How God relates to man
Does God put useless rules for His children to follow in stone and then sentence rule breakers to hell for not being able to do the impossible? No. Would God find us guilty in a matter where no innocence exists? Again no. God has through His son provided a way of salvation for all of us. God did not send His son into the world to condemn the world, but that through Him the world would be saved. Proverbs 21:1 says the kings heart (mind) is in the hand of the lord, like rivers of water he turns it where He wishes. Where ever you want the water to flow build a trench. Try to learn from each experience. Find more of a purpose to your life than getting drunk, high, or having orgasms. God is a crucial part of our lives. He wants us to make godly decisions and consider the consequences of our actions before we act. God appeals to our intellect. In the fourth chapter of Jonah shows a clear example of how God wants His children to have a conscience and think. In this chapter Jonah is angry at God for not destroying Nineveh, (the capitol of Assyria). God asks him, do you do well to be mad? Then God causes a plant to grow overnight and shade Jonah from the sun. The next night God makes a worm that eats the plant. Jonah is sad that he no longer has the plant. God asks Jonah I his feelings concerning the plant justified? God appeals to intellect, He wants us to think.
Spiritually-minded humans eventually come to understand that the earthly rules of human relationships to not apply to the Spiritual relationship that--as the Holy Bible says--existed "In the beginning" i.e., existed eternally between The One God and the Only Creation.
The First Commandment clearly instructs humans who can listen: "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." The One God spoke that commandment first because God knew S/He is All-in-All. That eternal fact means exactly what it says: The One God, All-in-All, Who is Spiritual--did not create the material universe. Error did.
THSWarrior wrote:
Spiritually-minded humans eventually come to understand that the earthly rules of human relationships to not apply to the Spiritual relationship that--as the Holy Bible says--existed "In the beginning" i.e., existed eternally between The One God and the Only Creation.
The First Commandment clearly instructs humans who can listen: "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." The One God spoke that commandment first because God knew S/He is All-in-All. That eternal fact means exactly what it says: The One God, All-in-All, Who is Spiritual--did not create the material universe. Error did.
Spiritually-minded humans eventually come to under... (
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The bible says "In the beginning God created".
fredlott63 wrote:
How God relates to man
Does God put useless rules for His children to follow in stone and then sentence rule breakers to hell for not being able to do the impossible? No. Would God find us guilty in a matter where no innocence exists? Again no. God has through His son provided a way of salvation for all of us. God did not send His son into the world to condemn the world, but that through Him the world would be saved. Proverbs 21:1 says the kings heart (mind) is in the hand of the lord, like rivers of water he turns it where He wishes. Where ever you want the water to flow build a trench. Try to learn from each experience. Find more of a purpose to your life than getting drunk, high, or having orgasms. God is a crucial part of our lives. He wants us to make godly decisions and consider the consequences of our actions before we act. God appeals to our intellect. In the fourth chapter of Jonah shows a clear example of how God wants His children to have a conscience and think. In this chapter Jonah is angry at God for not destroying Nineveh, (the capitol of Assyria). God asks him, do you do well to be mad? Then God causes a plant to grow overnight and shade Jonah from the sun. The next night God makes a worm that eats the plant. Jonah is sad that he no longer has the plant. God asks Jonah I his feelings concerning the plant justified? God appeals to intellect, He wants us to think.
How God relates to man br Does God put useless rul... (
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Thinking is only prelude to the heart.
fredlott63 wrote:
How God relates to man
Does God put useless rules for His children to follow in stone and then sentence rule breakers to hell for not being able to do the impossible? No. Would God find us guilty in a matter where no innocence exists? Again no. God has through His son provided a way of salvation for all of us. God did not send His son into the world to condemn the world, but that through Him the world would be saved. Proverbs 21:1 says the kings heart (mind) is in the hand of the lord, like rivers of water he turns it where He wishes. Where ever you want the water to flow build a trench. Try to learn from each experience. Find more of a purpose to your life than getting drunk, high, or having orgasms. God is a crucial part of our lives. He wants us to make godly decisions and consider the consequences of our actions before we act. God appeals to our intellect. In the fourth chapter of Jonah shows a clear example of how God wants His children to have a conscience and think. In this chapter Jonah is angry at God for not destroying Nineveh, (the capitol of Assyria). God asks him, do you do well to be mad? Then God causes a plant to grow overnight and shade Jonah from the sun. The next night God makes a worm that eats the plant. Jonah is sad that he no longer has the plant. God asks Jonah I his feelings concerning the plant justified? God appeals to intellect, He wants us to think.
How God relates to man br Does God put useless rul... (
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"Try to learn from each experience": experience is not a teacher. Only the Holy Spirit.
"He wants us to make godly decisions and consider the consequences of our actions before we act": no he does not, far from it. What you state is the exact opposite of the NT.
fiatlux wrote:
"Try to learn from each experience": experience is not a teacher. Only the Holy Spirit.
"He wants us to make godly decisions and consider the consequences of our actions before we act": no he does not, far from it. What you state is the exact opposite of the NT.
Then why read? I will never stop posting these ideas.
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