Yes, this is in large part a war between religions. God's truth vs Satan's lies.
Fact: all religions contradict each other.
Conclusion: Either all religions are false or ONE is true.
Which one do Q drops reference?
Only one, The Bible and the God of scripture.
God instructs us to hate the lies of the devil and evil.
The principalities run all the other religions.
The "camel fuckers" I referenced are followers of a totalitarian ideology called Islam which considers all other non-believers less than dogs, and they have a pretty fucking low opinion dogs.
Don't step to me about religion and awakening. My church wrote the amicus brief that overturned roe v Wade. I worked the cyber ninjas Arizona audit. I've made more "replacement" vaccine cards for Patriots than you can shake a stick at. I've been at this a LONG time.
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and truth.
Where do you get truth from if you don't start with God?
Seriously.
Absolute truth presupposes the God of scripture. This is basic Vantillian presuppositional apologetics. If you reject the god of scripture then you can account for truth, laws of logic, the principle of induction or the basis for any argumentation.
Everything becomes subjective like a fool that builds his house upon the sand.
Let me make this bold assumption that your idea is that, the wisdom and truth from God gives you the right to judge other people based on their beliefs and actions.
But if you paid careful attention to the Gospels and to what Jesus actually taught us, it is not our place to judge others. Everyone will have to answer to the God when their time comes and it is between them and the God only.
Furthermore, your own judgements will be harsher if you have been judging your fellow human beings yourself.
I have seen far too many religious people who have followed religion for long times, and who end up falling in this trap that just because they understand the Truth, it gives them the right to judge others who haven't.
You see "camel fuckers" and no doubt you have other names for other people that you don't agree with.
But what I see are my fellow brothers and sisters - all as much loved by God as any of us here, still lost and still yet to find their way to the Truth.
The whole reason this Q operation had to take this long and had to be this painful was precisely because we didn't want to lose half the humanity. Because we want to save as many people as we can.
God gives you the right to judge other people based on their beliefs and actions.
Yes. He instructs us to based upon His standards. In fact scripture says the saints will even judge the angels.
But if you paid careful attention to the Gospels and to what Jesus actually taught us, it is not our place to judge others.
Oof. You just made a very foolish assertion. First you judged me for judging. Hypocrite? Or maybe you have a poor understanding of what Jesus was saying there and it's you that didn't pay attention to God's Word.
Let me help you out...
Jesus' teaching about judging others, particularly in the Sermon on the Mount, is often misunderstood to imply that Christians should never judge at all. However, when we examine His words in the context of Scripture, it becomes clear that Jesus was instructing His followers to judge righteously, according to God's standards, and not by human or superficial measures. Here's a case for this understanding:
Jesus' Teachings on Judging
Matthew 7:1-5:
"Judge not, that you be not judged. For with the judgment you pronounce you will be judged, and with the measure you use it will be measured to you. Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye?... First take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother's eye."
Explanation: At first glance, it seems Jesus is telling us not to judge at all. However, He goes on to say that we must first examine ourselves (remove the "log" in our own eye), so we can "see clearly" to help our brother. This implies that judgment, when done humbly and righteously, is part of our responsibility. We are not called to judge hypocritically or by human standards, but rather with humility, after self-reflection.
John 7:24:
"Do not judge by appearances, but judge with right judgment."
Explanation: Here, Jesus directly commands His followers to judge, but He clarifies that the judgment must not be superficial or based on appearances. Instead, we are called to judge rightly, which is to judge according to God's standards, in truth and righteousness.
Other Scriptures on Judging with God's Standards
1 Corinthians 5:12-13:
"For what have I to do with judging outsiders? Is it not those inside the church whom you are to judge? God judges those outside. 'Purge the evil person from among you.'"
Explanation: The Apostle Paul instructs the church to exercise judgment within the body of believers, using God's moral standards to hold one another accountable. This shows that Christians are not only permitted but required to judge sinful behavior within the church.
1 Corinthians 2:15:
"The spiritual person judges all things, but is himself to be judged by no one."
