Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
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How would you like to spend eternity all by yourself? Do you think Jesus would like to spend eternity all by himself?Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
Well, not to sound trite, but I love Him in response to His loving me. Jesus has pulled my life from the ashes, and given me something meaningful, something lovely. And that's now, not in a future age. Though I don't mind that promise, to be sure!Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
When I was born again it was because I saw how wrong I had been to think I was a Christian because I believed in God. I came to Jesus because I saw the truth by reading a little booklet I was given. It took me a while to fall in love with Jesus because of who he revealed himself to be and even if I wasn't promised eternal life with Him I would still love Him.Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
Your question assumes Christian metaphysics are true but without eternal life. Some ancient Jews believed essentially the same thing - a creator God but no eternal life (or a shadowy Sheol-for-all half-existence). Certainly, anyone in any religion can have a profound sense of gratitude for the creation and the opportunity simply to be alive in it. Indeed, atheists can and do have pretty much the same sentiments with no thought of a "creation" at all.Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
Or, you haven't had the experience of meeting Jesus, maybe?Those who say they'd have the same "love" for Jesus if eternal life were not part of the equation are just mouthing pretend-Christian platitudes.
Your questions are spot on, sister. How many are only here [in churches and such] because they want the promises; they want the blessings. Without those might too many simply be saying forget God; forget Jesus... as they plunge themselves into whatever the world of men has to offer?Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
Sorry to break up posts . . . my thoughts sometimes come, as they say, in fits and starts.If eternal life were not part of the equation, and this hell on earth (relatively speaking) were all there was, then no one would "love" Jesus in the same way.
Oh, I'm sure it DOES make you wonder, Brother MucOr, you haven't had the experience of meeting Jesus, maybe?
You've said we cannot believe without also having doubt, and now that we would not love Him but for the promise of eternal life. It just makes me wonder whether you've really met Jesus.
Much love!
Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
I'm just wondering, are you married, in a good marriage? Because that can help us understand what it means to be in a relationship with God.Oh, I'm sure it DOES make you wonder, Brother Mucve, because you are one of THOSE "Christians." Jesus is such a living presence in YOUR life that you sometimes order an extra Happy Meal at McDonalds and then tell yourself He just must not have been hungry. Platitudes, platitudes, platitudes - can't enough of 'em, Brother Muc
ve! Platitude machines who resort to the "not sure you've really met Jesus" ploy are so helpful to the points I try to make that I'd almost have to invent them if they didn't exist.
"Not sure you've really met Jesus" - the last refuge of one who is actually insecure in his own beliefs. "I don't have mere convictions, I KNOW!!!" - ditto.
BTW, I didn'say you and yours wouldn't love Jesus without the promise of eternal life. I said you wouldn't love Jesus in the "same way." Remove the element of eternal life from the equation and you have no idea what your relationship with Jesus would actually look like.
Oh, I'm sure it DOES make you wonder, Brother Mucve, because you are one of THOSE "Christians." Jesus is such a living presence in YOUR life that you sometimes order an extra Happy Meal at McDonalds and then tell yourself He just must not have been hungry. Platitudes, platitudes, platitudes - can't enough of 'em, Brother Muc
ve! Platitude machines who resort to the "not sure you've really met Jesus" ploy are so helpful to the points I try to make that I'd almost have to invent them if they didn't exist.
"Not sure you've really met Jesus" - the last refuge of one who is actually insecure in his own beliefs. "I don't have mere convictions, I KNOW!!!" - ditto.
BTW, I didn'say you and yours wouldn't love Jesus without the promise of eternal life. I said you wouldn't love Jesus in the "same way." Remove the element of eternal life from the equation and you have no idea what your relationship with Jesus would actually look like.
Married now 49 years. 33 happy years to the lovely Beverly, who died of breast cancer. 16 happy years (and going strong) to the lovely Galina. Sorry to disappoint you.I'm just wondering, are you married, in a good marriage? Because that can help us understand what it means to be in a relationship with God.
My relationship with Jesus is a right now thing.
Your ridicule reveals yourself, not me.
Much love!
No, that's not a disappointment! I'm glad, because a good marriage is the closest thing we have in this world to exemplify what a relationship with God is like.Married now 49 years. 33 happy years to the lovely Beverly, who died of breast cancer. 16 happy years (and going strong) to the lovely Galina. Sorry to disappoint you.
It's just not sounding like this is true.I've been where you're at.
No, you have the wrong idea about me.In my experience and observation, there is a species of Christian, often those coming from a background in addiction, for whom Jesus HAS TO BE their rock, their anchor, their deliverer, their security blanket. He HAS TO BE. There CAN'T BE any acknowledgment of uncertainty, ambiguity or doubt. Always the specter of relapse is there. Jesus HAS TO BE real.
I agree, and to repeat, my relationship with Jesus is more than my relationship with my wife, and you are mistaken that we don't walk with Jesus moment by moment. That we don't share with Him our thoughts, as He also speaks with us.we don't walk with Jesus as we walk with our living fathers or wives.
Not true.Certainty just isn't possible.
Again, you really have the wrong idea here. I have such a certainty, I hope the same for you also.You express doubt as to whether I actually know Jesus at all. Why? Because for your own fragile faith to survive, NO REAL CHRISTIAN CAN HAVE ANY DOUBTS!!! EVERY REAL CHRISTIAN SAYS HE WOULD LOVE JESUS NO MATTER WHAT!!! EVERY REAL CHRISTIAN IS JUST LIKE ME!!!
This has nothing to do with me. There is nothing brittle or fragile about my faith, rather, fully the opposite. My faith in Christ, my relationship with Jesus, this is my bedrock. You don't sway me. I just want for you the good thing I've found. If you're happy with what you have, I won't gainsay you, I just want good for you.Don't become a victim of pabulum, platitudes and pretending because your faith will stagnate rather than deepen.
This is true of all of us who are truly born again. We NEED Jesus. He IS our ROCK and our ANCHOR; he IS our DELIVERER and there IS no 'uncertainty, ambiguity or doubt.'In my experience and observation, there is a species of Christian, often those coming from a background in addiction, for whom Jesus HAS TO BE their rock, their anchor, their deliverer, their security blanket. He HAS TO BE. There CAN'T BE any acknowledgment of uncertainty, ambiguity or doubt.
Hello Cassandra, And how are you all? Interesting, as much as He has done for us, I would say, personally, Yes, it is a great way to know that GOD loves us so much, That He is mostly that kind of GOD, so we love Him because He is.Is eternal life the reason you love him? Or is His Creation, all that He has given us, enough? Is our love contingent on rewards, or do we love Him because He is?
I want to give a couple of thoughts on what you've written here.This is really quite good, if I do say so. It almost sounds like I had @marks in mind when I wrote it, which I didn't.
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Knowledge, Certainty, Conviction and Doubt - Epistemology in Christianity
How epistemology relates to Christian belief.www.christianityboard.com
I think you missed the point of my question. Is it just for the reward of eternal life do we say that we love Him?How would you like to spend eternity all by yourself? Do you think Jesus would like to spend eternity all by himself?
So it makes sense we should love Jesus, because we'd like for him to love us.