Moderator: Community Team

















PopeBenXVI wrote:Call me an oldschool Pope but I miss the days of a good Theocracy.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
















natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"

























Fair enough. And that is all anyone can ask. I am looking forward to hearing what you have to say.got tonkaed wrote:I suppose a clairification is in order. I am far more reticient to discuss religion these days, mostly because the questions do not interest me as much as they did before. I am probably ok to discuss though i am probably on the otherside of the world from you so occasionally ill need time. While i certainly would appreciate any effort you would make in sharing your testimony allow me to interject that i am familiar with many of the concepts and passages that you would probably bring up, as i share portions of the religious history that your suggesting.
However if you would like to discuss some of the issues, i will do the best i can to offer my opinion if you are interested.



b.k. barunt wrote:Iliad wrote:comic boy wrote:I prefer the Fairy tales with Pixies,Bunnies and Elves, the readers tend to be less retarded
And its readers actually realise how wrong they were after several yearsb.k. barunt wrote:Simon Viavant wrote:God designs humans to be sinful, then commits genocide on them for their sinfulness, then promises to never do it again, then impregnates a woman and is born as her baby and sacrifices himself to himself to atone for the sinfulness he created in humans, then commits genocide on them for their sinfulness as he promised never to do again.
This should be food for thought here, for anyone who might be inclined in that area. In any other genre, a post this self contradictory and stoopid would probably be ignored, with one or two spammish comments by innocent bystanders. This one however, generated 5 fooking pages! Amazing.
First of all, "God designs humans to be sinful" - did you hear someone say that? Did you see it on TV? Where, pray tell, did you get that? I read somewhere (lemmesee, where was that?) that He created Adam and Eve perfect, so where did you get your info? Also, wherethefuck was the second genocide that He "committed"? Just wonderin.
Honibaz
God created Adam and Eve-correct
God created Adam and Eve and he made them perfect-Wrong as because if they were perfect they would not have been tempted
God is all knowing meaning he knew that Adam and Eve would be tempted when he created them. -Correct
God is also all-powerful meaning he should be able to create species that could've been better at resisting temptation-Correct
God is all knowing yet he knew Satan would tempt them but offered no advice such as "Btw guys that snake-yeah don't listen to it"-Correct
God is all powerful meaning he could've put this tree of knowledge on a very high mountain or something. But no-Wrong
God then throws a massive angry fit once they do eat it though he knew from the beginning they would-Correct
Yeah. It makes sense
Heh heh, illy, i love the way you answer each one of your opinions with "correct" - kinda like a doityourself kit for boosting your self image? You correct your own IQ tests too? So you're pissed at God because He didn't make you too bright, and gave you a small penis - surprise surprise.
I myself don't claim to follow the teachings of the scriptures - i couldn't handle the heat so i got out of the kitchen. My failure, however, does not negate the truth of the scriptures, and i've put thousands of hours of study into that book, at first to find a mistake - i mean shit, it was written by numerous authors, so there has to be a contradiction somewhere, right? I couldn't find one though, and people a lot smarter than any of us have been trying to for centuries.
Mormonism had 2 authors (Smith and Young), who contradicted each other (and themselves) right off the bat. Islam only had one author, and Mohammed is a case study in contradiction. The Bible, however, had numerous "authors", from semi-literate shepherds and fishermen to princes and kings, and not one contradiction. I've studied the Hebrew and Greek, and that just increases the incredible complexity of how it's woven together.
The professing believers (all but a very small number) in the Bible have, over 2,000 years made a carnival of horrors out of the teachings of Christ. This is where i questioned God, and was my eventual downfall spiritually. I can respect the opinions and questions of some of the skeptics on this forum, and have had some interesting, heated discussions with Heavy Cola, Dancing Mustard and Backglass, among others, but to see unschooled morons like illy and simon blathering stupidly over something that has confounded men of far greater intellect over the years, is just wrong. Ignorance beyond a certain level just gives me a case of the red ass. Go figure.
