Do you believe that 2007 will have the second coming of Jesus Christ?
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  Do you believe that 2007 will have the second coming of Jesus Christ?
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Author Topic: Do you believe that 2007 will have the second coming of Jesus Christ?  (Read 22730 times)
JSojourner
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« Reply #150 on: January 05, 2007, 07:05:11 PM »

All people are evil.  What a wonderful worldview.

yes, the ground around the cross is level - which is why Paul said, "Christ came into the world to save sinners, of which I am the worst."

You won't find jmfcst and I in agreement very often.  But on this, we do agree.  At least to the degree that no human can every attain or perform or otherwise reach the perfect goodness of God.

Which is why, from a Christian worldview, God came to bear our imperfection in Jesus...and bridge the gap between broken humanity and perfect divinity.
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« Reply #151 on: January 05, 2007, 07:08:10 PM »

2.  A comment was made (which I evidently misinterpreted and for which I apologize)

S'OK, apology accepted. Kiki

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I preclude no one from holding office. That's not the same as saying that I'd be happy with them doing so (Scientologists or Moonies, anyone?) but they certainly should not be barred from running and, if elected fairly, serving.

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Yeah, I'd forgotten about that. Loopy.
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JSojourner
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« Reply #152 on: January 05, 2007, 07:10:30 PM »

Okay, let's look at it another way.

Jesus Christ existed.  You grant that.  So do I.

On numerous occasions, this "wonderful man" claimed to be God...accepted worship from other people...and was tried and executed because of this.  Remember, though Rome ruled Palestine, all matters theological were relegated to the courts of the Sanhedrin.  And they did not kill Jesus because he feed the poor or called for social justice.  They killed him because he said, "Before Abraham was, I AM."  For a Jew to say, "I AM" is the very soul of heresy.  It is to say, quite unmistakably, "I AM that I AM."  He said he had the power to destroy the temple in three days.  And raise the temple up in as much time.  Whether he spoke of his body or the temple in Jerusalem -- he was claiming to possess the power of God.

So, I wish to challenge your assertion that Jesus was a wonderful man.

Can anyone claim such divinity and power and not be evil?  Or insane?

Jesus was crazy.  Or a rotten person who led people astray.

Or...

He was who he claimed to be.

In which case, resurrection from the dead is a no-brainer.

Why is it a dichotomy between actually being the Son of God and being evil and insane?  It seems to me that it would be entirely possible for someone who truly believes himself to be the Son of God (and is not) to still have a good message to tell.
It seems to me that one could also be evil and insane, and nonetheless be the Son of God.
OK, now that's just scary. Shocked Tongue

It is, I would suggest, a position that has been posited before.

When my best friend was murdered, I went through a tremendous crisis of faith and almost lost my faith.  I never discounted that God was.  I did seriously question what KIND of God was.  Perhaps God was a monster or a madman after all.  There is ample evidence in this world, leading people to that conclusion.

I no longer share it.  But since this is not a religious forum, and I am truly not here to proselytize, I won't expand.  
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JSojourner
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« Reply #153 on: January 05, 2007, 07:12:50 PM »

Many of my fellow Christians miss this.  The Great Commission of Jesus was to go into all the world and preach His Gospel.  Well and good.  But His Great Commission should never supercede or overrule His Great Commandment (do unto others).  The two should, ideally, compiment one another.

actually, if you reject Jesus as God, then you can't say "do unto others" was Jesus' Great Commandment, for "do unto others" originated in the Law of Moses.

Of course, I don't reject Jesus as God. 

understood, i was talking through you not to you.  sorry for the confusion.

Not a problem.  Big, convoluted threads like this can do that.  I misconstrued someone else.  This is one reason I like this bunch.  You're all pretty easy going.
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« Reply #154 on: January 05, 2007, 07:14:23 PM »

Okay, let's look at it another way.

Jesus Christ existed.  You grant that.  So do I.

On numerous occasions, this "wonderful man" claimed to be God...accepted worship from other people...and was tried and executed because of this.  Remember, though Rome ruled Palestine, all matters theological were relegated to the courts of the Sanhedrin.  And they did not kill Jesus because he feed the poor or called for social justice.  They killed him because he said, "Before Abraham was, I AM."  For a Jew to say, "I AM" is the very soul of heresy.  It is to say, quite unmistakably, "I AM that I AM."  He said he had the power to destroy the temple in three days.  And raise the temple up in as much time.  Whether he spoke of his body or the temple in Jerusalem -- he was claiming to possess the power of God.

So, I wish to challenge your assertion that Jesus was a wonderful man.

Can anyone claim such divinity and power and not be evil?  Or insane?

Jesus was crazy.  Or a rotten person who led people astray.

Or...

He was who he claimed to be.

In which case, resurrection from the dead is a no-brainer.

Why is it a dichotomy between actually being the Son of God and being evil and insane?  It seems to me that it would be entirely possible for someone who truly believes himself to be the Son of God (and is not) to still have a good message to tell.
It seems to me that one could also be evil and insane, and nonetheless be the Son of God.
OK, now that's just scary. Shocked Tongue

It is, I would suggest, a position that has been posited before.

When my best friend was murdered, I went through a tremendous crisis of faith and almost lost my faith.  I never discounted that God was.  I did seriously question what KIND of God was.  Perhaps God was a monster or a madman after all.  There is ample evidence in this world, leading people to that conclusion.

I no longer share it.  But since this is not a religious forum, and I am truly not here to proselytize, I won't expand. 

Sorry about your best friend. Sad And I'm not here to proselytize either so I won't expand on it either, although I have my own answer to that question (fairly close to ILV's Smiley ).
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Gabu
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« Reply #155 on: January 05, 2007, 07:17:08 PM »

You won't find jmfcst and I in agreement very often.  But on this, we do agree.  At least to the degree that no human can every attain or perform or otherwise reach the perfect goodness of God.

Which is why, from a Christian worldview, God came to bear our imperfection in Jesus...and bridge the gap between broken humanity and perfect divinity.

Since we're well on our way towards this topic now, anyways, this is something that has always bugged me: what difference exactly is it supposed to make to believe that Jesus was the Son of God and all that?  I've seen good and bad people who were allegedly "saved" and I've seen good and bad people who were not.  As far as I can tell, whether or not one believes (or says he believes) doesn't exactly have much of a bearing on how one acts.

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.
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JSojourner
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« Reply #156 on: January 05, 2007, 08:05:52 PM »

You won't find jmfcst and I in agreement very often.  But on this, we do agree.  At least to the degree that no human can every attain or perform or otherwise reach the perfect goodness of God.

Which is why, from a Christian worldview, God came to bear our imperfection in Jesus...and bridge the gap between broken humanity and perfect divinity.

Since we're well on our way towards this topic now, anyways, this is something that has always bugged me: what difference exactly is it supposed to make to believe that Jesus was the Son of God and all that?  I've seen good and bad people who were allegedly "saved" and I've seen good and bad people who were not.  As far as I can tell, whether or not one believes (or says he believes) doesn't exactly have much of a bearing on how one acts.

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.

Since you asked...  ;-)

First, let me preface by saying that I really hear what you're saying and I share a lot of your discomfort.  In particular, I am troubled by Christians who know where everyone is going to spend eternity.  As a boy, the pastor of the church I attended did a sermon the Sunday after Elvis Presley died entitled, "Why Elvis Burns in Hell".  Old Pastor Allen had everyone down there -- Elvis, Rock Hudson, every Pope in history, all the Jews and any woman in our congregation who wore slacks or listened to the devil's music (anything with a beat!).  I bought that whole line of b.s. for a good while and wasted a lot of my youth in fundamentalism.

I think the question about what difference Jesus makes is the best one anybody can ask.  Forget hell and damnation or heaven and reward.  If God is just, and he/she is, then God will do what is right.  Yes, there is truth in the theological doctrine that Christ atoned for our sins on the cross and one must believe that. 

