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protestantinca
Guest
Agree!I don’t think you have a point. The reason why, as you move up the chain, this approach becomes less prevalent is because more advanced species are more capable of killing other species and defending themselves. This doesn’t apply to the people situation, especially considering that the more “sophisticated” humans tend to look unfavorably upon genocide. Besides, labeling pursuit of large families as “unsophisticated” does not change the demographics or the outcome. Even those unsophisticated swarms of insects have been known to take out entire human populations by the destruction of their crops.
Easy. A key (I would even say “the key”) teaching of Christianity is that Jesus’ message was the absolute final revelation. God had sent prophets earlier to no avail so He send himself in human form to let humankind know that indeed, He knows what’s like to be a human, including suffering the most humiliating death possible. In that regard, not only the Bible narrative is a preparation of His arrival, but the New Testament has to be understood as a collection of writings about what Jesus said and did.Good Morning Protestantinca: Please explain that position if you would.
All the best,
Gary
With that in mind, it is one thing to reaffirm teachings that Jesus himself, as reported by the books in the New Testament, explicitly approved (such as traditional Jewish morality as included in the 10 commandments) quite another to “make up” stuff to justify the Inquisition or slavery. Nowhere in the New Testament I see Jesus condoning the Inquisition (the notion that people who disagree with Him need to be excommunicated and burned alive) or slavery. What Lutherans call “the two kingdom doctrine” is not an approval of any form of oppressive government, rather, a reminder that the spiritual kingdom is bigger than the things we see in this world.
So, people who ignore Jesus teachings do it at their own peril. If you think about it, Europe is a perfect example of every single form of refusal of the gospel: from the Crusades, to the Inquisition, to totalitarian regimes to now the adoption of so called “60s morality”. In each case there was a backlash. The backlash of the Inquisition was the Protestant Reformation. The backlash of some Lutherans in Germany to take the two kingdom theory to the extreme was Nazi Germany. The backlash of the 60s morality is being, as we speak, the demographic implosion of Europe.
100 years from now there will be people in what we currently call “Europe”, it just won’t be the same type of civilization because current Europeans have been taking themselves out of the demographic equation for several decades now. At this point the process is quite irreversible even if Europeans set themselves to have 5 children per family (something that will not happen because their soul is right now very polluted with the sin of pride).