Honibaz
jesterhawk wrote:Wow, what a thread. I must admit I toyed with not bothering to post because lets be honest for a moment. Some of you are here just for the flame war and the debate and are not interested in answers. I mean lets just be real. If we are going to discuss the God of heaven and earth and the creator of the universe, then we should know if we are going to be real about whether or not we really want answers and some of you don't. Fair enough. However, for those who do, I have a few things to say.Simon Viavant wrote:God designs humans to be sinful, then commits genocide on them for their sinfulness, then promises to never do it again, then impregnates a woman and is born as her baby and sacrifices himself to himself to atone for the sinfulness he created in humans, then commits genocide on them for their sinfulness as he promised never to do again.
Some people have touched on this, and I am going to add my two cents, and remember you opened this can of worms. To begin with, God created us to have freedom of choice like God has freedom of choice and with the choice comes the ability to choose to not obey God (this is the definition of sin not obeying God). Furthermore, God designed us to rule over the earth. Take a look at what God said.Now, we were created in God's image with the freedom to make a choice, a choice to follow what God told us to do or to not follow what God told us to do. Simple, straight forward. Furthermore, God created us this way because God, as mentioned, can see the big picture. He can see all eternity and wanted to create a set of people that was like him that he could have as like companions and friends that would CHOOSE to love Him and live with him. And God desperately wants us to make the choice to be with him and follow him.Genesis 1:26 wrote:26 Then God said, "Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness; and let them rule over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the sky and over the cattle and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth."And this is why he created us with the ability to make a choice.2 Peter 3:9 wrote:9 The Lord does not delay and is not tardy or slow about what He promises, according to some people's conception of slowness, but He is long-suffering (extraordinarily patient) toward you, not desiring that any should perish, but that all should turn to repentance.
Now, God did create Satan as an anointed cherub angel.And Satan was blameless until he rebelled against God. He didn't just become vain, he decided that he was greater then God and basically lead a revolt.Ezekiel 28:14-15 wrote:14 You were the anointed cherub who covers, And I placed you there You were on the holy mountain of God; You walked in the midst of the stones of fire.
15 You were blameless in your ways From the day you were created Until unrighteousness was found in you.You can say that God was mean and that God was overbearing, but Satan convinced a third of the angels to side with him and that did not happen over night. That tells us that God allowed Satan to operate for some time and most likely, given what we see of God's character in the Word, God spoke to him about his attitude giving him chances to change. And then only after God realized that there was no hope for his redemption did he remove him from heaven. And that was the ultimate act of compassion because he could have destroyed Satan especially considering all the things that Satan would do from that point forward.Isaiah 14:12-15 wrote:12 How you have fallen from heaven, O star of the morning, son of the dawn! You have been cut down to the earth, You who have weakened the nations!
13 But you said in your heart, 'I will ascend to heaven; I will raise my throne above the stars of God, And I will sit on the mount of assembly In the recesses of the north.
14 'I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will make myself like the Most High.'
15 Nevertheless you will be thrust down to Sheol, To the recesses of the pit.
Return back to the Garden after God created Adam and Eve. God told them basically that everything that he created was all for them and for their pleasure EXCEPT one tree. Think about that. God goes through all the trouble of creating a PLANET for you and a paradise garden for you to live in and all he asks is that you refrain from ONE tree. Yes, God knew what was going to happen, but come on, it was one tree out of probably hundreds or thousands. Give me a break with the whole he should have known better. So, he says to not touch the one tree and obviously Satan heard this as well because he comes and convinces Eve to eat.The devil is very crafty and we should never underestimate him. He comes and lies to Eve. How, because Eve was already like God in that she was made in his image and likeness. Just because she never disobeyed his command does not mean that she was not like him. I know how he phrased the statement, but he did so to entice her into eating the apple. Then Adam ate. When this happened, sin entered the world and we abdicated our rulership to the devil, and we entered into a contract with the devil and we now share in his punishment.Genesis 3:1-7 wrote:1 Now the serpent was more crafty than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made. And he said to the woman, "Indeed, has God said, 'You shall not eat from any tree of the garden'?"
