Re: the need for a bible
Posted: Mon Dec 31, 2007 1:05 am
ah. but my point is valid: how does one know what doctrines are vital to salvation and what are not? if so many leaders disagree, how can we know we are right? you said it's up to philosophers, and is not necessarily important to salvation. but many leaders delcare such issues ARE vital. my point (to reiderate) is that christianity (or any religion for that reason) puts THESE men and their doctrines and semantics between you and God. i propose perhaps a person doesnt need a coduit between them and God, circumventing all the mumbo-jumbo and dissimenation of dogmas. that perhaps God can actually just judge him AS him, not for how much he knows of what OTHER men believe (or tell him to believe.) why isnt that possible?Kurieuo wrote: That is nice. I would just say they are wrong. I could state a better informed council, the International Council on Biblical Inerrancy (ICBI), in fact affirmed that an Old Earth is in fact compatible with an inerrant reading of Scripture.
hang on, define wrong? you have to have a universality of right and wrong first, which for me is the fundamental proof of a loving God. that is, you can only admit "i have done wrong" according to your understanding of God's laws, without which there is no 'wrong."Getting back to Christianity, The Christian message is very simple. Do you admit you have done wrong? If you answered, "yes" that you have done wrong as I myself did, then we are guilty not even by God judging us, but by our own admittance. So how can you question that it would be unfair for God who is sovereign over us all to punish any one of us? It is only unfair if we are innocent, but from our (?) own admittance we are not innocent.
if nothing was illegal, no one could be a criminal.
that being said, i think it's strange that almost every inclination that make us human also makes us a sinner. our impulses are sinful, or will is sinful, our hearts are sinful. we are lustful, greedy, selfish monsters. our mere existence is sinful; so to eve EXIST in the realm of humanity is to admit to being wrong.
so. if being anything BUT wrong is an existential impossibility, doesnt God HAVE to be a bit merciful? we're not even given a chance to be anyhting but wrong. it's a decision none of us get to make.
i dont think i misunderstand it. i see the trinity the same way i see water--it can be ice, liquid, or gas, depending on the need. i see the holy spirit as the vaporous steam, Jesus as solid tangible matter (ice) and the Father as the oh so necessary life giving liquid water.sleep wrote:Firstly, it is not 3 Gods are 1 God, or that three persons are one person. Rather that three persons share one essence. It is a common JW misunderstanding which says that the Trinity is a doctrine of three gods being one god. It seems from your words further below that you may also have this misunderstanding
but i still call it water. i mean, i need water. when i thirst, i ask for water, i dont try to breathe vapors or eat ice. it is the liquid water that brings me life, tho the other forms are not without purpose. i just think the Father God is enough, so i pray "father God." i guess that, in and of itself is admission i accept some form of trinitarianism, since i DO talk to Father God. it's just i heard my whole life christians saying "dear Jesus," in all their prayers. i've actually been asked to pray outloud for someone (laying on of hands/anoitment with oil/blessings) and have been told afterwards by church leaders i ought to ask for Jesus rather than father God, as we can only reach the Father through Jesus.
i beg to differ. the acceptance of the trinity is vital to the preciousness of Jesus as our saviour. unless you accept jesus as God, he was just a guy. a profit. so i think that is fundamental to christianity.Now regarding the Trinity, we had a discussion on this board a while ago, and it seemed to be the consensus opinion of most here was that belief in the Trinity is not required to accept Christ and be saved. On the other hand, who Christ is was of importance to us in being saved.
sorry i missed the other discussion, i just dont see how it's possible to say christianity is the only way unless you accept christ as God.
i never meant to propose it's implausible, nor absurd, just difficult to comprehend, yet vital to salvation. you diminish it's vitality, i disagree, as noted above. i think moreover i was proposing the possiblity God the father always existed (however you want to define that) seperately from Jesus during jesus' tenure on earth. is that plausible?Does it seem implausible to think that if an all-powerful God exists, that he could indeed take on the form of a man if God so willed to? If this isn't implausible, then whatever seemingly absurd or repulsive solutions are given by Christians to try explain this (i.e., the Trinity), it still remains that this is a real possibility despite one's inability to explain how God taking on humanity, and as such Christ being God, may exactly work.
this directly confirms my speculation of a seperation of jesus and God. two wills, two levels of sovereignty.We here have Jesus, who was in the very nature God, emptying Himself into human form. Christ appears to have given up His sovereign authority as God which is why He was submissive and obedient to the person we know as His Father, God the Father.
do you believe Christ and God the father existed mutually exclusive, in heaven and on earth?