I don't agree with this at all. If I go around doing things for the common good of others only because I want God to accept me into Heaven, then I'm a no good liar.
Hmmm...Well, I didn't actually say that one should do things just so that one can get into Heaven. Maybe I didn't make it clear enough, but the Bible teaches that love
for God, not Heaven, is the sole motive for good deeds that He will accept.
I would put my heart into helping others, and I would do it for reasons besides making God happy - I would do it to make others happy, and to fill whatever hole that has formed in their lives. It's not all about God.
You know, it is just like God that He has ordained things such that in order to show our love for Him we must help and love others. The two things - loving God and loving other people - are not separate things in God's eyes. If we truly love God, we will inevitably be helping others in demonstration of that love.
I'm afraid it
is all about God. No, I take that back; I'm not afraid. God is at the center of
everything. He makes it all happen, whether we can see it or not, whether we are willing to acknowledge it or not. You would not exist, and thus be able to deny God His central role in the universe, were it not for Him.
Sure, a huge percentage of it is about God, but helping others benefits more people than myself, and more people than God.
Okay.
If I choose to help other simply to benefit God, I don't feel that I have the right motives what so ever. Because this is one situation where I am meant to have the interests of the person I am helping at heart, not just God's.
I think you are creating something called a false dichotomy here. You are offering up only two apparently mutually exclusive options - benefiting God or benefiting the person - when there are more options available. For instance, why can't you both serve God
and the person?
So let me get this straight.. in order to be a Christian, truly, I need to embrace the fact that I am a sinner and ask God to forgive me because of this. I need to accept the fact that God will always be more perfect than I am. But then yet, according to you, I'm supposed to walk around pretending I don't have sinful thoughts, and pretending that I am just as perfect as God is? And that I am not a sinner?
Uh, well, I don't recall telling you to pretend not to have sinful thoughts...Can you show me where I wrote that?
Of course I'm not going to stand on a rooftop and scream sinful things, but I do feel that because I am a sinner, I shouldn't be under constant pressure to hide this from others.
The Bible agrees with you (and so, of course, do I):
1 John 1:8-10
8 If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.
9 If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
10 If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His word is not in us.
James 5:16
16 Confess your trespasses to one another, and pray for one another, that you may be healed. The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much.
Have you ever felt the pressure of not being allowed to be yourself? I have.
Sure. I think everyone at some point(s) has felt this pressure.
I've been bullied throughout school for no reason whatsoever, I've dealt with severe confidence issues due to depression, and many other things that I will not mention. I've been held back by many things in life, and I have no desire to enter more things into my life that will only hold me back. Of course we do not have the right to murder or rape others, but that's completely beside the point. There is a difference between being a criminal and being yourself.
I agree with this - for the most part. I would add one caveat, however: What we call criminal and what God calls criminal are not necessarily the same thing. Consider the following list:
Proverbs 6:16-19
16 These six things the Lord hates, Yes, seven are an abomination to Him:
17 A proud look, A lying tongue, Hands that shed innocent blood,
18 A heart that devises wicked plans, Feet that are swift in running to evil,
19 A false witness who speaks lies, And one who sows discord among brethren.
Most people I know wouldn't say that a "proud look" is criminal, but God
hates it! In this list lying and causing dissension among people is on par with
murder. God hates them all!
So, I would be very careful about what I would call "merely being myself" and what I would call criminal.
No one is made a criminal. But there are many things that people can be MADE to be, and the bible speaks against a majority of these things.
Yes and no. Certainly there are influences that act upon us and induce us to behaviours that are bad. Rarely, though, do these influences
force us to do bad things. In some measure, we typically
choose to do evil. I heard a story about two men who grew up under the parenting of an alcoholic father. One son went on to be just like his Dad - a lazy, irresponsible drunk. The other, went on to be nothing like his Dad. He was a responsible, sober, happily married man. When asked why they had each become the men that they were, they both gave the same answer: "With a father like mine, what did you expect?"
Let me get one thing clarified;
God absolutely has the right to tell me the kind of person that I should be. He has the right to expect things from me in order to decide whether or not I am truly one of his followers. But other Christians do NOT. That is the one thing that turns me away from my faith so completely. Other Christians who feel they have the right to tell me that I am not a true Christian, and that the sinful acts I commit are sending me to Hell. GOD is the ONLY one who has the right to decide this, and it just sickens me that other Christians feel that they have the right to tell me otherwise. We have the Bible, sure, but we don't know everything. We don't know exactly what God decides when it comes to judgment day, and we don't have the right to pretend that we do.
