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Release from Epstein files

It's a maybe. Are you saying Biden was protecting Trump by not releasing the files in the years he could have? It goes both ways. Whatever one is going to apply to Trump and his admin, can probably be applied to Biden and his admin, who had them first.
Trump? No I think Biden was not releasing them because that is not a normal thing the government does. I think it was the conspiracy theorists who think this is a big deal. The only reason anyone cares about them now is it is one of the few avenues where Trump and his supporters disagree.
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The Saving results of the Death of Christ !

And you're clearly just firing off a response just to have something to say. I would encourage you to engage the actual literature on the subject. Nothing I said is novel or even controversial among scholars who work in lexical semantics. A simple Google search will confirm everything I said.

Barr's critique of TDNT is one of the most widely cited methodological corrections in 20th-century biblical studies. Silva's work on lexical method (see Biblical Words and Their Meaning) demonstrates why concept-historical studies produce semantic anachronism and illegitimate totality transfer. You're dismissing fifty years of scholarship just to have something to say in reply. That's a great witness for your position.
I'm not dismissing "50 years of scholarship", I'm dismissing your assessment of said scholarship.
As for the claim that Louw-Nida is "far more theologically driven" than TDNT, that is demonstrably false. Louw-Nida is explicitly usage-based and organized by semantic domains drawn from actual corpora, not by theological trajectories or concept-histories. Kittel explicitly states that TDNT is a theological project. Read the preface.
Those semantic domains are highly subjective, and a lot of the usage data was drawn from English glosses.
Establishing a verb's semantic core is always relevant before discussing its contextual function. Context determines usage, not lexical meaning. Pretending the lexical question is irrelevant demonstrates a clear misunderstanding of how language works.
Sure, but lexical indexing is a misconception of how language functions. Context determines meaning, because meaning is not a function of individual words but a function of whole passages. Semantic mapping can be helpful, but ultimatelly it is context that sets the meaning.
Nothing in my explanation "force fit" a conclusion, and I wager you won't actually attempt to show otherwise. It was a summary of standard lexical method: (1) identify the semantic core; (2) distinguish meaning from contextual effect; (3) prevent theological conclusions from being smuggled into the lexeme itself. If you want to argue that the context of John 6 modifies, nuances, or limits the force of ἑλκύω, then make that case from the text. But right now, the dismissive nature of your comments only signals that you don't want to deal with the steps necessary to make a coherent argument.
The method itself is built on a flawed conception of meaning that provides undue weight to individual words, and goes wrong at the first step by artificially restricting the semantic range.
This is not even coherent. My argument did three things that are simply standard lexical method (as noted above). That is the opposite of a "theologically driven" approach. You're just throwing out assertions, again just for the sake of responding.
You did no such thing, you determined the conclusion and then read matched the grammatical argument to your conclusion.
If you think I've confused lexeme and concept, then quote the sentence where I equate ἑλκύω with a theological construct. The word-concept fallacy occurs when someone loads a term with an entire doctrinal trajectory. I argued against that very move in TDNT's handling of ἑλκύω. Likewise, context has a central role in my analysis. I explicitly stated that success or failure of the action is determined by context, not by the lexeme itself -- contra your argument.
You've confused the basic element of meaning by reducing the meaning of words to their lexical form.
Your entire response has been very disappointing and underwhelming. You'll have to do a lot better for me to read and respond again. Your claim that I've "imposed theological baggage" on ἑλκύω is exceptionally absurd, given what I actually argued (most of which you simply ignored). What I actually did was isolate the term's semantic core and show how the syntax of John 6:44 functions independently of any theological overlay. The grammatical point -- the identity of the objects of ἑλκύσῃ and ἀναστήσω -- does not depend on whether you interpret the verb as "forceful" or "an attempt." That's the argument itself, and disputing the verb's semantics misses it entirely.
That isolate is exactly why your method is flawed, because it is only within the overall context of the passage that the force of the word can be determined not by atomizing the text and introducing foreign frameworks via lexical methodology.
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SO HOW DO YOU KNOW YOU ARE SAVED ??

That's pretty funny.
How many scriptural citings would you like for loving our neighbors as ourselves? I can count at least 10 citings in the N.T. alone, all stemming from the O.T. where there are several more

Even funnier it never made the cut of requirements of any creed

I asked if you believe our "unsaved neighbors" are going to burn alive forever or be permanently annhilated.

