No, you're teaching a "type" of universal salvation.Danieltwotwenty wrote:Kurieuo wrote:Sorry that we aren't all inconsistently post-modern with our beliefs.Audie wrote:Thanks, I dont know what else to say besides that. The scientist father doesnt surprise me you seem more analyticalDanieltwotwenty wrote:My Dad was a scientist at the DSTO in Port Melbourne, he definitely taught me how to think critically but he also showed me that there is something much deeper than the mere physical.Audie wrote:
Why not teach kids how to think?
Yep and that is a good thing, without faith we are all lost.Dont you suppose that most all conscientiously good religious parents have taught
their trusting children about their faith, planted it deep, early and strong, never to be lost?
Depends on what you believe by one "true religion", I personally believe there will be people of all faiths in the new creation, even the Bible says there will be people there who we didn't think would be there and people not there who we thought there would be. To me religion in it's purest sense is the "true religion", everything else is a man made construction to control the people, Jesus freed us all from that, but yet again man built his churches and institutions.What percent, in the history of the world, do you suppose got lucky and were indoctrinated into the one true religion?
Assuming the number is greater than zero.
and disinclined to the rigid "either / or" way of thinking of so many unschooled in rigorous thinking.
Oh..I wonder what you mean by the word faith.
I'd much rather be follow what Christ Himself said, and be wrong, then preach a more universal salvation in kindness based upon ... and be wrong.
Rigorous thinking has nothing to do with it.
No one here is preaching universal salvation.
In that one can come to Christ regardless of belief and have that accounted as "faith in Christ".
Question: what is it that makes it count as "faith in Christ"?