As if your interpretation is the correct one.
Do you have a Messiah complex?
All these empty responses do nothing to help either Quiet or yourself see how devoid you both are of God’s truth. Time and again, you have resisted what is true in order to cling to what is false.
A Messiah complex implies believing I can save or fix people. I do not. At most, I can guide, explain, or clarify. Salvation, truth, and transformation are not mine to dispense, and anyone who believes otherwise is already in trouble.
I’ve seen how you repeatedly copy and paste lists of quotations that you believe support your universalist claims. They do not. When this is shown to you, you end the discussion, because you are unable to enter into the Word or offer a coherent, scriptural explanation.
I'll give you and
@quietthinker an example.
Isaiah 53 is considered to be one of the most Messianic chapters in the Bible.
Speaking of the suffering God would inflict on His Son:
Isaiah 53:10 “Yet it was the will of the LORD to crush him; he has put him to grief; when his soul makes an offering for guilt, he shall see his offspring; he shall prolong his days; the will of the LORD shall prosper in his hand.”
Other translations state that its
Isaiah 53:10 "Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him; he hath put him to grief…”
How are we to understand the statement that it
pleased God to bruise His Son?
What doctrinal truths flow from this verse?
Can the same teaching be clearly demonstrated from the New Testament?
Why did translators replace the phrase “it pleased the LORD” with “the will of the LORD”? Is there a meaningful distinction between the two?
For what purpose did God put His Son to grief?
If you both truly know God, you should be able to articulate what it is that gives Him pleasure.
These are not trick questions designed to trip you up; the answers are readily found in the Word of God. It is possible you may respond as you have in previous discussions, but let us see whether, together, you can arrive at the core doctrinal truth concerning what truly pleases God.