dailogue is the best
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Yes I have, I am an ex muslim.
An ex-Muslim, and you dont know how to reconcile Christianity and Islam.???
Do you mean by your question that it is Christianity which doesnt accept Islam?
Yes I have, I am an ex muslim.
An ex-Muslim, and you dont know how to reconcile Christianity and Islam.???
Do you mean by your question that it is Christianity which doesnt accept Islam?
love one another...pretty straight forward...love your neighbor...fairly inclusive....love your enemy, leaves no one out.its personal things, I have been struggling to have any regard for Mohamed, and I was wondering if it is possible as a christian, I dont think it is but I thought other people might have a different perspective, hence this thread.
Love your enemy leaves no one out, including Muslims. If a Christian cant have regard for Muslims, only because they dont love their enemy, what does this make of Christians?love one another...pretty straight forward...love your neighbor...fairly inclusive....love your enemy, leaves no one out.
If a Christian can't have regard for Muslims can they expect any different?
Where did Jesus take up a sword? He used a whip on the money-changers in the temple, and in Matthew 10 he said he didn't come to bring peace, but a sword (division in the parallel account in the Gospel of Luke.) I can't find an example in any of the Gospels where he took up a sword himself.Love your enemy leaves no one out, including Muslims. If a Christian cant have regard for Muslims, only because they dont love their enemy, what does this make of Christians?
Apart from that, "love your enemy" as a unchanging principle is nothing less than suicide. I dont think Jesus himself practiced it. He cursed people, he took up sword etc. I rather stick to more pragmatic Muhammadan teaching,"You have the right to be equal, but its better if you forgive".
My mistake...he asked others (Luke 22:35-38)
...and then, later on in Luke 22, when Peter used the sword to cut off the ear of the high priest's servant, Jesus said, "No more of this!" and healed the man's ear. What was the lesson do you think he was teaching here?My mistake...he asked others (Luke 22:35-38)
love one another...pretty straight forward...love your neighbor...fairly inclusive....love your enemy, leaves no one out.
If a Christian can't have regard for Muslims can they expect any different?
Just because you have a sword in your hand doesnt mean you can do whatever you like. But dont throw it away either. Follow the middle path....and then, later on in Luke 22, when Peter used the sword to cut off the ear of the high priest's servant, Jesus said, "No more of this!" and healed the man's ear. What was the lesson do you think he was teaching here?
That's what the parallel account at Matthew 26 reports Jesus as saying after Peter cut off the man's ear.For those whom live by the sword shall perish by the sword... Who said that?
The sword cuts both ways. The best lesson we can learn from it is that of mercy.Just because you have a sword in your hand doesnt mean you can do whatever you like. But dont throw it away either. Follow the middle path.
The sword cuts both ways. The best lesson we can learn from it is that of mercy.
I was hoping for Farhan to answer... but A* To SG for her egerness!!!
Indeed, JC said that... So even before we look at your(Farhan) Understanding of the Luke account... Does it seem logical that jesus is telling others to take up arms?...
For Christians, the sword of the Spirit is the word of God. That's the two-edged sword you keep. (See Ephesians 6:17, Hebrews 4:12, Isaiah 49:2, and Revelations 1 & 2)1. One of the lessons is mercy.
2. He didnt say "throw away your sword", which shows its necessity.
3. What I see here is, "keep your sword with you, undrawn". Its a powerful message. I am not going to hurt you, and I am not going to tolerate me being hurt either.
4. Apart from all that, there is the context. Jesus being arrested, & he saying,"its written, let it happen". What if some "it" is not written? Not a good idea to interpret it only after de-contextualizing. And then accepting it as an absolute principle.
Two ideas: Vengence is a sham, and Jesus may have been claiming equality with the high priest.Seattlegal said:...and then, later on in Luke 22, when Peter used the sword to cut off the ear of the high priest's servant, Jesus said, "No more of this!" and healed the man's ear. What was the lesson do you think he was teaching here?
Exodus 21:23-27 said:But if any harm follow, then thou shalt give life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot,burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe. And if a man smite the eye of his bondman, or the eye of his bondwoman, and destroy it, he shall let him go free for his eye's sake. And if he smite out his bondman's tooth, or his bondwoman's tooth, he shall let him go free for his tooth's sake...
Where was that again? Was it this part here?.....
YUSUFALI: Let there be no compulsion in religion
PICKTHAL: There is no compulsion in religion.
SHAKIR: There is no compulsion in religion
Which translation of Qur'an, 2:256 do you like best, friend Tao?
....how Iran justified a program of murder to get rid of its Baha'i poplution I be interested in seeing how that explanation fits in with the Qur'an quote above.