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Kindness is of the Kingdom. Selfishness is of the world we have made in our own image. Because we reject the world of man, its institutions, its politics, doctrines, the national way, etc, all based on selfishness, we set ourselves up as enemies, in churches and even within homes.Yes, kindness is not selfishness but it considers what is best for others even if it means being rejected by those we love.
Not everything needs to be balanced.But how does one differentiate balanced from imbalanced? Surely you aren't suggesting that any attempt to override emotions with reason amounts to the introduction of imbalance. That would suggest that all reason amounts to imbalance.
I would suggest that balance occurs whenever emotions are tempered by reason, and that's all that stoicism attempts to do. It's not meant to 'snuff out' emotions, it's simply meant to temper them, so that the better of me can hopefully rise above the lesser of me.
It's a work in progress.
Why would the Ancient of Days and the Son of Man as appearing in Daniel be the same person? God the Father is not a human being, so I would never use the word 'person' for Him in this day and age (that would cause confusion given the definition of 'person' in any English dictionary). The ancient of Days and the Son of Man in this passage obviously are two distinct beings/identities though - and that's fully Biblical; one can see the same pattern in Psalm 110:1, and several others ..In Orthodox theology, the Ancient of Days is understood as the Son of God, the second person of the Holy Trinity.
In Daniel's prophecy, the Son of God appears as a distinct figure who approaches the Ancient of Days.
However, they are actually meant to be the same person.
How does Orthodox theology clarify this interesting situation?
One brick in repairing the wall.In a firm call to avoid “false mercy” in marriage annulment proceedings, Pope Leo XIV reminded that compassion cannot disregard the truth.
During a Friday audience with participants in the legal-pastoral training course of the Roman Rota, the Holy See’s court of appeals, the Holy Father read a lengthy speech in which he recalled the importance of the reform of marriage annulment processes initiated by Pope Francis 10 years ago.
The pontiff emphasized that theology, law, and pastoral care must be understood in a harmonious way, not as separate or opposing areas, and pointed out that annulment proceedings are not merely technical procedures to obtain the “free status of persons” but rather an ecclesial service based on the search for truth and on family pastoral care.
Judicial processes at the service of truth
Continued below.
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Pope Leo XIV warns against ‘false mercy’ in marriage annulment proceedings
In a firm call to avoid “false mercy” in marriage annulment proceedings, Pope Leo XIV reminded that compassion cannot disregard the truth.www.catholicnewsagency.com
OK.I see it differntly.
Maybe so. Because I don't see us light years apart.Maybe it's just semantics.
But of course.But I think the correct response to God when He leads, guides, directs, teaches, corrects, and comforts us from the intimacy of our own hearts is to believe what He says and respond as He directs.
I would agree.If He tells us to change denominations, then we should trust His voice and do what He says. If He tells us to not change our denomination, then we should trust His voice and do what He says. If He doesn't say anything to us about changing denominations, we shouldn't concerned about it.
There are, nonetheless, verses about conscience in the BibleThere is no Bible verse that says, "Let your consience be your guide".
OK. I know those verses.On the contrary, there are many Bible verses that say things like "Trust in the Lord" (Pr 3:5), "Believe me" (Jn 14:11), and "Walk in the Spirit" ( Gal 5:25). Verses like these point point us to God as our leader and guide and confirm that everyone who places their trust in Him will not stumble or be put to shame (Rom 9:23).
Hopefully for someone calling himself or herself a Christian this is true.We have an intimate personal relationship with the Lord. He lives in our hearts.
OK. Not disagreeing one bit.There is no substitute for hearing Him and doing as He says. But doing so is not about proving ourselves to be faithful so that in the end we will obtain eternal life. It is about living out the eternal life that He has already given us. And it is about bearing fruit that enriches us and brings Him glory. Proverbs 3:5-6 sums it up well...
5 Trust in the LORD with all your heart,And lean not on your own understanding;6 In all your ways acknowledge Him,And He shall direct your paths. (Pr 3:5–6)
I should have been clearer. If you hear God speak to you, You say 'Here I am, Lord, ready to do your will'. But you also, as soon as you can after that, inform your conscience. Conscience is that guide for the times you don't hear God telling you in the moment, for example, 'Adultery is wrong'. You know the commandments. You also have this interior scruple that nags you, called conscience. And sometimes God will directly tell you. Conscience is not God. Conscience is not God talking to you. It is your own possession, one that you coordinate with what you know about right and wrong, as learned from Bible and Tradition and prayer. And if well formed it is an invaluable adjunct to living a moral life.You might be saying the same thing in a different way, but it seems like informing our conscience and letting it be our guide creates a little distance between us and God.
