How are you responding to my statements by asking questions that are completely different
I'm asking questions based on the statements that you're making. Come on, surely, you've had a conversation before, haven't you?
1. Was Jesus unjust for not stoning the adultress?
That's not my understanding of God
But we're not talking about your understanding. We're talking about Jesus' teaching.
and I have searched, and continue searching, questioning everything I'm taught and bringing it to God in prayer.
And are you reading His word?
I must assume that you have read the Gospel. The Pharisees condemned Jesus, because he was healing on the Saabath, rather than resting. It's a law, after all. Jesus responded:
11 "If any of you has a sheep and it falls into a pit on the Sabbath, will you not take hold of it and lift it out? 12How much more valuable is a man than a sheep! Therefore it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath."
But it's a law!!! It's one of the 10 Commandments.
Does that mean that Jesus sinned on the Sabbath?
No. The laws are guidelines to help you, not weights to hold you down, so the idea that on Judgement Day, everything will be discussed since your birth to death, ie. "You had a job at at McDonald's and worked on the Sabbath, which is a sin..." is quite bizarre to me.
You're right in saying that He didn't sin, but not for the reason you think.
Yes, the Sabbath was a law under the
Old Covenant. Jesus came to bring us a New Covenant.
The law isn't a "guideline to help us". It is the law.
You can't rob a bank and tell the judge, "but your honor, that whole 'no bank robbery law' isn't binding. It's just a guideline to help me".
The reason Jesus wasn't sinning by not observing the Sabbath is made clear in Colosians 2:16-23.
The reason is because He
is the Sabbath.
You see, under the Old Covenant, the Sabbath was a foreshadowing of the rest that we have in Christ. Now that Christ has come, we have no more need of the foreshadowing because we now have the real thing.
If you believe that God punishes all sin, would the Christian, who believes in the bibles, and understands they should at least try to follow God's law as a sign of devotion to God, and because they know better since they believe, go to church, and read the bible, be more lenient to them when they say, "Yeah, well, you have to make a buck.
Christians are under no Biblical obligation to observe Sunday as a Sabbath day. In fact, the passage that I cited for you tells us just that, that we are not bound to observing any day over any other day.
2. Are my words and deeds pure? Sadly, no.
Why not?
If you think about doing something bad to someone, they might not even consider it a sin, because it isn't exactly like you did it.
But it isn't whether or not they consider it a sin that's the issue. Does
God consider it a sin?
My experience as a Christian was that almost everyone I knew spent more time concerned about their actions (the "real" sins), and less time I addressing the source of the actions, thus unable to stop their flow, and in a lot of conflict.
But the source of the action is a sin nature. We're not sinners because we sin, we sin because we're sinners. Our natural tendency, our default setting, is to sin. It is to do what pleases the flesh, rather than what pleases God.
You can't over come that by willing yourself to stop or just trying to be a better person. You've got to be crucified with Christ and die to your sins, before you die
in your sins.
...Initially, I thought that was the dumbest thing I've ever heard, but tried it nonetheless. After some practice, I noticed that my thoughts were no longer of how much I hated the person
Are you saying that you've hated someone?,
3. Do I think God will judge me innocent or guilty?
A Buddhist would say, "there is no way to prove that there is a God, so the point is mute. Why waste time on hypothetical questions?"
Why are you so afraid to answer this question?
However, let me answer from a Christian perspective, then my Buddhist perspective.
How about just being honest and telling me, if the God of the Bible is real and you stand before Him, as the Bible says you will, will He find you innocent or guilty?
From a Christian perspective, if we will say that there will be a Judgement Day, I believe that we will be judged on a number of criteria. How did we judge? (By the measure you judge, so will you be judged.) If you judge with mercy, so shall it be given.
The Bible tells us that we will be judged based on whether or not we kept God's laws. Have you kept God's laws?
Did you love your neighbor as yourself? That's the crux of what Christ taught.
That's not the crux of what Christ taught. It only appears in two verses.
Jesus said that He came to call sinners to repentance and went on to teach that man is sinful and in need of a savior, and that He is that Savior.
If you believe that Jesus was telling the truth when He said that His followers should love their neighbor, then why isn't He telling the truth when He says that no man comes to the Father but by Him?
As with the sheep and goats, if you claimed to love Jesus, then treated people with judgement, condemnation, showed no mercy, no humility, would not try to help those in need, this is how you have behaved to Christ, and that is what you will have to answer for - why you have thought yourself holier than Christ, rude to Christ, condemning of Christ, and merciless to Christ, and then answer what you thing you deserve as a reward for your behavior.