2 The woman said to the serpent, "From the fruit of the trees of the garden we may eat;
3 but from the fruit of the tree which is in the middle of the garden, God has said, 'You shall not eat from it or touch it, or you will die.'"
4 The serpent said to the woman, "You surely will not die!
5 "For God knows that in the day you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil."
6 When the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was desirable to make one wise, she took from its fruit and ate; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he ate.
7 Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they knew that they were naked; and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loin coverings.The good news is that God knew this was going to happen and didn't just leave us hanging. He had a plan.Romans 3;23 wrote:23 for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of GodJesus came to this world. Now, someone mentioned that Mary was one woman who really stuck to her story. Well, let me put it this way, if she wasn't a virgin then there is no redemption for anyone. Why? Simple, we are all born under the covenant that Adam and Eve made with the devil that separated us from God and placed us apart from Heaven and the Garden of Eden and separated from the tree of life. Now, because of this contract, we are destined to eternal damnation.John 3:16 wrote:16 For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish, but have eternal life.And everyone who is born is bound to this. However, Jesus was not born like we were.Romans 6:23a wrote:23 For the wages of sin is deathThe power of the Most High will overshadow Mary and Jesus was not born like we were but of a Virgin and overshadowed by the power of God and not under the covenant and contract with the devil. This allowed him to operate under the original covenant with God and why he could walk and do miracles and be filled with God's Holy Spirit. This is also why he could go to the cross as God's spotless lamb as a sacrifice for all of us and pay the price for our failure.Luke 1:34-35 wrote:34 Mary said to the angel, "How can this be, since I am a virgin?"
35 The angel answered and said to her, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; and for that reason the holy Child shall be called the Son of God.And by his sacrifice, he redeemed us from the devil and broke the covenant with the devil. He shattered what happened in the Garden so that we could be able to commune with God again. His single act of love at the cross and through the cross broke through time and crushed all that the enemy had ever planned to destroy all of mankind. And Jesus did it for you. And he would have done it for even one of you, and just one. That is how much Jesus loves everyone. And now that he has done this, authority has returned to him.Isaiah 53:4-7 wrote:4Surely our griefs He Himself bore, And our sorrows He carried; Yet we ourselves esteemed Him stricken, Smitten of God, and afflicted.
5 But He was pierced through for our transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; The chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, And by His scourging we are healed.
6 All of us like sheep have gone astray, Each of us has turned to his own way; But the LORD has caused the iniquity of us all To fall on Him.
7 He was oppressed and He was afflicted, Yet He did not open His mouth; Like a lamb that is led to slaughter, And like a sheep that is silent before its shearers, So He did not open His mouth.And because of this, we can now avoid death and eternal damnation.Matthew 28:18 wrote:18 And Jesus came up and spoke to them, saying, "All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth."It is a free gift that God offers to all. You call him cruel in this thread and I say that you don't know him because he has opened heaven to you through the sacrifice of his son.Romans 6:23 wrote:23 For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.God has called you his friend and he loves you and Jesus has laid his life down for you and all you have to do is accept him and have eternal life.John 15:13 wrote:13 Greater love has no one than this, that one lay down his life for his friends.Heaven, eternal life, paradise for all eternity is a free gift that is freely given and all you have to do is ask and truly believe and it is yours. And that is the greatness of our God.Romans 10:9-10 wrote:9 that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved;
10 for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation.
Now, all this was said to demonstrate the reason why God gave us free will. If we did not have free will we could not choose to love him, to follow him, to take his free gift of heaven. God has opened up everything about himself and freely given to all who ask. This is why I have seen miracle after miracle from cancers falling off of people to blinded eyes healed to mute people's voices returned to my own miraculous return from deaths door. And all of this, I have seen with my own eyes. I have even seen my son who accidentally fell out of a second story window and had every bone in his body just about broken verified by people only to have them healed by God in the Emergency Room. And that is just the beginning because God freely gives to those who ask. And I can go on and on and on.
