Results 1 - 3 of 3
|
|
|||||
Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | Paul our pattern to follow, not Jesus? | 2 Tim 3:16 | Bereaniam | 169598 | ||
lionheart, You are getting closer...because everything you just posted , I put in my first post. I just wanted to know if you believe the Gentiles (post resurrection of Jesus) had enough scriptures from Paul's epistles to get saved and live a fulfilled Christian life. I am sure the early Christian Gentiles did not have access to ALL of the scriptures as we do today. Would you live your Christian life differently if you only read Romans - Hebrews? Most Christians today comingle the scriptures and try to live under the old covenant and the new covenant. In Him and He in me |
||||||
2 | Paul our pattern to follow, not Jesus? | 2 Tim 3:16 | kalos | 169618 | ||
You write: "Most Christians today comingle the scriptures and try to live under the old covenant and the new covenant." This is a generalization. How do you know that most Christians today are comingling the Scriptures, etc.? How did you come to that conclusion? Grace to you, Kalos |
||||||
3 | Paul our pattern to follow, not Jesus? | 2 Tim 3:16 | Hank | 169620 | ||
Kalos, good point about generalizations. I tend to wrinkle my nose and cringe just a bit whenever I encounter the lead-in that goes something like, "Most ______ (Christians, Americans, churches, Baptists, fat people, farmers, monkeys) today do (or believe) thus and so." Variations of the generalization theme are 'everybody knows' ... or, 'statistics prove' ... or, (and this is bogus 'proof' at its sloppy worst) 'they say' ... or, 'it's perfectly obvious that' ... or, 'anybody with good sense can see (so and so) -- the list goes on. But it all boils down to the incontrovertibly basic fact that what is really being said is, "This is merely my opinion based on nothing more substantial than my opinion." The 'they' in 'they say' usually don't really exist, but even if they do, we have no reason to believe that what 'they' say can be trusted. ..... It reminds me of an O Henry story called "Man About Town." The young man in the story became curious about the meaning of 'man about town' and set out to find one. He travelled all around Manhattan, frequenting all the popular and fashionable restaurants and night spots, searching for the elusive 'man about town.' While crossing a busy street during one of his searches, he was struck and killed by a passing vehicle. The newspaper account of the fatal accident led off with the words, "A young man about town was killed last evening while crossing the street..." .... So the man in search of 'the man about town' was himself known as 'the man about town.' And so it is with 'they say' -- the person who says 'they say' is himself the 'they' in most cases. --Hank | ||||||