Absolutely!Prodigal Son wrote:but, in truly knowing Him, the selfishness is eradicated and replaced with love. fear is always an obstruction to love. it is God's love that relieves fear and allows US to finally, truly love and be liberated. trust me, if you don't know God, you don't really know how to love.
Agreed. Ambivalence is not tolerance, and most are confused about that nowadays. If I am truly tolerant and care about another individual then I'm compelled to share the truth with them.AttentionKMartShoppers wrote:TO all ye who preach tolerance, you airheaded hypocrites, tolerate my intolerance! Tolerance is stupid. It'd tacit consent. It's not caring. If I see someone being immoral, should I let him continue? Only if I didn't care. Because I care, though, I would be intolerant and say what he's doing is wrong.
And the judging passages are taken out of context here. Jesus is saying to reflect on ourselves before attempting to handle someone else's problems. But what a Christian says to a non-Christian is "I've turned to Jesus in faith to obtain righteousness, and so should you." It's not about being better than anyone else, or about people handling each other's problems; it's about accepting God's gift of grace - and by that standard I will welcome judgement because (as just pointed out) in love there is no fear.