
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Presenter: Asi Adams
The apostle James and German philosopher Nietzsche both recognized that the wisdom of this world is based on selfish ambition and competition--although the former saw this negatively and the latter positively. As the exact opposite, Christ did not even grasp for His rights as God. Any fragment of selfish ambition or competition within the church reveals a loss of Christ's wisdom and a triumph of the "wisdom” that James concluded is both both arrogant and demonic.
By Heritage PressPresenter: Asi Adams
The apostle James and German philosopher Nietzsche both recognized that the wisdom of this world is based on selfish ambition and competition--although the former saw this negatively and the latter positively. As the exact opposite, Christ did not even grasp for His rights as God. Any fragment of selfish ambition or competition within the church reveals a loss of Christ's wisdom and a triumph of the "wisdom” that James concluded is both both arrogant and demonic.