DIRESTRAITS wrote: They won 11 of the 18 state athletic championships last year, just because they recruit playes from all over. It really PISSES ME OFF!

Moderator: Community Team
DIRESTRAITS wrote: They won 11 of the 18 state athletic championships last year, just because they recruit playes from all over. It really PISSES ME OFF!
flashleg8 wrote:DIRESTRAITS wrote:I have no idea whats taught at Catholic Schools, because I go to Public. Im not a frickin Jesbian
Sorry! It's just that Catholic schools are very common where I live (Scotland), they are mainstream and state funded. Most Catholics here would attend a Catholic school - not just the devote people. They would teach the Scottish syllabus (thus secular) while retaining their faith for assemblies/school services etc. Just wondered if it was similar in the States.
vtmarik wrote:jay_a2j wrote:This is what happens when the Catholic Church discourages the reading of scripture. Its not a "metaphor". Please stick to facts not opinion.
flashleg I am Christian...non-denominational /Pentecostal.
Pentecostal is not non-denominational. It's Pentecostal.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
flashleg8 wrote:jay_a2j wrote:
flashleg I am Christian...non-denominational /Pentecostal.
Thanks, I'm not too familiar with the Pentecostal movement - would I be correct in saying this is similar to the "born again" Christian movement in the UK?
Edit: And your view is that the Scripture is literally correct and that the author is God himself (working through the prophets etc)?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:flashleg8 wrote:jay_a2j wrote:
flashleg I am Christian...non-denominational /Pentecostal.
Thanks, I'm not too familiar with the Pentecostal movement - would I be correct in saying this is similar to the "born again" Christian movement in the UK?
Edit: And your view is that the Scripture is literally correct and that the author is God himself (working through the prophets etc)?
Any person of the Christian faith can be "born again". Pentecostals believe in the gifts of the spirit (Speaking in tongues, healing, etc.) Non-Pentecostals do not believe these gifts are in effect today. (Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, etc.) But there are born again Christians in all denominations both pentecostal and non-pentecostal.
And yes to your edit.
jay_a2j wrote:lol There are MANY denominations within the Pentecostal Doctrine. Of which I belong to none.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
Wikipedia - Pentecostalism wrote:Pentecostals believe that one must be saved by believing in Jesus as Lord and Savior for the forgiveness of sins and to be made acceptable to God. Pentecostals also typically believe, like most other evangelicals, that the Bible has definitive authority in matters of faith.
Because many Pentecostal denominations are descended from Methodism and the Methodist Holiness Movement, Pentecostal soteriology is generally Arminian rather than Calvinist, believing that the ability to believe in Jesus is a power of the human free will.
This is in fact one of the distinctions that separates Pentecostal traditions from those of the Second Wave Charismatic and Evangelical churches which tend toward a Calvinistic soteriology. One of the main points of division is the definition of eternal security which is thoroughly Calvinist in the later Evangelical denominations and follows the Arminian tract in Pentecostal churches and denominations. This is most clearly illustrated by the belief held in Pentecostal groups that crediting the charismatic gifts and expressions to demonic or carnal motives and spirits qualifies as an unpardonable sin (Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit). In Charismatic and Evangelical churches, this view is marginalized or replaced with the belief that refusing to convert to Christianity before death is the only unpardonable sin.[citation needed]
Pentecostals believe in water baptism as an outward sign of conversion and that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is a distinct spiritual experience that all who have believed in Jesus should receive. Most classical Pentecostals believe that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is always accompanied initially by the outward evidence of speaking in tongues. It is considered a liberalizing tendency to teach contrary to this historic position. This is another major difference between Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians, who believe that a Christian baptized in the Holy Spirit may exhibit certain supernatural signs, including speaking in tongues, "being slain in the spirit" (where people fall to the ground as if asleep or in convulsions), prophecy (i.e. a vision or a word of God, spoken or felt in the spirit), miraculous healings, miraculous signs, etc.
