juvenissun
... and God saw that it was good.
- Apr 5, 2007
- 25,452
- 805
- 73
- Country
- United States
- Faith
- Baptist
- Marital Status
- Married
"Does not accept" can mean many things, for hypothetical examples:
- does not accept any interaction with members of other religions
- does not accept the existence of other religions and tries to destroy them
- does not accept (confess) other religions doctrines as a truth
- does not accept shared practice with other religions
- does not accept the presence of members of other religions in the same physical space with Christians (a building, a planet etc.)
These are all different levels of exclusiveness, as I pointed out earlier. Exclusiveness is not just a one absolute, there are shades of grey between how exclusive and how inclusive a religion can be.
You are using your very own, very specifically defined definition of "inclusiveness" and "exclusiveness" and assuming that those definitions are some sort of "ON/OFF" - absolutes for the words "inclusiveness" and "exclusiveness" that everybody else must use. Again, there are shades of grey.
As you said yourself "Existence doesn't mean right". Right?
That is why a definition of God is so important.
Anything violated the definition would be unacceptable.
Others can be considered.
Upvote
0