Getting back to the original topic, that post illustrates a possible answer - a faith rooted in dogmatism that leads to irrelevance to daily living for some can lead to a crisis of faith for some, from burnout, to becoming a spectator outside of a church commitment, to abandoning ones' faith altogether.
You telling me that me interpreting and studying the bible,
can lead to a crisis of faith, burnout??
I think is by not reading the bible, and just going to church as an spectator that leads to all that..
I'm just arguing the bits Christian Churches got wrong..., I didn't say all Churches...
I've been to a few Churches in which I go in and come out feeling completely empty...
So, love is an imbalance in Scripture?
Usage in the NT (KJV)
Love 179 occurrences
Repentance 25 occurrences
Faith 245 occurrences
Obedience 12 occurrences
Hope 60 occurrences*
*I added hope as Paul links and highlights these three in 1 Cor 13.
I don't see preaching about love a lot is at all unbalanced biblically based on the above information. Rather repentance seems rather badly overdone in some circles.
Don't change what I saying..., I'm not talking about how many times these words come up in the bible...
I'm talking about how many times "God's Love" comes up in all the chapter/ books...
Compared to how many times the teachings of Faith and Repentance.
Put it into context.
out of those 179 occurrences of the word Love, how many specifically related to the context of "God's LOVE"
Let's look at two words on your list a bit further.
Unconditional. Two OT Covenants a) The covenant with Noah. No condition attached. God just stated how it was. b) The Mosaic covenant depended on both parties keeping to its provisions, otherwise there were consequences. Using a word not found in Scripture is no more that describing a difference found in Scripture. It neither negates nor contradicts nor adds to any biblical teaching. It is simply explanatory.
Again, I'm discussing the word "Unconditional" in the context of LOVE
God's Love.
All I'm asking is where "God's love is unconditional" came from, since I don't see it anywhere in the bible.
Trinity
John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. NIV
That verse refers to Jesus. It echoes Genesis 1:1 "in the beginning". It states Jesus was there when creation took place with God and that He was God. What does that mean then?
Did Jesus come into existence after God but before creation?
Is God made up of two separate entities God and Jesus?
Did Jesus become God at his baptism when the Spirit came upon him? And who or what was that (S)spirit?
The father, son, and holy ghost are three modes, roles, or faces of a single person, God. This, of course, implies that Jesus Christ was purely divine, without humanness, and therefore could not truly have suffered or died.
Christ was not a real human being and did not have a real human body. He only seemed to be human to us.
Jesus was a human being who was "adopted" by God at his conception, at which point he developed a divine nature.
Jesus Christ was a special creation by God for man's salvation.
Jesus as the Son of God was a subordinate entity to God the Father
All these are heresies that challenged the early church fathers. Their response was to formulate teaching that used the word Trinity, from examination of the many biblical texts, of which John 1:1 is an example.
In short to your questions..., Jesus was human and GOD. He was both.
That's how the bible describes him, anything else would had been added.
He suffered, He died, He was tempted --> All human conditions...
YET...
He did not sin, He walked over water, he converted water to wine,
he healed people by touching them, he resurrected from the death. --> ALL Godly aspects.
Like our faith, everything is half half...in a strict balance...
i.e We have the key to enter the kingdom of Heaven, and yet we haven't entered it yet.
We sin, and yet we've been forgiven.
I imagine you believe God is all knowing (omniscient), all powerful (omnipotent) and all present (omnipresent). None of these 'omni' words are in the scriptures either.
Yes, and your point is?? if Omniscient means exactly the same as all knowing then...that's ok with me.
But if it slightly changes the meaning, then we shouldn't be using it..
In my personal opinion, I would rather say GOD is all present, as compared to omnipresent, but that's my choice.
A faith that is blind, uninformed, lacking good exegetical principles and has few reference points beyond one's own understanding of the Scriptures can lead to disillusionment. In a pastoral context I have seen many deeply troubled people, who have tried all the prevailing formulas diligently yet remained unchanged, have had their lives transformed when given fresh, life related biblical insights and principles. I have helped many, including those in ministry, re-establish their faith, after finding the limitations of the ones they had. Some now have internationally recognised ministries. The truth has life and does set free.
John
NZ
Those were questions
I agree with you, and I wouldn't even dare to share such misunderstanding of the Scriptures if it wasn't based on careful study and research
backup by one of the best bible teachers in the world(to me)...David Pawson.
David Pawson - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Most Churches these days only preach the love of GOD, which is OK.
We need to spread his Love & Grace...
But also
As David explained...
repentance towards God; believing in Jesus, baptism in water and receiving the Holy Spirit.
The half-half picture...
God as our Savior. God's Grace
God as a consuming fire. God's Wrath.