4 out of 4 points
Erickson writes that the final state of the wicked and the
righteous is best understood as "conditional
immortality."
Selected Fals
Answer: e
Question 3
4 out of 4 points
According to Erickson, baptism is the outward sign of
"spiritual circumcision" identifying the believer with
Christ in His death and resurrection.
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Question 4
4 out of 4 points
Some dispensationalists consider the church to be a
“parenthesis” in God’s program with Israel, rendering
the church an afterthought in God’s plan.
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Question 5
4 out of 4 points
In the Presbyterian form of church government all the
, churches in one area are governed by the presbytery (or
“classis” in the Reformed churches) which is made up of
one lay elder and one minister from each from each
consistory (Reformed) or one lay elder from each
session and all the ministers in the area (Presbyterian).
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Question 6
4 out of 4 points
According to Michael Brown, Jesus addressed the issue
of homosexual practice in at least three different ways.
Which of the following was NOT among the three that he
listed?
Selected Matthew 8:5–13, about Jesus healing the
Answer: paralyzed servant of a Roman soldier
Question 7
4 out of 4 points
Biblical Images of the Church as discussed by Erickson
include: (Select the BEST answer)
Selected All of the
Answer: above
Question 8
4 out of 4 points
According to Erickson Romans 6: 1– 11 is crucial to the
sacramentalists’ view of baptism, because in their
interpretation of this passage, baptism actually unites
us with Christ.
Selected Tru
Answer: e
Question 9
4 out of 4 points
The so-called “pietistic approach” to the church, as
reflected in Roman Catholicism, stresses the “invisible”