The "you believe in a corrupt Jesus because you believe He drank" is a logical fallacy. People who believe the simple accounts given by the KJV and other versions simply believe that Jesus interacted with people who drank wine. Those people fully believe in the sinlessness of Christ. You're appproaching it from your perspective--the a priori that drinking wine is evil--and then you infer that we somehow "give Jesus a pass" on this one.
Let's try another, less hot-button issue. Let's take Commandment #11..."Thou shalt not run in church." And let's throw Jesus in the mix. Here we go...
God knows right from wrong. Poor, mistaken, or incomplete understanding about how Christ handled a singular issue does not mean we worship "a different Jesus."
HBSMN...
First, this shows and apallingly bad leap of logic. But then it shows a more sinister edge IMO. Get your definitions straight...having a mistaken point of view (mistaken in your eyes) is not the same as lying.
And you just questioned the salvation of a bunch of posters (in red). Bad move. You redefine "lie," make it mean something it doesn't, decide that people who disagree with you on a point of theology are "liars," and pull out your favorite verse that lists the "hellbound sins." It bothers me for two reasons: one, because you are doing the very thing that you are incensed about others supposedly doing:
You're mad that other folks are "redefining sin" to include drinking...they're "changing the rules to suit them" according to you. Yet...you redefine the word "lie" to mean "to speak of a theological point I disagree with."
N
NE here believes that the Son of God ever, EVER sinned. Put your "liar" labels away. And let's lay off the backhanded questioning of others' salvation. I don't do it. I'm sure you lie awake at night and try to figure out ways to be like me. :laugh: Here's yer chance.
Let's try another, less hot-button issue. Let's take Commandment #11..."Thou shalt not run in church." And let's throw Jesus in the mix. Here we go...
- Is it sinful to run in church?
- Did Jesus do it when He was little? If so, we must draw one of two conlcusions:
- It ain't sinful, because He doesn't sin.
- Because we know it to be a sin, He thus committed a sin, and we have a "different Jesus."
God knows right from wrong. Poor, mistaken, or incomplete understanding about how Christ handled a singular issue does not mean we worship "a different Jesus."
HBSMN said:It very well is a Salvation issue, mc.
If one utters a lie and lives a lie, can it truly be said that one is saved? Since the Word of God declares that those who lie will not enter into the Kingdom?
I believe it is a Salvation issue. Are they believing in a Christ that is sinless? or one that has sin?
HBSMN...
First, this shows and apallingly bad leap of logic. But then it shows a more sinister edge IMO. Get your definitions straight...having a mistaken point of view (mistaken in your eyes) is not the same as lying.
And you just questioned the salvation of a bunch of posters (in red). Bad move. You redefine "lie," make it mean something it doesn't, decide that people who disagree with you on a point of theology are "liars," and pull out your favorite verse that lists the "hellbound sins." It bothers me for two reasons: one, because you are doing the very thing that you are incensed about others supposedly doing:
You're mad that other folks are "redefining sin" to include drinking...they're "changing the rules to suit them" according to you. Yet...you redefine the word "lie" to mean "to speak of a theological point I disagree with."
N
NE here believes that the Son of God ever, EVER sinned. Put your "liar" labels away. And let's lay off the backhanded questioning of others' salvation. I don't do it. I'm sure you lie awake at night and try to figure out ways to be like me. :laugh: Here's yer chance.