New Heart:
Here is another example of a money grabber with no eternal benefit. Jesus did not sanction stuff like this, he shunned it. Why do you think he gave the Pharisees and Sadduccees such a hard time. They kept on trusting in traditions made by men instead of trusting in Yahveh. Why do you think he threw the money changers etc out of the temple. Why did He keep on insisting that the Father knows all and had ordained all, and told them to stop it. He went further than what was given in the Old Testament Law, (10 Commandments) and explained how they were to be applied and showed that there is no way that anyone except Him could fulfill them. He was and is the only who was sinless and proved it.
Absolutely. Alot of things i this world focus on incomplete aspects of God, and it is damaging.
The way I see it is the incomplete can be on either side. It is very popular to talk about how God is love, He is merciful, He is generous, etc. To talk about God’s love and not His wrath, His mercy and not His justice, His generousity and not His punishment–this is to completely disregard a significant part of God’s nature, and for many it turns into an entitlement to get what they want and do what they want without consequence or accountability. After all, a loving God would never send anyone to Hell, would he?
The flip side is far less popular, but still used. To talk about God’s wrath, justice, and punishment (fire, brimstone, and Hell) without talking about His love, mercy, and generousity (for He gave His only Son to die for our sins) can make people see God as a meanie, a tyrant–they may fear Him and behave out of that fear, but they may not see God as lovable and certainly won’t repent and be grateful for His mercy.
People truly need to a more complete picture of God. They need to know they are sinners, and the horrible consequences of that sin. But they also need to know that the very God who would punish them loved them enough to send His Son to redeem us–
if we
repent, and* turn from that sin. *
This is what so moved me about the sermon. First, sin and its consequences (repenting and behavior does matter). Second, salvation and its rewards (its a wonderful gift, not of this world, but of eternity for which we should be grateful). To preach one without the other is a backslider waiting to happen–because it is tough to obey a God who you think is only love, and it is tough to love a God that you think is only punishment.
Long, but I believe this is very important.
Blessings to all.

I hope everyone had a merry christmas.