Kolek planning to go pro
Epehsians 6:5. And other passages on beating slaves.. come on man
You’re entirely missing point of St Paul’s message. It’s essence is that of obedience and we all serve one master, who doesn’t hold anyone above the other. It is not about beating slaves, that is such a twisted interpretation and flat wrong. I’m sure you have nothing from God’s word or from Jeaus’s ministry on earth either as I asked.
In what bible is that?!? Seriously
all I need to do is quote. You cherry pick the parts you like and ignore the rest. I'm sure you dont want execute People who cheat on their spouse? Also you can't argue slavery. It I's clearly recognized in the bible. You can choose to ignore those.parts but that's my whole point. Its non sense
I'm honestly not attempting to troll. You connected being Christian with seeing transgender as being a "dysfunctional path." I was curious where that came from as I personally don't know of any scripture that says that being transgender was a "behavior that Jesus did not accept."I think gender identity and sexual orientation are often unfairly lumped together. While I don't agree, I at least "get" why some Christians believe homosexuality is against their faith. There is scripture you can point to. Personally, I think that scripture is often taken out of context and is later clarified by Jesus' message of love, but that's a whole other discussion. I don't think there is any scripture that labels being transgender as a sin, I certainly could be wrong though.
Jesus unquestionably put down the angry mob who wanted to stone to death the woman caught in the act of adultry. And put them down with one of His most profound responses that simply disarmed the mob
Unquestionably?
And thouest says the LORD, "take thy chemicals and other man-made cocktails, and turneth yorth cockandballs into a hairy vagina." Lasvegasans, 2:15-16.
Personally, I think that scripture is often taken out of context and is later clarified by Jesus' message of love
Jesus unquestionably put down the angry mob who wanted to stone to death the woman caught in the act of adultry. And put them down with one of His most profound responses that simply disarmed the mob completely.
Numerous places in the Old Testament say adulterers must die. Jesus later said numerous times that the Old Testament was divinely inspired, the irrefutable "Word of God." He referred to Old Testament scripture as "the commandment of God."So I'm not sure what you say is "unquestioned," as it seems to be questioned (or at least contradicted) by Jesus himself.However, yes, most biblical scholars I've read believe exactly as TAMU says and that you agree with: "scripture is often taken out of context and is later clarified by Jesus' message of love." The Jesus that I learned about at Marquette and elsewhere would have condemned those who hate homosexuals, transgender people, immigrants, poor people, sick people, those of different religions, even "enemies."
Is it still OK to hate Notre Dame?
you must have had the old traditional bible. the newer versions at least are open to the brazilians or landing strips? must be different bibles from different persuasions
Yes. How is that not the correct term for how it played out?
There were no recording devices, shorthand, printing presses etc at that time. The bible appears to be at least a translation of a translation of a translation. Writers were generally slaves with unknown literacy. Even the new Testament was written long after the death of Jesus. Finally it was all reviewed and redacted by the Council of Trent long after it was written. All the parts that were not in accord with dogma as understood at that time, and some parts disappeared forever -- like the gospel of Thomas, the gospel of Judas, etc. Catholic Religion has never claimed to be based exclusively on the Bible.
Anyone watching the documentary right now?? It’s really good