As I pointed out to you before, in this passage, Jesus is explaining the outward signs that will show whether or not someone is truly following Him, not that these things are a means to salvation.
You can't follow Jesus by simply saying that Jesus is your Person Lord And Savior (TM), and then living as if he isn't.
You're right. That's what's called a false convert. There are many of them. But that isn't what we're talking about.
At the same time, if someone is not a Christian, but is loving their neighbor as themselves, is showing kindness and mercy, is giving of their time, compassion, and self for the benefit of others, they have done so to Christ unknowingly.
And they are still enemies of God because of their sin, and still face God's wrath on judgement day.
I didn't find a God of harshness, but one of gentleness that wants us to succeed in loving each other, to become as we were created. We are given talents for each other, not for ourselves. I found that no one is good, and no one is bad. We are both. It's easy to think that a killer is a bad man, and dismiss that it is impossible that there is any good in him, but you must also forget that Saul killed many Christians, and was the writer of many a new testament book. It's easiest to point to another, as the Pharisees did, and say, "I go to church. I go to bible study. I'm so glad I'm not like THAT person."
But this "god" you found isn't the God of the Bible and he isn't a righteous or just god, whoever he is. Essentially, what you've done is to create a god in your own image, and the Bible tells us that that is a sin.
We have two wolves inside of us, one good, and one bad, and the one who wins is the one that we feed.
We have nothing good inside us. We're sinners who are in danger of, and who completely deserve, God's wrath.
It is only because of the great love of God for us that He condescended to become a man in order to pay the penalty that we, by repentance and faith in Christ, might be forgiven and reconciled to Him.
I also don't believe that man was created by a God that demands his adoration, that we must toil for, worship, and avoid his wrath, and hope for a reward at the end of the day.
You've said several things about what you believe Jesus taught. How do you know He taught these things?
So, will I be found guilty or innocent?
You tell me, according to Christianity.
You've already admitted that you've hated people. Jesus says in Matthew 5 that if you've hated someone, then you've already committed murder in your heart and will face God's judgement for that.
Then, we see that you've supplanted God with your own god and that breaks two of the ten commandments, blasphemy and idolatry.
So, given that the Bible says that you'll stand before God a murderer and a blasphemer, do you believe that God will judge you to be guilty or innocent?
Will God know me? If I have a relationship with God, if I have regular conversations with him, as I did since I was 4 or 5, will he damn me to eternal suffering on a legality?
The Bible says that we're judged by the law and that is sin. It goes on to say that God judges those who die in their sins and they do go to Hell.
Do you believe that God sits up in heaven somewhere, micromanaging everyone's life, and making tick marks anytime we do anything wrong? Do you believe that God sits in total judgement of our every move?
That's what the Bible says. That's what Jesus taught.
However, it will not be you. And as much as I sometimes seek God to confirm that he is above, looking down in harsh judgement from grave sins to the pettiest to confirm what I was taught, the God of Fire and Brimstone who's wrath we live to avoid, I simply can't find that being.
That's because you're not reading His word.
I find the antithesis, one who judges me with more mercy than I judge myself, who offers compassion, comfort and mercy from our hardest judges, ourselves.
The Bible tells us that God is both righteous and just.
If He is righteous, then His righteousness demands that He have a moral code (the law).
If He is just, then His justice demands that He punish those who violate that moral code.
Either Christ's sacrifice undid the devil's work, or it did not.
Christ made a way for us to be saved. He did not, however, undo our free will. He still tells us that we must repent and put our faith in Him.
Either Jesus is my Saviour, or he is not. If he died for my sins, he is my saviour, but if I must accept him, and he is not, then he didn't die for my sins. It must be one or the other.
It doesn't sound as though you've repented and put your faith in Christ, so I don't believe that you can honestly say that He is your savior.
Zimmer believes, and with good biblical support, that Jesus' death died for the sins of all
Jesus Christ died for all men. All men, however, will not live for Jesus Christ.
and that all will be drawn back to God.
And that is contradictory to what Jesus taught.
That seems far more loving, far more just.
If it is justice, then where is the payment for sin?
It's because it lacks love and mercy. The very idea is not one of love. The "judgement" is far more based on law than love
That's right. Jesus taught that we will be judged by the law.
God isn't about Judgement
Then you haven't read the teachings of Jesus lately. Jesus tells us very plainly that He is the Judge and will judge the world
and in my opinion, to reduce him down to a judge and jury of Judgement Day is a true blasphemy.
If this is true, then the Bible is not to be trusted, since it very clearly tells us that God is our judge and each one of us will stand before Him on judgement day.
If that's the case, then what is the basis for your claims about what Jesus taught?
Why do you believe that one of Jesus' teachings is true, but not the other?