Is there a "Christian lifestyle?"

Monna

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The background to this question is that I am currently reading Jacques Ellul "The Presence of the Kingdom." This builds on the unavoidable tensions caused by Christians being "in the world but not of it." It is a thought provoking book even if it was originally written (in French) in 1948. The copy I am reading was published in English in 1967 with an introduction by William Stringfellow (who wrote "An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land" during Nixon's presidency.)

I looked up 'list of lifestyles' on the internet and got many hits. One of them (Alternative lifestyle - Wikipedia) categorizes lifestyles as follows:
  • Nudism and clothing optional lifestyles
  • Living in unusual communities, such as communes, intentional communities, ecovillages, off-the-grid, or the tiny house movement, convents or monasteries, hermitages (my additions)
  • Traveling subcultures, including lifestyle travellers, housetrucking, and New Age travelling
  • Restrictive dieting, such as vegetarianism, veganism, freeganism, or raw foodism
  • Body modification, including tattoos, body piercings, suspension, and transdermal implants
  • Non-normative sexual lifestyles, such as LGBT (often used euphemistically), BDSM, swinging, polyamory, and certain types of sexual fetishism or paraphilia[3]
  • Alternative child-rearing, such as homeschooling, coparenting and home births
  • Alternative medicine and natural methods of medical care or herbal remedies as medication
  • Eastern religion as sought and practiced by some western converts into faiths based in East Asia and South Asia, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and Shintoism, as opposed to Monotheism or Abrahamic belief systems
  • Adherents to alternative spiritual and religious practices, such as vampirism, Wicca, Neopaganism, Satanism, or cults
  • Certain religious minorities, such as the Amish who pursue a non-technological or anti-technology lifestyle
This is not by any means a comprehensive list, nor are these necessarily mutually exclusive. My question to readers is basically if you think there is a particularly "Christian lifestyle" or if there are some that are more, or less, "Christian" than others; how would you describe a Christian lifestyle if you think there is one. If you can support your description with Scripture, please do so.
 

rockytopva

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Here in the Southeast we use to farm and attend revivals. Quoting the full testimony of George Clark Rankin...

"Grandfather was kind to me and considerate of me, yet he was strict with me. I worked along with him in the field when the weather was agreeable and when it was inclement I helped him in his hatter's shop, for the Civil War was in progress and he had returned at odd times to hatmaking. It was my business in the shop to stretch foxskins and coonskins across a wood-horse and with a knife, made for that purpose, pluck the hair from the fur. I despise the odor of foxskins and coonskins to this good day. He had me to walk two miles every Sunday to Dandridge to Church service and Sunday-school, rain or shine, wet or dry, cold or hot; yet he had fat horses standing in his stable. But he was such a blue-stocking Presbyterian that he never allowed a bridle to go on a horse's head on Sunday. The beasts had to have a day of rest. Old Doctor Minnis was the pastor, and he was the dryest and most interminable preacher I ever heard in my life. He would stand motionless and read his sermons from manuscript for one hour and a half at a time and sometimes longer. Grandfather would sit and never take his eyes off of him, except to glance at me to keep me quiet. It was torture to me." - George Clark Rankin

Then he got it good in the Methodist church in Georgia...

...Quote...

After the team had been fed and we had been to supper we put the mules to the wagon, filled it with chairs and we were off to the meeting. When we reached the locality it was about dark and the people were assembling. Their horses and wagons filled up the cleared spaces and the singing was already in progress. My uncle and his family went well up toward the front, but I dropped into a seat well to the rear. It was an old-fashioned Church, ancient in appearance, oblong in shape and unpretentious. It was situated in a grove about one hundred yards from the road. It was lighted with old tallow-dip candles furnished by the neighbors. It was not a prepossessing-looking place, but it was soon crowded and evidently there was a great deal of interest. A cadaverous-looking man stood up in front with a tuning fork and raised and led the songs. There were a few prayers and the minister came in with his saddlebags and entered the pulpit. He was the Rev. W. H. Heath, the circuit rider. His prayer impressed me with his earnestness and there were many amens to it in the audience. I do not remember his text, but it was a typical revival sermon, full of unction and power.

