Author |
Message |
Allenette
| Posted on Monday, December 25, 2000 - 9:18 pm: |    |
Valm: no offense but the FLat EArthSOciety is no more a joke than any other belief system. Those of us who would not want to offend anybody for their indidvidual belief system, would NEVER, EVER want to discourage anyone from their belief systems, since that is usually what "keeps them going" in this sometimes difficult world we live in. (GGGG) You better not make fun of them since they are as sincere as a heart attack in their beliefs and can back them up with faithful arguments and, at times, seemingly logical conclusions as well. If needed, they can quote BIble texts too. ;-) |
Max
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 12:04 am: |    |
Val, The Flat Earth Society is real, and the folk there are deadly serious and have about as much of a sense of humor as junk yard dogs. |
Max
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 12:26 am: |    |
Hi George, Communications problem again. ^^This then must be the TRUE test of faith, to believe in God when His very existence is only an assumption.^^ I didn't say that. Nor does Scripture. In Scripture belief in God in Scripture is based on divine-human encounters known as inspiration and revelation, not on any assumption. When the biblical writer had an experience of this encounter he was inspired and wrote out revelation as a reporter might do. When a war correspondent, for example, writes about a battle he doesn't try to prove that the enemy is real, he ASSUMES that the enemy is real and writes out his report. I'm the same way. I experience an encounter with the divine and then I write it out as I did in "It's Christmas and All You Can Do Is Cry." Only my work is not on a par with Scripture. Scripture writers are special in that the Old Testament writers were prophesying of the coming Messiah, and the New Testament writers were witnessing to the Messiah event -- eyewitnesses, earwitnesses, touch witnesses. But that task is finished. No one can add to or detract from the completed record. Revelation pronounces a curse on anyone who does so. That's why Ellen G. White is under a curse. Still, every believer is entitled to his own divine-human encounter, known as prayer. NIV John 12:44 Then Jesus cried out, "When a man believes in me, he does not believe in me only, but in the one who sent me. 45 When he looks at me, he sees the one who sent me." Blessings, |
Max
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 12:28 am: |    |
Great post, Allenette! I concur completely. |
George
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 7:40 am: |    |
Max. I don't think we have a communication problem on this one. Unless we can actually put our hands around the earth and feel it is round, there can be a lingering doubt that it is.. You can question almost any "proof" by calling into question it's proof.( How do we really know the earth is round when the sun moves across the sky? In most things of that nature you would think the earth is still.) At some point you have to take most of what is taught on faith. The same with the Bible. Where is the "proof" the writers were inspired? Where is the "proof" there is a God when there is no "proof" the Bible which tells us of Him is true. So you see, Before we can we ann have faith in Christ's death we MUST have faith in what tells us of it, and then, in who inspired it. How can you have faith in something the Word says if you don't have faith in the Word it's self? Seems rather impossible to me. George |
Max
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 2:07 pm: |    |
Great questions and observations, George! Your calculator is well-oiled. Again, remember that in my answers I am not speaking for anyone except myself or any group as a whole, including Christianity and FAF. ^^Unless we can actually put our hands around the earth and feel it is round, there can be a lingering doubt that it is.^^ Yes, and the gospel writers put their hands around God: NIV 1 John 1:1 "That which was fom the beginning, which we have HEARD, which we have SEEN with our eyes, which we have LOOKED at and our hands of TOUCHED -- this we proclaim concedrning the Word of life." THEY saw, THEY heard, THEY touched. But I didn't. I wasn't there. I have to take their word for it. But as a "calculator" (rational, scientifically oriented person) I can't just take their word for it. I have to have some experience myself, some putting of "our hands around the earth and feel[ing] it is round," as you have creatively said. Therefore, where am I going to go? Well, I'm not going to go to Ellen G. White or Albert Einstein or Bishop St. Anselm. I'm going to go to my own experience with the divine. God came to me in the silence of my own agonized ignorance and revealed Himself to me. I had an encounter experience with the divine. And this experience gave me reason to trust John and the other gospel writers about the spiritual reality of the Son God. You asked, ^^How can you have faith in something the Word says if you don't have faith in the Word itself?" I can have faith in something the Word says because I have faith in the Word itself. And I have faith in the Word itself because I have had an experience with God who opened my eyes and ears and gave sensory receptors to the touch of my numb hands. Max of the Cross |
George
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 8:30 pm: |    |
Max, Often when I say "you" I don't mean you in particular I mean people in general. If you can suggest a way to make that more clear I would appreciate it. Maybe I didn't say exactly what I wanted to get said this morning, so I will try again. If I am not sure if I believe there is a God how can I have faith in something He is supposed to have said? In other words a person would have to believe there is a God before they could believe anything He said. Therefor believing there is a God is the first test of faith, for me anyway, and most of the time I am tested to the limit. All this time I have been saying I believe in a free salvation, I should have been saying, assuming there is a God then I believe what He says and salvation is free. George |
