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Yeah---we have different creation stories, bvut it amounts to the same thing; We wouldn't call it "fallen" nature, but rather "animal" nature. We were ahead of Darwin by about two thousand years. Hence, we have no problem with evolution because it fits in generally with our faith.I don't think its odd at all. Jesus died to restore our fallen nature to give us meaning
Ok. Why would Jesus die on a cross if He didn't have to? Makes no sense. Just forgive everyone of sins if you can. However, if God could die for our sake so our sins may be forgiven (because there's nothing we could do to remove our sins), That sounds extremely merciful!
the thing that people say will suffer forever or be deleted. you know it as in, me and you and that guy with the duck face.What's 'it'?
So God is a blinding light of seemingly evil darkness? k. I believe God is a blinding light.(period) I also have been filled with His Spirit. God is love, however he is also Holy, Holy, Holy. That's the only quality glorified 3x. He's a triune, loving, Holy, righteous, inexhaustible, immanent, transcendent, almighty, etc. God is not just a mushy-gooshy feeling (which is what love is generally known as)
Le Bible says free will can't choose God. So... yeah. I'll let ya chew on that gumdrop.
But remember, God is not just love!
Es muy cryptic.
Yeah---we have different creation stories, bvut it amounts to the same thing; We wouldn't call it "fallen" nature, but rather "animal" nature. We were ahead of Darwin by about two thousand years. Hence, we have no problem with evolution because it fits in generally with our faith.
It's not a problem. I am not bound by Protestant rules. If a book is useful, I'll use it. If not, reading the book doesn't hurt me. I read other books that are not in the Protestant Bible.How do you cope with using this when it has OT books most Protestants' bibles don't use?
No, but I haven't read the books enough to be sure.So you accept the Orthodox or Catholic OT canon?
That is a common misconception. Gnosis is knowledge, particularly divine knowledge, learned by experience, and by personal revelation of Jesus Christ, as pertaining to the nature of God. It is not particular to just Gnostics, which in scholarly terms now means "pre-catholic". Anyone in any denomination, can, and do, receive gnosis, though they may call it by another term.He must have learned it from someone.
Gnosis is all about Jesus keeping secrets and only through personal efforts/discernment finding out this hidden knowledge.
Oh. Pardon my assumption; I'm Christian Gnostic.
No, I don't, there are just some things that we don't have in common. A Christian Gnostic places a lot of emphasis on education, particularly in the realms of science, philosophy and psychology. Our forebears believed that Jesus taught a type of evolution called "emanation" wherein everything that exists is a derivation of whatever preceded it. Carl Jung, one of the fathers of modern Psychology based his theories on gnostic text, and our forebears did not hide their admiration for Plato.I met a Christian woman named Ruby a few years ago. Ruby is a nurse who works in a nursing home. She is very big on Bible study, prayer, meditating upon the word, and gifts of healing. She was charming, radiant, positive, loving, upbeat and very inspirational. I sincerely felt like she had the Holy Ghost. She sincerely believes the Bible, she happens to be Oneness (former ALJC), believes in the baptism of the Holy Ghost with speaking in tongues, laying on of hands, and all the “gifts of the Spirit”… and yet she doesn’t classify herself as an “Evangelical”, “Charismatic”, or “Pentecostal” Christian.
So I asked her what brand of “Christian” she was. Her answer troubled me.
Ruby classified herself as a “Christian Spiritualist” or a “Christian Mystic”. I was a bit taken aback, because I didn’t know exactly what that meant. She explained that most Christians are “religious” and not “spiritual”. They are wrapped up in the traditional dogmas of their church or denomination. While she believes that the Bible is the Word of God, she also believes that the Bible doesn’t tell us everything about spiritual things, some things have to be learned by “walking in the Spirit”. She went on to say most Christians define salvation according to a decision they made at one time to be a follower of Jesus. Or they define salvation in accordance to the sacraments of their church. However, she feels that once one has come to Christ and has received the baptism of the Holy Ghost they must spiritually progress into the fullness of spirituality, spiritual truths, and spiritual living. For the most part, she embraces nearly all major Christian doctrines.
I asked her if she believed in anything outside of the Bible like the book of Mormon, the Vedas, crystals, horoscopes, or any other spiritual source of information. She stated that she whole heartedly only believes in the Bible. However, she explained that she also believes that some things can be found in the Bible that the Christian religion rejects. For example she believes we can find the following in the Bible:-Praying until one enters a trance wherein they commune one on one with God directly through the Holy Ghost.Those are the only things that I can remember her talking about. Some of what you've said just reminds me of Ruby. She was very interesting. Of course, I was a lay minister in a local Pentecostal church at the time. Though she was one of the most loving, kind, and interesting people you could meet, I don't think she'd ever fit in with most main stream Evangelical, Catholic, Protestant, or Fundamentalist churches.
-Gifts of supernatural healing.
-The ministry of angels.
-Casting out of devils & demons, banishing.
-Speaking in tongues.
-Interpreting tongues.
-All the gifts of the Spirit.
-That (in a sense) we become angels after death.
-That the Zodiac (the Mazzaroth, Hb.) is something originally ordained of God that has been distorted by Satan.
-Universal Reconciliation
-That some human spirits are reincarnated for a divine purpose.
-Hauntings.
-Prayer cloths, candles, and anointing oil.
-That there are prophets and seers alive today.
-That we are to strive to be one with God through the Holy Spirit as Jesus was one with God through the Holy Spirit.
Do you think she was a Gnostic Christian?
What does its being a "man who hammered the nails in" versus "a demon or an angel" doing that, have to do with anything on this subject, or is that just to fill in the gaps to make your post longer?I too think Jesus died for our sins. It was a man that hammered the nails in, not a demon or an angel. No righteous man can take another's life except in the direst of circumstances.
No one is saying that Jesus could not be killed, as it is very obvious that he could be. But he could have only been killed if he allowed and agreed to be.Jesus Bled. Anything that can bleed can be killed, or will eventually die of old age. So Jesus could have lived the rest of his life with Mary Magdelene in France and fulfilled Dan Brown's fantasies. But He didn't run. He showed us how to live, and how to die.
What was he praying about then in the Garden of Gethsemane?
Yes to a certain extent. Whenever you go beyond the bible to things that are not really associated with it or have a negative inference in it and accept them as "good" you can be headed down the path of gnosticism. As for the mysticism etc., I have come across many what I call "spiritual" Christians that instead of standing on the bible first and foremost they end up standing on what they "feel" in the spirit and at times forget to test those spirits with sound biblical understanding. If you query them about their knowledge of biblical doctrines they will be already wrong on many fronts or may just be outright ignorant of what the bible truly teaches. The fact she believes in oneness is a sign that her theology has issues already. The oneness crowd I have come across tends to desire a higher emphasis on spiritual gifts than biblical knowledge IMO.I met a Christian woman named Ruby
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Do you think she was a Gnostic Christian?