Perhaps it is time that we stop mocking God and his Word and give him a try. You might be surprised that he meets you where you are and does something amazing.
Anyway, that is what I have to say for now and again I remind you that you did ask for this.
JH






PopeBenXVI wrote:Acctually the Bible has shown Historical fact more than any other book or collection of writtings in existance.......and yes by non religious historians too. Many stories from the Bible are also mentioned in other historical writtings which are recognized as true history.
Also, The Catholic Church reviewed the authenticity of many of those other manuscripts you mentioned and in reviewing much of their content confirmed which ones were known to be authentic and which had serious doctrinal descrpencies based on the verbal & written teachings of the early Church that had been passed down to that time. The cannon was then established so others would not have to try and sort through hundreds of questionable documents which contradict each other and many of whom the authors can not be confirmed.
KraphtOne wrote:when you sign up a new account one of the check boxes should be "do you want to foe colton24 (it is highly recommended) "






PopeBenXVI wrote:Acctually the Bible has shown Historical fact more than any other book or collection of writtings in existance.......and yes by non religious historians too. Many stories from the Bible are also mentioned in other historical writtings which are recognized as true history.
Also, The Catholic Church reviewed the authenticity of many of those other manuscripts you mentioned and in reviewing much of their content confirmed which ones were known to be authentic and which had serious doctrinal descrpencies based on the verbal & written teachings of the early Church that had been passed down to that time. The cannon was then established so others would not have to try and sort through hundreds of questionable documents which contradict each other and many of whom the authors can not be confirmed.












































Ok, I am in the process of create my first post for tonkaed and then I found this. Since I have never see a verse that says to "dash out the heads of their children against the rocks" please tell me where that is?jonesthecurl wrote:INconsistencies in the bible:
"Thou shalt not kill"
vs
"Blessed shall he be that dashes out the heads of their children against the rocks"
..the command not to let blood is just a short distance away from the command to cut off the foreskins of all your male children.




























You are correct. And it was an incorrect assessment on my part that had me start the post that way. As I mentioned I am on several forums and on the other forums they all have a rule that goes something like this, "Please refrain from posting any text quoted from religious sources UNLESS specifically directed to within a thread." I understand that it is there in an effort to stop people from coming in and just blasting people over the head with the Bible (the so called Bible Thumpers, although there have been times when I have wanted to thump a few people with God's Word LOL). This forum is different in that it is much more open in allowing posts to contain God's Word as well as many other topics without fear of being banned or warned just because you happened to quote the Bible. Therefore, it was my mistake to begin the post with those negative comments and I apologize.got tonkaed wrote:An initial comment that I might make is you are arguing far too emotionally, though perhaps it is understandable given your attempting to make a defense of something incredibly important to you. However I find you could make a more persuasive case if you didn’t refer to things like opening a can of worms, or bringing this upon oneself. While I can see you arguing perhaps even effectively that the sinner is repelled by the light, I would expect that if you were attempting to bring people to what you are calling (at times accurately so) a positive message, that you make far more positive references than negative ones. However I accept the possibility that the very nature of what appears to be your particular blend of the faith can have a difficulty reconciling the desire to bring others to what you’ve found with other perhaps less positive motivations.
Ok, I lost you where you seem to think that I am limiting or suggesting that there is limited knowledge of God or maybe you are suggesting that by stating that we are made in God's image and that the image is close to God that it limits God? Not sure exactly what you are saying there. But I can clarify what I meant and that might help.got tonkaed wrote:To start with your first verse. I believe you have started off on the wrong foot here, as you are making a perhaps inaccurate but necessary assumption. While rule leads to potential choices, the simple creation in the image of something, does not imply that it carries the same capacities as the original, especially if you chose to take it more literally than figuratively (which frequently in your post you tend to do). There is very little if anything from there to take immediately and turn to will, without doing necessary mental gymnastics. I believe you are forcing God into a rather small box by claiming awareness of the desires and wishes of God. Other religions, even Judaism have provisions that suggest we can know far more about a creator than you seem to suggest. While you could argue perhaps from later texts that you can know God, realize it is certainly not the only impression that is drawn from the text you are reading from.