But before one should wrestle with that business, I think it is best to simply consider Jesus.  His teachings, His claims, His behavior and the difference he has (or hasn't) made to others.  I get this question a lot.  Is Mahatma Gandhi in hell today?

Hell, how should I know?  A good fundamentalist Christian will say yes, unless at the last second of Gandhi's life, he repented his Hinduism and accepted Jesus as "his personal Lord and Savior".  Ick.  I hate that phrase.  It makes Jesus sound like wallet or a makeup compact.  Small, personal and all mine!  Bah!

I believe people are judged based on the light they have and what they did with it.  If they hear and believe Jesus is the Son of God who died for their sins and rose from the dead...if they believe and understand it...then yes...they are accountable for that should they still reject it.  But my late brother could never grasp it.  Yet he was as good and decent and kind a man as ever lived.  Is he in hell?  Rather, I ask, "Is God good and just?"

The heart of the matter is what YOU think of Jesus.  What, if any, attraction does he hold for you.  How does he compare to other good religious teachers (and there have been some wonderful ones through the centuries)?  And do I think, feel, intuit or somehow know that he is as alive today as ever he was...and might actually be calling to me.

Yikes!  Shades of Pat Robertson!  Ugh.  I didn't mean to sound that way.

But God does call people.  Not to hate and destruction as Robertson seems to think.  But to love, inclusion, mercy and courage. 

Jesse Ventura once said he thought Christians were a bunch of weak, spineless cowards.  I think he was referring to the religious right, but even if that's what he meant, he was wrong.  But I've heard that from others. 

Yeah -- we've had a lot of turds in our ranks, left and right.  Even our best and most noble representatives have screwed up.  John Calvin, an intellectual giant whether you agree with him or not, had people murdered. Dr. Martin Luther King, maybe the greatest American of the 20th century, had an affair.

The great Mahatma said, "I like your Christ.  Your Christians?  Not so much."  So if I could, I would ask that wonderful man..."Then what of Jesus?  What of his claim to deity?  What of his promise that whoever believes in him and follows him would have an eternal spring of hope welling up inside him? What do you do with Jesus?

I know what I'd like to do with a lot of his followers!  And I am pretty sure what a lot of people would do with me!  LOL!

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Gabu
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« Reply #157 on: January 05, 2007, 08:31:55 PM »


I appreciate your taking the time to write such a detailed response, but it unfortunately didn't really answer my question.  I suppose my question basically is this: why does God reward people with eternal bliss for last-minute faith after a life of sin, yet punish people with eternal torment for a life of service that lacked faith?

Or whether or not this is the case, I suppose.  It's all I ever hear from people attempting to save my soul from my clearly debaucherous, sinful life.

I just don't see why faith in Jesus' divinity is necessary for anything.  One can easily appreciate his message without believing that he was the Son of God.
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JSojourner
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« Reply #158 on: January 06, 2007, 01:31:12 AM »


I appreciate your taking the time to write such a detailed response, but it unfortunately didn't really answer my question.  I suppose my question basically is this: why does God reward people with eternal bliss for last-minute faith after a life of sin, yet punish people with eternal torment for a life of service that lacked faith?

Or whether or not this is the case, I suppose.  It's all I ever hear from people attempting to save my soul from my clearly debaucherous, sinful life.

I just don't see why faith in Jesus' divinity is necessary for anything.  One can easily appreciate his message without believing that he was the Son of God.

Sorry...I got carried away.  :-)

I have never bought into the notion that Hitler makes it to Heaven at the last second because he gave mental assent (sp?) to a theological concept...while Mahatma Ghandi burns in hell because he rejected, or simply didn't understand, the idea.

I know what you're getting at.  Most Christians, me included, believe that no matter how good one's deeds and life are, it isn't enough.  At the same time, I part company with them when they assert that all one must do is say a prayer, raise a hand and accept a theological idea.

