Hey All,
Here is something to ponder.
When God is fed up with humanity and wipes them out in the flood. Is that God admitting defeat?
By destroying humanity, is God admitting that His love was unable to turn the people from their wickedness?
I know these are heavy questions. But God's actions pretty much support a yea answer to both questions.
What about Sodom and Gomorrah?
Is God admitting, by His actions, that He was unable to save them? Remember if there were five good people God was going to spare the cities. So God could not get five people in the whole city to follow Him?
Keep walking everybody.
May God bless,
Taz
Here is something to ponder.
When God is fed up with humanity and wipes them out in the flood. Is that God admitting defeat?
By destroying humanity, is God admitting that His love was unable to turn the people from their wickedness?
I know these are heavy questions. But God's actions pretty much support a yea answer to both questions.
What about Sodom and Gomorrah?
Is God admitting, by His actions, that He was unable to save them? Remember if there were five good people God was going to spare the cities. So God could not get five people in the whole city to follow Him?
Keep walking everybody.
May God bless,
Taz