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that is your opinion!Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:I won't put my opinion or anyone's opinion over that of the Holy spirit, these other teachings mentioned, are not of the Holy spirit,they don't lay claim to being that of the spirit of God nor would anyone with the spirit of God recognize them as such.megadoc1 wrote:you do not believe in the teachings of Islam or Hinduism or Buddhism, it is therefore YOUR opinion that guides what you believe to be right.
Kasey wrote:^^Thats the same thing MG man said. U just repeated it in different words.
what about people belonging to religions who do not believe in the holy trinity? are they even more susceptible to being possessed by a demonic entity?meccalli wrote:A believer can possess the holy spirit and its gifts which makes a dwelling in willing/ repented vessels., without it, one is susceptible to being possessed by a demonic entity.
meccalli wrote:Kasey wrote:^^Thats the same thing MG man said. U just repeated it in different words.
quite the contrary, a demon is an evil entity, an angel fallen from grace through Lucifer's witnessing. A believer can possess the holy spirit and its gifts which makes a dwelling in willing/ repented vessels., without it, one is susceptible to being possessed by a demonic entity.
rspann wrote:This man making me believe that man come from monkey and wasn't created.I believe every one who knows what is going on knows that although he spelt it 'cannon" he is talking about "canon"
Canon refers to the list of books thst are accepted as scripture,not the kind that is used to fight war,I will advise you to start following the thread from the beginning and you might have an idea of what's going on.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:what about people belonging to religions who do not believe in the holy trinity? are they even more susceptible to being possessed by a demonic entity?meccalli wrote:A believer can possess the holy spirit and its gifts which makes a dwelling in willing/ repented vessels., without it, one is susceptible to being possessed by a demonic entity.
megadoc1 wrote:no that's a bad assumption if you left out the premise that one is being led by the spirit and with this spirit recognition of scriptures that are a result of the spirit,no room for opinions hered spike wrote: ...you operate on the childish premise that because:
1. The Spirit of God inspired the scriptures;
2. You read the scriptures;
3. Therefore your opinions (and those whose opinions agree with yours) are the result of the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
megadoc1 wrote:my opinion is nothing
megadoc1 wrote:d spike wrote:Clearly, you know nothing of Jim Jones (among a multitude of other things) apart from his foolish end, for you to spout such stuff. Read up on his earlier life, his preaching and the testimonies of his followers from these times.
am....jim jones preached against Jesus and the bible , his program was that of mind control
and christianity was his hook
to use him as an example is stupid on your part or simply deceitful, all because you assumed I don't know the history behind him
d spike wrote:Clearly, you know nothing of Jim Jones apart from his foolish end... Read up on his earlier life, his preaching and the testimonies of his followers from these times.
Jim Jones began his career as a preacher in both Methodist and Pentecostal churches, and while the first church he opened in 1954 – Community Unity – was not formally affiliated with a denomination, it included elements of both those religious traditions. Community Unity became Wings of Deliverance – initially also without denominational affiliation – but the latter became known as Peoples Temple about the time that Jones was ordained as a minister in the Assemblies of God.
In part at the urging of Ross Case, a Disciples of Christ minister who became one of Jones’ assistant pastors, Peoples Temple applied to and was accepted in the Disciples of Christ in 1960. Jones received his ordination in that denomination four years later, in February 1964.
The Temple remained in good standing with the Disciples of Christ throughout the rest of its history, and was the largest denominational contributor in 1978.
In 1954, Jim Jones established the church that would become Peoples Temple. Even though Jones eventually turned against a traditional understanding of a Christian God, the church never lost the denominational affiliation with the Disciples of Christ it acquired in 1960.
Yet even from its earliest days, the Temple championed the plight of the poor, the disadvantaged, and especially racial minorities. Jones’ outreach to Indianapolis’ black population, his church’s efforts to desegregate local hospitals, restaurants, and other public facilities, and even his family’s composition of multiple races led to his appointment to the city’s Human Rights Commission in 1960.
megadoc1 wrote:d spike wrote:What premise? So people just wandered through the halls and randomly selected writings and stapled them together? Clearly you have not thought through your excuse for denying what is recorded history. Whatever jovial term I use to refer to those esteemed folk doesn't negate or lessen the importance of their actions - the result of which you use to base your arguments, decisions, justifications and whatnot on.
how you placed your argument should apply to peter vs Paul with same results if not
trash it
Your interpretation, your opinion... and we already know what that's worth.megadoc1 wrote:wait wait wait .this is true but it happens when one comes to faith in jesusd spike wrote:I thought it was preached "God's laws were written in the heart of man"... I guess your ilk believe everyone else suffered from typographical errors and misprints...
