Aizle wrote:
Then frankly Bery, you need to explain yourself better.
You admit to Christianity changing over time. And throughout all your posts you comment on how there is a singular truth and that the changes in society are due to this disease of not letting God rule.
When I bring up Lutheranism, you immediately agree that it's a change, and then say that you need to look at the why of the changes to find the disease. Indicating that Lutheranism is a symptom.
Explain to me then, how Luther nailing up a list of things that he felt the church was wrong on is a symptop of some un-named, un-defined disease.
You say it's easy, and that we're making this hard and don't need to, but yet you can't even seem to be able to articulate a coherant message on what exactly this disease is.
The moral law of God existed for as long as God has existed. It was by that law that God threw Adam and Eve out of the garden. It was by that law that God condemned Cain for killing Abel. So prior to Judaism, man has been subject to that law. And man rebelled and still rebels.
Along came Judaism, and God used Moses to set down His moral law. But Judaism changed over the years to the point that when Jesus came He condemned the Jews for their practices, which on the outside looked so righteous but inside was corrupt and rotten. It served to prove that by the deeds of the law we are all guilty before God, because we all break His moral law.
Christ died and rose again to redeem us, and out of that act rose another religion, that changed over the centuries; Judaism did, and so has Christianity. The existance of denominations is a terrible condemnation of Christianity; Christ did not divide us so. But over time, people started deciding to do things their way, instead of God's way. Leaders of "this" church wanted to do "this", people could not agree, and splits occur. Sometimes the church leaders were at fault. Sometimes the people who decided to leave were at fault. But it still comes back to the same disease.
Aizle, people do not want to subject themselves to God's moral law. That is the disease that causes all the symptoms we see around us. Even Christians are guilty of this (actual Christians, not only the CINO's) at times. If that were not true, we would not see the divisions in the church that we see. A phrase you see in the OT occasionally is "And everyone did what was right in his own eyes" (paraphrased)and even today in Christianity you see that attitude: "We live under grace and the law no longer applies to us" is nothing more than a variant of "And everyone did what was right in his own eyes."
That's the disease. Non-believers will not yield to the moral law of God, and nowadays even Christians will not do so if the moral law conflicts with what they want.
But you see so many people who look at the symptoms and call it the disease, as I've said. It makes me think of people looking at a man with pneumonia and calling his fever the disease. Then they want to treat the fever, and debate the merits of aspirin or ibuprofen, and think that they're making the patient better. What they accomplish is to reduce his fever, temporarily making him more comfortable, but do nothing for the disease that may be killing him. The patient needs medicine for his fever, sure. But he also needs antibiotics to cure the infection, and I see people on this board who don't even consider that he needs antibiotics.
My stance on abortion is always the same; we as a nation shed innocent blood and God will take us to task for it. When He went to Cain, He told Cain: "What have you done? The voice of your brother's blood cries out to Me from the ground." I tell you all, the voice of the blood of those innocent abortion victims cries out to God, and He hears.
So debate the merits of aspirin or ibuprofen if you must, but you're not curing anything.