Explanation: A person who lives by the Spirit, walking in accordance with God's Word, is called to judge all things spiritually. This means discerning between good and evil, truth and falsehood, based on God's standards, not man's.
Matthew 18:15-17:
"If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother."
Explanation: This passage shows Jesus' instruction on dealing with sin within the community. Here, we see that confronting someone about their sin—essentially making a judgment—is a loving and necessary act for restoring the sinner. This judgment must be done in alignment with God's law.
Galatians 6:1:
"Brothers, if anyone is caught in any transgression, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness."
Explanation: This verse emphasizes the need for judgment to be done in gentleness and humility, reflecting God's character. It is not a harsh, self-righteous judgment, but rather a righteous judgment aimed at restoration.
The Case for Judging by God's Standards
Throughout Scripture, Jesus and the Apostles call believers to exercise judgment, but always in accordance with God's righteous standards, not human or hypocritical standards. Here are the key reasons:
God's Law is the Ultimate Standard: Christians are called to uphold God's commandments and discern between right and wrong based on His Word, not cultural trends or personal preferences (Isaiah 5:20). Jesus Himself, in John 8:15-16, said, "You judge according to the flesh; I judge no one. Yet even if I do judge, my judgment is true, for it is not I alone who judge, but I and the Father who sent me."
Judgment Begins with Self-Reflection: Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 7 is not a prohibition on all forms of judgment but a call to begin with humility and self-reflection before judging others. This prevents hypocrisy and ensures that judgment is grounded in righteousness, not personal pride.
Judging to Restore and Protect the Community: Scriptural examples, such as in Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5, show that Christians must judge in order to maintain the purity of the church and to restore those who have gone astray.
Conclusion
Jesus did not condemn all forms of judgment but warned against hypocritical and unrighteous judgment. Christians are called to judge rightly, meaning according to God's standards—His Word and law. This judgment must be exercised in humility, with a heart toward restoration, and in the fear of the Lord. Other scriptures confirm that Christians have the responsibility to judge sin within the church and to discern truth from error, always in accordance with God’s revealed truth.
So maybe tone it down a notch. Your position was obviously hypocritical with just basic logic applied AND completely wrong with a cursory look at the totality of scripture. You literally can't even preach the gospel without judgement. This is super basic stuff and not exactly deep theological dogma.
Yes, this is in large part a war between religions. God's truth vs Satan's lies.
Fact: all religions contradict each other.
Conclusion: Either all religions are false or ONE is true.
Which one do Q drops reference?
Only one, The Bible and the God of scripture.
God instructs us to hate the lies of the devil and evil.
The principalities run all the other religions.
The "camel fuckers" I referenced are followers of a totalitarian ideology called Islam which considers all other non-believers less than dogs, and they have a pretty fucking low opinion dogs.
Don't step to me about religion and awakening. My church wrote the amicus brief that overturned roe v Wade. I worked the cyber ninjas Arizona audit. I've made more "replacement" vaccine cards for Patriots than you can shake a stick at. I've been at this a LONG time.
Wow, you did all that but didn't understand the simple truth. Good luck fren and I mean it from the bottom of my heart.
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and truth.
Where do you get truth from if you don't start with God?
Seriously.
Absolute truth presupposes the God of scripture. This is basic Vantillian presuppositional apologetics. If you reject the god of scripture then you can account for truth, laws of logic, the principle of induction or the basis for any argumentation.
Everything becomes subjective like a fool that builds his house upon the sand.
"Truth" starts with God and His Word.
Let me make this bold assumption that your idea is that, the wisdom and truth from God gives you the right to judge other people based on their beliefs and actions.
But if you paid careful attention to the Gospels and to what Jesus actually taught us, it is not our place to judge others. Everyone will have to answer to the God when their time comes and it is between them and the God only.
Furthermore, your own judgements will be harsher if you have been judging your fellow human beings yourself.
I have seen far too many religious people who have followed religion for long times, and who end up falling in this trap that just because they understand the Truth, it gives them the right to judge others who haven't.
