Dondi
Well-Known Member
Welcome to CR, wethirst!
I didn't know this thread existed until now. It's been buried for two years until resureected by wethirst. But I do want to put my thoughts into the matter.
I grew up in a fundamental Baptist church. I was taught the Bible to be the inerrant Word of God. Sin is evil, hell is hot, and Jesus is the only way to God. Basically, if God said it, then it's settled. So I was "saved" at the age of 13 way back in 1976.
But since I've been around the block a few times, I've modified my views a bit. I still attend a fundy Baptist church, though. I still believe that i was saved back in 1976, however, my thinking about just what that really means has broadened greatly over the years.
I believe God's light shines through the filter of the Bible. I recognize that it is not a perfect document. it was written by men who believed in God and were inspired by God. So mistakes will be made. I don't meddle with little inconsistancies such as whose geneology is in Luke and Matthew or what king reigned when and how long. I chalk these up to scribal mistakes of men who were trying to perserve something sacred, but were still fallable. God's light shines in the scriptures opaquely. We see through the glass darkly.
I'm a bit less fundamental now, and a little more tolerant to other faiths. I see salvation beyond the act of getting saved and toward the goal that God really wants for His children, to be conformed to His image. While I believe salvation is important, i think there is somewhat too much emphasis on salvation and not on the point of salvation. The point of salvation is not to save someone out of hell and into heaven. The point of salvation is to bring people back into a loving relationship with God and our neighbor.
I have a different view of sin. Because sin is directly related to those relationship. I explained this in another forum in a discussion about divine healing:
In the beginning, God made Adam from the dust of the earth and Eve from Adam's rib. Before the fall, they were perfect and enjoyed perfect communion with God. When they sinned, they fell from that perfect communion with God.
As a result, sickness and death entered into man. Was this caused by sin? Well, in a way, yes.
See, the problem is not in the sin itself, but what that sin has done to our relationship with God. Since God is the giver of Life, the sin has enter to keep that Life from sustaining man.
What sin does is disrupt our communion with God. We cannot approach the holy of holies, because our sin will destroy us, because God operates in the perfect.
All sin really does is make love imperfect. It clouds our sense of rightness toward the Lord. Therefore we cannot receive God's love and sustaining power properly. Nor can we love God and our neighbor properly.
That is precisely why God sent His Son, Jesus. To restore God's Life back into. By taking away our sins, we can receive the Holy Spirit which will regenerate out spirit and souls and, eventually, resurrect our bodies on the last day.
Our soul and spirit are reborn, but our bodies are not redeemed yet. Why? Because all of creation is still under the curse. There is still sin in the world and as long as sin lingers, so will sickness and death. When God makes the New Heaven and New Earth and we are raised to life at the Resurrection, the perfect physical state will be restored. The corruptable will become incorruptable. Until that time, we have to live in a fallen state. Thus sickness and death reigns.
This doesn't prevent us from enjoying God's Life now, in our spirit and soul. We can commune with the Father through the sinless Son who lives in us. On occasion, God's healing power may be manifest, but any healing we experience here is still only temporary.
So now my focus in bringing others to Christ is not to necessarily to instill the fear of hell and the hope of heaven in someone. Because this is all for nought if they aren't willing to have a relationship with God:
"And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent." - John 17:3
Instead, I would see people open up to a relationship with the Source of Life, for heaven without God is not heaven.
I didn't know this thread existed until now. It's been buried for two years until resureected by wethirst. But I do want to put my thoughts into the matter.
I grew up in a fundamental Baptist church. I was taught the Bible to be the inerrant Word of God. Sin is evil, hell is hot, and Jesus is the only way to God. Basically, if God said it, then it's settled. So I was "saved" at the age of 13 way back in 1976.
But since I've been around the block a few times, I've modified my views a bit. I still attend a fundy Baptist church, though. I still believe that i was saved back in 1976, however, my thinking about just what that really means has broadened greatly over the years.
I believe God's light shines through the filter of the Bible. I recognize that it is not a perfect document. it was written by men who believed in God and were inspired by God. So mistakes will be made. I don't meddle with little inconsistancies such as whose geneology is in Luke and Matthew or what king reigned when and how long. I chalk these up to scribal mistakes of men who were trying to perserve something sacred, but were still fallable. God's light shines in the scriptures opaquely. We see through the glass darkly.
I'm a bit less fundamental now, and a little more tolerant to other faiths. I see salvation beyond the act of getting saved and toward the goal that God really wants for His children, to be conformed to His image. While I believe salvation is important, i think there is somewhat too much emphasis on salvation and not on the point of salvation. The point of salvation is not to save someone out of hell and into heaven. The point of salvation is to bring people back into a loving relationship with God and our neighbor.
I have a different view of sin. Because sin is directly related to those relationship. I explained this in another forum in a discussion about divine healing:
In the beginning, God made Adam from the dust of the earth and Eve from Adam's rib. Before the fall, they were perfect and enjoyed perfect communion with God. When they sinned, they fell from that perfect communion with God.
As a result, sickness and death entered into man. Was this caused by sin? Well, in a way, yes.
See, the problem is not in the sin itself, but what that sin has done to our relationship with God. Since God is the giver of Life, the sin has enter to keep that Life from sustaining man.
What sin does is disrupt our communion with God. We cannot approach the holy of holies, because our sin will destroy us, because God operates in the perfect.
All sin really does is make love imperfect. It clouds our sense of rightness toward the Lord. Therefore we cannot receive God's love and sustaining power properly. Nor can we love God and our neighbor properly.
That is precisely why God sent His Son, Jesus. To restore God's Life back into. By taking away our sins, we can receive the Holy Spirit which will regenerate out spirit and souls and, eventually, resurrect our bodies on the last day.
Our soul and spirit are reborn, but our bodies are not redeemed yet. Why? Because all of creation is still under the curse. There is still sin in the world and as long as sin lingers, so will sickness and death. When God makes the New Heaven and New Earth and we are raised to life at the Resurrection, the perfect physical state will be restored. The corruptable will become incorruptable. Until that time, we have to live in a fallen state. Thus sickness and death reigns.
This doesn't prevent us from enjoying God's Life now, in our spirit and soul. We can commune with the Father through the sinless Son who lives in us. On occasion, God's healing power may be manifest, but any healing we experience here is still only temporary.
So now my focus in bringing others to Christ is not to necessarily to instill the fear of hell and the hope of heaven in someone. Because this is all for nought if they aren't willing to have a relationship with God:
"And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent." - John 17:3
Instead, I would see people open up to a relationship with the Source of Life, for heaven without God is not heaven.