J
jinminn
Guest
I believe I may have. Both seem to be true. There is no way to fathom the consistency of:I agree with you here.
I initially thought you meant changing as “changing His ways from the way of the OT comparing to the NT”
- OT (several occasions):
— Kill every one of them, man, woman, beast, and child, everything that breaths, by the edge of the sword. Leave none alive.
— Take from your flock a such-and-such, cut it in half, and offer it up as a pleasing aroma to me - NT: Turn the other cheek, do good to those who persecute you, etc.
- You need to look at the OT through the lens of Christ. No idea what that means
- God is constant but we change and therefore it appears that he changed.
Again, though, this ‘higher meaning’ cannot hold at the expense of the thousands killed in violence when he could easily have struck them dead like Ananias and Sapphira in Acts (they don’t contribute their whole ownings to the early community and they just drop dead). God could have just ‘struck down’ anyone… it is a whole other thing to force your own people to use violence to do it. Not only is it contrary to other commands of God, but surely it’s not pleasant for the people – look at what war does today: even if a side ‘wins’ they come home with emotional trauma that may never leave, lost limbs, maimed bodies, and often absolutely trashed relationships with spouses because they’ve changed or the time away created near-irreparable emotional distance.
Not only did god command killing when he could have just ‘removed their spirits’, but he did it in the worst possible way for both sides.
Makes more sense. No worries.I must have misunderstood your question - English is my 3rd language. Still learning.
Evidence…
Have you tried reading the Bible again? Maybe a couple of more times?
Maybe your initial approach in being skeptical about physical things/proof caused you to view it differently from what it really is and actually teaches.
- First, ‘what it actually teaches’ varies tremendously. That’s what we’ve been talking about. More so, we have conflicting messages about the OT law in general:
— Jesus gives the greatest commandment and says ‘in this are the law and prophets fulfilled’
— Jesus also says, ‘do not think I have come to abolish the law. I tell you that not one iota shall pass away’
— Paul says that one is not justified by the law but by faith.
- Second, you perhaps don’t know my history. I have been involved with a Catholic charismatic movement for about 7 years, had a ‘personal relationship with Jesus’ since about 2003, worked in campus ministry during college, didn’t go into engineering for a year after I graduated in order to work for the same ministry group, was married in the Chuch, strove to meditate through the Bible every morning, sought it’s deeper meanings, reflected on them through the day, and tried to pray rather constantly to Jesus throughout my day to direct and guide me.
— In other words, I have known what you suggest. Some doubts about actual facts rather than my experience was what caused me to begin questioning.