This Is Getting Biblical - Document Stash Reveals FBI's Scheming To Target Christians - Coast To Coast! ( Q - 4542)
(www.wnd.com)
- N C S W I C -
Comments (16)
sorted by:
https://www.youtube.com/live/OhWOUBf3YF0?feature=share This dude thinks Covid was the first seal of Revelation
Good info to know.....And it comes from the ACLJ headed by Jay Sekulow. In the 20 years or so that I've been familiar with this 'Christian' advocate law firm, I can't think of anything they've ever done except for providing news like this.
the fish is not worshipped, it is not an idol. There is history to this symbol. When it was illegal to discuss Jesus a Christian man would draw half the fish on the ground with a stick, if the other man was a Christian he would complete the fish then the two could safely discuss Christianity.
I don't have one on my car. I am sure some are doing at as a form of virtue signaling, others may be using it to spread the word or show other Christians they are not alone. I think it is dangerous to judge another man's heart. I assume you believe the cross is an idol as well as any artistic rendering of Jesus. I don't agree that we are worshipping the fish or the cross, I don't need them in order to pray. My teenage son has a cross on a necklace, he is not worshipping it, does he need it, no of course not. However, I am happy he is not ashamed of his Christian faith, especially in this day and age of hedonism.
Further we speak a different language than Jesus did, I don't believe God is concerned with how we pronounce his name. His concern is if we know him and our concern should be if he knows us.
I don't expect you to agree, just giving you my opinions on the matter. I believe we are all sinners and God is forgiving of this.
A legalistic and unforgiving God would mean 99% or more of us will be separated from him upon death. When I pray, when I feel the presence of God I feel love and fogiveness and I am very far from perfect.
so we must speak greek or go to hell?
All Christians worship a false idol.
The version of Jesus comes from Pagan Rome.
a good read on authenticity of The New Testament.
https://carm.org/about-the-bible/can-we-trust-the-new-testament-as-a-historical-document/
The problem is Christians don't regard it as such and for the past 1700 years made up countless doctrines that have no biblical basis.
Sure there are many apostate churches. Your phrasing above reads more like you don't believe Jesus Christ from the New Testament is the Messiah. It sounds like that wasn't your intention.
If you mean many that call themselves Christians worship a false God (ie gay flags on a church sign (a church near me has one), then I am right there with you. Not that you care about downvotes, but if this is what you meant you would not have gotten the downvotes here.
But, you stated "All" Christians worship a false God. Which includes many of us that base our faith and beliefs on the Bible.
There is a reason I said 1700 years instead of 2000.
A series of things happened in the 4th century. Many Christians thought this was the bright century that persecution of Christians stopped, and Rome adopted Christianity as the state religion.
In reality, many things we were taught about Christianity, Jesus and God were set out by Rome, quite contrary to what had been practiced in the first 300 years. The Edict of Milan in 313 and the Council of Nicea in 325 were just the first steps of the Roman takeover. Some doctrines they set out were the trinity (that Jesus was God incarnate) and the vicarious atonement. In 380 the Roman Church made their own version of Christianity official. More doctrines were invented in the subsequent centuries, such as the conflation of Sheol and Gehenna, the censorship of the word "Jehovah", and the personification of Satan.
Rome immediately ordered the destruction of pagan monuments, despite Christians in the past 300 years never demanded their destruction. Year 395 Rome began the first major crackdown on "heretics", despite early Christians never attack each other for difference in doctrine. And year 415 marked the murder of Hypatia, despite early Christians never called for the death of unbelievers. One Roman emperor even imprisoned and banished the Pope for not complying with his doctrines.
Fastforward to the 16th century, with Martin Luther, who were thought to be the champion against the corruptions of the Catholic Church. He was well known with the doctrine of salvation by grace and by faith alone. Turned out these doctrines, like the doctrines set out by of Rome 1200 years prior, have no biblical basis. At the meantime, most doctrines of Rome which were supposed to be repudiated were instead kept. Books that were excluded and buried by Rome were not restored. Therefore today's Protestants who believe they are free from the Roman heresy are actually still in it.
So what was preached by Christians in the first 300 years? They kept Jesus's commandments. That was what He wanted. As Allan Chronshaw described, Jesus fulfilled the Law of God within himself and became anointed. It was that day God declared Jesus was "begotten". He showed himself as an example to follow, not to be worshipped, or merely "believed". The doctrines of early Christianity could be found in the works of Celsus and Origen, many of which have been banned by Rome as heresy, and which modern Christians will dismiss as "foolishness", "joke", "heathen". The first people who realized Christianity as known in the times were heavily corrupted were the founding fathers of America, namely Thomas Paine and Thomas Jefferson. A century later a Russian noblewoman named Blavatsky also made the same conclusions.
This is why I said "All" Christians worship a false idol. It is much deeper than just "gay flags on church signs". The question is: what can we do about it? With the current wave of the Q movement, who uncovered many vices by the Deep State, what more will they uncover? Makes you think.
Some instreasting reads by other frens. I believe they have better explanation than mine:
If we are all worshipping the wrong Jesus it would be safe to say God is failing. I don't think that is the case. I have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. We are all sinners, if Jesus' Crucificiton did not save us, then we are all dead. I don't believe God's plan is to have all or 99% of his creation separated from him upon death.
I appreciate you taking the time to discuss even though we disagree.