Results 1 - 4 of 4
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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | Will suicide condem my soul to hell? | Ex 20:13 | son of god | 208106 | ||
suicide is blasphemy of the Holy Ghost the unpardonable sin. You may reject God the father and the blood of Jesus can redeem you, you may drop the ball with Christ and the Holy Spirit can save you, but after the Holy Ghost there is nothing left. When one commits suicide they have admitted that there is nothing God can do for them. So please dont even think about it. | ||||||
2 | Will suicide condem my soul to hell? | Ex 20:13 | Hank | 208110 | ||
Dear s-o-g :: The scriptural account and description of the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit -- the "Unpardonable Sin" -- is given in Matthew 12:22-37 and Mark 3:22-30. ..... There is not in the scriptural account of this sin even the remotest suggestion that it is suicide or has any connection whatever with suicide. To equate suicide with the unpardonable sin is bad, enormously bad, interpretation of these passages in Matthew and Luke. Try this link: http://www.gotquestions.org/unpardonable-sin.html --Hank | ||||||
3 | Will suicide condem my soul to hell? | Ex 20:13 | son of god | 208118 | ||
Please see my note to Steve.As for the scriptures you pointed out, they all refer to Belzebub also known as the thief, John 10:10 blows your theory out of the water only the spirit of the Devil would make one want to commit suicide. As I have tried to teach others you cant just take bible verses all willy nilly and build a doctrine but you must read them in context. | ||||||
4 | Will suicide condem my soul to hell? | Ex 20:13 | Hank | 208121 | ||
s-o-g :: No one on this Forum is a firmer advocate of context, context, context than I, so lay off your implication that I take Bible verses out of context and serve them up "willy nilly" fashion to prove a theory! You say John 10:10 blows my theory out of the water. It didn't blow anything I said in my post out of the water. I advanced no theory but merely cited the passages in the New Testament that define what is commonly known as the unpardonable sin, and pointed out that these passages are not about suicide. I really have no idea of what you're trying to prove by what you have said in your response. and I frankly wonder whether anyone else does, or even you do. So why don't you take a dose of your own medicine and stop yanking verses out of context in an effort to shore up an untenable preconceived notion that is foreign to any biblical definition or orthodox interpretation of the unpardonable sin. --Hank | ||||||