We were created to have that same spirit which is why God and his spirit can dwell within us when we accept Jesus.John 4:24 wrote:24 God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.
- John 4:24
Galatians 2:20 wrote:20 I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.
- Galatians 2:20
When we are saved, Jesus and the Holy Spirit come and dwell within our spirit which is made in the image and likeness of God. If it were not, then we could not support God within us and then Jesus could not commune so closely with us as the Word declares. But God wanted to have this close personal relationship with us so that we would never ever walk alone or be forsaken once we accepted Jesus. Then after we accept Jesus, as quoted above, we live in the flesh by faith in Jesus, the Son of God, who loves us. So, this is what is meant when it says that we are made is his image and likeness. This is not figurative language nor is it limiting God in any way because it is a way that God made us on purpose so that He could live with us and within us to help us live our lives for him.1 Corinthians 3:16 wrote:16 Do you not know that you are a temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?
- 1 Corinthians 3:16
I am curious as to what different interpretations you have on this verse?got tonkaed wrote:I also believe you verse from Peter can be viewed under a different interpretation. There are many instances throughout the texts that suggest that God was not always long suffering toward all. While you could argue that we have little right to decide what is best or worst in terms of God’s long suffering nature, you frequently in the rest of your post make value laden claims about God’s intentions. While this is understandable given your stance in general, it should be noted that is rather difficult to discuss critically any of religion if we always adopt the stance that it is unnecessary to make allowances for God or to question, because of provisions like these which are paradigmatically assumed to be true, incorrectly so.
There are several points here I need to address.got tonkaed wrote:I believe the Satan story you bring up is one of the weaker elements of your post. You make too many claims here that are completely conjecture at best in my opinion and at least from my perspective is a quite intellectually dishonest way to present God. In as far as I have ever had it explained, the creation and purposes of cherub angels and human are conceived of differently in Christian thought. Yet you bridge the gap between them entirely if not more so, by positing correctly that it is understood that Lucifer was seen to be blameless. To assume that God had foreknowledge of all of the actions of the morning star and yet only offered to counsel him seems inconsistent. IF angels did not have free will, and had a purpose of servitude, why would God allow Satan to corrupt so many. Did God care so little for the other creation? Also within the context of what we claim to know (from the judeo-christian framework at least) the greatest punishment of sin is separation from God (hence the name). To assume that God did something benevolent when in fact under our framework this is the least benevolent thing that could have done, seems to reflect a great amount of fudging of the doctrine to fit an argument.
So, God desired that Satan and all the angels he was speaking with would stop what they were doing and turn from their wicked ways and return to him. However, when it became apparent that was not going to happen, then God had to do something.Galatians 6:7 wrote:7 Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, this he will also reap.
- Galatians 6:7
Another place where there are several points to address and they are all good questions!!got tonkaed wrote:While you may wish to immediately dismiss the many pragmatic but not necessarily strong theological objections to the garden of Eden story, that doesn’t mean they cannot be discussed. In the interest of brevity, it is not simply the creation of a tree of knowledge that implies that God did not always choose to act benevolently or was not always omniscient. Rather it is the failure (an astonishing claim I know) of the creator to deal with the insurrection in a fashion that would allow for God to remain in communion with the beloved creation, along with a failure to be attuned to the location in which humans resided, along with the enacted punishment for as you suggest (at least under your framework) acting in a way that was consistent with the idea of being in the image of a creator. Surely if God thought free will so important in its own perspective to bestow it on a creation, he would not punish it in the first opportunity it had to manifest itself? Nor would God so greatly overreact to punish the entire following history of his favorite creation because the first two individuals were 0/1 in good decision making? Again the only real answer to this is to give a free pass or make unnecessary qualifications that don’t fit within how the story is originally presented.