At its close he invited penitents to the altar and a great many young people flocked to it and bowed for prayer. Many of them became very much affected and they cried out distressingly for mercy. It had a strange effect on me. It made me nervous and I wanted to retire. Directly my uncle came back to me, put his arm around my shoulder and asked me if I did not want to be religious. I told him that I had always had that desire, that mother had brought me up that way, and really I did not know anything else. Then he wanted to know if I had ever professed religion. I hardly understood what he meant and did not answer him. He changed his question and asked me if I had ever been to the altar for prayer, and I answered him in the negative. Then he earnestly besought me to let him take me up to the altar and join the others in being prayed for. It really embarrassed me and I hardly knew what to say to him. He spoke to me of my mother and said that when she was a little girl she went to the altar and that Christ accepted her and she had been a good Christian all these years. That touched me in a tender spot, for mother always did do what was right; and then I was far away from her and wanted to see her. Oh, if she were there to tell me what to do!

By and by I yielded to his entreaty and he led forward to the altar. The minister took me by the hand and spoke tenderly to me as I knelt at the altar. I had gone more out of sympathy than conviction, and I did not know what to do after I bowed there. The others were praying aloud and now and then one would rise shoutingly happy and make the old building ring with his glad praise. It was a novel experience to me. I did not know what to pray for, neither did I know what to expect if I did pray. I spent the most of the hour wondering why I was there and what it all meant. No one explained anything to me. Once in awhile some good old brother or sister would pass my way, strike me on the back and tell me to look up and believe and the blessing would come. But that was not encouraging to me. In fact, it sounded like nonsense and the noise was distracting me. Even in my crude way of thinking I had an idea that religion was a sensible thing and that people ought to become religious intelligently and without all that hurrah. I presume that my ideas were the result of the Presbyterian training given to me by old grandfather. By and by my knees grew tired and the skin was nearly rubbed off my elbows. I thought the service never would close, and when it did conclude with the benediction I heaved a sigh of relief. That was my first experience at the mourner's bench.

As we drove home I did not have much to say, but I listened attentively to the conversation between my uncle and his wife. They were greatly impressed with the meeting, and they spoke first of this one and that one who had "come through" and what a change it would make in the community, as many of them were bad boys. As we were putting up the team my uncle spoke very encouragingly to me; he was delighted with the step I had taken and he pleaded with me not to turn back, but to press on until I found the pearl of great price. He knew my mother would be very happy over the start I had made. Before going to sleep I fell into a train of thought, though I was tired and exhausted. I wondered why I had gone to that altar and what I had gained by it. I felt no special conviction and had received no special impression, but then if my mother had started that way there must be something in it, for she always did what was right. I silently lifted my heart to God in prayer for conviction and guidance. I knew how to pray, for I had come up through prayer, but not the mourner's bench sort. So I determined to continue to attend the meeting and keep on going to the altar until I got religion.

Early the next morning I was up and in a serious frame of mind. I went with the other hands to the cottonfield and at noon I slipped off in the barn and prayed. But the more I thought of the way those young people were moved in the meeting and with what glad hearts they had shouted their praises to God the more it puzzled and confused me. I could not feel the conviction that they had and my heart did not feel melted and tender. I was callous and unmoved in feeling and my distress on account of sin was nothing like theirs. I did not understand my own state of mind and heart. It troubled me, for by this time I really wanted to have an experience like theirs.

When evening came I was ready for Church service and was glad to go. It required no urging. Another large crowd was present and the preacher was as earnest as ever. I did not give much heed to the sermon. In fact, I do not recall a word of it. I was anxious for him to conclude and give me a chance to go to the altar. I had gotten it into my head that there was some real virtue in the mourner's bench; and when the time came I was one of the first to prostrate myself before the altar in prayer. Many others did likewise. Two or three good people at intervals knelt by me and spoke encouragingly to me, but they did not help me. Their talks were mere exhortations to earnestness and faith, but there was no explanation of faith, neither was there any light thrown upon my mind and heart. I wrought myself up into tears and cries for help, but the whole situation was dark and I hardly knew why I cried, or what was the trouble with me. Now and then others would arise from the altar in an ecstasy of joy, but there was no joy for me. When the service closed I was discouraged and felt that maybe I was too hardhearted and the good Spirit could do nothing for me.

