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Blessings bella. I conflate nothing. And the year was the early 2000's and a show called American Idol came on. When a heard a female singer sing for the first time, I spoke out loud," There is your winner."as I could perceive the gift of God in her. And the enemy spoke up and said," you are not a very good judge of music." Her name is Kelly.Justin Bieber is incredibly talented and was discovered on YouTube as a child. Whatever you may feel about his music does not negate the scripture on the subject.
For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable [for He does not withdraw what He has given, nor does He change His mind about those to whom He gives His grace or to whom He sends His call].
You’re conflating the Lord’s gifts with the Holy Spirit’s. The things you’re born with come from God. What we receive upon our acceptance of Christ is what the Holy Spirit bestows.
~bella
Oi vey, any Christian who thinks God's covenant was a real estate transaction seriously misunderstands their faith.Paul, the self-described apostle to the Gentiles, wrote these words to Christians in Rome: “For the gifts and the calling of God are irrevocable” (Romans 11:29). What was Paul talking about?
He was declaring that God keeps His promises even when we don’t. In Romans 9-11, Paul defends the faithfulness of God to Israel to reassure Gentile believers that the Gospel promise he had just written in Romans 10 could be trusted — “If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.”
Because the covenant God made with Abraham in Genesis 12 remains valid, and will be fully fulfilled, we can be confident the promise of the New Covenant will be fulfilled: God gave this promise to Abraham, “Go from your country… to a land that I will show you.… I will make of you a great nation... I will bless those who bless you, and him who dishonors you I will curse, and in you all the families of the earth shall be blessed.”
This continuity of covenant undergirds Christian support for Israel today. God’s redemptive plan was never revoked — it was expanded. The Church has been grafted into the covenant, not as a replacement for Israel, but as partakers in God’s unfolding promise. Paul warns Gentile believers in Romans 11:18, “Do not boast against the branches ... remember that you do not support the root, but the root supports you.”
What does this have to do with what is happening in our nation and in the world? How we view this topic will shape the public policies we support or oppose. Some voices — even among those who claim the name of Christ — are labeling these beliefs and convictions as “Christian heresy.” Recently, Tucker Carlson, in a conversation with known antisemite Nick Fuentes, mocked Christians like Mike Huckabee and Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) who support Israel’s right to its land and existence. He claimed Christian Zionists are “seized by a brain virus” and that their beliefs are “Christian heresy.”
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Tucker Carlson’s mockery and God’s irrevocable call
No Christian support for Israel is not heresywww.christianpost.com
Morality, the law, was given to the Jews primarily so that, through their experience, the world could definitively come to know that sin exists, and that we all participate, failing to live up to a righteousness that “ought to be”. It explains why we live in a messed up world with all its division, competition, destruction, and harm, with its lack of love, IOW. It demonstrates that something is missing. With that bit of knowledge now, man can be all the more primed and ready to accept God’s next step “in the fullness of time”, the advent of His Son who provides the answer to the problem of sin and death. Man needs God, first of all, before he can be as he was created to be, before he can love as he was created to love. That's what's missing.If one considers ethics to an an agreed upon set of rules for conduct such as the code of Hammurabi and other ancient laws, one might consider "morality" as going beyond conduct to motives for behavior such as the danger of "coveting". One might even ask if philosophies such as Stoicism were influenced by Jewish law.
There are elements of ethics in Jewish law as well as proscriptions for activities to remind them of the God they were supposed to remember. However, one can find elements of morality beyond don't steal because you might be punished to don't steal because it is wrong to hurt someone else.
One might even say that God used Israel to introduce morality such that people would start doing less harm to others. One might then see in Christianity and advance in that the idea of even doing good for others is introduced.
Interesting possibilities.
This is a pretty significant misread of things.
I know loads and loads of people who want the wealthy to pay more - few of them are poor or even struggling;
most are degreed, ✅
working professionals ✅
with household incomes north of $200k ✅
Christians ar most definitely called to change this world, towards justice, towards God's will, even while knowing that heaven will never be realized on this earth. A theocracy, IOW, is impossible here. But either way we're not to just isolate, to fail to work against those human mentalites and resulting systems and structures that cause war, genocide, starvation, victimization, abuse, mass abortion, etc.So, I want to explore political philosophy and how it relates to Christianity.
Ideally, our faith should inform our politics, but not the other way around. Yet, this unfortunately not the case in reality. I don't intend to turn this into a finger pointing game between the left and the right, I just want to explore options here.
Should the government enact policies that reflect Christian policies?
One could argue yes, since a Christian government could provide a moral foundation for an otherwise secular society and arguably improves everyone's lives. On the other hand, one can say that the government would just bastardize Christianity and use it as a weapon for social control.
What about libertarianism? The Bible says to help the poor and needy. Yet, does that mean we should petition the government to do it, or is charity a personal responsibility for us as Christians, and thus we should not outsource it to the state?
Should there be a government? There are verses that seem to advocate for submitting to earthly authorities. Then again, many of these earthly authorities have, and sometimes still do, put innocent people to death. It can also be argued that the government has a monopoly on force and violence.
What are your thoughts?
I'm personally undecided, but that's why I made this thread. I want to see what others think to help me find out where I stand.
I will occasionally read something by them, knowing their bias. I would not consider a steady diet of Crux to be healthy.Cruxnow??
I never read anything from Cruxnow since I found out their 'leanings'.
This post confirms it-----they don't like tradition.
BTW, Ghandhi never told anyone if his test of himself was successful or not.That's the worst way to train oneself morally.
I was taught to act like a chicken when facing any temptation---not to look at it, not to argue with it, run and pray.
More accurately, the same oligarchy that supports Trump owns several of the judges and rents some of the others.trump owns the Supreme Court Judges. They will not dare rule against their Dear Leader. Wake up.