Love, or unconditional love?
If you Love your child without your child having to do anything now or later it is unconditional, but if you love your child as the result of something he did or will do that is conditional, so which is it and what would be the more loving?
And yet, part of the resolution between the father and son required repentance. Sure, the father still loved the son but the relationship could not be fixed without repentance. In order to make things right (i.e. for either of them to experience genuine love) the son had to repent.
Tell me is this true each time every time all the time he that is forgiven much Loves much ?
Of could you have to receive that forgiveness as pure charity and not as payment for something you have or will do to truly feel the Love? If it is pure charity is that not also unconditional and totally undeserving and not to be paid back?
The Godly type Love is not what drove the son to return, but he had personal selfish reasons (which is fine in his condition), but after accepting the charity of the father his Love would have skyrocketed especially Love for the Father, so what fixed the relationship?
As an enemy of God, I did not apologize to begin with but I did quit fighting (surrendered). If you suggest a person apologize to begin with that sounds like he is doing something of value, as compared with just quitting and allowing God to do the rest.Yes, I am presuming that an "apology" from a Christian is the same as a genuine desire to change. They say the sincerest apology is change, but sometimes it helps to express it verbally, too.
You are very right those in Acts 2:37 could have been told to at least take a beating and hag on a cross for a day. I do not have the Love that the Prodigal sons father had, I might have beat that kid within an inch of his life.But, it would still be God's right to make demands of that person. The person surrendering could not argue with God about how his love is supposed to be unconditional and so there should be no demands.
Genuine surrender does not argue or haggle with God about what his love is supposed to be or not supposed to be. If God tells a genuinely surrendered person to do something, that person should do it, right?
Tell me was Christ doing what he was ordered or commanded to do while He was here on earth, or did Christ do what He wanted to do partnering with God, that was pleasing to the Father.
I think you have a real problem telling Christians do what you really want to do that your indwelling Holy Spirit can participate doing with you.
If they do anything without being motivated by Godly type Love would it have any value for anyone? (1 Cor 13: 1-4) If they have Godly type Love motivating them (compelling them like it did Paul) would they need any other motivation (like you have to do this because God commands it)?
We have way too many people that call themselves Christians doing stuff soly because they think they have to and it comes through that way. Does that show Gods fatherly Love or that these Christians really Love God with all their heart, soul mind and energy? Does this not work against Gods message to the nonbeliever?
Am I missing something here? God provides every heart beat and is in no way obligated to provide the next beat. We can only allow ourselves to be a slave/servant of satan or of God, if we do anything of value it was not us but us allowing God to work through us. We need to quit thinking about what we can do or bring to the table and just allow Him to do what he wants in our lives (God is really working with nothing when He is working with me, but can do wonders with nothing.)We have our lives to give to him. Free will, remember? We can throw that all away if we want to, or we can willingly give it back to him.
Giving us commands does not mean Christs Love for us is conditional on our obeying those commands. Look again at the prodigal son parable (Luke 15) there were two sons, the older stayed home and seemed obedient and the younger was rebellious, so did the Father Love the Older son any more than the younger son?We are only citizens of that kingdom insomuch as we practice the values of that kingdom.
This all goes back to the objective of man while here on earth and Gods help of man to fulfill that objective. Very similar to the Fathers objective with his two sons in the parable of the prodigal son, the making of his sons to be like He (the Father) is, not as a hard worker, but as a Lover.
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A bit of common sense is all that is needed to understand this point. Even a worldly example could be used. An employer expects results from his employees. If an employee is not doing his job, the employer has every right to fire that employee. The employee could argue "unconditional love" or some other such technicality, but blind freddy could see that an employee who is unwilling to follow the standards set by the boss has no place on the job.
Wow! Our relationship with God is so foreign to an employee/boss relationship it is hard to relate the two. It is much closer to a child/parent relationship, so when your child does not do what you say do you fire him? There are also lots of banquet parables, so what works are you to be doing at the party? There are parables about workers/servants and the master/ruler, but they are not fired. Even if you want to discuss the parables of the talents, first the master did not tell (order) them to do anything so there is no disobeying of an order, the servant with one talent did not have to work to be acceptable to the master, since all he needed to do is place the money in the hands of money changers and let them work it. (Matt. 25: 14-30)
Yes, a genuine desire to want to apply the values of the kingdom of heaven, without any rules, is the ideal. In that sense, the kingdom of Heaven is pure anarchy, where the individual is accountable to God alone and there is no need for others to judge that person, because that person judges him/herself.
And yet, obedience IS commanded in the gospels. It is VERY much expected by Jesus. In fact, he calls those who refuse to obey fools, and he says that it is BECAUSE of obedience that he is able to see who loves him and who does not.
I could site scripture for this, but do I really need to quote chapter and verse for this basic concept to be true? Is it wise to disobey Jesus? Is it an expression of real love to argue that we should not have to obey Jesus' commands?
Of course we should want to, but the law is for the lawless. Because Jesus asks us to confront some of the most uncomfortable truths in existence, he knows we will just naturally avoid such confrontations. He asks us to smash our pride, forsake our respectability. challenge our dependency on materialism, and just generally challenge every thing we cling to.
We humans just don't have the natural tendency to understand the reasoning behind such challenges, so we need rules (at least, at first). We obey the rules because the boss tells us to, but after experiencing the fruits of the rules, we come to understand the reasoning behind it, and we no longer need the rule, because we know WHY we do it.
So, when we talk about "conditions" on love, it's not really conditons, so much as learning to appreciate that love is far more complex that simple black and white statements. It involves discipline, sacrifice, and a genuine concern for others. Without these "conditions" being met, love is just not love.
I am not suggesting we do not have tons of rules and disobeying those rules is definitely sinning. But we are talking about Gods Love for His children and if His Love for us is conditional on our obedience to those rules?
Yes, our Love for God can be seen in our actions and non-actions to Gods rules, but that is not the same as Gods Love for us.
People do not go to hell because God lacks Love for them (it is in no way Gods fault). People go to hell because they continue to refuse Gods Love (in the form of forgiveness) for them. They just will not accept Charity and that is what Gods Love is given as (since it is completely undeserved and unconditional). People in hell do not want unconditional Love (they do like conditional type love), so they would not be happy in heaven where there is one huge Love Feast of unconditional type Love.
If you teach people that Godly type Love is conditional, how will they ever learn to have unconditional type Love for others? You are to Love those that hate you and want to harm you and your family (your enemies)? Could you have Loved Saul before he became Paul in the first century after he had tortured and murdered your friends and family? God did and that is the Love we can have.
Instead of trying to get people to do good stuff by suggesting God does not love them as much if they do not do good stuff, have even the new Christian take what little Love and faith he has and use it doing something simple, but for the right reason and the right motivation. It is amazing how fast their Love and Faith can grow. My experience has not shown difficulty getting the new Christian do stuff solely out of appreciation, but I have had problems getting mature Christians to do stuff without asking what results will we get?
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