After we went home I tossed on the bed before going to sleep and wondered why God did not do for me what he had done for mother and what he was doing in that meeting for those young people at the altar. I could not understand it. But I resolved to keep on trying, and so dropped off to sleep. The next day I had about the same experience and at night saw no change in my condition. And so for several nights I repeated the same distressing experience. The meeting took on such interest that a day service was adopted along with the night exercises, and we attended that also. And one morning while I bowed at the altar in a very disturbed state of mind Brother Tyson, a good local preacher and the father of Rev. J. F. Tyson, now of the Central Conference, sat down by me and, putting his hand on my shoulder, said to me: "Now I want you to sit up awhile and let's talk this matter over quietly. I am sure that you are in earnest, for you have been coming to this altar night after night for several days. I want to ask you a few simple questions." And the following questions were asked and answered:

"My son, do you not love God?"

"I cannot remember when I did not love him."

"Do you believe on his Son, Jesus Christ?"

"I have always believed on Christ. My mother taught me that from my earliest recollection."

"Do you accept him as your Savior?"

"I certainly do, and have always done so."

"Can you think of any sin that is between you and the Savior?"

"No, sir; for I have never committed any bad sins."

"Do you love everybody?"

"Well, I love nearly everybody, but I have no ill-will toward any one. An old man did me a wrong not long ago and I acted ugly toward him, but I do not care to injure him."

"Can you forgive him?"

"Yes, if he wanted me to."

"But, down in your heart, can you wish him well?"

"Yes, sir; I can do that."

"Well, now let me say to you that if you love God, if you accept Jesus Christ as your Savior from sin and if you love your fellowmen and intend by God's help to lead a religious life, that's all there is to religion. In fact, that is all I know about it."

Then he repeated several passages of Scriptures to me proving his assertions. I thought a moment and said to him: "But I do not feel like these young people who have been getting religion night after night. I cannot get happy like them. I do not feel like shouting."

The good man looked at me and smiled and said: "Ah, that's your trouble. You have been trying to feel like them. Now you are not them; you are yourself. You have your own quiet disposition and you are not turned like them. They are excitable and blustery like they are. They give way to their feelings. That's all right, but feeling is not religion. Religion is faith and life. If you have violent feeling with it, all good and well, but if you have faith and not much feeling, why the feeling will take care of itself. To love God and accept Jesus Christ as your Savior, turning away from all sin, and living a godly life, is the substance of true religion."

That was new to me, yet it had been my state of mind from childhood. For I remembered that away back in my early life, when the old preacher held services in my grandmother's house one day and opened the door of the Church, I went forward and gave him my hand. He was to receive me into full membership at the end of six months' probation, but he let it pass out of his mind and failed to attend to it.

As I sat there that morning listening to the earnest exhortation of the good man my tears ceased, my distress left me, light broke in upon my mind, my heart grew joyous, and before I knew just what I was doing I was going all around shaking hands with everybody, and my confusion and darkness disappeared and a great burden rolled off my spirit. I felt exactly like I did when I was a little boy around my mother's knee when she told of Jesus and God and Heaven. It made my heart thrill then, and the same old experience returned to me in that old country Church that beautiful September morning down in old North Georgia.

As we returned home the sun shone brighter, the birds sang sweeter and the autumn-time looked richer than ever before. My heart was light and my spirit buoyant. I had anchored my soul in the haven of rest, and there was not a ripple upon the current of my joy. That night there was no service and after supper I walked out under the great old pine trees and held communion with God. I thought of mother, and home, and Heaven.

