airō;55196425 said:I have never met an Evangelist who would endorse this movement, nor have I ever met a person who endorses this movement who also evangelizes.
Man, you are frustrating to talk to. Are we talking about the movement to promote "peaceful co-existance," or universalism? I thought I sort of cleared things up in my last post that those were two completely separate things.
2 questions for you since you didn't answer my previous one:
1) Do you or would you endorse this bumper sticker?
Yes, I fully agree with the message of the bumper sticker (and not neccessarily the extra messages that you have added to it)
2) Do you share the Good News of Jesus Christ to those of religion?
I do share my beliefs with others, but that is a completely separate issue than coexisting.
This is extremely frustrating because you do not appear to even be aware of what you're arguing. If you have issues with universalism, fine, let's talk about universalsim. But don't take something completely unrelated to the unversalist movement and claim that it is entirely within the scope of that movement and that movement alone.
Let me give you a hypothetical scenario that hopefully will demonstrate to you what you are doing. Let us say that there is a bumper sticker that simply says "Love thy neigbor." That's a good message, right? I agree with it, I think (and hope) that you agree with it too. Jesus himself even said it, and it's in the Bible and everthing, so it checks out with your beliefs.
But uhoh! The Latter Day Saints also agree with it too!
So therefore, using your logic, the "Love thy Neighbor" bumper sticker would then be some sort of segment of the church of LDS, in order to promote their specific theology!
See how that doesn't make sense? Simply saying "Love Thy Neighbor" wouldn't automatically be a promotion of the church of LDS simply because the LDS also hold that belief. The message on the sticker, in its entirety, was only "Love Thy Neighbor." But it would be foolish to assume that this was some sort of trick in order to promote mormonism, simply because that message also happens to fit in with mormon beliefs. And likewise, it's foolish to assume that the "coexist" bumper sticker is a promotion of universalsim, simply because universalists also happen to hold that belief.
There is no "Coexist movement" designed to promote universalism, and every time you insist that there is, you only make yourself look more and more foolish. And when you argue that the message of the "Coexist" bumper sticker is wrong, then you come across as if you are stating that peaceful coexistance itself is wrong, which I know you don't believe.
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