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Author Topic: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable  (Read 9240 times)

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September 26, 2008, 03:07:25 PM
Reply #30

sickofpalantirs

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #30 on: September 26, 2008, 03:07:25 PM »
I think he means good deeds, and/or good morals.
Felipe Musco:
(after all, it's a CHARITY organization, I still have SOME principles, even having gone through Law School... :P),
Elf Lvr:
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September 26, 2008, 03:26:41 PM
Reply #31

TheJord

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #31 on: September 26, 2008, 03:26:41 PM »
Actions that reflect your dedication to follow Jesus Christ.

EDIT: what SoP said
"The rule of Gondor is mine!"

September 26, 2008, 04:13:55 PM
Reply #32

FM

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #32 on: September 26, 2008, 04:13:55 PM »
Interesting...

September 26, 2008, 05:07:10 PM
Reply #33

Yanko Markovic

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #33 on: September 26, 2008, 05:07:10 PM »
wow! I'm out for one day (I think) and have 20 minutes to read all the answers for the questions (specially mine), and for what I've read, both turin and Jord are partially right. turin, Christianity is about Jesus, and what Jesus did. In fact, the deciding point of Christianity is Jesus resurrection, if He never had resusrrected, whole fith would be vain. it's
about Jesus death and mercy that we can be saved, not for our merits (now forgot in which passage this was), BUT, and here I give reason to Jord (and sorry, BTW, what is a jord??? if you can tell me?), We have to reflect Jesus' compassion to others, WE HAVE TO FOLLOW HIS EXAMPLE, BECAUSE WE WEREN'T SAVED FOR NOTHING, WE WERE SAVED WITH A PURPOSE, so, we have to follow all His commandments (in His name, of course), but, and let me clarify, it's Jesus who saves, not acts, it's Jesus' compassion what saves, not our "goodness"

that would, of course, resolve only one problem, one that came secondary to the question, but one I think most important     
"To ask if Orcs "are" Communists is to me as sensible as asking if Communists are Orcs." - JRR Tolkien, regarding his "allegory".

September 26, 2008, 06:47:56 PM
Reply #34

Gate Troll

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #34 on: September 26, 2008, 06:47:56 PM »
Our works don't save us, but they are what show that we are saved.

September 26, 2008, 06:58:44 PM
Reply #35

Yanko Markovic

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #35 on: September 26, 2008, 06:58:44 PM »
Quote
Our works don't save us, but they are what show that we are saved

bingo! if you don't want to read 9 lines, that would resume it.
"To ask if Orcs "are" Communists is to me as sensible as asking if Communists are Orcs." - JRR Tolkien, regarding his "allegory".

September 27, 2008, 01:04:04 AM
Reply #36

TheJord

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #36 on: September 27, 2008, 01:04:04 AM »
My name is Jordan, which became TheJord in college. Dont ask why, I'm not really sure ;D
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September 27, 2008, 06:35:33 AM
Reply #37

Elf_Lvr

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #37 on: September 27, 2008, 06:35:33 AM »
Okay, this is one conversation I might be able to bear being involved with.

My chosen path in life is youth ministry, and I also really highly believe that a growth of faith can primarily come from a test of faith. I really love religious debates!

I'll love them a lot more once I go to a Christian college and figure out how to pull verses for every situation out of nowhere (I know there's a google Bible somewhere, though...) but for now I'll answer with how I believe.

First of all, I'd like to go ahead and say that one Christian's beliefs don't often express others'. The Bible is often "open to interpretation" (hence denominations), however, something I don't think is in debate amongst Christians is the existence of one undeniable truth. My belief is probably flawed, because it's based on mostly what I think and the best arguments presented to me. Present a good enough argument and I can change what I believe (somewhat).

Anyways, some of Felipe's statements just really made me want to respond, because I can come back to some of that stuff. Plus, I've always wanted to discuss religion with him, just to see what happens.  :P

Yeah, I have to give it to God for the kick-off, and I believe in destiny (or a very close thing to it), so I also think there's at least a kind of... "force" that drives things around, steering the world in the right direction.

