These excerpts from Chris Millerβs book are π₯π₯π₯π₯π₯π₯π₯
(media.greatawakening.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (66)
sorted by:
Ask the scribes and pharisees. Did their obsession with the scriptures save them? When the truth was right in front of them but it didn't line up with their reading of scripture, where should they have turned? If you make the scriptures the source of all your knowledge and wisdom and miss the point that you should be going directly to God to know truth from error where will that lead you? If someone altered the bible in a critical way before it reached your hands how would you know if not by the spirit of God? The Bible speaks of a living God we have every right and obligation to commune with. When you take a hard look at the people who put the Bible together, if that doesn't tip you off that maybe it's not the end all be all of the truth, you aren't thinking very hard. Read the Bible. Let it center your mind. Then go to the source. If you lack the faith to believe you can commune directly with God, that's not on me. If that's your only link to God for now, hold fast. But just remember, words can be altered. But truth is truth regardless of the medium. And so is error. The Bible points you to the fountain of living waters. It's still up to you to go there and drink.
And you duck the question. And all you have is a baseless distrust of a document you offer as a reliable guide.
We do not know God except through His Word, which is the Bible and Jesus Christ. That's what it says. Faith is not of our own making, nor are we saved by our own seeking. That is also what it says.
Look, if you want to argue with the Bible, that is your burden. But it is not a fit subject for this page. I'm just not interested in your home brew.
I answered your question. The scribes and pharisees held up their scriptures in Jesus' face too. He didn't mind quoting it, but he spoke "as one having authority, and not as the scribes." It means he communed directly with God. Faith comes by hearing the word of God. In other words, it comes by hearing truth. When you read truth in the Bible and it inspires faith, you should act on that faith. The Bible does not have to be inerrant for it to accomplish this. But if you make it your source, then the alterations that have been made to it will lead you astray. And you too may be found to be flapping it at some actual servant of God someday who actually knows what he's talking about because he went to the source, and demanding his stoning because you never became a doer of the word.
The Bible is your God. God is mine. That's your burden.
Jesus was (is) God. Perhaps you haven't heard of the Trinity. You want to say the Bible contains truth, but also that it will lead you astray. You don't have any way of sorting truth from error. As a result, you follow your own path of error. You profess to follow God but not Christ. You have missed the boat.
You just said God was Christ. Then say when I say I follow God I'm not saying I follow Christ? You're all over the place, kiddo.
And no. YOU don't have any way of sorting truth from error. The fact that you can't fathom the idea that a book can contain both truth and error is kind of amazing. It shows you haven't done your homework on how the book was put together in the first place.
The spirit of God will show you truth from error, no matter where it is found. As an adult, if you really struggle to understand this, it really worries me that you're on my team. And your need to misrepresent my points in order to make yours should tell you which spirit is operating within you, and it's not God.