I at once gave my name to the preacher for membership in the Church, and the following Sunday morning, along with many others, he received me into full membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. It was one of the most delightful days in my recollection. It was the third Sunday in September, 1866, and those Church vows became a living principle in my heart and life. During these forty-five long years, with their alternations of sunshine and shadow, daylight and darkness, success and failure, rejoicing and weeping, fears within and fightings without, I have never ceased to thank God for that autumnal day in the long ago when my name was registered in the Lamb's Book of Life.

.../Quote...
 
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OldWiseGuy

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I believe there is a Christian "way" of living, but not a particular "life-style". Reminds me of the sermonette about the "proper position in which to render prayer", and recounts that sincere prayer can be offered even "while hanging upside down in a well".

Another humorous bit of advice on keeping God's law.

"God's law is very flexible. It can be kept while walking, running, working, talking, resting, and even while eating lunch. It can be kept while hot, cold, clothed, or buck naked. It can be kept during the daytime, at night, and on weekends. It can be kept while singing, laughing, reading, staring off into space, or doing nothing at all."

Very flexible is God's law. :bow:
 
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Sabertooth

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Jesus said,
"If you love Me, you will keep My commandments." in John 14:15

Some of the lifestyles listed in the OP can be maintained while pursuing God's Holiness. Others cannot.
 
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Sabertooth

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@Monna , two more lifestyles:
  • Quiverfull
  • Pro-kosher (kosher-leaning); that is, preferring kosher when there is a choice (for health's sake, not as a spiritual mandate).
 
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Andy centek

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The background to this question is that I am currently reading Jacques Ellul "The Presence of the Kingdom." This builds on the unavoidable tensions caused by Christians being "in the world but not of it." It is a thought provoking book even if it was originally written (in French) in 1948. The copy I am reading was published in English in 1967 with an introduction by William Stringfellow (who wrote "An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land" during Nixon's presidency.)

I looked up 'list of lifestyles' on the internet and got many hits. One of them (Alternative lifestyle - Wikipedia) categorizes lifestyles as follows:
  • Nudism and clothing optional lifestyles
  • Living in unusual communities, such as communes, intentional communities, ecovillages, off-the-grid, or the tiny house movement, convents or monasteries, hermitages (my additions)
  • Traveling subcultures, including lifestyle travellers, housetrucking, and New Age travelling
  • Restrictive dieting, such as vegetarianism, veganism, freeganism, or raw foodism
  • Body modification, including tattoos, body piercings, suspension, and transdermal implants
  • Non-normative sexual lifestyles, such as LGBT (often used euphemistically), BDSM, swinging, polyamory, and certain types of sexual fetishism or paraphilia[3]
  • Alternative child-rearing, such as homeschooling, coparenting and home births
  • Alternative medicine and natural methods of medical care or herbal remedies as medication
  • Eastern religion as sought and practiced by some western converts into faiths based in East Asia and South Asia, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and Shintoism, as opposed to Monotheism or Abrahamic belief systems
  • Adherents to alternative spiritual and religious practices, such as vampirism, Wicca, Neopaganism, Satanism, or cults
  • Certain religious minorities, such as the Amish who pursue a non-technological or anti-technology lifestyle
This is not by any means a comprehensive list, nor are these necessarily mutually exclusive. My question to readers is basically if you think there is a particularly "Christian lifestyle" or if there are some that are more, or less, "Christian" than others; how would you describe a Christian lifestyle if you think there is one. If you can support your description with Scripture, please do so.
 
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Andy centek

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Hello Mona:

There is only one Christian life style as far as this one is concerned. That life style is to pray and ask for the Holy Spirit's guiding to learn as much as I can before having to leave this body behind. The one thing that comes into my mind is that I pray i can here these words from My Christ Jesus; Well done !"
Unfortunately the word Christian is widely miss used today.

