Yes, we all sin. But not all human imperfections are sinful. Freckles, for example, or other physical traits would not be. Being a slower learner than others would not be, etc. It's matters of the heart that spawn the imperfections God cares about.
Neither should nonconformity be a sin. I don't conform with criminal expectations, I don't conform to antichrist ideals, gang ideologies, or Christian belief. Frankly, Christianity has propogated wars, burned innocent people out of mass hysteria, instated bs rules (albeit indirectly), etc, etc. I can claim it is you who are guilty of non conformity with God's desires, and I don't even live by the book supposedly reflecting his "truth".
Jnwaco said:
That's not quite how I would put it. Ultimately the rejection of God, according to Christians, will be dealt with by God. I don't think that necessarily makes you our enemy. Even if it did, we're also charged with "loving our enemies".
So that "love", to you, is superficial and a logical contradiction? If you love your enemy then he can't be your enemy, can he?
Jnwaco said:
What would you expect His rules to be like? They seem pretty reasonable to me, though tough in practice. Love your neighbor as yourself. Love your enemies. From your perspective you might not be angering God, just as a child might not think his actions should anger his parents. God's perspective is a bit different, according to the Bible. But a lot of people confuse God's relationship with sinners and Christians' relationships with sinners. God's the judge and jury, not us, but we do sin, get frustrated like anyone else sometimes, make poor judgment, etc.
I'm not a child though, I know how to use my own brain and that my decisions will have consequences (good, or bad ones) which will reflect my judgement, rationality, reasoning, kindness, etc, etc, etc.
Um, that isn't a good thing is it, your dad should treat you the same ni matter what your beliefs, that would be really hard to accept.
It is extreemely difficult to accept. I also struggle with coming to terms of his attempt at killing me on the road by sitting in the dark without his brake lights on until I was right on him. I was on a bike, he called me pansy for complaining about my dislocated hip needing a dr. etc; he himself visited the dr's about an elbow complaint but refused to get me to the dr's while I was dependent on him for a lift. And this is only one of the problems I have to accept, somehow . . . I have disowned him as my family, I'm interesting in making that severance legal too, I just live some distance from where he is and I'm not sure how the legal system works in this respect (any reasonable advice will be much appreciated anyone); also, I hadn't seen him for around a decade before our brief get-together/s, so it isn't as though our lives are interconnected meaning I can continue to live normally without having to see him again, etc.
Christ's_Warrior said:
Mate, it's always good to find a new freind.
So true, I could use more friends too.
Christ's_Warrior said:
Yeh i know how you feel, their are "Christians" who try to take the high moral ground and are at complete opposites of Jesus' teaching.
My own brothers are by no means committed (to say the least) and I talk to them about God only if they ask a question because i know it will annoy them if i bash their ears all day long.
Don't better yourself for them, better yourself for yourself. Redemption is there for the taking bro.
Well we are all hypocritical in one way or another, for e.g. My football team only loses when they have an off day, but all other football teams lose cause their crap. See how i apply one way of thinking to something I hold dear and another way to everything else.
I'd have to agree that any rule will be broken under certain circumstances, that nobody's perfect, subsequently that no human invention is perfect, and to me that includes the doctrine of Christianity, the legal system which constantly subject to revision, etc.
MY DEAR BROTHER,
If you were indeed "beyond redemption" as you propose, that would make God a liar--an impossibility.
I don't believe that there is a God, but if there were one then I find it highly unlikely for you to know him any better than anyone else. Holding a widely published reprint of scriptural inscription from centuries ago doesn't suggest that a) you know what God says, regardless of whether it's a lie or not b) that disproving your version of God, as he is written in the bible has any bearing on whether God is possible or not.
ephraimanesti said:
As Scripture puts it in 2 Peter 3:9 (MSG):
"God isn't late with his promise as some measure lateness. He is restraining himself on account of you, holding back the End because he doesn't want anyone lost. He's giving everyone space and time to change."
i firmly believe, from my own experiences and those of many others i have talked to, that the reason you "don't see nor hear his love" is mainly because you didn't "see nor hear" your biological father's love as a child. This is a fairly well accepted psychological phenomenon which i first ran across while reading either Rollo May's LOVE AND WILL or Gerald May's ADDICTION AND GRACE. (i always get these two psychologists mixed up.) Anyway, this idea made a marked impression on me--a HUGH aha moment, as it were--because it explained much of what was going on in my life at the time vis-a-vis my seeking to accept my acceptance by God--acceptance i had never felt from my biological father. Anyway, just a thought to perhaps ponder for a second or two.
In some very big ways I think God is synonymous with actual parents, the virgin mary is a way of respecting certain ideologies of purity and innocence of ladies in olden times; and the rules of the parents being authority, just as the need to instill a sense of authority in youth is important, so is the instilling of fear, social rejection, etc, etc.
ephraimanesti said:
Well, there is a not so small difference between our stubbornnesses--mine is NOT innate but is the result of my personal experiences with the reality of God and His unbelievable Love for us. These experiences have brought me to a place where it is impossible for me to even minimally conceal, deny, gainsay, or negotiate my experiential knowledge of God's existence and His over-arching desire for our good and happiness.
The only certainty I've been able to rely on lately is my knowledge that changing my life circumstances is up to me and that changing my outlook isn't always effective in dealing with issues and problems.
ephraimanesti said:
On the other hand, your "innate stubbornness", as you call it, is the result of "your brain having been pounded" with untruths and false conclusions for so long that you have come to accept them as being true when, in reality, they are 180 degrees therefrom. You have been hurt--the child still lives within--and, in order to avoid future pain and disappointment, you have built a wall of half-truths and falsehoods around your heart in an attempt at self-protection. The problem is that in walling out the pain and disappointment you have, at the same time, walled out its healing remedy--Abba's Love.
Not true to say untruths, untruth would be contrary to what actually happens. It is 'un' by which is the removal of, or from such thing. So I would find an untruth immediately when I say something like "thinking everything's good and being optimistic will change my life to exactly how I want it to be. See how my thinking something doesn't effect the change in reality, so therefore it is an untruth to claim it as true when it indeed is ineffectual at effecting the result of realistic change (notice how the logical explanation can continue endlessly on this point because it's fallaciousness cannot be said correctly without becoming untrue in itself).
ephraimanesti said:
Dear one--YOU WILL NEVER EVER BE ABLE TO SEE SOMETHING YOU DENY EVEN EXISTS! What you have been deprived of thus far in your life nevertheless does exist. THE FLAWS OF YOUR BIO-FATHER ARE NOT SHARED BY YOUR HEAVENLY FATHER!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I can't believe in something until I know it is there though, catch 22, if God wanted me to believe he would understand this and wouldn't rely on me to configure my outlook to accomodate his understanding of how I would think . . . . sigh . . .
ephraimanesti said:
Thank you for sharing them and allowing me to do likewise.
MAY YOU BE HEALED, BLESSED, AND GRANTED PEACE!

ABBA'S FOOL,
ephraim
Thankyou very much for your kind words, all the best Ephraim.