I don't believe either happens to our neighbors, so you have my answer. Where's yours?
And PLEASE read Hebrew 9:18 means what you are quoting. does not apply for today as the OLD COVENANT has

passed AWAY and PLEASE read that VERSE and see why !!

# 1. Becase. The first COVENANT you needed a PRIEST.

# 2 You would need an ALTAR

# 3. You would NEED a LAMB

# 4 This is just and. ANIMALS BLOOD

# 5. For what is called an ATONEMENT.

# 6. We can ONLY BE SAVED AFTER Christ death on. the Cross

# 7 And in Acts 2:36-38 , salvation was FIRST OFFERED TO ISRAEL. and than Israel was SET. ASIDE. in ACTS 28:25-28

IS Just one verse that show Israel is in. the trouble that they are IN. !!

# 8. This why WATER BAPTISM , just gets you all WET. !

#.9. This is why BORN AGAIN is for Israel during. the GREAT TRIBULATIO

# 10 This is why being BORN of WATER and the SPIRIT WHICH BELONG TO ISRAEL. , read EZE 36 and EZE 37

about 2 SRTICKS. !!

dan p



dan p
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Is purgatory a Biblical or extra biblical teaching?

Why have you not answered my question regarding Romans 10 - for a meaningful debate - BOTH sides have to engage in question and answer - please be so kind in answering my query please

Rom 10:10 For with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. 11 For the Scripture says, “Whoever believes on Him will not be put to shame.” 12 For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek, for the same Lord over all is rich to all who call upon Him. 13 For “whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

Go back to Hebrews -

Heb 9:26 He then would have had to suffer often since the foundation of the world; but now, once at the end of the ages, He has appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself. 27 And as it is appointed for men to die once, but after this the judgment, 28 so Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many.
Why is the concept of purgatory not mentioned? It is a simply stated sentence. Men die once and after that judgement - period - end of sentence, but not of thought -

So Christ was offered once to bear the sins of many.

I did answer your question. I said “It means we are saved.”

Our disconnect seems to be exactly what that means. You seem to think it means once you die and are judged there is an immediate entry into heaven regardless of whether or not you still have attachment to any sin. I do not.

It’s also important to remember that Scripture speaks of salvation as being a past event, a present ongoing process and a future event.

For example, in 1 Corinthians 3:12-15 we seem to both agree this is in reference to our judgment. A person has died and there is judgment, as your Hebrews 9:26 citation references. Okay. We agree on that too.

You will notice however, Paul is still referring to our salvation in the Corinthians text as a future event that occurs after the person has ‘suffered loss’ and gone through fire.

If any man’s work is burned up, he will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire (1 Corinthians 3:15)

So, I’ve answered your question, so now would you please answer mine?

We indeed WILL BE saved but only as through fire
What does being saved only as through fire mean to you?


I don't deal with hypotheticals -

Then answer a question – at the moment of every believer’s death do you believe they are perfect, completely sanctified with no attachment to sin?

The concept of purgatory, at best, is theoretical and I'll explain why.

There is a term in theology - exegesis - it means

Exposition; explanation; especially, a critical explanation of a text or portion of Scripture
When a teaching or concept is not plainly shown it does not rise to an exegetical level. It requires suppositions, reasoning and possibilities. All of which is demonstrated in your last few posts. (Forgive me, I am not picking on you)

I am familiar with the terms.

I would contend there are several concepts here I’ve shown that are quite plainly in Scripture. The first is that just become someone is saved, it does not mean they are immediately sanctified. Therefore, God will discipline us as sons in order to bring us to holiness (Hebrews 12:4-14)
We will not see God until we have reached that level of perfected holiness (Hebrews 12:4, 23)

There is nothing in Scripture that indicates that all believers will have reached that state of perfection by the time they die.

There is nothing in Scripture that says that once we’re judged our entry into heaven will immediately follow that judgement regardless of the state Christ finds our soul. In fact, it says quite the opposite. Anything he finds that needs to be burned off before we enter heaven, he will. That is why even when referring to our judgment Paul writes that if any of our work is burned up, we “will suffer loss, though he himself will be saved, but only as through fire” (1 Corinthians 3:15). “Will be saved.” In the future. When Christ is finished removing all that does not belong in heaven.
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The Saving results of the Death of Christ !