Think about our world today with disposable marriages and see if God's idea of love stated here matches with our idea of love. It doesn't, but then think of what it would be like if people really got a hold of this kind of love because it is available. Think about what would happen to marriages where the spouses were loving in a way that they bore all things, believe all things about each other, hoped all things about each other, did not provoke each other, did not seek their own, did not act unbecomingly, were patient and kind and never failed each other. They would certain never get divorced and it would like a honeymoon everyday of their married life. But in our world, we have moved away from God's ideas of things long ago and yet now we want to apply our "new" terms of love and justice and even holiness to God who is the same yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8) and then we don't understand why things don't add up. So, this is why you can look at God being benevolent and not see it because our ideas of what justice and compassion and love are have gotten off from the true meanings and we need only go back to the source, God, to find them again. Just look at love as our example.1 Corinthians 13:4-8a wrote:4 Love is patient, love is kind and is not jealous; love does not brag and is not arrogant,
5 does not act unbecomingly; it does not seek its own, is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered,
6 does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth;
7 bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.
8 Love never fails
- 1 Corinthians 13:4-8a
I handled most of this in the previous section. I do want to point out that you state that I did not present my case very well for my stance on God as benevolent and omniscient. In my original post, I my goal was to present the plan of redemption as to answer why God had to deal with original sin from the original post in this thread. So, I may not have been as thorough on this topic. I do think I was more complete in my response above. Of course, that does not mean you will agree with my answergot tonkaed wrote:Moving on again we have to make a choice about how much to look the other way in terms of God’s actions towards the creation. We are told to accept a story (that while intricate, especially in the chain of events) forces us to acknowledge a far more selfish, less benevolent creator than anyone would like to take on first glance. Consider the following: Humans are first created, perhaps with or without free will. They are in state of eternal communion where the creation is supposedly in union with the creator and the creator in union with it. Instead of continuing on in what would seemingly be (from our perspective) eternal bliss, God chose to allow the fall, with certainly some knowledge of the failure that was imminent if not complete knowledge of it, so that God could make what would otherwise be an unnecessary sacrifice that would never reconcile the union completely, forcing individuals into eternal separation. In the wisdom of lolcatish grammar “wat?”. Whilst there are certainly theological defenses for this, I don’t really believe you are presenting very many of them. All of these chains of events (certainly taken from the perspective of a non-believer) seem to suggest if not imply that for these events to occur either God is not always benevolent or God is not omniscient. It would be possibly that God could still be omnipotent, but given the flipping nature of God’s will out of such a starting chain of events, why should the individual assume that God will be consistent. It certainly seems inconsistency is a far easier position to maintain than consistency in the initial stages of God’s relationship with the creation.
I will grant that Jesus being born of a virgin can not be verified and has to be taken on faith. However, there are prophecies that do not take that kind of faith because if I remember correctly Jesus fulfilled something like 300 Old Testament prophecies. Some of them are easier to prove or disprove then others. And some are even recorded in extra-biblical writings like Josepheus and Philo (although not as direct with Philo). Here is a short list of prophecies that Jesus fulfilled that he did not have direct control over.got tonkaed wrote:At this point I believe we reach a more difficult impasse as we are no longer throwing around more theological concepts and now dealing with actual miracles which take far more faith to believe. Essentially you are hinging everything on one individual in history meeting a specified number of prophecies, and I am assuming until stated otherwise that he must meet them all. While you cite the spontaneous birth of a virgin as the main example, under your logic I believe he would have to fulfill all of them, some of which are on more shaky ground (as is my understanding at least) in historical circles. There regrettably isn’t a whole lot I can say on this subject (and probably in much more of the post), as you are riding everything on a prophecy that I believe does not stand up to critical inquiry. However this is quite likely to be the critical point for you so I will no belabor it, but I believe you must realize this is far less set in stone than you are claiming.
