Hazelelponi
Well-Known Member
I’m not defending Islam. I’m standing against Christians who imitate Islam.
What do you mean imitate Islam?
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I’m not defending Islam. I’m standing against Christians who imitate Islam.
There is something profoundly symbolic in this, just this last weekend in Australia:There are many verses in their scriptures about killing non-Muslims. And they especially mention Jews and Christians.
What do you mean imitate Islam?
United Pentecostals.
One of the fastest growing denominations today.
What do you mean imitate Islam?
No, should be as Buddhist, Drop your knife, and you'll become a Buddha immediately.The Crusaders killed their enemies - Muslims, Jews, and Christians.
Do you support that?
No, should be as Buddhist, Drop your knife, and you'll become a Buddha immediately.
LOL..
There is no pagan today as in the OT.I’m not a Buddha. I act like Jesus, the apostles and the early Christians when threatened with violence. I reject the temptation of the devil to kill my enemies, and because of that I’ve been labelled in this thread by a unitarian imitating the Roman Catholic Crusaders as being antiChristian.
Besides being ironic, it’s light persecution inflicted on me at the hands of the unitarian. It’s nothing compared to the heavy persecution that Jesus, the apostles and the early Christians endured at the hands of their unitarian - and other nonChristian (i.e., pagan) - enemies.
There is no pagan today as in the OT.
But ignorance of our God.
Thank you for asking.
I mean a Christianity that does to its enemies what Islam does to its enemies, rather than doing what Jesus, the apostles and the early Christians did to their enemies.
True Christianity, not Islam, is the true religion of peace.
Before God, governments are instituted to protect those under their care, not to abdicate that duty in the name of misplaced sentimentality. A ruler who refuses to restrain evil is no less morally culpable than a corrupt judge who refuses to render justice. Scripture is clear that civil authority exists to punish evildoers and to promote peace and order for the good of the citizens.
Historic Christianity has always understood this.
The freedom to preach and spread the Gospel presupposes a measure of civil peace and security. The Church does not wield the sword, but God has ordained that the state does—so that evil is restrained and the innocent are protected.
Even Jesus appealed to basic moral reason when He said that if a homeowner knew when a thief was coming, he would keep watch to prevent the break-in. That is not cruelty; it is prudence. Love does not mean passivity in the face of real danger.
No one calls it virtue to invite violence into one’s home. Protecting wives, children, and neighbors from harm is not hatred—it is responsibility.
Scripture commands men to love their wives as Christ loved the Church, and Christ’s love was not passive. He laid down His life so that she might live. A man who refuses to protect his family has misunderstood love entirely.
In the same way, a nation that refuses to defend its people and its borders will not preserve peace for long. Nonviolence as a personal ethic may be admirable, but God has established nations precisely to restrain chaos and protect life. Justice, rightly exercised, is not opposed to love—it is one of its necessary expressions.
Before God, governments are instituted to protect those under their care, not to abdicate that duty in the name of misplaced sentimentality. A ruler who refuses to restrain evil is no less morally culpable than a corrupt judge who refuses to render justice. Scripture is clear that civil authority exists to punish evildoers and to promote peace and order for the good of the citizens.
Historic Christianity has always understood this. The freedom to preach and spread the Gospel presupposes a measure of civil peace and security. The Church does not wield the sword, but God has ordained that the state does—so that evil is restrained and the innocent are protected.
Even Jesus appealed to basic moral reason when He said that if a homeowner knew when a thief was coming, he would keep watch to prevent the break-in. That is not cruelty; it is prudence. Love does not mean passivity in the face of real danger.
No one calls it virtue to invite violence into one’s home. Protecting wives, children, and neighbors from harm is not hatred—it is responsibility. Scripture commands men to love their wives as Christ loved the Church, and Christ’s love was not passive. He laid down His life so that she might live. A man who refuses to protect his family has misunderstood love entirely.
In the same way, a nation that refuses to defend its people and its borders will not preserve peace for long. Nonviolence as a personal ethic may be admirable, but God has established nations precisely to restrain chaos and protect life. Justice, rightly exercised, is not opposed to love—it is one of its necessary expressions.
LOL. I am putting Christ's commands INTO context to justify soulful behavior. Christ said give to Caesar what is Caesar's. The overly spiritualized somehow read a "DO NOT UNLESS" into it.It becomes corrupt when people like you are taking it out of context to justify evil behaviour.
You had a question and I answered it.
Two expressions that you have used more than once, are....“overly spiritualized” and “soulful behaviour”.LOL. I am putting Christ's commands INTO context to justify soulful behavior. Christ said give to Caesar what is Caesar's. The overly spiritualized somehow read a "DO NOT UNLESS" into it.
The Crusades of today still exist.You who say that Roma Catholics aren’t Christians and that the Crusaders defended Christian land: the Crusaders did not defend Christian land, they defended Catholic land. And they did it with ferocity that matched and in some details exceeded that of the Muslims.
Thank you. The Crusaders whom you extol would have killed you (and possibly done worse than that to you before they did) and told themselves they were serving God in doing so. @Wrangler pointed out to his readers that they were men who did not witness. They were men who acted like their enemy.