Works and deeds DO matter.  They are evidence of the grace of God at work in humanity...in ANY human, regardless of faith.  I think what the writers of the scriptures were trying to say when they insist people are saved by grace and not works...is that counting on one's own goodness is tricky and uncertain ground.  How good is good enough.

I remember seeing Muhammad Ali interviewed (on 60 Minutes, I think) before he lost his ability to speak clearly.  He told the interviewer that he would sign autographs, answer letters personally, take time and talk to fans and do charity work for hours on end...every day...day in and day out.  When asked why he was so "fan-friendly" and altruistic, Ali said he hoped that by doing enough good...he might possibly gain entrance into Heaven.

I remember thinking what a beautiful person he was and how generous.  But at the same time, feeling sad that he had so much angst and uncertainty.  He didn't know how much good to do.  And I suspect he wondered if taking time away from his family for his fans or even for a good cause might be less good than the alternative.  Who knows?

How good is good enough?

This is where Christ comes in.  He gives us his goodness.  He is good FOR us.  We needn't worry or fear because a perfect God could only be satisfied with a perfect sacrifice. 

The horrendous mistake so many professing Christians make is to assume that because this spiritual transaction has taken place, it's no longer essential to do good.  Particularly the good that moves us out of our comfort zones...like seeking justice, defending the poor and minorities and caring for creation. 

I've had fellow Christians say to me, "I'm under God's grace.  Jesus took my sin and gave me His goodness and that's that.  Now, I try not to hurt anyone and live as I please."

Doesn't work that way.  And that attitude makes me wonder if there was ever a genuine encounter with Jesus Christ.  He's supposed to change things and shake things up.  He came to make us better people.  Not healthier, wealthier or happier. 

To your specific question:  I have real difficulty believing God does punish good people with eternal torment, simply because they fail to go forward at some tent revival or fill out a card at a church service. God looks on the heart of each man or woman.  I do believe God looks to see Jesus  and his vision imprinted there.  But suppose the person lives as though that imprint is there (Gandhi is a fine example) yet never confesses faith in Jesus?  Perhaps he didn't understand the message.  Perhaps he never heard the message.  Perhaps the message was so bolloxed by the messenger (you know -- hypocrites, charlatans and spiritual headhunters), that the person just couldn't accept it.  I believe God, in His/Her mercy, takes all that into account.

The question I usually drive at (but only with those who invite the conversation -- I do NOT believe in hammering people and I particularly despise Christian "witnesses" who treat non-Christians as subhuman, damned or unworthy of friendship) is simply:

Does Jesus speak to you?  No, not audibly.  But his written words...his historical example...the great good done in his name over the centuries?
(Yeah, I could write an even lengthier tome about the evil done in his name and believe me -- I am ashamed of it.)

But if he speaks to a person today, what does he say?  And what does that person say in response.

I guess that's where it comes down for me.  But as to eternal damnation, I sometimes wonder if the ones who proclaim it the loudest might just be the ones who most merit it.
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Ebowed
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« Reply #159 on: January 06, 2007, 03:42:15 AM »



Jesus was crazy.  Or a rotten person who led people astray.


That's all you really needed to say, to hit the nail on the head as it were.

Well, I added something I think is essential.  A third option.  He was crazy.  Or insane.  Or He was precisely who He claimed to be.  Shocked)

He may have also been honestly mistaken.
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« Reply #160 on: January 06, 2007, 05:07:54 AM »

I haven't the slightest idea. It's not like God put a timer on earth and let us count down the final seconds till Jesus comes back like it's a New Year's ball dropping or something.

Don't be silly, I know where the timer is.

And they laughed at me when I said that no one could use my microwave because it would cause the end of the world.

It's an established fact that the instrument of the apocalypse is made in Taiwan.