If I take this as an answer to my question, then you do indeed depend on CHANCE to cause things. Your notion of Free Will depends on it. And it is self-contradictory. Chance can cause nothing.Sorry Mark, but my computer or CF website was having problems when I posted and posted just one line.
Everything can be understood by man's earthly objective which should drive everything for humans.
As far as God having perfect knowledge of our free will choice before, in our time frame, our making those choices we need an understanding of time.
Lots of things are predestined by God since that is what He will do and sometimes when He will do it.
For over 100 years now scientists have been trying to disproof the relativity of time and have only shown time to be relative. Since science is also saying: space, time and matter came into exist, something outside of space, time and matter had to create them.
If God’s omnipresence includes not only man’s present time, but also man’s past and man’s future time, then God is outside of time and not limited by time.
God expressing himself in anthropomorphically to humans shows why God would use our understanding of time in communicating with us. We know the results of God’s miracles but not how the miracle was done. God would not have to talk about the relativity of time or his existence outside of our time and would keep it simple and with excellent communication, talk about time from a human perspective. Time in heaven might also have their own time separate from man’s time.
If you know today historically a free will choice, I made yesterday, that choice cannot be changed, since history cannot be changed even by God (it happened). The fact you historically know a free will choice does not mean it was not a free will choice.
If God is outside of human time then God at the end of time knows perfectly historically (history cannot be changed) every autonomous free will choice man made at any and all times. God at the end of time would be able to send that information to Himself at the beginning of time before there was a known universe.
If God at the end of time knows what Adam and Eve did in the Garden, He can provide thatinformation to Himself before Adam and Eve were created, so God knows exactly what Adam and Eve are “going to do”, since they have “already done” it (God is in both places at the same “human” time).
It is difficult to think about what it is like to be outside of time and existing throughout time.
My theory would have this:
1. God perfectly knows all human future from some beginning point or before time began.
2. God knows all possible scenarios for the future that would result from His actions and man’s autonomous free will choices.
3. God has predestined in detail most of what man will experience, but this predestined set up scenario by God is to assure every mature adult has a truly independent autonomous free will choice to accept or reject His pure charity as charity, which is the individual’s choice.
4. God predestining the scenarios of man to make this free will choice would be limited to the point an individual could still chose to accept and not harden his/her heart to the point there is nothing more God could do to help that individual.
5. God knows perfectly from the beginning of time what choice every mature adult made throughout man’s history from God’s presence throughout time, but God did not make the choice for the person.
6. God predestined “before” anything was decided to be made that those humans who accepted His charity He would save.
God exists throughout human time at the same time, so there really is no past or future for God, so when we talk about the future, it is only future for us and not God.
It is not that God knows what future you will chose in the future (suggesting the future, is also God’s future), but God knows the free will choices you did make in the future (it is history for God).
The free will choice to humbly accept God's Love as pure undeserved charity and complete the transaction is need or we are nothing more hen robots programmed to accept charity and be charitable, without it being our choice.
I suppose that means something?It’s hard to kick against the pricks.
The "Merit Hiring Plan" looks great, long overdue!Government employees asked a federal judge Wednesday to block the Trump administration from encouraging job applicants to demonstrate their loyalty to the president’s agenda.
In a lawsuit filed earlier this month, a group of federal labor unions argues that the White House’s “merit hiring plan” violates applicants’ First Amendment rights. The plan, put forth by the Office of Personnel Management, includes the following short essay question:
Romans 9See Ro 9:22-23.
nebraskaexaminer.com
You seem incapable of addressing all rebuttals to your theological theories above. Why is that?The "rapture" is the first resurrection .... there is no "secrete rapture" ... personally I don't like or use the term. There are two resurrections.
Okay. Thank you.Yeah, I don't believe in that. I believe were either serving righteousness or unrighteousness.
I will freely love them / I will love them freely
For if I do this willingly, I have a reward; but if unwillingly, I am entrusted with a stewardship.
But I did not want to do anything without your consent, so that your goodness will not be out of compulsion, but by your own free will (Berean Standard Bible; NASB; Amplified Bible; Christian Standard Bible; Holman Christian Standard Bible; American Standard Version; English Revised Version; New Heart English Bible; Majority Standard Bible; World English Bible; Smith's Literal Translation; Anderson New Testament; Godbey New Testament) / according to willingness / willingly / voluntary / not something forced.
The only teacher is GOD through Jesus Christ the mediator. We are taught of GOD. If anyone learns from the FATHER they must go through Christ. This eliminates deception, GOD cannot lie, neither can Jesus.Jesus can teach anyone. That's what my eyes see in scripture