Seems I answered you!So, it appears to me that the revmwc is madly searching
the Internet trying to discover what the bold actually means!
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Seems I answered you!So, it appears to me that the revmwc is madly searching
the Internet trying to discover what the bold actually means!
Nope!Responding to 1 John 4:1-3 in post 93 ...
Everyone who has a true profession of faith, is of God that is they are saved.
Everyone who does not truly confess Christ is not of God, but is against Christ.
Many make a false confession they are arenas those who say Lord l did this
or that in your name and He says depart from me I NEVER KNEW you.
They had never been saved and yet confessed Him.
John spoke in no code, he spoke clearlyNope!
John is speaking in Christianese ...
not Chinese, but Christian code language,
which I'm told was a common practice back in the day.
(The fish symbol is also used by some today as such.)
[Disrespectful reference edited] is simply giving the test of being a true believer:
God has come in the flesh, i.e. was born on the earth.
I would suggest that OT Scripture has nothing to do with the issue!Where I disagree with TC is that I think the arrival of that revelation which makes such gifts unnecessary is not necessarily the canon of Scripture (but it is revelation).
Let's try this....
Read Ezekiel 36. Read Zechariah 8. Read Hosea 2.
Read of John the Baptist.
Then think this through one more time.
Have you been to Jerusalem to await the Holy Spirit? Oh....that's right, the purpose for Jesus' command that His disciples wait in Jerusalem has been fulfilled. Go figure.To my knowledge, nothing in the NT is obsolete for us today,
not even things like instructions to slaves and their masters!
You just might want to consider this.
The New Testament is not a covenant, and you cannot understand the New Testament divorced from the Old.I would suggest that OT Scripture has nothing to do with the issue!
Not even the OT prophets were involved in
the 9 spiritual power gifts of 1 Cor 12 ...
no surprise here, 'cause the NT is a FAR superior covenant.
Huh? Aren't "testament" and "covenant" synonyms?The New Testament is not a covenant
Yep. They are inextricably linked.(Y)ou cannot understand the New Testament divorced from the Old.
I believe the book of Hebrews states that Christ brought a better covenant.Huh? Aren't "testament" and "covenant" synonyms?
Ok.....I here's a bit of my "heresy" showing...Huh? Aren't "testament" and "covenant" synonyms?
I also believe the Covenant of Grace is an everlasting covenant. And that the gospel message is not the New Covenant except in its outward expression. And, according to Hebrews, the New Covenant was made with the same people the Old Covenant was made: Israel.Ok.....I here's a bit of my "heresy" showing......but...no. I believe that the old and new covenants are both within the Abrahamic Covenant (God's covenant with Abraham is overarching). I also believe that the gospel message was not that there will be a new covenant, but that the new covenant of which the Old Testament spoke has arrived. The New Testament gives testimony of this new age, but it is not the covenant itself.
error
"The Bible, Volume 2" just didn't sound right Tongue. (I do remember that "testament" means "covenant", but also that New Testament in terms of Matthew to Revelation isn't the New Testament itself...but that's how we use the term). My experience is that most people use "New Testament" to refer to post-Resurrection Scripture.I also believe the Covenant of Grace is an everlasting covenant. And that the gospel message is not the New Covenant except in its outward expression. And, according to Hebrews, the New Covenant was made with the same people the Old Covenant was made: Israel.
However, that is not the point. My point is that "testament" and "covenant" are the same thing. The words are synonyms. The New Testament is just another way of saying The New Covenant.
To say "the New Testament is not the New Covenant" is to say the New Covenant is not the New Covenant or the New Testament is not the New Testament.![]()
'Tis hereby retracted & withdrawn, Happy now?No. That is not how the forum works. You made the claim in post #50. Now it is your responsibility to either back up the claim or retract it.
Thanks for the clarification ... I had no idea what was in the OT and NT,The New Testament is not a covenant, and you cannot understand the New Testament divorced from the Old.