Most major Pentecostal denominations reject any connection between personal salvation or conversion and the baptism in the Holy Spirit and teach that it is not necessary for salvation, but a gift from God available to all Christians regardless of denominational affiliation. This doctrine was a development of the teachings of Stephen Galbraith regarding what he called the Third Moment of Grace and as such is linked to soteriology. Many early Pentecostals believed that the revival of the gifts of the Spirit were a sign from God of the latter rain, a period of restoration before the end of the age and the coming millenial reign of Christ. Traditional Protestants believe that one is baptized with or in the Holy Spirit upon regeneration, the work of the Holy Spirit that enables faith and belief in the unbelieving heart. Pentecostals would not deny that regeneration is an activity of the Holy Spirit or that it results in the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the believer. Instead they distinguish this indwelling from a subsequent, more intense relationship with the Holy Spirit.
Protestants most often reject such concepts as a "second grace" though not rejecting the idea of periodic or even weekly renewal through repentance and the ordinances of the church. Classical Pentecostals, unlike their Charismatic or evangelical counterparts, hold a peculiar form of sacerdotalism. For this reason many will not use the term Sacrament, preferring the term sacerdotal function or ordinance. This belief invests the efficacy of the ordinance in the obedience and participation of the believer and the witness of the celebrant and the congregation. This view stems from a highly developed concept of the priesthood of the individual believer. The activity of the ordinance takes on a sacerdotal rather than sacremental role in that it is a sacrificial act offered by the believer on his or her own behalf, rather than a ritual which has an inherent power of its own.
jay_a2j wrote:DIRESTRAITS wrote:I think God created your brain out of dust![]()
Genesis is an extended metaphor for the scientific factors that created and formed the world. 3000 years ago, If you told people they had evolved over billions of years, they would have laughed you out of Israel. Thats why the Bible isnt literal. It wouldn't have been accepted.
Im sitting here waiting for Caleb to come and call me a heretic who will burn in hell
This is what happens when the Catholic Church discourages the reading of scripture. Its not a "metaphor".
vtmarik wrote:Makes ya wonder how a perfect document written by a perfect god can spawn so many groups of people each claiming that their interpretation is the only correct one.
jay_a2j wrote:Jesus said to, "Go into all the world and preach the Good News". He did not say hide in your home and worship there so as not to offend the unbeliever.
The1exile wrote:Jay, what makes you insist that there has always been God as opposed to there has always been a universe? Because God has been one of the oldest and most simplistic ways of explaining things through history?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:First off put aside any bias that you may have...weather it be religious or anti-religious.
Now science has said, Life cannot come from non-life. Which is common sense... a rock will never reproduce since it is not living.
Then you trace back all life to its orgin...the very first living thing.
Where did it come from?
The ONLY answer is someting or someone has always existed. And that someone or something must have the power to create (or reproduce).
There must be a God.
Science also dictates evolution could never have happened (but lets save that for a later thread).
jay_a2j wrote:backglass... no one's "forcing" anything. Don't tell me some crazy Christian comes to your house and logs you on to CC everyday with a gun to your head! You choose to enter the threads. You are forcing it on yourself.![]()
MR. Nate wrote:Without wading into the deeper issue here, as I have in the past, Jay's right about the denomination thing.
Formal Denominations have some sort of heirarchy or ruling body. The Vatican for Catholics, SBC for southern baptists. Some denominations have split, and have multiple ruling bodies, creating different denominations from the original: A Presbyterian in the US could be in 1 of a number of formal denominations, including the PCUSA, PCA or the EPC, each one is it's own denomination. Churches without allegiance to a ruling body often align themselves with a larger movement, for ease of identification. So, even though there are a bunch of Presbyterian denominations, you could have a church, which considers itself presbyterian because of it's doctrine, but is formally non-denominational becuse it is self-governing. Generally, pentecostalism is considered more of a movement than a denomination, so it's very common to have a pentecostal/nondenominational church.
Edit: Note the beginning of the 2nd and 5th paragraphs of the wikipedia quote, which refers to "pentacostal denominations" Plural, meaning, there are multiple.
flashleg8 wrote:DIRESTRAITS wrote: They won 11 of the 18 state athletic championships last year, just because they recruit playes from all over. It really PISSES ME OFF!
Cracks me up that the Catholic Church isn't above cheating to win!!
MR. Nate wrote:Are you saying your some sort of non-traditional Christian?vtmarik wrote:Now do you see why I'm not a traditionalist Christian?
Users browsing this forum: mookiemcgee