I am not sure what I said that gave you the impression that I did not equate Jesus as being part of the Trinity because I do. Yes, Jesus is most definitely part of the Trinity. For those who may not be away, God is three parts in one. There is God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. They exist separate and yet all part of the same whole God. It is like water. Water exists in three form: liquid, gas and solid and yet it is all still water. It is the same with God. He is one God but exists in three forms; Father, Son and Holy Spirit (or some say Holy Ghost). To give you another example, we humans are one and yet we are the triune being because we exist as three parts. We are a spirit (the part that is eternal), we have a soul (mind will and emotions), and we live in a body, and yet we are one person (1 Thessalonians 5:23). It is the same with God. Three parts, yet one God. But yes, I totally believe in the Trinity and that Jesus is part of the Trinity.got tonkaed wrote:Im also curious about your particular religious history here, as the way that you refer to Jesus after the birth suggests that you do not equate him to be part of a three person trinity. While I suppose I could be incorrect in my analysis and you are using a few different verses where Jesus refers to his father to justify the way you are posting, the manner in which you refer to Jesus’s divinity seem unorthodox.
Ok, we have several points to hit here.got tonkaed wrote:I find your justification of Jesus eventual claim that no one comes to the father but by me all the more remarkable given the way you describe Jesus triumphant birth. If Jesus has broken the communion with the Devil, which would have to assume is under the express desire of He and the Creator (either as part of a trinity or not) to reconcile the gulf between God and the Creation, why on earth would there be a restipulation? Seemingly the benevolent action of the creator is immediately countered by something that is at its essence not at all benevolent. Wise men said to do the same thing over and over again and expect different results is madness, if God is hinging what we assume must be the most important of all commitments (as many were taught the loving paternal aspects of the relationship between God and Humans) on free will after it clearly did not work the first time around, what does that imply about God, or at the very least about our perceptions of him? Also, where was the authority before, why would God cede such an important authority, even for a moment, if this is the most beloved of all creations? I believe this could be further noted as far as the perhaps misconception that a Christian God is necessarily a benevolent one.
So, nothing is impossible with God and having a virgin become pregnant is possible. Yes, again, it takes faith, but then the Bible does tell us that by faith we believe (2 Corinthians 5:7). But that special virgin birth separated Jesus and had him not under the covenant with the devil and allowed him to be an offering. Why was this necessary, because as stated, the garden affair was more then just a cookie from the cookie jar, it was the loss of our rulership to the devil. To gain this back, Jesus had to come the way he did and live a sin free life and go to the cross as a lamb without blemish or spot. Why? Because the terms of the contract we made with the devil required a high price to be paid for us to be bought back and this was the price. You say that God's actions are all askew because you think he operated incorrectly but I think your assumptions are wrong. God created man and gave him free will and dominion. Man sold our birthright and dominion to the devil. The devil then demanded a high price to be paid to get us back. It was not God who demanded this price, he was just the one who paid it to get us back. It was the only way to do it without overriding and violating his word and integrity. This is why God had Jesus born of a virgin so he was not under that contract and sent him to the cross so that the debt could be paid. And look at what the Bible tells us that Jesus went through for us and sit and watch "The Passion of the Christ" movie and get an idea and he did this because this was the demanded price to be paid to get us back and God paid it for us with his own blood. We really shouldn't be mocking him but praising him and running to him. Honestly!Luke 1:37 Amplified wrote:37 For with God nothing is ever impossible and no word from God shall be without power or impossible of fulfillment.