Andy Centek
 
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Sabertooth

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There is only one Christian life style as far as this one is concerned.
But we all start off in some lifestyle paradigm. As we walk with the Paraclete, we learn what we can keep and what we should chuck/replace. ;)
 
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bugkiller

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The background to this question is that I am currently reading Jacques Ellul "The Presence of the Kingdom." This builds on the unavoidable tensions caused by Christians being "in the world but not of it." It is a thought provoking book even if it was originally written (in French) in 1948. The copy I am reading was published in English in 1967 with an introduction by William Stringfellow (who wrote "An Ethic for Christians and Other Aliens in a Strange Land" during Nixon's presidency.)

I looked up 'list of lifestyles' on the internet and got many hits. One of them (Alternative lifestyle - Wikipedia) categorizes lifestyles as follows:
  • Nudism and clothing optional lifestyles
  • Living in unusual communities, such as communes, intentional communities, ecovillages, off-the-grid, or the tiny house movement, convents or monasteries, hermitages (my additions)
  • Traveling subcultures, including lifestyle travellers, housetrucking, and New Age travelling
  • Restrictive dieting, such as vegetarianism, veganism, freeganism, or raw foodism
  • Body modification, including tattoos, body piercings, suspension, and transdermal implants
  • Non-normative sexual lifestyles, such as LGBT (often used euphemistically), BDSM, swinging, polyamory, and certain types of sexual fetishism or paraphilia[3]
  • Alternative child-rearing, such as homeschooling, coparenting and home births
  • Alternative medicine and natural methods of medical care or herbal remedies as medication
  • Eastern religion as sought and practiced by some western converts into faiths based in East Asia and South Asia, including Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism and Shintoism, as opposed to Monotheism or Abrahamic belief systems
  • Adherents to alternative spiritual and religious practices, such as vampirism, Wicca, Neopaganism, Satanism, or cults
  • Certain religious minorities, such as the Amish who pursue a non-technological or anti-technology lifestyle
This is not by any means a comprehensive list, nor are these necessarily mutually exclusive. My question to readers is basically if you think there is a particularly "Christian lifestyle" or if there are some that are more, or less, "Christian" than others; how would you describe a Christian lifestyle if you think there is one. If you can support your description with Scripture, please do so.
Some of the lifestyles on your list are subcultures within a lifestyle. Yes they can also be a sole focus lifestyle. I think maybe the world does not think of Christianity as a lifestyle because of its own culture. The way I see Christianity being defined is participation in organized religion. I had one pastor tell me he did not know what to do with me because he could not label me as something. My thinking is Christianity is much different than a prescribed religious practice by some SoF and social rule pressures (unspoken law of conformance). People can say what they want. I find most who call themselves Christians have based everything they believe on what someone said and not the Bible. I also find Christians live to themselves meaning closed to others not allowing fellowship. I did not say they are not socially polite refusing to talk with other people.

bugkiller

PS - nudism must be very popular as it tops your list. Interesting
 
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Monna

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Quoting the full testimony of George Clark Rankin...

Thank you Rocky for George Clark Rankin's testimony. As a testimony I found it very interesting.
Can you describe Rankin's lifestyle, and in what way was it "Christian?" Did his lifestyle consist simply of farming and attending revivals?
 
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Monna

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That life style is to pray and ask for the Holy Spirit's guiding to learn as much as I can before having to leave this body behind.

Thanks for this, Andy. Can you tell us more? Is there nothing else to your life style than prayer and learning? 24/7? If you do other things from day to day, can you describe how your praying and learning affects these activities?
 
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Throughout the Bible, God seems to desire the worship of every "tongue & nation." This implies that He cherishes our cultural differences (apart from those practices that are inherently sinful).

I think that we, His children, should have shared values of love, purity/repentance, proclaiming His Kingdom, etc., but it isn't necessary that our tastes, interests, likes & dislikes should be the same, where they are subjective.
 
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rockytopva

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Thank you Rocky for George Clark Rankin's testimony. As a testimony I found it very interesting.
Can you describe Rankin's lifestyle, and in what way was it "Christian?" Did his lifestyle consist simply of farming and attending revivals?

