Silenus
Regular Member
Do you understand? When you turn the cheek, you end the spiral of violence. When you feed those who harm you, you call them into a deeper fellowship with you. When a thief takes your life, you do not add violence to the world, but you sacrificially love the thief. You who say the greatest commandment is love God and love others as yourself...do you put love God and harm others in your deeds? Does love your enemy mean you kill your enemy? Why do you place yourself as a judge to execute judgment? Do you want God to execute judgment against you for your sins for all sin is worth of death, but which do you depend on wrath or mercy? Do you wake with a drive to say I would love God to kill me or beat me? Or do you wake with a drive to say I would love God to show me mercy? All sin is worth of death, but as Christians we are dependant on grace. SO DISPLAY GRACE ALWAYS!
I had a friend who is for non-violence, and he used to say, if they kill us all, then we all get to go to heaven and the world ends sooner. I do like your point about ending the cycle of violence. But Romans does seem to give the government the right to execute some of Gods vengeance and the scriptures seem to indicate that Christians can be the governmental agent of that justice. So how does that work? Also, I have no problem turning my own cheek, but what about a guy smacking the cheek of three people next to me and I can stop it. What does it say about my commitment to ending suffering if I dont.
For those who think Christians can serve in the military, how would you characterize the principles of a just war? I agree, the gulf war isnt one. Any examples of one that is?
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