B-A-C
Loyal
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2008
- Messages
- 12,067
I have often wondered about the past. In medieval times the "Christian church" (i.e. the Roman Catholic church) sent several crusades to the middle east
to "convert" non-Christians to Christianity. Most of the time this was something like "change your theology or die".
Yet I have often wondered if this is the way Jesus would have evangelized?
Some of the muslim world is doing the same thing. They are killing people who refuse to convert to Islam.
I have always believed I could hold a gun to your head and make you say anything I wanted to make you say. But even if you do say it...
would you believe it in your heart?
Does God want people who say they believe in Jesus... but yet in their heart they really don't?
For that matter, does God really want people that have to be forced to "convert" to believing in Jesus or else..?
I can't help but believe God wants those who choose to follow him on their own. Not because they were forced.
I could take this thought a little further, and talk about one of the things that separates a large protestant denomination from most of the others.
It seems that some believe God forces some people to become Christians and there is nothing they can do about it.
These same people believe that God forces other people not to become Christians and there is nothing they can do about it.
There really is no choice in this theology. Those who are saved are only that way because God forced them to be that way.
If you follow this thought a little further... everything that happens (even evil, sin, murder, rape, etc...) only happens because God makes it happen.
Therefore whether you believe in God/Jesus or not, if you sin.. it is ultimately God's fault because he made you sin.
This is similar to once saved always saved and predestination, but slightly different. Usually they go hand in hand.
The thought here is... once the Holy Spirit dwells in me he never leaves. I am as saved as I'm ever going to be. It doesn't matter
how much I sin, (after all God is the one making me sin, and in fact you may believe you are saved for a few years... but ultimately if you do too many
bad sins, well that means you were never saved in the first place (and of course even God forced this to happen).
It is almost as if these people believe once you are saved.. you still have no freedom of choice.. in fact you become even more of a robot.
To them having Jesus in your heart and the Holy Spirit dwelling in you means they can never leave and you have no choice in the matter.
Yet I see literally dozens of scriptures that say otherwise.
One of the things I see in this theology is something like.. well it doesn't matter if I keep on sinning, because Jesus already paid for all my sins.
I am reminded of a casino study I read once. It stated that if they make people by tokens instead of actually placing coins in the slot machines they tend to spend a lot more
because they don't actually see the actually money.. only the tokens that represent it.
Again what I see in scripture is that sin paid on a "as required" basis. Also I see that confessed sin is forgiven, but I do not see the same promise for un-confessed sin.
For those who believe that Jesus forces our actions to always be righteous and the Holy Spirit refuses to let us slide or fail, I wonder what scriptures there are to support this?
I notice that when Jesus sent the disciples out into the world, he didn't tell them to keep debating or force them to be saved. He simply said if they don't receive you
wipe the dust off your feet and move on.
to "convert" non-Christians to Christianity. Most of the time this was something like "change your theology or die".
Yet I have often wondered if this is the way Jesus would have evangelized?
Some of the muslim world is doing the same thing. They are killing people who refuse to convert to Islam.
I have always believed I could hold a gun to your head and make you say anything I wanted to make you say. But even if you do say it...
would you believe it in your heart?
Does God want people who say they believe in Jesus... but yet in their heart they really don't?
For that matter, does God really want people that have to be forced to "convert" to believing in Jesus or else..?
I can't help but believe God wants those who choose to follow him on their own. Not because they were forced.
I could take this thought a little further, and talk about one of the things that separates a large protestant denomination from most of the others.
It seems that some believe God forces some people to become Christians and there is nothing they can do about it.
These same people believe that God forces other people not to become Christians and there is nothing they can do about it.
There really is no choice in this theology. Those who are saved are only that way because God forced them to be that way.
If you follow this thought a little further... everything that happens (even evil, sin, murder, rape, etc...) only happens because God makes it happen.
Therefore whether you believe in God/Jesus or not, if you sin.. it is ultimately God's fault because he made you sin.
This is similar to once saved always saved and predestination, but slightly different. Usually they go hand in hand.
The thought here is... once the Holy Spirit dwells in me he never leaves. I am as saved as I'm ever going to be. It doesn't matter
how much I sin, (after all God is the one making me sin, and in fact you may believe you are saved for a few years... but ultimately if you do too many
bad sins, well that means you were never saved in the first place (and of course even God forced this to happen).
It is almost as if these people believe once you are saved.. you still have no freedom of choice.. in fact you become even more of a robot.
To them having Jesus in your heart and the Holy Spirit dwelling in you means they can never leave and you have no choice in the matter.
Yet I see literally dozens of scriptures that say otherwise.
One of the things I see in this theology is something like.. well it doesn't matter if I keep on sinning, because Jesus already paid for all my sins.
I am reminded of a casino study I read once. It stated that if they make people by tokens instead of actually placing coins in the slot machines they tend to spend a lot more
because they don't actually see the actually money.. only the tokens that represent it.
Again what I see in scripture is that sin paid on a "as required" basis. Also I see that confessed sin is forgiven, but I do not see the same promise for un-confessed sin.
For those who believe that Jesus forces our actions to always be righteous and the Holy Spirit refuses to let us slide or fail, I wonder what scriptures there are to support this?
I notice that when Jesus sent the disciples out into the world, he didn't tell them to keep debating or force them to be saved. He simply said if they don't receive you
wipe the dust off your feet and move on.