amigo de christo
Well-Known Member
i had just typed that and then i seen this . YEP teh WORDS OF THE LORD confirmed my friend .Proverbs - "the fear of man is a trap"
Welcome to Christian Forums, a Christian Forum that recognizes that all Christians are a work in progress.
You will need to register to be able to join in fellowship with Christians all over the world.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
i had just typed that and then i seen this . YEP teh WORDS OF THE LORD confirmed my friend .Proverbs - "the fear of man is a trap"
the gatekeepers of man-made doctrines may have me banned from here as welli had just typed that and then i seen this . YEP teh WORDS OF THE LORD confirmed my friend .
TO the trenches david . TO THE TRENCHES .the gatekeepers of man-made doctrines may have me banned from here as well
My feeling is that the Jews probably thought that all their suffering came from God and not from themselves.
@amigo de christofor the fear of man IS A SNARE indeed .
To depart FROM EVIL is the fear of GOD .
Many have not the LOVE OF GOD SHED UPON THEIR HEARTS BY THE HOLY GHOST .
Many have not submitted UNTO GOD , unto HIS righteousness , unto HIS CHRIST .
they submitted unto an image of what MAN said was GOD and claimed as CHRIST .
But NOT THE SHEEP david . JESUS has the SHEEP david .


Yes! This novella is a direct illustration of the very heresy of “unconditional love for all” that Vladimir Solovyov exposes in Three Conversations."Walk in the Light While there is Light" is to me one of the more profound books I've read. Have you read this? It's fairly short, and is available online.
Much love!
But he's right, This is not heresy,Yes! This novella is a direct illustration of the very heresy of “unconditional love for all” that Vladimir Solovyov exposes in Three Conversations.
Tolstoy doesn’t just promote it—he makes it the central idea, wrapped in the form of a Christian “hagiography”, which makes it especially perilous.
Brief plot:
A young merchant named Julius, living in 3rd-century Antioch, renounces wealth, power, and even family to live by what he calls “Christ’s law.”
He preaches absolute non-resistance to evil, love for all without distinction, and refusal to judge or use force.
In the end, robbers kill him, and he blesses them to the last breath and dies smiling.
Tolstoy sells the heresy of “love everyone, never resist” as a saint’s life. Julius drops everything, preaches: don’t judge, don’t defend, don’t call the cops, don’t go to court. Even self-defense is evil. Army — evil. State — evil. Robbers butcher him — he goes: “Brother, I love you.” Dies smiling.
Now reality check:
Ever called the police?
Ever sued for your rights?
Would you protect your wife, kids from a rapist?
Would you hand your daughter to a killer, like Delarue in Solovyov’s parody?
Ready to watch your family get slaughtered — and “not resist”?
Tolstoy says: yes, be like Julius.
Solovyov says: then evil becomes a senator.
This isn’t light.
It’s surrender dressed as holiness.
You must have this confused with something else. Julius lives and eventually joins the Christians, to die a natural death.Brief plot:
A young merchant named Julius, living in 3rd-century Antioch, renounces wealth, power, and even family to live by what he calls “Christ’s law.”
He preaches absolute non-resistance to evil, love for all without distinction, and refusal to judge or use force.
In the end, robbers kill him, and he blesses them to the last breath and dies smiling.
Where did you get the idea that if you don't call the police, let a criminal kill you, rape your daughter, rob you, and escape—then you'll definitely go to heaven?But he's right, This is not heresy,
This enabled him to enjoy the kingdom of heaven before the end of his life,He was killed rather than waiting for the end of his life, which made him enter the kingdom of heaven faster.
You may have forgotten how the disciples did it, too.
He's not telling the story right.But he's right, This is not heresy,
This enabled him to enjoy the kingdom of heaven before the end of his life,He was killed rather than waiting for the end of his life, which made him enter the kingdom of heaven faster.
You may have forgotten how the disciples did it, too.
Do you have the erroneous idea that love means tolerance for evil? That if you love others, you won't defend the helpless, for instance?? Is that what you are thinking?Where did you get the idea that if you don't call the police, let a criminal kill you, rape your daughter, rob you, and escape—then you'll definitely go to heaven?
You’re looking at an adapted English version, not Tolstoy’s original 1887 text.You must have this confused with something else. Julius lives and eventually joins the Christians, to die a natural death.
Much love!
You just did a complete 180° flip?Do you have the erroneous idea that love means tolerance for evil? That if you love others, you won't defend the helpless, for instance?? Is that what you are thinking?
Stopping someone from committing evil shows love for them, and love for others.
Much love!
This is a pointless conversation.The love that we are to love others with is not talking about the love that comes from the flesh, but is love of God, ie, love which comes from His Spirit which doesn't compromise the truth. Same with regard to righteousness...there is human righteousness which falls short of God's glory, and there is the righteousness of God from His Spirit. Yes, as I said, we need to discern......and that needs to come from His Spirit too, if we are walking by faith and not by our own sight and perceptions or opinions.
You still don't get it. What can I say?Where did you get the idea that if you don't call the police, let a criminal kill you, rape your daughter, rob you, and escape—then you'll definitely go to heaven?
The apostles never prohibited self-defense, military service, or going to court. On the contrary: the Apostle Paul himself went to court and demanded Caesar's judgment (Acts 25:11). And in his Epistle to the Romans, he said directly:
"The authority is God's servant... he does not bear the sword in vain; he is God's servant, an avenger to execute wrath on the one who practices evil" (Rom. 13:4).
And further: "For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to evil... for he is God's servant to you for good."
This one quote alone—and Tolstoyan non-resistance collapses. Tolstoyan doctrine teaches: "Do not resist evil, love everyone, do not judge, do not call on authority."
But the Apostle Paul says: authority is from God, the sword is not in vain, evil is punishable.
Self-defense is not a sin. Protecting one's family is a duty. Appealing to courts and authorities is a biblical norm. And "love for all" without distinguishing good from evil is heresy.
Tolstoyan non-resistance is not evangelical love. It is a trap.
You don't seem to know the book you claim shows this "heresy" to begin with. And no, I've not done a 180.You just did a complete 180° flip?
You're the one pushing Leo Tolstoy's heresy here, not me.
So, do you agree that Tolstoy's teaching is heresy?
Well, I don't read Russian, so I'll have to take your word for it.You’re looking at an adapted English version, not Tolstoy’s original 1887 text.
I'm not finding anything to substantiate this, just wondering, do you have anything to offer? Besides something in Russian?So:
1887 original (Russian) - Julius killed by robbers, dies blessing them
preaching intefaith and this all roads lead , IS NOT LOVE nor loving one enemies .You don't seem to know the book you claim shows this "heresy" to begin with. And no, I've not done a 180.
I'm telling you God says, Love your enemies. Now go and do so.
Much love!
I explained this clearly—see posts #184 and #185–187.You don't seem to know the book you claim shows this "heresy" to begin with. And no, I've not done a 180.
I'm telling you God says, Love your enemies. Now go and do so.
Much love!