Author Topic: 200 Christian Homes Burned in Pakistan  (Read 2315 times)

Offline Simaril

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« Reply #90 on: July 06, 2005, 06:41:08 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Lizking
Eve was, but Adam was missing a rib-hardly a perfect specimen.

I have always found it odd that a religion would consider knowledge to be a sin, much less the original sin.

 



The knowledge itself was not the sin -- it ws the willful choice to step past the limits God put in place. Think of a kid: Mom says "Don't touch that lamp!", and the minute she turns her back he reaches out to touch it with his finger. Not becasue he wants to touch it, but because he was told not to.

Also, although the tree was called "The Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil" for communication to humans, the term jsut sounds like soemthing a dad would use to communicate soemthing complex to kids. I know that when my kids were little, I called the hobby knife I sometimes left on the model table the "finger-chopper-offer-knife" so they got the point to leave it alone.

I suspect the issue was more one of innocence than knowledge. And, since the time in the Garden was interrupted, who are we to say that the knowledge of good and eveil was supposed to be withheld forever? Maybe in God's eyes it was a matter of restricted timing, not forbiddence forever? We are told elsewhere that God wants all to have knowledge of the truth....
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Offline lazs2

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« Reply #91 on: July 06, 2005, 09:58:05 AM »
lada... I believe people cry when they lose someone because....

they have lost someone.   They will never see that person again for the rest of their lives.  Is that so hard for you to understand?

lazs

Offline mosgood

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« Reply #92 on: July 06, 2005, 10:24:07 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by lazs2
lada... I believe people cry when they lose someone because....

they have lost someone.   They will never see that person again for the rest of their lives.  Is that so hard for you to understand?

lazs



Aye...

they are not crying because that person is in a better place.... but for the criers loss.

Offline Seagoon

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« Reply #93 on: July 06, 2005, 01:35:07 PM »
Hi Liz,

Quote
Originally posted by Lizking
Seagoon, those passages speak of a rebirth, but they speak of a rebirth after death, not a conversion in this life.

You didn't answer my question, either.


Actually Liz, those passages speak of a new birth occuring in this life, which results in a new heart here and has profound consequences for the next.

You can see that regeneration refers to our life here and now from several of the passages, for instance - a profound change in behavior:

"I will put My Spirit within you and cause you to walk in My statutes, and you will be careful to observe My ordinances.

Writing to Titus, Paul tells him to remind the members of the church in Crete:

"For we also once were foolish ourselves, disobedient, deceived, enslaved to various lusts and pleasures, spending our life in malice and envy, hateful, hating one another. But when the kindness of God our Savior and His love for mankind appeared, He saved us, not on the basis of deeds which we have done in righteousness, but according to His mercy, by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the Holy Spirit, whom He poured out upon us richly through Jesus Christ our Savior" (Titus 3:4-6)

You see there the former life, and then the change that results in a new life. It is not that they continue in their prior sinful behavior looking forward to a rebirth after death. The have gone through pallingenesia literally "the new birth" or being "born again" in this life and it has changed the way they act, and think, and feel, forever.

I could pile on some more quotes related to the new birth, but I'm hoping that'll be enough.

As to not answering your question, I had thought I did, forgive me for not being clear enough.

Does one need to worship in my church to be saved? No, clearly not. As the heavenly assembly sings to Christ: "You were slain, and purchased for God with Your blood men from every tribe and tongue and people and nation" and if I might be allowed to add, in every age since the creation as well. Our church is but one small visible expression of a church vaster than any one can number, as difficult to count as the sands of the sea.

But that assembly is still the assembly of the redeemed, those purchased out of an estate of sin and death by Christ, and forever united to him by faith.

I think that perhaps the problem we are having here is that in the way you seem to be framing it, everyone is worthy of heaven but there are a bunch of Christian meanies saying, "unless you worshipped with us in the right way, you can't get in - only we have tickets." Whereas in the bible, all men are counted as amongst the perishing mass, no one is accounted worthy of heaven, and the only way that can change is to be redeemed by the Lamb, and called to faith in Him by the working of the Holy Spirit within them. This salvation is not earned or merited, it is not because those saved were better than anyone else, and its grounding is only in the grace of God who says "I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion." (Romans 9:15)

So for a Christian to be "proud and haughty" about salvation is stupid beyond words. They were debtors, poor blind beggars just like everyone else, who received mercy from the hand of the king - and that not on account of anything they did. Can anyone be saved without receiving the mercy of the King? No, they will continue on to receive perfect justice.

- SEAGOON
« Last Edit: July 06, 2005, 01:37:25 PM by Seagoon »
SEAGOON aka Pastor Andy Webb
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Offline Lizking

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« Reply #94 on: July 06, 2005, 08:27:51 PM »
Seagoon, thanks for your reply.  As for the question, there are only 2 answers, yes or no.  You can, of course, refrain from answering the question as posed.