- Luke 1:37
Actually, this is incorrect. Salvation is a gift. Jesus has bought and paid for it already, as mentioned above. All that remains with this gift is to accept it. That is a choice, but look at it this way. If it was your birthday and I bought you a present and wrapped it in a box with a bow and came to your party with it and walked up to you and extended my arms out with the present and said happy birthday, what would you have to do? You would have to accept and take the present. The fact that you have to by choice receive my gift does not change the fact that it is a gift that I got for you or that it is free. It is the same with Jesus. He has done all the work for salvation by going through the cross and taking all the sins of the world on him there and paying the price demanded for our failures. By doing so, he put your salvation in a box with a bow and has shown up to your place and has extended his arms and said, "Here it is for the free taking, just accept me." And all you have to do is accept him.got tonkaed wrote:The gift of heaven is not a free one, as it requires choice. A free gift would resemble a more universal election with less condition. To require something, even the choice (bolstered perhaps by election as it was – though this clearly presents problems unless it’s a universal election)means that this is not so much something that is given as it is bartered for. While theres nothing wrong with this I suppose on its own, that isn’t how it is really presented. Certainly there are many arguments that can be made against this however, but considering we are talking more about deliverance instead of some of the other potential forms of salvation understanding, it seems prudent not to try and add to an already tl;dr.
Yes, it is a choice to accept him and salvation, but that does not change that it is a free gift that we can all have by just speaking out a prayer confessing that Jesus is Lord and that God did raise him from the dead and thank him for what he did and accept him into our lives and believe that in our heart when we pray it and then we are saved. That is all. Of course, once we do that, we will find that the Jesus that comes to live within us is really cool and can show us awesome things in the Bible, his word, and even connect us to really cool other Christians and even make church fun. But that is just extra icing on the cake and none of it is required.Romans 10:9-10 wrote:9 that if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved;
10 for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation.
- Romans 10:9-10
I can say that I have lived without Jesus and I have lived with Jesus and I have found that I wasn't really living until I got saved and started living with and for Jesus. There was so much more that God had in store for me and opened up the world to me in ways I would have never imagined on my own that is so amazing that I wish I could express for everyone here. Because there simply is no greater joy then living for Jesus to be found anywhere.got tonkaed wrote:While I understand anecdotal stories are incredibly important to issues of faith, they do not make a communion with a creator involving free will make. I have known many people of faith and those who are not faithful who have had wonderful and terrible things happen to them. I know many more who have had enriched lives through faith and equal numbers of those who have done so without. I believe while you make an impassioned case that it doesn’t mean that this case need be accepted nor that we need to accept the implications of it.



I found it now, Psalm 137. I couldn't find it at first because the NASB, which I use, search had "little ones" instead of children so I could not find it. But I found it. Anyway, that is a well known psalm that is about the lament over the fact that Israel was taken into captivity and it was prophetic speaking that soon someone would destroy Babylon and Edom would be glad and blessed because of it. Not because of the killing of children but because of the destruction of the evil nation.jonesthecurl wrote:In the psalms. It's a part of the lovely "Rivers of Babylon" psalm, the number of which will no doubt be supplied by someone who has a bible more immediately to hand.
Mrs Curl borrowed mine as a prop for her Sally Army character in a LARP last month, and I can't find it immediately.






























PopeBenXVI wrote:Most if not all the Dead Sea scrolls can be read by you whenever you want as they were put into a book after being translated. I have not checked but you can probably read some online as well. I am not sure what you mean by the church is keeping them from people as not only Catholics have been involved in translating and keeping the documents but Jews, Lutherans etc....
Are you also saying that just because a document is old it should be included? What is your criteria for what should be included?











jesterhawk wrote:No you are not seeing what it is saying is what I was saying.
But you know what, if you really want to find a single verse to take out of context and focus on that is not the best one. Come on. I mean you can do better then that. Really.
The point of the Bible is to point us to God. The Old Testament to show us that we can't live a life holy enough to make it and that we need help. And the New Testament to show us Jesus the way, the truth and the life (John 14:6). Then how to walk in the life that Jesus, God the Father and the Holy Spirit provide. Outside of that there is a few historical accounts and some prophetic words about the end times and that is the whole Bible in a nutshell. We can overcomplicate from there, but that is it. We can even make it simpler because it is basically God's love letter to his people.
Anyway, I am rambling on.
JH











Users browsing this forum: No registered users