Aristotle Smith wrote:KevinSim,
Honestly, it is probably best if you just stay where you are.
Aristotle, are you saying that there is no compelling reason for a Latter-day Saint to think that God wants her/him in Biblical Christianity?
Aristotle Smith wrote:KevinSim,
Honestly, it is probably best if you just stay where you are.
KevinSim wrote:Aristotle, are you saying that there is no compelling reason for a Latter-day Saint to think that God wants her/him in Biblical Christianity?
Aristotle Smith wrote:KevinSim wrote:Aristotle, are you saying that there is no compelling reason for a Latter-day Saint to think that God wants her/him in Biblical Christianity?
...
But I'm afraid there is no a priori way to decide where God wants you without looking into where you think he might want you.
And when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost.
KevinSim wrote:Are you saying that I should keep more of an open mind regarding Islam? Are you saying that to really know the faith that God wants me to be in I should read the Quran and see if it actually teaches that Allah is that powerful and yet lets some souls suffer endlessly?
This is, of course, more or less a trick question, since as I understand it Biblical Christianity also teaches that its deity has this power and yet its deity also lets some souls suffer unbearable agony from the point at which they die on and on forever every single moment of eternity. Do you understand Christianity differently, Stormy Waters? Does a thorough reading of some version of the Bible lead you to believe that God either doesn't have the power to cause souls to cease to exist, or that God won't let some souls suffer unbearable agony endlessly?
huckelberry wrote:You of cours are not the first person to have noticed the problem of suffering in hell. In fact people have thought about it over many centuries. I for one do not find your version of Biblical hell in the Bible and do not believe it. I realize that the interpretation you reference has a sizeable place in history.
huckelberry wrote:The fact that Biblical Christianity has different ideas in the understanding of differnt people is a drawback in some peoples view. To my view having variations is a good thing.
KevinSim wrote:But tell me, if there really is no such Hell, then what is the fate of Judas Iscariot, that Jesus in Matthew 26:24 says is so horrible that "it had been good for that man if he had not been born"? He said something similar in Mark 14. If the fate of Judas is not Hell, then what is the eternal fate of Judas?
Aristotle Smith wrote:Not at all. I think there are plenty of compelling reasons for a Latter-day saint to switch to orthodox Christianity. You don't seem all that interested in those reasons because you seem to show very little interest in finding out about it.
Aristotle Smith wrote:If you have specific questions about aspects of orthodox Christianity or the Bible, I would be happy to answer them.
Aristotle Smith wrote:I think deciding God wants you in a different place is a two part process. First, figuring out that where you are at right now is not the right place. Second, figuring out the new place to be.
Chap wrote:The prayer apparently takes precedence over everything else, and KevinSim is not even going to think of reading anything you recommend until, as he sees it, God authorizes him to.
KevinSim wrote:But tell me, if there really is no such Hell, then what is the fate of Judas Iscariot, that Jesus in Matthew 26:24 says is so horrible that "it had been good for that man if he had not been born"? He said something similar in Mark 14. If the fate of Judas is not Hell, then what is the eternal fate of Judas?
Huckelberry, were you planning on responding to this?