Edited for clarification - by "New Testament" I am referring to Matthew to Revelation. By "Old Testament" I am referring to Genesis to Malachi.
Seems thou is lookin' in all the wrong places!
I'll name one: my wife.
On the 3/4 hour drive to church ...
God used to tell her what to say to the congregation of 500.
This message from the Lord to the church was a corporate one
... stuff about the church in general ... this is an example of
being led by the Spirit (ever heard of Romans 8:14?).
Some of you here MIGHT just decide it's time to wake up
and get with God's program (instead of the doctrines of men),
which originally come from Satan ...
"the god/ruler of this world/age" (John 12:31, 2 Cor 4:3).
These refs are off the top of my head, hope they're accurate.
Let me put it this way, Martin.So you don't believe he makes a 'departure from orthodox Christianity'? Then is it not a little childish to say that he does, just because he 'disagree'd one of your posts?
As for negative ratings, I suggested some time ago that they be abolished. Why not do so, and then your problem is solved? If you continue to provide a 'dislike' or 'disagree' button, it's no good being aggrieved if someone presses it.
Jon, we all get posts "liked" and "disliked" and one poster gave me about 150 "Dumb" icons simply because he is emotionally immature and wanted to do something to express his dislike for me, personally.More to my point was that lurking around, engaging posts with dislikes only to whine when called into question for such juvenile behavior is trolling.
Then why make an issue of it? If he was trolling you, didn't you respond to that trolling? Why, if you knew he was just trolling?I know his dislikes was not really anything to do with the post and that he doesn't really disagree.
And therein lies at least part of the problem. You don't know what he didn't like about your post. You just assumed it had something to do with your generic statement regarding the Covenants. He may have been disliking your grammar. Or punctuation. Or word choices. The fact is, you don't know, and your disdain is based on your assumption not on what he actually did.I "attributed" that belief to him because that's what I interpreted his rating to suggest.
He disliked, for whatever reason, your post. He reacted, but he did not interact.But he sought out me, he initiated interaction.
Nobody is pretending anything. He did not engage you in discussion in the forum. He simply "dislike"d your post. You have to stop letting it bother you so much.However sarcastically to highlight his behavior, my post was a reply to his engagement. Let's not pretend otherwise.
Exactly. The buttons are there. We have to get used to getting "likes" and "dislikes" and even "dumbs" now and then.If you continue to provide a 'dislike' or 'disagree' button, it's no good being aggrieved if someone presses it.
The problem is, Jon, is that you make unwarranted assumptions about what others believe. I think, based on what has been posted (and on what has not been posted) all of us recognize where the OC is enumerated and where the NC is enumerated, and make no claim that all of either "testament" is all inclusive in either of those covenants.Do you think that a position that denies the Old and New Covenants as being within God’s singular redemptive plan, within His promise to Abraham , or that Matthew to Revelation gives witness of the new covenant but is not that covenant itself, is orthodox or unorthodox?
Who, in this thread, holds to such a position?Do you think a position that denies Scripture as God’s revelation to man and instead holds it as God’s actual legal agreement with mankind is orthodox or unorthodox?
Actually, Jon, both of those statement describe your assumption of IT's belief.Both of those statements describe Internet Theologian’s stance on my posts.
It certainly could, and even should, be considered heterodox, but who, in this thread, believes such a thing? Not your assumption, but their unequivocal statement.I do consider that to be unorthodox (which is at topic we can discuss).
It is not wrong of you to ask him anything you like. But he is not under any obligation to answer you. And, as he had not posted in the thread, he was under no obligation to respond to you in any way. He chose to give a minimal response. A "dislike." Until, and unless, he expands on his "dislike" to include what and why he dislikes something in your post, we really won't know, will we?Is it therefore wrong of me to ask him, and to ask him as if his objections were legitimate, to explain his position?
I don't disagree that my "calling him out" is juvenile. .