Bling
Bling
bling said:
So we start with my last post.
I spent a lot of time answering a ton of comments and questions you had in a bunch of postings and asked a ton of questions. Now, just tell me did you at least read the resent posts: 512, 516, 517, 521, 522, 524, 525, and 529?
I have got my self in trouble with you before making assumptions, so how should I treat no comment?
Bling, I try very hard to answer you the best I can. When I answer anyone I try to understand them so I answer it in a way that applies to them.
I don't think I have hidden the fact that I don't really understand your logic, and I find it hard to relate and find a good way to answer to you. So my answers are just blunt. Vomit on the Paper.
Yeah, that was gross.
Sorry, anyway. I have read everything you said, and I said in the past that I have been studying so that I can answer you better.
My last posts to you have used much bible to answer your question, since most of your posts demand evidence.
A lot of these questions fall together, so I try to answer them together. I am trying to answer your questions. I know we got side tracked, or I did, after RobE's response that we were designed to sin. I felt compelled to stand against that.
It was really answers at RobE, only half of that was for you, if even that, but you got involved. So we had to discuss it further. I know there are some post that I didn't answer directly because of ongoing study. I feel confident in my beliefs now that we can discuss it now.
You ask how to handle me (not in so many words, but that's what it comes down to)I know I don't like being misquoted, don't do that, but ask if you understand me as such and such and I'll tell you, don't just say I am.
Example:
"So you are saying God uses us for entertainment"
Nooooooo (that one was borrowed from our other forum)
Instead say "Are you saying God uses for entertainment?"
As for when I don't answer a question, I am sorry, just ask again.
And some advice, make them shorter
bling said:
1. How does God define Godly love? .... What is loving your God with all your: heart, soul, mind and energy? ...... We also are told to love others like Jesus loves us.
Godly love seems most easily explained as a love like God's, as you put well. God does desire the love from all of our being, not "half hearted" love.
bling said:
2. Is loving God with our all we have and can give still and always been, both what God desired and ordered of us?
It is the greatest commandment. If we love God, we will also be keeping the commands, for all the commands are wrapped up in that one, "love the LORD with all..." you are.
God does desire we love him. I say that, afraid of where you will take it tho. Because I still think you believe sin was necessary to achieve love like that. I tell you, bling, It is not! If God is powerful, and he can love in such a way without sinning, he is still yet powerful enough to give us the same ability.
Love is written in our hearts, before the law was. It is something we just know, and have the ability to do.
Which brings us to the next question that will arise from that answer.....
Are we really able to do this without grace? And I think the answer is no. We can't love God when we are sinners, because a sinner is separated from God. But we are not talking about our situation, we are really talking about Adam's.
Adam lived for who knows how long without sinning. During that time, there was nothing separating him from God, no sin to speak of. Adam, the ideal form of man, did not require grace to love God, as he wasn't a sinner yet, and HE had the ability to love God.
The same would have been true of any of us had Adam never sinned, and had we not sinned. We would be able to love God fully, just like the angels do, who have no sin.
BUT Adam did bring sin on us. Thanks pal. And now we need grace. But because that is true doesn't mean we were created to be this way. I say that if we want to see how God desired us to be, look to the Garden, and how he made us.
He made us without sin. He made us understanding love. He made us knowing him, understanding who he was. That is what God wants, to name a few. How do we achieve that as sinners? We require Grace, through Christ Jesus.
bling said:
3. If humans are to commit their total selves ... will that not require a mature decision... to understand “all” verses ... and what they are committing to?
Bling, I do not think we are all meant to have the same function in the Body. Some people's place is to commit and understand the deeper things of the Word. Other people think it's over their heads and don't desire to learn the deeper matters.
I think it would be good for all to know, but it isn't required of them. Because we all have a function in the Body of Christ, we are not meant to do the same thing. Should a foot read? Should hair listen?
We can love God in many ways, and still love him with our total selves. Understanding all or even some verses is not required, as long as we understand that Grace saved us and believe in it, we have love for God.
bling said:
4. I have tried to find support for, “God just wanting some type of relationship with humans” and I always come back to only a Godly loving relationship, so can you show me where scripture talks about another type relationship with God? I am using verses like: John 15:12, Gal 5:14, 1 John 5:2, and 2 John 1: 5-6.
I thought I already gave you a few examples of how God desires a relationship.
1 Corinthians 1:9
God, who has called you into fellowship with his Son Jesus Christ our Lord, is faithful.
2 Corinthians 13:14
May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.
fellowship
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=fellowship
God desires much from us. I agree that love has everything to do with it, but there are somethings love enables but doesn't do.
Like I said before, you can love someone and not have a relationship with him. I believe loving someone is all the better when a relationship is present, be it great or small.
bling said:
5. Has all adult mature humans everywhere and throughout time sinned? Will all adult mature humans have to sin in the future? I can find scripture that, God seems to be saying that all will sin and all have sinned. God has shown us the plan that He had from the beginning of time that includes sinning. If there was a plan in which humans did not sin and that was the Garden, that plan did not work and should not be followed.
All have sinned, and all accountable people will sin. But this is because of the law we have on our heart, that we are clearly not ready to have.
If God were to allow us the ability to sin without providing a way out of sin, knowing the future or not, he wouldn't be loving. I think we all agree that allowing sin means providing a way out.
The question is is allowing sin also designing us to sin? I say no. God did not intend for any of us to be sinners. That is another thing he desires, obedience, not sacrifice.