Please do not bother using a particular quote from the bible to reinforce or illustrate your view on religious matters.  They are all liable to be taken out of context, since their meaning depends upon it to such a large extent.


Please discuss it as you see it, no documentation required.

In my reading of the bible,  many times and over many years, I have never seen, in context, anything that would indicate that Jesus or God demand anything resembling being reborn (in the sense you used it above) as being a required ritual to enter heaven.

Offline Lizking

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« Reply #95 on: July 06, 2005, 09:42:27 PM »
Here is the passage I am referring to, by the way:

Seagoon:

The bible is quite clear that all men are born fallen, and that in order to be saved, they must be "born again" in the case of normal adults, this comes via the preaching of the gospel. The bible is also clear that salvation cannot be obtained via any other means than faith alone in Christ alone, hence the urgency that attends missions and evangelism.

To this I can not agree.

I do not worship a deity, only the moral values that it represents. As such, the name and morphology of the deity is unimportant. If you live your life as a moral person, which pretty much all religions are in agreement with as to the general moral rules of civilization, then the particular rituals of those religions serve only as a comfort and teaching tool to perpetuate the concepts.

That is a good thing, until the rituals become more important than the spirit of the lesson.

I fear that that is the case with born-again Christians. They are caught up in the ritual, and forget the ultimate goal.

Offline Simaril

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« Reply #96 on: July 08, 2005, 06:04:27 AM »
LizKing, I know this wasnt addressed to me, so I wont step in to your conversation to give my answer.

However, your requested fromat isnt quite fair. On one hand, you tell Seagoon to "not bother" using quotations because they are so easily taken out of context -- but then you challenge the core beliefs of Christianity and ask for a dcotrinal answer.

How do you expect him to answer without referring to the text that's the foundation of Christianity??????



Maturity is knowing that I've been an idiot in the past.
Wisdom is realizing I will be an idiot in the future.
Common sense is trying to not be an idiot right now

"Social Fads are for sheeple." - Meatwad

Offline Furball

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« Reply #97 on: July 08, 2005, 06:16:12 AM »
Quote
Originally posted by Seagoon
Hi Holden,

The Bible teaches that since the fall all mankind has inherited the sin nature of Adam along with the guilt of of his initial transgression (called "original sin"). As a result, all men are born not sinless.
- SEAGOON


I am completely open to religion.  I am not religious nor am i against religion.  I would love there to be a God and i keep an open mind whether to believe in god....

However, the belief that there was a garden created by god, with a male and female, adam and eve etc. perplexes me.

I genuinely mean no offence to you Seagoon, from my perspective i am confused on how someone who is so educated can appear to believe in something, which to me, appears to be so far beyond belief that it is almost fairy-tale like.  How does the religious view tie in with the proof of evolution?

Again, i mean no disrespect and would be happy to edit this out if you want me to.
« Last Edit: July 08, 2005, 06:18:43 AM by Furball »
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Offline Tilt

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« Reply #98 on: July 08, 2005, 06:57:42 AM »
I once worked with an engineer who thought the solution to all mechanical engineering problems could be found in Kemps Engineering Handbook.

It struck me that this too required a "leap of faith"

The nice thing about Kemps however was that its instructions were precise and not open to multiple interpetations to suit the agenda of who ever read it.

Neither did it become the company doctrine on engineering or indeed the foundation of an enforced rule set.

My associates dependance on Kemps did sort of stop him from thinking outside the box and his contribution was less to do with his own considered judgement than it was his knowledge of Kemps.

However occasionally Kemps did have an answer we had struggled to find and as such proved useful.
Ludere Vincere

Offline Lizking

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« Reply #99 on: July 08, 2005, 07:21:07 AM »
Simaril, I want his interpretation (doctrine) of the quotes (the bible), not the quotes themselves.

Offline FiLtH

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« Reply #100 on: July 08, 2005, 09:31:30 AM »
Furball if you arent raised in it from birth, its hard to understand.  Faith has alot to do with trusting those you love, your family and friends. They guide you. Therefore you accept what they tell you. An adult just being introduced into Christianity is likely looking for something to fill the void most of us feel.

   I know I would find it extremely difficult to accept it today if I hadnt been raised in it. To try to convince a Christian he is wrong..is trying to get him to say " What a waste of time its all been. I will never see those I love again. All those Sundays I could have been fishing."  That just wont happen...and Im sure its the same with other religions.

  There is nothing I know of more comforting than to trust in Jesus, and know its out of your hands.  It takes alot of stress off of you.

~AoM~

Offline Silat

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« Reply #101 on: July 08, 2005, 12:23:16 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by FiLtH
Furball if you arent raised in it from birth, its hard to understand.  Faith has alot to do with trusting those you love, your family and friends. They guide you. Therefore you accept what they tell you. An adult just being introduced into Christianity is likely looking for something to fill the void most of us feel.