Well, I think God=Destiny, in the way you're thinking. The Bible says that God has a plan for the world, and every person in it (or at least that he knows what's going to happen to the world and every person in it). The world is going to end up where he says it's gonna end up. There's your destiny.

Quote
Surely, sometimes it swerves a bit, but hey, even omnipotent beings can't REALLY watch out EVERY SINGLE PERSON at all times, right?

See definition of omnipotent. God DOES see every singe person at all times. Because, well, he's different than a human. That's why you called him a "being," eh? He can (obviously) do stuff we can't.

Quote
Sometimes, one slips by unnoticed and takes a wrong path, but generically speaking, the world tens to drive them back to their right path.

Untrue. God is omnipotent, and as such, he knew that said person was going to make that specific wrong decision from the beginning.

The point is free will. People don't make wrong decisions because God "slips up" but because they do. God doesn't railroad us like a bad DM, but he still knows where things are going. God made humanity with the aptitude to choose right over wrong, or vice versa.

Which leads to the question, obviously, of why "evil" exists in the world. I could throw out the "Cold Doesn't Exist" argument to solve that one, but I also think that God allows evil to exist (although he could destroy it right now, if he wanted to) because of free will. I don't claim to know why God created humanity (I assume someone with a kid could make some comparisons), but it wasn't because he wanted little mind-slaves. He HAS to allow evil to exist (until judgment day) because that's just a result of free will.

Quote from: AgentDrake
C.S. Lewis had a chapter on that in Mere Christianity which, even if you don't agree, is an interesting theoretical look at how things would look from outside of time.

Ever read "The Bloodstone Chronicles"? An only okay series of books, but they do have some interesting thoughts on why God created people, and a God that exists outside of separate dimensions that people do.

I think it went something like this: people can observe a three-dimensional world, and exist in four dimensions (the fourth being time, eh?). So assume that you could create a world in only two dimensions. People in that world would consider it perfectly normal, but should you try to influence it, they couldn't understand the magnitude of your actions.

By their reasoning, God exists outside our field of understandable, observable dimensions, but he's still there.

Like I said, interesting thoughts, and probably not entirely untrue.


Quote
Also brings in some interesting connections between fate and free will (which, honestly, I don't believe are really mutually exclusive, but that would take forever to explain, and is part of that whole Dark Ages-era Anglo-Saxon/Old Norse influence in my worldview. If we're gonna argue about that one, we might need a whole new thread. Maybe I should write up an argument for that.  Twisted! )

See above post. Enjoy.

Quote
I believe God gave us Jesus Christ to allow us to return to His presence if we do what he asks of us. Part of this is, as you state, accepting Christ. But I believe to fully accept Christ into your live you must make your life a reflection of His, or at least to the best of our ability, as we are not perfect, as He is. This is why I believe you must have works also.

My favorite argument of all.

What it boils down to is this: You MUST believe in God and Jesus Christ to go to heaven.

But what is belief? Lots of people believe in God the way they believe in a table. They know it's there, and they trust it to perform its function (for the most part), but they don't bother getting into any sort of personal relationship with it.

Obviously not the definition of belief.

Maybe, you think believing is just knowing God exists. Well, I LOVE this Bible passage. Read James 2:19. It says:

Quote from: James 2:19
You believe that there is one God. Good! Even the demons believe that—and shudder.

Demons go to heaven? Not likely. So that's not the answer either.

Even non-Christians can agree with me: there are some (a lot) of fake Christians in this world. People who say they believe in God but make wrong choices and do evil regardless, with the idea that either a) it doesn't really matter or b) because Jesus will forgive me anyway. Think those people will go to heaven? I don't either.

That's not to say if you make a mistake, you go to #$&*@!. Not at all. I'm just saying that people who take (consciously or unconsciously) spiritual "advantage" of being "saved" to do whatever they want don't believe. Agreed?

My old youth pastor told me this about baptism, although I think it applies to this situation also:

"It's not required. But if you really believe in God, and you have the opportunity, you'll do it."

