I've encountered statements like the following:
"Most of my atheist friends are better Christians than those who claim to follow Jesus."
What do you make of it? Can that be true? Or share a similar one, along with your thoughts.
Here's another: (from post #18)
"As a Christian, the primary (if not only) reason you do good things is to please someone else (your invisible sky daddy, I've taken to calling him). As an atheist, the only reason I do good things is because it's the right thing to do. The Christian may think it's the right thing to do, too, of course, but obviously, one of us has ulterior motives, the other's motives are plain and simple and pure."
What say you? Is it true? Are Christians guilty of this? Or, if I could phrase it biblically, is "do all for the glory of God" a worse or too-complex motive than "do because it should be done"?
"Most of my atheist friends are better Christians than those who claim to follow Jesus."
What do you make of it? Can that be true? Or share a similar one, along with your thoughts.
Here's another: (from post #18)
"As a Christian, the primary (if not only) reason you do good things is to please someone else (your invisible sky daddy, I've taken to calling him). As an atheist, the only reason I do good things is because it's the right thing to do. The Christian may think it's the right thing to do, too, of course, but obviously, one of us has ulterior motives, the other's motives are plain and simple and pure."
What say you? Is it true? Are Christians guilty of this? Or, if I could phrase it biblically, is "do all for the glory of God" a worse or too-complex motive than "do because it should be done"?
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