   I know I would find it extremely difficult to accept it today if I hadnt been raised in it. To try to convince a Christian he is wrong..is trying to get him to say " What a waste of time its all been. I will never see those I love again. All those Sundays I could have been fishing."  That just wont happen...and Im sure its the same with other religions.

  There is nothing I know of more comforting than to trust in Jesus, and know its out of your hands.  It takes alot of stress off of you.


There is a reason we indoctrinate the young. Its easier:)
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Offline Seagoon

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« Reply #102 on: July 08, 2005, 03:53:09 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Lizking
Seagoon, thanks for your reply.  As for the question, there are only 2 answers, yes or no.  You can, of course, refrain from answering the question as posed.


Lizking,

I don't seem to be having much luck answering your question to your satisfaction. Here then is one last attempt. Jesus said that unless a man was born again he could not see the kingdom of God and that men could only get to heaven through Him. As an ambassador of Christ therefore, I preach salvation through faith in Jesus Christ alone. I do not preach salvation via works, or rituals, or even a rite of initiation.

So to aid in your interpretation of this answer, this means that no man regardless of his tribe, tongue, nation, philosophy or creed can be saved by any other means. I confess with the Apostle Peter that there is no other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved.

Quote
Please do not bother using a particular quote from the bible to reinforce or illustrate your view on religious matters.  They are all liable to be taken out of context, since their meaning depends upon it to such a large extent.

Please discuss it as you see it, no documentation required.


Liz, my own opinions are ultimately valueless. Let me give you an example of what I mean. I could argue with you at length that Orange is a better color than Magenta, I could appeal to aesthetic principles, quote great artists, and even refer to polls showing that more people prefer orange to magenta. But does any of that really establish that "orange is a better color than magenta" is true? Not at all.

Unless there is in fact a God who has established absolutes and made it possible for us to know them as well, then all we have are conflicting and equally baseless opinions. Then again, most people in the West today, particularly in regards to religion are happy enough with the idea that "what is true for you may not be true for me" even though the statement is ultimately nonsensical. So we treat religions as no more than fairy tales and argue their merits on the same level that we might say "Hansel and Gretel is inferior to Red Riding Hood because I believe the morals taught in Red Riding Hood are superior."  

Ok Lizking, you have a set of morals you believe are taught by "all of the major religions." What if a fascist comes along and says, "Bah, all your "morals" are decadent and worthless, my ideals which include eliminating your system of morality are empirically superior to your morals." On what basis do you assert the opposite? My fairytales trump your manifesto? Again it is merely competing preferences, Orange vs. Magenta with anecdotal support.

If that really were the case then there would be no reason why I shouldn't stand up on Sunday and preach my personal opinions, my personal politics, and so on, after all consensus, antiquity, and popularity do not make or unmake truth. Jesus said "I am the way, the truth, and the life" I believe that to be absolutely true and not merely his opinion and therefore I preach that regardless of how popular or unpopular it may be.


 
Quote

In my reading of the bible,  many times and over many years, I have never seen, in context, anything that would indicate that Jesus or God demand anything resembling being reborn (in the sense you used it above) as being a required ritual to enter heaven.


So what is your reading of Isaiah 53? I mean the entire Chapter - not just a potentially out of context snippet - how about Romans 3?

I ask this because if all that was required to enter heaven was a base assent to certain philosophical principles, then why was the crucifixion and death of Christ spoken of as necessary both before and after it happened, by the prophets, Jesus, and his apostles? Was it all an unnecessary tragedy? Why then was it the will of the Father that the Son be put to death? If this was something Jesus was only willing to do because there was no other way for men to be saved, then how can you assert that we can be saved by assenting to certain principles of moral philosophy taught by "all religions."

Surely if "assent to common moral principles in order to be saved" really is the message of the Bible there should be plenty of in context evidence for it in the text that you can give me.

- SEAGOON
SEAGOON aka Pastor Andy Webb
"We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion... Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other." - John Adams

Offline Seagoon

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« Reply #103 on: July 08, 2005, 04:51:19 PM »
Quote
Originally posted by Furball
I am completely open to religion.  I am not religious nor am i against religion.  I would love there to be a God and i keep an open mind whether to believe in god....

However, the belief that there was a garden created by god, with a male and female, adam and eve etc. perplexes me.

I genuinely mean no offence to you Seagoon, from my perspective i am confused on how someone who is so educated can appear to believe in something, which to me, appears to be so far beyond belief that it is almost fairy-tale like.  How does the religious view tie in with the proof of evolution?

Again, i mean no disrespect and would be happy to edit this out if you want me to.


Hi Furball,

No offence taken, its a relevant and common question.