This sounds like an unfounded presumptive attack, rather than a substantive critique.
And you're clearly just firing off a response just to have something to say. I would encourage you to engage the actual literature on the subject. Nothing I said is novel or even controversial among scholars who work in lexical semantics. A simple Google search will confirm everything I said.

Barr's critique of TDNT is one of the most widely cited methodological corrections in 20th-century biblical studies. Silva's work on lexical method (see Biblical Words and Their Meaning) demonstrates why concept-historical studies produce semantic anachronism and illegitimate totality transfer. You're dismissing fifty years of scholarship just to have something to say in reply. That's a great witness for your position.

As for the claim that Louw-Nida is "far more theologically driven" than TDNT, that is demonstrably false. Louw-Nida is explicitly usage-based and organized by semantic domains drawn from actual corpora, not by theological trajectories or concept-histories. Kittel explicitly states that TDNT is a theological project. Read the preface.

None of this is relevant, and instead appears to be a pretext to force fit your pre-arrived at understanding rather than dealing with the contextual usage.
Establishing a verb's semantic core is always relevant before discussing its contextual function. Context determines usage, not lexical meaning. Pretending the lexical question is irrelevant demonstrates a clear misunderstanding of how language works.

Nothing in my explanation "force fit" a conclusion, and I wager you won't actually attempt to show otherwise. It was a summary of standard lexical method: (1) identify the semantic core; (2) distinguish meaning from contextual effect; (3) prevent theological conclusions from being smuggled into the lexeme itself. If you want to argue that the context of John 6 modifies, nuances, or limits the force of ἑλκύω, then make that case from the text. But right now, the dismissive nature of your comments only signals that you don't want to deal with the steps necessary to make a coherent argument.

and your whole argument is theologically driven, particularly in your failure to recognize the role of context in meaning and instead seeming to cling to a word-concept fallacy of meaning.
This is not even coherent. My argument did three things that are simply standard lexical method (as noted above). That is the opposite of a "theologically driven" approach. You're just throwing out assertions, again just for the sake of responding.

If you think I've confused lexeme and concept, then quote the sentence where I equate ἑλκύω with a theological construct. The word-concept fallacy occurs when someone loads a term with an entire doctrinal trajectory. I argued against that very move in TDNT's handling of ἑλκύω. Likewise, context has a central role in my analysis. I explicitly stated that success or failure of the action is determined by context, not by the lexeme itself -- contra your argument.

In order for the Calvinist conclusion to follow, sure. But not for it to make sense in the context of the passage. All you're doing is imposing your theological baggage
Your entire response has been very disappointing and underwhelming. You'll have to do a lot better for me to read and respond again. Your claim that I've "imposed theological baggage" on ἑλκύω is exceptionally absurd, given what I actually argued (most of which you simply ignored). What I actually did was isolate the term's semantic core and show how the syntax of John 6:44 functions independently of any theological overlay. The grammatical point -- the identity of the objects of ἑλκύσῃ and ἀναστήσω -- does not depend on whether you interpret the verb as "forceful" or "an attempt." That's the argument itself, and disputing the verb's semantics misses it entirely.
Upvote 0

Is purgatory a Biblical or extra biblical teaching?

Which is the basis for every cult teaching in existence - not calling anyone a cult.

In fact, not true. Many cult teachings have a basis in Holy Scripture. A perversion of Scripture to be sure, but derived from Scripture nonetheless. And the perversion of something does not mean that it’s not good or true. Often quite the opposite.

So I stand by the statement -- Just because we do not have a preserved writing that directly speaks to a teaching prior to a certain point in time, that is not evidence that the belief was not in place prior to that.

The basis for a teaching to exists prior to a certain point in time - is the teaching being present.

And I demonstrated that it quite clearly was present in the early church.

You evidently like AI. What is the answer to “are there early christian references to purgatory”? Its answer:

While the formal doctrine of purgatory wasn't developed until the Middle Ages, early Christians had references to a process of post-mortem purification. Texts from the New Testament like 1 Corinthians 3:11-15 hint at cleansing through fire, and early Church Fathers like Tertullian, Ambrose, and Augustine spoke of purification after death and the benefit of prayers for the departed.

Early Christian beliefs and practices
• Purification after death: The foundational idea that further purification is needed for some souls after death before they can enter heaven was present in the early Church.
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What's on your mind?