And what would that be, a VCR instruction manual?
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Gabu
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« Reply #161 on: January 06, 2007, 08:44:49 AM »

To your specific question:  I have real difficulty believing God does punish good people with eternal torment, simply because they fail to go forward at some tent revival or fill out a card at a church service. God looks on the heart of each man or woman.  I do believe God looks to see Jesus  and his vision imprinted there.  But suppose the person lives as though that imprint is there (Gandhi is a fine example) yet never confesses faith in Jesus?  Perhaps he didn't understand the message.  Perhaps he never heard the message.  Perhaps the message was so bolloxed by the messenger (you know -- hypocrites, charlatans and spiritual headhunters), that the person just couldn't accept it.  I believe God, in His/Her mercy, takes all that into account.

Thank you for another detailed response. Smiley

I'm curious why you say, though, that you don't believe that someone would not be given eternal punishment for not believing in Jesus.  I suppose that one section in particular that I'm looking at is Mark 16:15-16, which reads as follows:

"[Jesus] said unto [his desciples], Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.  He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."

This is quoted over and over by people who say that it doesn't matter what you do if you don't believe.

Although in reading other verses that I looked up, I do sort of find it confusing, as in Matthew 7:21-23 and Matthew 25:31-46, in which it sounds as if people who do good things will be rewarded while people who do bad things are the ones who will get eternal punishment.

If God intended for there to be one clear message, he didn't do a very good job... Tongue
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« Reply #162 on: January 06, 2007, 08:47:21 AM »

Depends.  Are we talking about the Jesus of the GOP IE the anti-poor warmonger?
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Bono
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« Reply #163 on: January 06, 2007, 10:47:15 AM »

To your specific question:  I have real difficulty believing God does punish good people with eternal torment, simply because they fail to go forward at some tent revival or fill out a card at a church service. God looks on the heart of each man or woman.  I do believe God looks to see Jesus  and his vision imprinted there.  But suppose the person lives as though that imprint is there (Gandhi is a fine example) yet never confesses faith in Jesus?  Perhaps he didn't understand the message.  Perhaps he never heard the message.  Perhaps the message was so bolloxed by the messenger (you know -- hypocrites, charlatans and spiritual headhunters), that the person just couldn't accept it.  I believe God, in His/Her mercy, takes all that into account.

Thank you for another detailed response. Smiley

I'm curious why you say, though, that you don't believe that someone would not be given eternal punishment for not believing in Jesus.  I suppose that one section in particular that I'm looking at is Mark 16:15-16, which reads as follows:

"[Jesus] said unto [his desciples], Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.  He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."

This is quoted over and over by people who say that it doesn't matter what you do if you don't believe.

Although in reading other verses that I looked up, I do sort of find it confusing, as in Matthew 7:21-23 and Matthew 25:31-46, in which it sounds as if people who do good things will be rewarded while people who do bad things are the ones who will get eternal punishment.

If God intended for there to be one clear message, he didn't do a very good job... Tongue

Matthew 7:21-23 is talking about the faith of miracles, which is distinct from saving faith. Judas, for instance, had the faith of miracles, but obviously had no saving faith.

As for Matthew 25:31-46, and all other passages which seem to indicate a judgement based on works, it must be taken into account the other passages that indicate both

a) The imposibility on being justified by works;
b) Justification by faith.

That is--unbelievers will be judged based in their works and will be found guilty. Believers if judged their works and would be found guilty too. However, believers have the righteousness of Christ imputed to them, and they are thus blameness. For a Biblical understanding of this synthesis, I advise you to read the epistles to the Romans and to the Galatians, where Paul puts forth this doctrine.

P.S. Mark 16:15-16 isn't bona fide canon.
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JSojourner
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« Reply #164 on: January 06, 2007, 02:26:47 PM »

To your specific question:  I have real difficulty believing God does punish good people with eternal torment, simply because they fail to go forward at some tent revival or fill out a card at a church service. God looks on the heart of each man or woman.  I do believe God looks to see Jesus  and his vision imprinted there.  But suppose the person lives as though that imprint is there (Gandhi is a fine example) yet never confesses faith in Jesus?  Perhaps he didn't understand the message.  Perhaps he never heard the message.  Perhaps the message was so bolloxed by the messenger (you know -- hypocrites, charlatans and spiritual headhunters), that the person just couldn't accept it.  I believe God, in His/Her mercy, takes all that into account.

