Z
ZenFred
Guest
Over the several years I’ve been off and on this forum, I’ve had shifting and very different viewpoints with plenty of ping ponging back and forth between Christianity, Buddhism and Judaism. I have always found that this forum has been respectful, well versed in scripture, and articulate. I have also been impressed and greatful for the many people who have showed genuine concern for me as a person and as a seeker, not just a theologian opponent. Thank you very much!
In that spirit, I thought I’d share how as my spiritual practice has deepened and taken several sharp turns that I’ve come to realize first of all it’s not about me (it’s about God) and it’s even less about what I happen to think about God.
On the simplest, most obvious but overlooked level, God isn’t changed by my beliefs. If God exists as a trinity He doesn’t stop being so because I made a counter argument. Jesus doesn’t stop being the incarnate God because I stop believing. It’s this way for all my beliefs about God.
I’m also firmly convinced that God alone is the source of salvation. We are not saved by our beliefs nor our religious affiliation nor gaining the approval of any human authority (religious or otherwise). If Jesus Christ is God and we are saved by Christ, then we are still saved by God. I know God thru prayer and have deep faith in his redeeming me at the time of my death. Perhaps this is because I have faith, perhaps because I was baptised as an infant and had a born again expierence later in my teens, perhaps because I’ve never renouced Christ. Or perhaps it is solely because I am a child of God. I don’t know, but I have the assurance of salvation thru God’s mercy and love.
God gives me zero authority to judge the beliefs and paths of others. I am supposed to be discerning yes but it’s not my salvation to give, it’s Gods. So let’s say you are saved by God and are His beloved child on whom He shows favor. My disagreeing with you counts for nothing.
Finnaly, God leads me thru prayer. He calls me first to Him and then to follow His commandments. He doesn’t give me a theology syllable.
I indulge myself too much in theological speculation. All I should do is work a tentative rough framework that makes sense of what I encounter in prayer. So far, I’m continuing to fall flat in that regard, but I do feel I’m getting closer with each attempt.
-Fred
In that spirit, I thought I’d share how as my spiritual practice has deepened and taken several sharp turns that I’ve come to realize first of all it’s not about me (it’s about God) and it’s even less about what I happen to think about God.
On the simplest, most obvious but overlooked level, God isn’t changed by my beliefs. If God exists as a trinity He doesn’t stop being so because I made a counter argument. Jesus doesn’t stop being the incarnate God because I stop believing. It’s this way for all my beliefs about God.
I’m also firmly convinced that God alone is the source of salvation. We are not saved by our beliefs nor our religious affiliation nor gaining the approval of any human authority (religious or otherwise). If Jesus Christ is God and we are saved by Christ, then we are still saved by God. I know God thru prayer and have deep faith in his redeeming me at the time of my death. Perhaps this is because I have faith, perhaps because I was baptised as an infant and had a born again expierence later in my teens, perhaps because I’ve never renouced Christ. Or perhaps it is solely because I am a child of God. I don’t know, but I have the assurance of salvation thru God’s mercy and love.
God gives me zero authority to judge the beliefs and paths of others. I am supposed to be discerning yes but it’s not my salvation to give, it’s Gods. So let’s say you are saved by God and are His beloved child on whom He shows favor. My disagreeing with you counts for nothing.
Finnaly, God leads me thru prayer. He calls me first to Him and then to follow His commandments. He doesn’t give me a theology syllable.
I indulge myself too much in theological speculation. All I should do is work a tentative rough framework that makes sense of what I encounter in prayer. So far, I’m continuing to fall flat in that regard, but I do feel I’m getting closer with each attempt.
-Fred