First in answering your question (and this will pertain to both Filth and Silat's comments as well) I should note that I was not raised as an evangelical Christian, in fact for most of my life I despised Christians, thought the Bible was a bad joke, and that Jesus was an utter ninny. I enjoyed making fun of and running down all things Christian and regarded the continuing elimination of the Christian faith and its influence from the culture as a good thing and a sign of progress. I was a practicing occultist and one of my particular peeves was the "narrow-minded" antipathy of Christians towards my own beliefs and practices. One of my central assumptions was that Christianity was inherantantly illogical, ignorant, contradictory, and fideistic. I also felt sure that I, who had barely read the bible, understood it far better than people who read and studied it every day of their lives. I dismissed evangelicals as mindlessly dogmatic, although I myself unquestioningly accepted certain scientific paradigms as "fact," as did all of my friends, this was especially the case because I had been indoctrinated in these principles since my early youth.

For instance, I didn't go to church on Sunday, but on Saturday I went to the local Arboretum without fail and visiting naturalists and biologists taught us the standardized doctrine of Darwinian evolution.

After I became a Christian, I went through exactly the fundamental change of heart and mind that Lizking and I were discussing in the posts above. The things I once hated, I now loved. But I must admit to having initially had a certain uneasiness when it comes to dealing with the issue of Evolution, I believed in the garden account as the origin of man (as did Christ see Matt. 19:4-5 for instance), but how to reconcile it with everything I had been taught?

Well before even becoming a Christian, I'd been reading in the science mags of the increasing splintering and feuding within the scientific community over Darwinian evolution. Evolution, as you know, is a scientific paradigm created to "explain the available evidence." In science, when the evidence exceeds the ability of the paradigm to "hold it" then a change in paradigm or "paradigm shift" occurs. These paradigm shifts can be quite traumatic because men are dogmatic by nature and seek stability (we fear change), and once we become comfortable with a certain explanation of the universe, finding out that it wasn't quite right and needs to be replaced causes a certain amount of panic.

One such paradigm whose parameters were long ago exceeded by the available evidence is Darwinian evolution. For instance, the hope of Darwinian evolutionists was that eventually we would discover transitional lifeforms to explain the "missing links" in the fossil record, that we would find evidence both in biology and paleontology that the variety of life goes from less to greater variety, and many other things that have not come to pass. Also there was the problem of the Cambrian explosion (i.e. that instead of going from fewer to greater lifeforms, the fossil record indicates exactly the opposite) then there were problems biologists were discovering as they learned more about DNA and its mechanics and finally coming close to the frightening conclusion that mutation will not work as an engine for evolution.

The argument and frustration in the science journals lies in the fact that Darwinian evolution is now so established in our society (particularly in teaching) that its truth is now religiously defended. Men like the late Stephen Jay Gould (who was himself a militant atheist) have railed against what they call "Darwinian fundamentalism" and how it is holding up the progress of science to new paradigms.

One of my quirks is that I'm a voracious reader so I began discovering that much of the existing evidence is now pointing inexorably towards intelligent design, but that when this is discussed by scientists (even doggedly non-Christian ones) the scientific community explodes in an uproar. Therefore research, like the DNA markers that point to two common ancestors for all mankind or the wealth of astronomical data that contradicts the "principle of mediocrity" is either suppressed or treated with embarrassment.

The fact is Furball, that whether one believes in the biblical account, the scientific community is struggling to come to grips with the fact that the available data no longer supports (if it ever did) the traditional Darwinian explanations for the origin of the species. They are having grave difficulty moving on though, in an ironic reflection of the same resistance society showed from moving from a geocentric to a heliocentric model of the solar system.

I happen to believe strongly that the more data we have, the stronger the evidence for intelligent design and two common ancestors for all humans becomes. In other words, the doctrine of special creation is becoming more established, not less. So while I may in fact be quite stupid (and aren't we always the last to know? ;) ) the doctrine I happen to believe itself is actually increasingly credible.

For some good laymen level introductions that will get you started on this, you may want to pick up Darwin on Trial by Phillip Johnson or Intelligent Design by Dembski. Please note, my purpose in writing the above is not to convince you of either position per se, simply to show a) the actual complexity of the issues and b) that it is not necessary to be entirely out of touch with reality to believe the testimony of scripture regarding creation.

- SEAGOON
« Last Edit: July 08, 2005, 05:01:27 PM by Seagoon »
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Offline Lizking

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« Reply #104 on: July 08, 2005, 07:16:24 PM »
I will take that as a "no" Seagoon.

You were able to answer the question without using hard quotes.  When I said "your opinion", I meant, of course of your proffesional opinion, i.e. the doctrine of your church.

As for the last part, no, Seagoon, first Facism is not a relgion, and second, the core beliefs I adhere to are right, prima facie, with no "back-story" (religion) needed to validate them.