George Clark Rankin. The Story of My Life Or More Than a Half Century As I Have Lived It and Seen It Lived Written by Myself at My Own Suggestion and That of Many Others Who Have Known and Loved Me

CHAPTER III
An Old-Time Election in East
Tennessee, and Else

In the earlier days, long before the railroads ran through that section, East Tennessee was a country to itself. Its topography made it such. Its people were a peculiar people - rugged, honest and unique. I doubt if their kind was ever known under other circumstances. Hundreds of them were well-to-do, and now and then, in the more fertile communities, there was actual wealth. Especially was this true along the beautiful water-courses where the farm lands are unequaled, even to this good day.

Among them were people of intelligence and high ideals. No country could boast of a finer grade of men and women than lived and flourished in portions of that "Switzerland of America." Their ministers and lawyers and politicians were men of unusual talent. Some of the most eloquent men produced in the United States were born and flourished in East Tennessee.

Those evergreen hills and sun-tipped mountains, covered with a verdant forest in summer and gorgeously decorated with every variety of autumnal hue in the fall and winter; those foaming rivers and leaping cascades; the scream of the eagle by day and the weird hoot of the owl by night - all these natural environments conspired to make men hardy and their speech pictorial and romantic. As a result, there were among them men of native eloquence, veritable sons of thunder in the pulpit, before the bar, and on the hustings.

But far back from these better advantages of soil and institutions of learning, in the gorges, on the hills, along the ravines and amid the mountains, the great throbbing masses of the people were of a different type and belonged almost to another civilization. They were rugged, natural and picturesque. With exceptions, they were not people of books; they did not know the art of letters; they were simple, crude, sincere and physically brave. They enjoyed the freedom of the hills, the shadows of the rocks and the grandeur of the mountains. They were a robust set of men and women, whose dress was mostly homespun, whose muscles were tough, whose countenances were swarthy, and whose rifles were their defense. They took an interest in whatever transpired in their own localities and in the more favored sections of their more fortunate neighbors. They were social, and practiced the law of reciprocity long before Uncle Sam tried to establish it between this country and Canada.

Who among us, having lived in that garden spot of the world, can ever forget the old-fashioned house-raisings, the rough and tumble log-rollings, the frosty corn-shuckings, the road-workings and the quilting-bees?

And when the day's work was over - then the supper - after that the fiddle and the bow, and the old Virginia reel. None but a registered East Tennessean, in his memory, can do justice to experiences like those. No such things ever happened in just that way anywhere on the face of the earth except in that land of the skies.

Therefore, the man who even thinks of those East Tennesseans as sluggards and ignoramuses who got nothing out of life is wide of the mark. They had sense of the horse kind; and they were people of good though crude morals. No such thing as a divorce was known among them. It was rare that one of them ever went to jail in our section; and, if he did, he was disgraced for life.

I never knew, in my boyhood, of but one man going to the penitentiary and it was a shock to the whole country.
 
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Andy centek

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Thanks for this, Andy. Can you tell us more? Is there nothing else to your life style than prayer and learning? 24/7? If you do other things from day to day, can you describe how your praying and learning affects these activities?
Hi Mona

As for me; I have found that when I start to do the things I should not, that I think about the Lord and His God, would look upon such an act. That in itself should make people consider more closely their actions.
However, I can only do what He has graciously given me the ability and knowledge to do that is pleasing unto the Lord.

Andy Centek
 
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bugkiller

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It is not my list. As I noted, it is taken directly from Alternative lifestyle - Wikipedia. I could have used half a dozen other lists, some of them extremely long.

How would you describe your own lifestyle ... and is it "Christian?"
I think so. Is my lifestyle Christian exclusive to other things like permaculture or even dare say single as in celibate. Is country living excluded as a lifestyle for a Christian?

bugkiller
 
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hedrick

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There are aspects of our lives that should be dictated by Christianity. But not a whole lifestyle. First Century Judaism, medieval Christianity, the 16th Cent, and the current culture are very different. It's a mistake to think that Christians should live as if we were in the 1st Cent. It's impossible, and the attempt to do it will result in self-delusion. The trick is to figure out how to be faithful to Christ in a very different environment than the one in which he taught.
 
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