Basically, I say Adam could have resisted sin forever. He didn't, so you take that as part of the big plan. I say no, the plan didn't depend on Adam. It depended on any sinner, no matter who sinned, to be allowed a way out of sin.
bling said:
6. I also have looked at angels as an example of sinless living and have some issues I hope you can help me with: a. There is no information on the stags angels went through in their creation: we know some day we will be like angels (not human anymore), so were angels like humans at one time? b. Did angels go through a time in another place where they sinned and were forgiven and the sins forgotten? c. How do I compare sexual, physical, terminal, earthly, separated, organic, having human minds and mortal beings with Spiritual beings? d. There is so little information about the angel/ God relationship how do we know? e. If God wanted us to use angels as an example for us, would He not provide more information?
The only thing that matters of Angels is that the ones who are in heaven didn't fall, i.e. sin. If God created them with the ability to love him and resist sin, why not us too?
Point being, we were not meant to sin, even though there was a planned way out.
bling said:
7. Christ said,(John 14: 15) "If you love me, you will obey what I command. , now there are some passages that suggest God loves those that obey His commands and you can tell who loves God by their obedience to his commands (John 14:21, John 15: 10, 2 john 1:6), but I do not find obey God’s commands produces love in the one obeying and when I look at the O.T. I find Jews obeying and seemingly not loving. Do we first have to love or at least want to love God before we can properly obey God’s commands?
Again, it is the greatest commandment. It is really a "no duh" answer since one of those commands is to love him. If you follow all commands you are following that one too.
But Christ said if we love God we will follow his commands. So loving God leads to following commands.
So if you don't love God, you won't follow his commands. Point with Adam, he didn't love God, he rejected God, and didn't follow the one command he had.
bling said:
8. Luke 15: 15-32 “The Prodigal Son”. I do not want to make too much out of this or carry it too far, but it does seem to tell us about God. The father in the story seems to represent God and as such is a wonderful loving, wise man. The father in spite of the young son actions and attitude toward the father gives him a lot of money. It only seems reasonable that a loving and wise father would realize what a rebellious, ungrateful, immature son would do with that money. The end result appears to be what the father desired for the young son and in this case happened. We also see the older son who remained faithful until the younger son’s return, had not developed enough love for his father to be happy with the father’s happiness or do things to please the father even though he had been obedient. Do you think God wants all of us, to be like the younger son or the older son, even if it cost Him a great deal, like in the story?
God wants us to be like the son who stayed with him. The reason the younger son was taken back is because he returned, thus becoming like his brother.
Even though the younger son experienced a different love from his father and will return more love, the love of the older son is still worth something.
The older son loves his father in that he would never leave him. The younger son loves his father in that he doesn't deserve it and got it anyway. Both are love, and desired by the father.
bling said:
9. Does it not appears from the above story forgiveness is tide to loving and suggest without being forgiven there is no love?
NO
bling said:
10. 1 John 1: 9If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness. Does this not suggest a pure heart comes from being forgiven?
(Now I know God for civil matters for the earthly Kingdom of the Jews had different punishments, put when it was of the heart type sin not involving others directly, they had no punishment for coveting, lusting, or hating their brother other then it was sin, so were these little sins? Civil earthly wrong doing are also sin, but what the Jews had to do or what had to be done to those wrong doers did not do anything about the sin, for a sin is against God and requires Christ to bare them no matter how “small?”. Paul said, to break one command is to break all the commands. Jesus also came along and took the sins that were not considered by the Jews at that time as significant and made them punishable by death under the Jewish law. Can we then equate the Jewish law punishments on earth for wrong doing with the price for sin?)
The punishment for sin is always death. Physical and spiritual. No matter what the sin is.
bling said:
11. From the above about the law’s different punishments can we conclude God considers one sin in relationship between man and Him (not man and man) different then another sin?
We can sin against ourselves, our friends, whoever, but it is always against God no matter what.
bling said:
12. Which of the following can exist before there is sin and/or I sin: forgiveness of sin, Christ going to the cross, detail examples of how to live in a world like mine that has sin, the indwelling Holy Spirit, needy people, a clear understanding of how bad evil is with human examples for me to fully relate to, a clear understanding of my lack of person strength against evil and knowing my need for help, a desire for rest in heaven, and have an great appreciation for heaven, by contrast?
It is our world, bling. But this is why I am confused by you. God created us knowing we would sin and did it anyway. So you say the sin must have a point, and that somehow makes it OK that God created us.
I say NO, God wouldn't knowingly create all this. Instead He created it with a different goal, and it turned out bad. But even though it turned out bad, he had a plan up his sleeve for this very situation, and that is Christ's sacrifice.
The Goal did involve love. But love, again, does not require sin for humans to understand it. It is the one point that should make you completely reconsider everything you preach.
So what if God doesn't want a relationship, So what if God want's agape love, It isn't relative, what is relative is that God created us and we turned out bad. These are all important, yes. But you should ask "Did he know we would turn out bad or not?" That's the underlining question that might lead you to the answer....
If he did know, why create us knowing he would be sorry he did later?
It should be obvious that God wouldn't create us being knee deep in sin if he knew about it before hand. That's why he didn't know, be cause he wouldn't.
Bling, I can't answer your entire post. Lets try to keep these smaller. One or two questions at a time from now on please. I wish I could allow for more, but I really want to start working on smaller posts for myself. I hope this will be the last LONG one, because I think reading so much gets the reader lost and confuses the message of the writer.
Thanks Bling
-Pat