Real belief in God, the kind that it takes to get to heaven, is trying to live a Godly life (a life following Jesus' and God's commands, in case that can be misinterpreted) not because it's required, but because you know it's right.
« Last Edit: September 27, 2008, 06:38:00 AM by Elf_Lvr »
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September 27, 2008, 10:45:03 AM
Reply #38

Gil-Estel

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #38 on: September 27, 2008, 10:45:03 AM »
And Elf, for all the reasoning you gave, especially the last part, I think we need to focus on the maingoal of our lifes, or our faith. It is not to get to heaven, for that would give a fear-based religion. I think the maingoal is a life in which you share with God. Faith is a walk with God. Like Adam and Eve in the early days, wandering with God, talking to him. Prayer should not only be done on the regular moments -which is also good ofcourse- but God should be involved in every step. What sums it up for me is James 5:13  If you are having trouble, you should pray. And if you are feeling good, you should sing praises.
So in every part of your life, involve God. I think that is a godly life and our main purpose in life. I know God has put us on this earth for that reason, to walk/live with him.

http://www.biblija.net/biblija.cgi?Bijbel=Bijbel&l=en

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September 27, 2008, 11:01:22 AM
Reply #39

FM

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #39 on: September 27, 2008, 11:01:22 AM »
I see your point, EL. Basically, as an example, you could say that God knows said person is gonna derail at some point, but allows it so that other people can stand in the way and become martyrs and heroes, and so that humanity can learn from that and not let it happen again, thus making for LESS people derailing ON THEIR OWN, without God interceding. Did I get it right?

September 27, 2008, 11:35:36 AM
Reply #40

Gil-Estel

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #40 on: September 27, 2008, 11:35:36 AM »
If it is okay with you FM, I will give you my 2 cents. If not, just choose not to read this. I don't think God makes people suffer so we can help instead. If things like that happen, I think it has to do all with the sin in the world.
I think God doesn't act because of the consequenses of the choice we made back in paradise. We wanted to take matters in own hands, and from that moment we have to deal with people suffering.
Believing in God doesn't mean you get a life full of prosperity, for God's blessings are for all his children. But as a christian -as being said before- you have the responsibility to stand up for others. I love the part in Matthew 25 where Jesus says that each time you look after someone, even when they seem unimportant, it is like you did it to Jesus.
..."Elves seldom give unguarded advice, for advice is a dangerous gift, even from the wise to the wise, and all courses may run ill"...

September 28, 2008, 06:10:40 PM
Reply #41

FM

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #41 on: September 28, 2008, 06:10:40 PM »
I see. Well, I AM "new" to this, to thanks, G-E, for the lesson. :D And that last part, well, I'll look into it, since it fits perfectly with some things that happened to my life recently.
And for the record, you, like everyone else, is always welcome to give me your 2 cents on anything (even bash me, though do it through PMs... :P)!

September 29, 2008, 07:23:40 AM
Reply #42

TheJord

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #42 on: September 29, 2008, 07:23:40 AM »
I think its hard to have religious debates. Debating religion is never a good idea. Sharing ideas and opinions is much better, as it saves a lot of aggro. I'm sure some of you will understand when you are trying to explain something that seems so clear to you, but the other person wont accept it ](*,) - hence, best to just share beliefs!
"The rule of Gondor is mine!"

September 29, 2008, 10:55:09 AM
Reply #43

FM

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #43 on: September 29, 2008, 10:55:09 AM »
But debating is SO MUCH FUN! :P

September 29, 2008, 11:27:36 AM
Reply #44

Gil-Estel

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Re: Deep Questions Seemingly Unanswerable
« Reply #44 on: September 29, 2008, 11:27:36 AM »
Debating is something different from explaination. So as long as someone has questions for me, hit me. I'm nowhere close to thinking I can pursuade someone into my religion, for that is never my intend.
And then again, debating is cool.....
..."Elves seldom give unguarded advice, for advice is a dangerous gift, even from the wise to the wise, and all courses may run ill"...