Clete. Right Divider.
I hear you. Loud and clear. You’ve made your assessments, drawn your conclusions, and passed your judgment. I won’t waste time trying to defend myself against accusations of superiority or spiritual confusion. That’s not a conversation—it’s a closing argument in a trial I never signed up for.
Stupidity.
What I brought to this thread was not a system or a syllabus.
Obviously! Neither was it a trained mind or coherent theology.
It was a soul. I came with a lived faith, born in fire and tempered by grief, not to win debates but to bear witness. That’s what testimony is. That’s what the early church bled for—not airtight theology, but the raw confession that Jesus Christ is Lord even when the whole world says otherwise.
If your life experience has taught you that the truth need not make sense then it's made you a fool.
Right Divider, your question about whether God can sin wasn’t offensive. But what came after wasn’t honest engagement—it was accusation disguised as logic. You made your mind up about me the moment my answers didn’t fit your framework. You wanted precision, not presence. But I’ve learned to recognize when people ask questions not to learn, but to trap. I’ve seen it on the streets, in broken churches, and now here. And I’m not obligated to entertain it.
Thin skinned silliness. You've just admitted to being put off by people who use precision in their doctrine.
Clete, you say I contradicted myself. Maybe I did—
There is no "maybe" and it isn't true because I say it. The post is still right there for the entire English speaking world to see! You DID contradict yourself - period!
if you only read with the eyes of a logician.
There are times when less precision is understandable and tolerable, even desired, but making theological claims is not one of those times.
But faith isn’t a geometry proof.
No one is claiming that faith is some form of mathematics but there is no such thing as an irrational truth - by definition.
THIS IS A RATIONAL STATEMENT!!!!
You don’t trust someone irrationally (or at least you shouldn’t); you trust them
because they’ve shown themselves trustworthy. That’s a rational basis for a relational decision. Likewise, faith in God isn’t irrational, it’s the most rational response to who God is.
Faith is a rational relationship, rooted in reason, expressed through trust.
It stretches. It groans. It walks with God through paradox, mystery, and the jagged edge of suffering. You call that postmodern fog. I call it the Psalms. I call it Gethsemane. I call it Jacob wrestling God all night and limping away blessed. You demand clarity, but not everything true is neat.
Show me a counter example. Where is the truth at contradicts itself. Were is the precept that cannot be understood?
Go ahead, show me just one!
You said I left the conversation the moment I was asked to defend my faith. But I didn’t leave—I answered, over and over. You just didn’t like that my answers didn’t look like your answers. That’s not evasion. That’s difference. That’s tension. That’s a thing called humanity.
It was a figure of speech, not a commentary on how many seconds had transpired between you starting a conversation and leaving it. As soon as you detected that the conversation wasn't going in the direction you liked, you bail out. You lasted here the span of one quite short thread!
I’m not against reason. God gave us minds and truth matters. But when reason becomes a cage and theology a cudgel, we stop proclaiming good news and start managing a fortress.
No we don't!
God is Reason! There is no such thing as irrational truth! There is no such thing as immoral truth. Truth is not, nor can it be, antithetical to God or godliness! It is godliness!
And I’m not interested in living in that fortress.
You're not interested in limiting your mind to the truth.
That isn't what you intended to say. It is what you said.
Christ didn’t die to make us better debaters.
That isn't the point. This is a tactic known as moving the goal post. I don't care whether you're that great at defending what you believe. What I care about is whether or not you are willing to reject the irrational as false and whether you allegiance is to what you want to believe vs. what is actually truth.
He died to set the captives free. And I’ve seen too many of those captives walk out of church doors with their souls torn apart because they couldn’t live up to someone else’s doctrinal grid.
Well, the vast majority of "doctrine grids" that exist in any church you've ever darkened the door of are almost certainly irrational and couldn't possibly be lived up to no matter what anyone tried to do or how much effort they put into it.
This will be my last word—not just because the thread is spent, but because the Spirit in me says enough.
The spirit (small s) within you, is your own emotional state of mind running from the idea that something you believe might not make any sense.
I won’t be drawn back in. Not out of fear. Not out of weakness. But because I know when the conversation has stopped bearing fruit.
There was never any fruit possible. Your mind is turn off.
You say I’m in danger? I say I’m redeemed. You say I’m irrational? I say I’ve met God in the place where reason fails.
You met God where God fails?!
You literally do not know what you're even talking about.
I ask you again, how would you ever be able to tell a Branch Davidian that they were (are) wrong?
The point there is that you can't! You might as well just go believe whatever random thing you desire to believe.
You say I’m avoiding scrutiny?
You very obviously are! You are here stating in no uncertain terms that faith isn't to be scrutinized!
I say I’ve stood under the weight of suffering you couldn’t calculate with a spreadsheet and found Christ still holding me.
Yeah?! You think you've got David Koresh beat in terms suffering?
How many Catholics have been murdered for their faith?
How many Calvinists have been murdered for theirs?
Both cannot be right, Ty!
Your suffering is NOT a test for truth!
“The Lord is near to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit” (Psalm 34:18). That’s the theology that saved me. That’s the gospel I live by.
You're not making a theological argument; you’re closing the door on one. It’s essentially saying,
“This verse resonates with me emotionally, therefore my theology is sound.”
But Scripture isn’t a mood ring, Ty! It’s truth. And truth is not validated by personal experience alone. The verse itself is beautiful and true, but it’s not a license to reject critical thinking, logic, or a comprehensive and self-consistent theology.
You're really just replacing theology with autobiography, as if the test of truth is "what helped me cope", rather than "what God has actually revealed."
Sure, God is near to the brokenhearted, but that doesn’t mean theology becomes a choose-your-own-adventure. Of course, God does save the crushed in spirit, but He also commands us to love Him with all our mind, not just our emotions (Luke 10:27). The gospel is not validated by how it makes us feel. It's validated by the reality of Christ’s death and resurrection, by reason, by history, and by the integrity (i.e. self-consistency) of God’s nature.