Max
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 9:25 pm: |    |
Hi George, Iíll try to do a better job of interpreting ìyouî from context. You are using English correctly. It is I who must be more careful interpreting what you write. Some writers use ìoneî instead of ìyouî to indicate people in general, but that can sound old-fashioned and stilted. For me your writing is fine just as it is. ^^If I am not sure if I believe there is a God how can I have faith in something He is supposed to have said?^^ If a mysterious, intelligent, commanding voice were to come to you when you were alone out in the desert and speaking to you out of a bush that was burning but not burning up, would you believe what you were experiencing was real? Or would you think you were going nuts? Or if you were slam-dunked to the ground and struck blind by an overpowering light, then spoken to by a human voice, would you believe what you were experiencing was real? Or would you think you were going nuts? ^^In other words a person would have to believe there is a God before they could believe anything He said?^^ I donít know. Maybe itís different for different people. ^^Believing there is a God is the first test of faith, for me anyway, and most of the time I am tested to the limit.^^ Would you have to have God proven by science and logic before you could believe there is One? ^^All this time I have been saying I believe in a free salvation. I should have been saying, assuming there is a God then I believe what He says and salvation is free.^^ All right then, well said. Do you assume there is a God? Max of the Cross |
Denisegilmore
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 10:47 pm: |    |
Flat earth, round earth, square earth...I could care less what the shape of our world is. I go outside at night and look up to the stars and the moon and sit in silence, beholding the twinkling in the skies. A beautiful, silent moment with God for me. Deep calls to deep during these interludes. God Bless all nomatter what the shape of our world is, Denise |
Denisegilmore
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 10:57 pm: |    |
I know there is a God. Nobody may want to hear this, but I was dead, clinically. And I can tell you that unless you have experienced something like this, you have no idea what I'm talking about. But there is something beyond this, in all reality, one dimension life. I was there and came back because God said to me "You have to go back." He said this not once but twice. That was December 5th 1988. Oh yes, there is a God. To this I have no doubt and nobody can tell me that I hallucinated this nor that it was from a lack of oxygen to my brain. When God speaks to you in that way, BELIEVE me that you KNOW it is God. GOD IS. Denise P.S. The Bible tells us too that God has put His laws into our minds and our hearts, so I listen to the 'supposed athiests', knowing that they know better. Nobody will ever convince me that they actually believe and I mean BELIEVE that there is no God! They know better and so does God. So now am I going to be blasted for my experience? |
Maryann
| Posted on Tuesday, December 26, 2000 - 10:57 pm: |    |
Hey George!, I got the answer to how you can get the sure fire answer to ALL this "stuff." Make sure you go to heaven and ask God yourself;-) :):):)........Sis |
Max
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 12:18 am: |    |
Denise, I know what you mean, I know your experience was real, and I know you're not crazy. As the bard has written, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy." --William Shakespeare, Hamlet, Act I, Scene 5 |
Denisegilmore
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 12:22 am: |    |
God Bless you Max of the Cross. I love the play 'Hamlet.' But in my case, and I'm sure in others, those words are so very TRUE! your sister in Christ Jesus, Denise |
Maryann
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 12:29 am: |    |
Hi Max;-)) |
Max
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 12:51 am: |    |
Hi Maryann, Thanks for the Xmas presents. You're a princess. |
Maryann
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 1:04 am: |    |
You're welcome;-) It seems that you will most likely understand the "hug the elephant" thingy that Denise and I were going on about! He he he he:,,,,-( |
George
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 2:46 am: |    |
Max, You said, "All right then, well said. Do you assume there is a God." That's just it, I don't know. I do think however, this is at the root of all my questions. 'To believe or not to believe, that IS the question' To really really believe, Hmmm...? It would be nice. George |
Max
| Posted on Wednesday, December 27, 2000 - 11:05 am: |    |
George, The best response I can give you right now is this passage from Scripture: NIV Hebrews 11:1 Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see. 2 This is what the ancients were commended for. 3 By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God's command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible. 4 By faith Abel offered God a better sacrifice than Cain did. By faith he was commended as a righteous man, when God spoke well of his offerings. And by faith he still speaks, even though he is dead. 5 By faith Enoch was taken from this life, so that he did not experience death; he could not be found, because God had taken him away. For before he was taken, he was commended as one who pleased God. 6 And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him. I must emphasize, though, that I don't believe any human being or any scientific endeavor or philosophical school has ever proved that God exists. And if they did, there would be no more room for faith. I even believe it's impossible to prove scientifically or philosophically or logically God's existence. But you probably are already aware of that. |
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