Sometimes I hear pastor's say 'it's easier sinning w/ other people.' I'm not sure that's accurate. When you're w/ someone else, you're trying to encourage them, set an example for them, & safeguard yourself as well. It's an accountability thing. They're your accountability & responsibility & you're their's.
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Hell doesn't exist and there is no eternal suffering, instead bad peolle just cease to exist

Really? “God is hate” really? Yet the Bible says otherwise:

1 John 4:8, in context of 1 John 4:1-12

Then there is John 3:16-21 and what St. Paul tells us in 1 Corinthians 13:1-13.

I guess I can claim to know who God “hates” and judges and appoint myself as an assistant prosecutor too. Well maybe not: ( Matthew 7:1-12 etc.).
Sorry to disappoint you but my verses destroy your interpretation of the verses you tried to use against my theology. I have unleashed 45 verses below, which prove that your theology is based on false doctrine.

Now lets talk about Gods hatred
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Leviticus 18-22&version=NKJV

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Is engineering a ‘super’ human being a good idea?

That's more like 44%, but a small sample size probably makes such a distinction problematic.
215,000 women is not a small sample size.

as for if it matters at all, that's for the insurance companies to determine, by which we all live today.

again, unforeseen consequences.

too small for you to consider in this generation. which is your right to make that judgement.
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Is engineering a ‘super’ human being a good idea?

Data says severe allergic reactions are about 5 per million doses. Which is similar to other vaccines. I managed an immunology clinic in the AF, and It happened rarely. Most commonly, it happened with desensitizing treatments, which understandably were far more likely to trigger release of IgE and subsequent allergic reactions.

you can support the system all you want
You can deny the evidence all you want. The funny thing about reality is, it doesn't care what we think.
but there is systemic rejection of people's concerns due to the prevailing notion that vaccines were safe.
Evidence, again. BTW, nearly a half-century ago, when I was studying immunology, they had good data on the risks of immunizations for different vaccines. When I took the clinic, I set up some controls over just that issue. There are people at higher risk, and we go physicians to look at those people before allowing them immunizations.

perhaps 90% of various ills that came in many cases months later were swept under the rug.
Sounds awful. I'm sure you have checkable data to support that. Show us.

50% increase in actual miss carriage rate. from 9 to 13 out of 100.
That's more like 44%, but a small sample size probably makes such a distinction problematic.

More than 30,000 pregnant women have been reported to the CDC vaccine safety monitoring program (v-safe) as of February 16, 2021. The v-safe prenancy registry includes >1,800 participants as of February 19, 2021 and includes 275 completed pregnancies and 232 live births. Participants are being tracked for miscarriage and still birth, pregnancy complications, maternal intensive care unit admission, adverse birth outcomes, neonatal death, infant hospitalizations, and birth defects. To date, pregnancy outcomes are comparable to background rates and “no unexpected pregnancy or infant outcomes have been observed related to COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy.” An infographic comparing obstetric and perinatal morbidity among mRNA COVID-19 vaccine recipients compared to background rates among pregnant mothers that did not receive the vaccine are shown in [Fig. 2].[20]

1763263807650.jpeg
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SO HOW DO YOU KNOW YOU ARE SAVED ??

You seem to be stuck in complication and self justifications land dan

"-everyone who loves knows God and is born of God" capital word spellings not required, but I like the bold
And I am. SPREADIND. the English word and. then. spending the Greek word so. it will be easier to understand and anyone

will learn the TENSES , MOODS. and all will see that I have not ADDED nor. SUBSTRACED. any words !!

And in. 1. COR 11:1 IT READS :

# 1. BE //. GINOMAI. in. the PRESENT. TENSE is in. the MIDDLE or PASSIVE VOICE



# 2. YE FOLLOWERS //. MIMETES. is. a NOMINATIVE CASE. in. the PLURAL

# 3 OF ME //. MOV is. a PERSONAL POSSESSEIVE. PRONOUN. is a GENITIVE CASE. in. the SIGNULAR

# 4. EVEN AS. //. KATHOS is an ADVERD

#.5. I ALSO //. KAGO. in. the NOMINATIVE TENSE. is a SIGNULAR

# 6 ( AM ). OF CHRIST. // CHRISTOS. in. a GENITIVE CASE is a SINGULAR. !!


# A And many quote John 3 :3 and if you are BORN AGAIN he cannot SEE THE KINGDOM. OF GOD. !!

#B. IT says that you can see the Kingdom of God. , really. than give us a word picture what it LOOKS LIKE. ??