nice try though
(new covenant)
Again, your opinion - and an unlearned one at that. Writers from that era claim otherwise ('Google' is good, but you really should start reading those odd-looking heavy things called reference books). Now then, who should we believe... a whole gang of early Christians who assisted in the compilation of the Bible... or YOU? That's a rather easy one, isn't it?megadoc1 wrote:acceptance does not implyd spike wrote:The simple fact remains (whether you continue to dance around it, pretending not to see it) pieces of the Bible were taken out by those who had their own agenda long after the Bible was compiled and accepted.
that they were in inspired also
megadoc1 wrote:d spike wrote: You cannot claim to hold the Bible as "the Word of God" and at the same time, refuse to accept those writings as inspired as well.
yes I can and I do
Really? How?megadoc1 wrote:reading the ones that are inspired shows that the ones rejected are not
pioneer wrote:Was having a convo with religious coworkers this week and they said/indicated/insisted HIV/AIDS was NOT man-made and that GOD created it to punish unfaithful and promiscuous people. They were very adamant that it was NOT created by man.
Is this true?
This is the first time i heard this in my life, and i really was in shock.
rspann wrote:Spike,you know that there are plenty religious asses too!
rspann wrote:Spike,you know that there are plenty religious asses!
d spike wrote:rspann wrote:Spike,you know that there are plenty religious asses too!
At first, I agreed heartily with this statement...
But in reading it over, I have to ask: Why the use of "too"?
The statement, as written, implies more than is said - unless you just slipped, meaning to write:rspann wrote:Spike,you know that there are plenty religious asses!
in which case I agree. There's a lot of them out there (there's quite a few in here too) and thanks to them and their tireless efforts to ensure their point of view is unquestioningly accepted as the only one, one can easily understand why so many refuse to accept to believe in the divine.
What one has to appreciate is that people understand things via concepts. Many people who claim to not believe in God, really mean they do not accept the concept of an old man with a white beard sitting in the clouds, taking terse notes in a big book... A person who has had a horrible relationship with an abusive father would either accept the concept of "a heavenly Father" quite happily ("Finally! A real, loving father!") or just as likely have major problems with the concept of "a loving father".
What is remarkable is when you speak to most people, they do have a concept that is God. If a person has a sense of right and wrong, then that is a concept of God. Fundamentalists will have serious problems with this, as their faith only allows them to accept the concept of God that it projects.
If you believe in God, then you would believe that He would make an infinite attempt to bring all men to a realization of Him. To believe that this realization must fit a narrow, finite, defined acceptance is a human error. By its very nature, the Divine is infinite, the Infinite is divine... Who is man to decide what God should be? (Smells of idolatry, doesn't it?)
A wise woman once said that we are all climbing a mountain. Some find an easier path than others, some stumble and slip... but we are all going in the same direction our own way.
What we think is at the top is up to us.
Are we supposed to tell others that their path is wrong? That they are going in the wrong direction because they choose their own path?
The most important thing is where YOU are in your journey. Stopping to direct traffic is only going to harm one person - you.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:but spike, from this same thread and around the world we see that even each fundamentalist has their own opinion of their own religion.
AND they have their own opinion of other religions too.
996vtwin wrote:The Bible is written perfectly. How else would we have gotten where we are today if it weren't taken literally. The Bible speaks the truth.
996vtwin wrote:The Bible is written perfectly. The Bible speaks the truth.
d spike wrote:pioneer wrote:Was having a convo with religious coworkers this week and they said/indicated/insisted HIV/AIDS was NOT man-made and that GOD created it to punish unfaithful and promiscuous people. They were very adamant that it was NOT created by man.
Is this true?
This is the first time i heard this in my life, and i really was in shock.
This is an oft-told tale. I'm surprised that you have only now heard it.
It's just another turd on the Literalists' crapheap.
Ask them what happened to the threat of Hell? They are supposed to believe that Hell is the ultimate in Divine punishment. Can it now be bettered? Is there more than the ultimate?
Did God decide that wasn't enough punishment? Did God err in making Hell insufficient punishment? Did the sodomizers of Gomorrah get off easy by just ending up in Hell for eternity - with no AIDS?
...And what did Arthur Ashe do that was wrong? (Unless they see heart surgery as sinful.)
People who make these sort of statements do not expect rational responses.
Good luck.
Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:^ I don't see anything wrong with that - everyone has their beliefs - it's when they start saying they alone are right and the others are wrong - that claim needs proof
Dizzy28 wrote:I live in a predominantly Hindu area and on Divali day a few years ago a Church from Balthazar Street, Tunapuna passed around and left pamphlets in every one yards saying Hinduism is a Devil religion.
Take that for tolerance.
intent based on whose opinion?rspann wrote:A good method of studying,is using a study bible with the strongs annotations so you can see what the original intent was
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