“In wars, soldiers cast aside their inhibitions, their sense of humanity, and take the lives of men, women, and children. Their actions express the horrors of war and the paroxysms of violence that are present in conflicts between nations. …
Such are the barbarities of war.
But, there is hope. The Bible says that when the Messiah comes, there shall be peace among the nations: ‘He shall judge between the nations, and shall arbitrate for many people; they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore’ (Isaiah 2:4)’”.
(Claude Mariottini, “Ripping Open Pregnant Women”)
No one likes war, but war is a reality that has existed in human society from the dawn of civilization. With no exception, one characteristic of wars is the extreme violence that goes on in the bat…
claudemariottini.com
Jesus and the apostles taught the followers of Jesus to “cast aside their inhibition, their sense of humanity, and take the lives of men, women, and children”?
Jesus and the apostles taught the followers of Jesus to “express the horrors of war and the paroxysms of violence that are present in conflicts between nations”?
@Wrangler @Armour of God @NayborBear
The actions and writings of the followers of Jesus for the first three hundred years of Christian history show us that they didn’t think so.
And there have been and are followers of Jesus since them, down to our own day, who have shown by their actions and writings that they also don’t think so.
P.S.
An ad popped up suggesting this for me:
I haven’t read the book yet - so I’m not in a position to recommend it to my readers - but I’m strongly attracted by the title.
“Do as he did” -> the apostles did; the crusaders didn’t.
P.S.S.
A link to a review by Kevin DeYoung on the strengths and weaknesses of the book.
The point about Jesus’s apprentices originally being called “followers of the Way” is essential to Comer’s overall thesis.
clearlyreformed.org