Thank you for another detailed response. Smiley

I'm curious why you say, though, that you don't believe that someone would not be given eternal punishment for not believing in Jesus.  I suppose that one section in particular that I'm looking at is Mark 16:15-16, which reads as follows:

"[Jesus] said unto [his desciples], Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.  He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."

This is quoted over and over by people who say that it doesn't matter what you do if you don't believe.

Although in reading other verses that I looked up, I do sort of find it confusing, as in Matthew 7:21-23 and Matthew 25:31-46, in which it sounds as if people who do good things will be rewarded while people who do bad things are the ones who will get eternal punishment.

If God intended for there to be one clear message, he didn't do a very good job... Tongue

Yeah, I intend to have words with him about that some day. 

I am convinced that the Matthew 25 passage is pivotal, but pertains exclusively to governments and people groups.  Jesus is very clear here that "the nations" are being judged.  This, to me, is proof-positive that nations are accountable to God for their treatment of the least and the last.  How God can damn a nation and not individuals is problematic, but perhaps the leaders of those nations bear the wrath for their behavior.  I am not sure.  But the flaccid argument that government is not responsible for the plight of the poor, the marginalized, the oppressed or the prisoner is utterly smashed on the rock of Jesus' Matthew 25 teaching.  (as well as some other powerful pronouncements from Jeremiah, Isaiah and Amos.)

As to the Mark passage, it is one I have never believed to be authentic.  I believe it was added much later.  Jesus did encourage his disciples in other Gospels (repeated in St. Luke's Acts of the Apostles) to go into all the world and make disciples.  But no mention is made there of damnation.

Even if you don't view the Mark passage as altered or redacted in some way, how is any of it consistent with the character of Jesus unveiled in the rest of the Gospels?  Did he intend his followers to drink poison and handle snakes as a test of faith?  Some Pentecostals think so, but no authoritative scholar ever did.

If someone you know is fixated on damnation (and they are always fixated on the damnation of someone other than themself, aren't they?), then I would simply respond to them as Jack Nicholson did in "As Good as it Gets"...

"Go peddle crazy someplace else.  We're all stocked up here".

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« Reply #165 on: January 07, 2007, 09:41:11 AM »

You won't find jmfcst and I in agreement very often.  But on this, we do agree.  At least to the degree that no human can every attain or perform or otherwise reach the perfect goodness of God.

Which is why, from a Christian worldview, God came to bear our imperfection in Jesus...and bridge the gap between broken humanity and perfect divinity.

Since we're well on our way towards this topic now, anyways, this is something that has always bugged me: what difference exactly is it supposed to make to believe that Jesus was the Son of God and all that?  I've seen good and bad people who were allegedly "saved" and I've seen good and bad people who were not.  As far as I can tell, whether or not one believes (or says he believes) doesn't exactly have much of a bearing on how one acts.

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.

"Whatever good deeds you do in his name, you do for me" - Rough paraphrase of Aslan in the last Narnia book.

I don't really buy into the idea that you have to believe in exact scripture in order to be saved, but then again I don't think one should take the Bible literally just like that.
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« Reply #166 on: January 07, 2007, 01:26:28 PM »

but then again I don't think one should take the Bible literally just like that.

That is a strawman because no one believes that the bible must be read literaly like an instruction manual. The Bible must be read literally when it is meant to be read literally and figuratively when it is meant to be read figuratively. Any conservative Christian will tell you the same. This is why hermeneutics is a foundational topic of theology--to determine which is which. However, what you mean when you say that you think the Bible should not be taken literally is that you think one should just pick and choose which parts they like to consider inspired and which ones they don't like and consider it human.
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« Reply #167 on: January 07, 2007, 01:32:20 PM »

It depends what is meant by pick and choose. From personal experience UK evangelists tend to be the most guilty of doing so (particularly when justifying a position on social issues) and tend to play fast and loose with the OT and NT. I'm not one to pick and choose - I do look at each passage and each concept individually. Some are as clear as day, others require consideration alongside contemporary historical and cultural factors (homosexuality for example though it is rarely mentioned in relation to other concepts - not as much as conservatives or liberals would like you to believe)
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Swing low, sweet chariot. Comin' for to carry me home.
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« Reply #168 on: January 08, 2007, 11:56:58 AM »

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.

No, Hell is the consequence of sin; it is NOT the consequence of disbelief:

John 3:36 Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on him."

But Salvation is the consequence of living by faith:

John 3:16-18 "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. 18Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son."
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Wakie
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« Reply #169 on: January 09, 2007, 09:21:00 AM »

I don't sit around worrying about when the 2nd coming of Christ will be.  I just live my life in a way in which I believe he would approve but I don't plan on the world ending tomorrow.
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Grumpier Than Uncle Joe
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« Reply #170 on: January 09, 2007, 03:23:44 PM »


Wonder what his approval rating is?
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Ebowed
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« Reply #171 on: January 12, 2008, 06:58:19 AM »

So, who voted yes?
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Everett
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« Reply #172 on: January 12, 2008, 07:05:57 AM »

2007 isn't over yet, baby. It's still around 1950 in Alabama, Mississippi, and other states in the vicinity. Don't let your guard down yet; Jesus Christ could make his second appearance any day.

(I voted no, of course. Smiley)
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John Dibble
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« Reply #173 on: January 12, 2008, 10:37:10 AM »

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.

No, Hell is the consequence of sin; it is NOT the consequence of disbelief:

John 3:36 Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on him."

But Salvation is the consequence of living by faith:

John 3:16-18 "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. 18Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son."

Dude, you're contradicting yourself - first you say that non-belief isn't the reason you go to hell, then you say non-believers are condemned (a.k.a. going to hell) because they don't believe. It's right there in plain English, the second half of the last sentence in your post.
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« Reply #174 on: January 12, 2008, 11:25:55 AM »

Probably one of the most distasteful parts of Christianity for me is the part that you hear over and over from people trying to convert others, which is that you get eternally tortured in hell if you don't believe that Jesus was the Son of God, etc.

No, Hell is the consequence of sin; it is NOT the consequence of disbelief:

John 3:36 Whoever believes in the Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for God's wrath remains on him."

But Salvation is the consequence of living by faith:

John 3:16-18 "For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life. 17For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. 18Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God's one and only Son."

Dude, you're contradicting yourself - first you say that non-belief isn't the reason you go to hell, then you say non-believers are condemned (a.k.a. going to hell) because they don't believe. It's right there in plain English, the second half of the last sentence in your post.

Hello and welcome to Jesus 101!

In the beginning, God created man. He was all like, "Dude, don't do that sh**t over there." But man was all "Whatever, man," and did it anyway (man was probably high). God was pissed and was like, "You idiot, now I have to send you to hell. I LOVE YOU!" Man was like "That's lame." So God felt a little bad and was like "Well just wait 2000 years I'll fix everything."

So 2000 years later this Jesus guy pops out and doesn't do any of that sh**t over there. God was like, "Jesus is so awesome, let's kill him so that man doesn't have to go to hell." So they killed Jesus and that was a serious bummer. But then Jesus popped out of the ground a few days later all like, "Pshh death is for pussies. Believe me and you can come hang out with God."

To summarize: God condemned man to hell for sin. The belief, faith, and acceptance that Jesus died in stead of you is what forgives you your sin. Now, one could indeed argue that not believing results in going to hell, but not believing would not be a problem if you didn't already have sin on your plate. Besides, the Bible states that even the demons know and believe in God and Jesus.
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