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djrakowski
Guest
You’re still insisting that it is Jesus doing the leaving, when nothing could be farther from the truth. What he promises, he keeps, but we have to keep up our end of the bargain, too. When you sin, you’re turning your back on God - not the other way around.But if Jesus KNOWS we are sinners and STILL promises never to leave us then I truly believe he wouldn’t leave us even in a state of sin. However, if we are living for Him, we never feel good about our sin. If he is the center of our life, we would never say we weren’t responsible, only “Isn’t it wonderful that Christ loves us so much he never leaves us, sinners though we are? Thank you Jesus!”
Here’s a horrible analogy (bear with me, I’m a-tryin’!): If you choose to disobey the rules of your company, having adequate knowledge of them, and then are fired, has the company left you, or have you left the company?
When I sin, I’m remorseful. I know that I’ve placed a barrier between myself and God, and I want to do something to make that relationship right again. But, I insist, I was the one who chose to leave God by disobeying him and refusing him lordship over the area of my life in which I’ve sinned.
What do you make of 1 Thessalonians 5:19 - “Do not quench the Spirit.” If we can’t walk out of relationship with God, then why would we have to worry that something we’ve done could ‘quench the spirit?’