I'm going to link this thread back to a discussion from another, different thread, so some of the context may be lost on those reading this by itself. But the context isn't really necessary to understand the point I want to make.
This is a single example from the Word, that can potentially influence our biblical understanding of whole range of very controversial biblical topics, such as predestination, election, free will and the security of our salvation.
The answer to the question I posed in the thread title is "no, there are no conflicts in the Bible". The conflicts always come as a result of us misunderstanding the Bible.
(To be continued)
This is a single example from the Word, that can potentially influence our biblical understanding of whole range of very controversial biblical topics, such as predestination, election, free will and the security of our salvation.
The answer to the question I posed in the thread title is "no, there are no conflicts in the Bible". The conflicts always come as a result of us misunderstanding the Bible.
(To be continued)
Last edited: