Then you aren't following the discussion.Ohh, I've been following the discussion, so please don't assume that I haven't.
What I have seen you do, is simply state that you disagree with her and then based on your judgment, you have strongly asserted that she is not a Christian.
http://christianforums.net/Fellowship/index.php?threads/marianne-williamson.74904/post-1440249
I have provided Scripture as evidence against one of her claims and some of the others are so obviously false, I should not need to post Scripture.
The fact that you even ask those questions is sad and says quite a bit. I notice quite some time ago that you seemed to have given yourself over to post-modern ideology and now you seem unable to discern truth from error, even though the NT commands it. Do any of the NT writers, such as Paul, ever make a case for someone not being a believer? Of course they do and it is largely based on erroneous belief. We are told to be aware of such people.This befuddled me. Are we now allowed to tell people that they are not Christian because we strongly disagree with their theology?
So, I'll ask you again. What is a Christian? If you can't define what is is to be a Christian, how are we to judge what anti-Christian is?
As I showed, Williamson has deeply flawed views of Jesus, the central person of all of Scripture through whom alone we have salvation. One simply cannot believe whatever they want about Jesus and be saved. The Bible makes that clear. This isn't mere disagreement with me; this is disagreement with 2000 years of Christian teaching. She mixes New Age/New Spirituality with Christian language. If that doesn't tell you anything...
Were you not one of those in the past that wouldn't say whether or not Mormons and JWs were Christians? We can say that they are not Christians because they hold to erroneous views of Jesus and of God, among other errors.
There are a number of beliefs that define what it means to be a Christian, including but not limited to, believing that Jesus and God are who the Bible reveals them to be, believing in Jesus's literal, physical death and resurrection for the propitiation of sins, and the necessity of striving for holiness.