I understand your resentment at someone's suggestion that your life may not be pleasing to God. I've felt the same resentment. It may surprise you, then, to know that the Bible requires us to be discerning about right and wrong, about who is and isn't truly saved, and to "reprove, rebuke, and exhort" one another. Here are some verses which support what I'm saying:
1 Corinthians 5:1-6
1 It is actually reported that there is sexual immorality among you, and such sexual immorality as is not even named among the Gentiles--that a man has his father's wife!
2 And you are puffed up, and have not rather mourned, that he who has done this deed might be taken away from among you.
3 For I indeed, as absent in body but present in spirit, have already judged (as though I were present) him who has so done this deed.
4 In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when you are gathered together, along with my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ,
5 deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.
6 Your glorying is not good. Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump?
Pretty serious stuff. The apostle Paul goes on to say:
1 Corinthians 5:11-13
11 But now I have written to you not to keep company with anyone named a brother, who is sexually immoral, or covetous, or an idolater, or a reviler, or a drunkard, or an extortioner--not even to eat with such a person.
12 For what have I to do with judging those also who are outside? Do you not judge those who are inside?
13 But those who are outside God judges. Therefore "put away from yourselves the evil person." (underlined portions are mine)
Clearly, then, there is a biblical basis for judging the conduct of other Christians. Of course, a Christian who is struggling with sin is to be treated differently than one who has entered wholesale into immorality. Even Paul himself struggled with sin. (
Ro. 7:15 -21) As a result, we support those who are wrestling to overcome sin in their lives with prayer and spiritual encouragement. Those, however, who have ceased to "strive against sin" are to be challenged directly.
Ephesians 5:11
11 And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them.
2 Timothy 4:2
2 Preach the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching.
How many times did Paul write "Such-and-such is wrong. Don't do it"? Every one of his letters has such commands. And these commands were given in part because Paul judged that the Christians to whom he was writing were guilty of doing sinful things. If Paul was careful to judge as sinful the conduct of fellow Christians and reprove them, so also ought we.
Is there a place even for challenging a person's salvation? Yes, I think so. The New Testament is filled with the criteria by which one may know that one is saved. It is a simple thing to assess according to this criteria whether or not I am saved and whether or not another is saved. The apostle Peter, Paul and Christ himself told us to beware of those who would come "in sheep's clothing," the false teachers, who would lead Christians astray. These are people who will appear to be Christian, but who actually aren't. Christians will have to judge the truth of the claim of spiritual birth of these pretenders as well as the things they teach in order to declare them "wolves among the sheep."
What do Christians think? That telling people that because of the acts they commit they are going to Hell is going to turn them on to the Christian faith? We think that telling them that they must repent from their sins or they are going to burn in Hell is going to turn them to the Christian faith for the right reasons? We have 0 right to tell people whether or not they are Christians, and whether or not they are going to receive eternal life. We have no right to tell each other whether or not we will be accepted into God's Kingdom.
As I've shown from Scripture, you're not biblical in your thinking here.
I would agree with you that simply threatening people with Hell is not the way to encourage them toward God. The gospel is far more than the threat of Hell. Along with the jeopardy of Hell, we must share with people God's grace, mercy, forgiveness and love expressed to us in the sacrifice of His Son on the cross for our sins.
He might hate sins, but he's perfect capable of loving sinners. Otherwise, according to you, he would not love me, and he would not love you. God still loves murderers, rapists, molesters, etc. And I simply cannot comprehend why God would deny someone he loved a place in Heaven.
You're probably not gonna' like this answer, but...
How do you balance the idea that God loves the sin, but hates the sinner with the fact that unrepentant sinners stand under the wrathful judgment of God? Yes, I believe God "loved the world" but those who live in willful rebellion to Him will spend an eternity in Hell. It is the
sinner who sins. It seems artificial and not entirely biblical to assert that somehow God separates our sin out from us. God wouldn't send my
sin to Hell if I died without a saving faith in Christ as my Lord and Savior, He'd send
me there!
God accepts me only because of my faith in His Son Jesus as my Saviour, which clothes me in Christ's righteousness. Thats it. There is nothing in me for God to love. If He has any love for me, it is because it His nature to love, not because I am lovely. But that loving nature is constrained by His holiness. Where my conduct offends God's holiness, His love cannot transcend or over-ride that holiness to embrace me and my sin. If the sacrifice for my sins is not received by me by faith in Christ, I stand, not under the shower of God's all-loving attention, but under his holy wrath! This is what the Bible teaches.
John 3:36
36 He who believes in the Son has everlasting life; and he who does not believe the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him. (Underline mine.)
I did not make the decision to be baptized. I didn't tell my parents at 6 months old "Please Baptize me." I didn't tell the minister baptizing me that I wanted to be baptized. I have never been confirmed, and I have never truly made my own decision to be Christian. Before I do this, I feel that it is important to know that I am in the right religion.
Amen to that!
Peace.