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VirginShallConceive
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Well, no matter what excuses you would like to tell yourself, I certainly see that the actions and proclaimed beliefs of the overwhelming majority of Christians do not match up. Earlier in this thread, you have an honest and warranted suspicion about Christians and their actions:It's this simultaneous fear coupled with constant proclamations in anticipation of Heaven that is learned by the child.
We don't give children enough credit, me thinks. (that's my grandson speaking Yoda). Uncle Mike was a Christian we believe we will see him in heaven. But the way Uncle Mike died was a slow and awful existence. At 50 he suffered a stroke the paralyzed him on one side. He could no longer speak or eat (feeding tube). His wife took care of him at home for three long years. He finally died in his sleep.
I would not want to die this way, a burden on my family. I have a Christian friend who said she was afraid to die. I asked her why, because she is afraid it might be painful.
If our children do not understand it is because we have failed to explain it.
What I have a problem with is telling a child who has lost their parent, that God needs them in heaven. Then that child will wonder why God would need their daddy more than they do? After all, I'm just a little child, God is all powerful, why couldn't He use someone else. And what could he possibly be doing in heaven for God?
Now that's just making things up and confusing a child. It's better just to say, you don't know why they died, than to give them nonsense. Children are not stupid. But sometimes adults don't want to admit they just don't know right now. Maybe someday they will see.
Then, you have two others agreeing-- because it is plain to see when honestly looking.Keeps me wondering. If we expect death to be an improvement, then why is it we christians aren't the most deathwishing, suicidal bunch on earth? Okay, maybe because God doesn't want fr us to commit violence against ourselves, so suicide is out of question. But I never heard any christian say that they secretly wish they'd die soon so they can be with Christ, like Paul did.
That's why I'm suspecting many christians don't really believe in what they say they believe.
Death isn't the only type of instance in which Christians don't back up their proclamations with their actions. Another huge example that flaunts itself at every turn of the corner is how Christians proclaim that God has the authority over everything and how important it is to obey God(in whatever way each individual Christian interprets the message of what it is, exactly, that God wants them to do). But, you see these Christians stop speeding when they spot a traffic cop-- every single time. In a lame excuse for their sins against God, you might hear them say "We are sinful by nature". And sure, maybe it is natural to speed when you are tying to get somewhere. But, as soon as they realize the cop with the radar gun is watching, they always slow down . . . ALWAYS. Then, they'll turn around and say that God is always watching.
Turn that 100% obedience to the traffic cop who is watching into the 100% refrain from sinful physical actions against God who is always watching, and then we can talk. (I couldn't include thought crimes in my comparison because the cop can't give you a ticket just for wishing that you could speed.)
Until then, they don't act like it.
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