juantoo3
....whys guy.... ʎʇıɹoɥʇnɐ uoıʇsǝnb
Kindest Regards, cyberpi!
I am afraid we will have to agree to disagree pertaining to the necessity of "confession" as you have described. I realize it is a major functional component of at least one major denomination of Christianity, and they are welcome to do as they see fit. I do not see any benefit in "confessing my sins" publically, even to a religious leader. Those things I choose to share, I am deliberate about and with purpose. Otherwise, my personal life is mine and mine alone. I do not believe in airing dirty laundry for just anybody to see.
My confessions are made to G-d, and G-d alone. No man need serve as an intercessor. What is between me and G-d, is between me and G-d alone. Unless and if I so choose to share. So, depending what it is you mean by internal dialogue, I am thinking I disagree with the above sentiment.
Perhaps there may be some poetic conflation of terms, but I believe I said as much about the mob condemning, but a judgement must be passed before condemnation, even if that judgement is reflexive and prejudicial.
I can accept what you say here about Jesus using judgement, even passing judgement. Staying with this example, notice the way in which He does so. So atypical compared with how a regular joe goes about things. Most of us tend to want to force our own views upon others, rather than considering what is the most beneficial for all concerned.
You lost me. Care to expand on this?
Confession is a judgment expressed outward, communicating it to other people. It is NOT an internal dialogue. It is a required step that simply can not be skipped.
I am afraid we will have to agree to disagree pertaining to the necessity of "confession" as you have described. I realize it is a major functional component of at least one major denomination of Christianity, and they are welcome to do as they see fit. I do not see any benefit in "confessing my sins" publically, even to a religious leader. Those things I choose to share, I am deliberate about and with purpose. Otherwise, my personal life is mine and mine alone. I do not believe in airing dirty laundry for just anybody to see.
My confessions are made to G-d, and G-d alone. No man need serve as an intercessor. What is between me and G-d, is between me and G-d alone. Unless and if I so choose to share. So, depending what it is you mean by internal dialogue, I am thinking I disagree with the above sentiment.
The "mob" does not judge... they condemn. In the parable of the people wanting to throw stones at a person, the mob wanted to condemn, whereas Jesus pointed the finger and JUDGED the mob. He also JUDGED the person telling her to not SIN anymore. Jesus used judgment, whereas the mob wanted to rush to condemning her by stoning.
Perhaps there may be some poetic conflation of terms, but I believe I said as much about the mob condemning, but a judgement must be passed before condemnation, even if that judgement is reflexive and prejudicial.
I can accept what you say here about Jesus using judgement, even passing judgement. Staying with this example, notice the way in which He does so. So atypical compared with how a regular joe goes about things. Most of us tend to want to force our own views upon others, rather than considering what is the most beneficial for all concerned.
OK, I'm trying to see where you are coming from, I think I can go along with this.Words do not remove from a person. They add. Jail time, separation from family, being stoned to death... those things remove from a person. Judging with words adds to a person, but condemning with high velocity or high mass projectiles removes from a person.
When Jesus judged the mob, if another mob came along and wanted to attack and stone the first 'uncivil' mob to likewise teach them a lesson... would it be due to Jesus' judgment? Who could instead blame the obedient mob for behaving like dogs, right?
You lost me. Care to expand on this?