You see "camel fuckers" and no doubt you have other names for other people that you don't agree with.
But what I see are my fellow brothers and sisters - all as much loved by God as any of us here, still lost and still yet to find their way to the Truth.
The whole reason this Q operation had to take this long and had to be this painful was precisely because we didn't want to lose half the humanity. Because we want to save as many people as we can.
Yes. He instructs us to based upon His standards. In fact scripture says the saints will even judge the angels.
Oof. You just made a very foolish assertion. First you judged me for judging. Hypocrite? Or maybe you have a poor understanding of what Jesus was saying there and it's you that didn't pay attention to God's Word.
Let me help you out...
Jesus' teaching about judging others, particularly in the Sermon on the Mount, is often misunderstood to imply that Christians should never judge at all. However, when we examine His words in the context of Scripture, it becomes clear that Jesus was instructing His followers to judge righteously, according to God's standards, and not by human or superficial measures. Here's a case for this understanding:
Jesus' Teachings on Judging
Explanation: At first glance, it seems Jesus is telling us not to judge at all. However, He goes on to say that we must first examine ourselves (remove the "log" in our own eye), so we can "see clearly" to help our brother. This implies that judgment, when done humbly and righteously, is part of our responsibility. We are not called to judge hypocritically or by human standards, but rather with humility, after self-reflection.
Explanation: Here, Jesus directly commands His followers to judge, but He clarifies that the judgment must not be superficial or based on appearances. Instead, we are called to judge rightly, which is to judge according to God's standards, in truth and righteousness.
Other Scriptures on Judging with God's Standards
Explanation: The Apostle Paul instructs the church to exercise judgment within the body of believers, using God's moral standards to hold one another accountable. This shows that Christians are not only permitted but required to judge sinful behavior within the church.
Explanation: A person who lives by the Spirit, walking in accordance with God's Word, is called to judge all things spiritually. This means discerning between good and evil, truth and falsehood, based on God's standards, not man's.
Explanation: This passage shows Jesus' instruction on dealing with sin within the community. Here, we see that confronting someone about their sin—essentially making a judgment—is a loving and necessary act for restoring the sinner. This judgment must be done in alignment with God's law.
Explanation: This verse emphasizes the need for judgment to be done in gentleness and humility, reflecting God's character. It is not a harsh, self-righteous judgment, but rather a righteous judgment aimed at restoration.
The Case for Judging by God's Standards
Throughout Scripture, Jesus and the Apostles call believers to exercise judgment, but always in accordance with God's righteous standards, not human or hypocritical standards. Here are the key reasons:
God's Law is the Ultimate Standard: Christians are called to uphold God's commandments and discern between right and wrong based on His Word, not cultural trends or personal preferences (Isaiah 5:20). Jesus Himself, in John 8:15-16, said, "You judge according to the flesh; I judge no one. Yet even if I do judge, my judgment is true, for it is not I alone who judge, but I and the Father who sent me."
Judgment Begins with Self-Reflection: Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 7 is not a prohibition on all forms of judgment but a call to begin with humility and self-reflection before judging others. This prevents hypocrisy and ensures that judgment is grounded in righteousness, not personal pride.
Judging to Restore and Protect the Community: Scriptural examples, such as in Matthew 18 and 1 Corinthians 5, show that Christians must judge in order to maintain the purity of the church and to restore those who have gone astray.
Conclusion
Jesus did not condemn all forms of judgment but warned against hypocritical and unrighteous judgment. Christians are called to judge rightly, meaning according to God's standards—His Word and law. This judgment must be exercised in humility, with a heart toward restoration, and in the fear of the Lord. Other scriptures confirm that Christians have the responsibility to judge sin within the church and to discern truth from error, always in accordance with God’s revealed truth.
So maybe tone it down a notch. Your position was obviously hypocritical with just basic logic applied AND completely wrong with a cursory look at the totality of scripture. You literally can't even preach the gospel without judgement. This is super basic stuff and not exactly deep theological dogma.