# C. Then. in verse John 3:5. not says EXCEPT. a Man. be. BORN OF WATER. and of the SPIRIT. HE cannot

ENTER INTO. THE KINGDOM OF GOD !!


# D. You explain. first and I will explain it to you since you believe. that post for SELF JUSTIFICATION

dan p
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Trump promises $2000 tariff dividend to all Americans

You are paying the tariffs! It's coming out of your pocket! It's raising the cost of literally everything that you buy that is grown or manufactured overseas! And companies that manufacture items in the US have to import more expensive materials and parts to make them!


'The tariffs at the heart of this week's Supreme Court case are raising tens of billions of dollars for the federal government. '

And it's all YOUR MONEY!

'The Treasury Department is collecting almost four times as much tariff revenue now as it was a year ago.'

And it's all YOUR MONEY!

'While the tariffs are designed to encourage domestic manufacturing by making imports more expensive, factory employment has dropped by more than 40,000 jobs since April, while the ISM index of manufacturing activity fell in October for the eighth month in a row.'

But you mentioned it effecting international trade... Now you're backpedaling. Are you now saying international trade isn't effected by the tariffs? Only Americans feel the crunch?
Upvote 0

Is engineering a ‘super’ human being a good idea?

yes some reported that study as a 4% increase in misscarriage when in reality it was a 50% increase from actual 9 to 13 out of 100 pregnancies.
Depends on how we're understanding the percentage, as 4 out of 100 is 4%.
some of the reporting was worded that way intentionally to make it seem like it wasn't a big increase.
It's worth looking at, but it's a moderate risk at best.
13 misscarriages at week 9 instead of 9 out of 100 is a big increase.
compared to...?
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Is engineering a ‘super’ human being a good idea?

Yeah, its called risk assessment. Nothing is entirely safe, and a minor increase in actual miscarriage events(50% sure sounds a lot worse than 4 in 100) is an understandable risk, just means pregnant women should be advised of the increase in risk to their pregnancy.
yes some reported that study as a 4% increase in misscarriage when in reality it was a 50% increase from actual 9 to 13 out of 100 pregnancies.

some of the reporting was worded that way intentionally to make it seem like it wasn't a big increase.

13 misscarriages at week 9 instead of 9 out of 100 is a big increase.

also if you read the paper you'll find that it takes about 4 weeks for the misscariage to happen.

thus, it couldn't have been the vaccine in the minds of most people like yourself.
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Trump promises $2000 tariff dividend to all Americans

It's just that American voters won't place the interests of foreign nations on par with American interests.
You are paying the tariffs! It's coming out of your pocket! It's raising the cost of literally everything that you buy that is grown or manufactured overseas! And companies that manufacture items in the US have to import more expensive materials and parts to make them!


'The tariffs at the heart of this week's Supreme Court case are raising tens of billions of dollars for the federal government. '

And it's all YOUR MONEY!

'The Treasury Department is collecting almost four times as much tariff revenue now as it was a year ago.'

And it's all YOUR MONEY!

'While the tariffs are designed to encourage domestic manufacturing by making imports more expensive, factory employment has dropped by more than 40,000 jobs since April, while the ISM index of manufacturing activity fell in October for the eighth month in a row.'
Upvote 0

Is engineering a ‘super’ human being a good idea?

misscarriage rate go up, covid survival rate go up. .. mission accomplished!

you forget.. the end result.
Yeah, its called risk assessment. Nothing is entirely safe, and a minor increase in actual miscarriage events(50% sure sounds a lot worse than 4 in 100) is an understandable risk, just means pregnant women should be advised of the increase in risk to their pregnancy.
  • Agree
Reactions: Michie
Upvote 0

Gallup: Drop in U.S. Religiosity Among Largest in World

It seems pretty obvious that church participation dropped with Covid. There are lots of Christians with lots of motivations. My interpretation is that many people decided they didn't miss church that much and didn't find it worth coming back.

I'm not surprised that this leaves us closer to other 1st world countries. Our societies aren't that different, though we may have a larger fraction of religious conservatives.

It's interesting to see what has happened to CF. I've noticed that serious theological discussion has nearly disappeared. It's mostly politics. The Christian community discussions, except Catholics, are nearly (and in many cases completely) dead. Theology groups are at the level of Reddit in sophistication.
I am not convinced that most of those discussions matter, even here, and even as a Christian.

Tell me how it affects the mission...otherwise, it's worst than a waste of time because it causes division over words.
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