Join For His Glory for a discussion on how
https://christianforums.net/threads/a-vessel-of-honor.110278/
https://christianforums.net/threads/psalm-70-1-save-me-o-god-lord-help-me-now.108509/
Read through the following study by Tenchi for more on this topic
https://christianforums.net/threads/without-the-holy-spirit-we-can-do-nothing.109419/
Join Sola Scriptura for a discussion on the subject
https://christianforums.net/threads/anointed-preaching-teaching.109331/#post-1912042
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How does this forum handle Gnosticism. Is it off limits as a topic? Same question for dead sea scolls. Thanks.
I don't believe you are harsh or judgmental. You are just sharing your ideas and I appreciate this.
A question. I thought the Bible says that it was Jesus who was our bridegroom.
My problem with the Bible is all the different translations. I don't know which one is closest to the original. In some of the older translations they use the word, "rach' to describe the Holy Spirit which is the feminine gender. Why did they change this?
As a writer one of the hardest things is to choose a gender pronoun when writing about an individual. I was taught to always use a male pronoun even when talking about a woman. These days we are allowed more freedom to say he or she or to use the plural, "people." That is what I do most of the time.
So I have always wondered if God refers to himself as male or the man who wrote the scripture who was following the norms of his time.
I am not really worried about the whole thing because I know God is spirit and has no gender. It only comes up for me when I personify God. If I am going off the deep end I wonder who gave birth to Jesus. LOL
Hi Susannah,,,I don't believe you are harsh or judgmental. You are just sharing your ideas and I appreciate this.
A question. I thought the Bible says that it was Jesus who was our bridegroom.
My problem with the Bible is all the different translations. I don't know which one is closest to the original. In some of the older translations they use the word, "rach' to describe the Holy Spirit which is the feminine gender. Why did they change this?
As a writer one of the hardest things is to choose a gender pronoun when writing about an individual. I was taught to always use a male pronoun even when talking about a woman. These days we are allowed more freedom to say he or she or to use the plural, "people." That is what I do most of the time.
So I have always wondered if God refers to himself as male or the man who wrote the scripture who was following the norms of his time.
I am not really worried about the whole thing because I know God is spirit and has no gender. It only comes up for me when I personify God. If I am going off the deep end I wonder who gave birth to Jesus. LOL
I did read one article where the author said God has been referred to as a male because he is an authority figure just as men were back then. Here is a loaded idea. As women because authority figures does our image of God change. The feminists think so.
In conclusion . . . I like the male image of God. I really do. I just want some feminine qualities. Someone on this board suggested I can turn to Mary, the mother of Jesus, for my feminine fix because it helps me fit in better with a religion which is still very patriarchal. I think this is what I will do.
Thanks for replying. The early church was divided into different factions until the council at Nicea. I like their ideology and might have voted to include their ideas in the Bible, but now it is too late.
actually many of us here have studied this stuff our whole lives at in incredible depth. There are membership here that have PHDs in this.It is easy for me to bring controversy where none existed by rationalizing that I am educating people, but I am trying to stay away from these days. I just wanted to know where people stand on this issue.
The part of their ideology I am attracted to is the idea that if we were made in God's image then the Trinity must have some feminine qualities. If God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit are all male then why create both men and women in his image. I have wrestled with this issue all my life. My most radical fantasy is the God is masculine; the Holy Spirit is feminine; Jesus was androgynous. Of course they are all spirit so it doesn't matter really. I just can't let go of the idea that if we are made in his image there is more to the story than what was sanctioned at Nicea. God help me. ❤
In that very popular verse where Jesus says "If they were with us they would not have left us", I THINK in John 6...John is speaking about gnostics. But this verse is always used by those that believe in unconditional eternal security to show that they were never saved to begin with.Only about 2000 years too late to add your opinion. They actually weren't that divided in many aspects of theology when they met.
Constantine, as the new Emporor, wanted to appreciate those who helped him gain the Throne. So he asked those who were the religious leaders to more organize the tenants of their religion. Because he wanted to herald them and promote their religion.
actually many of us here have studied this stuff our whole lives at in incredible depth. There are membership here that have PHDs in this.
And this heresy which was dead by the time of the Council of Nivea was killed by the Apostle John who wrote several letters, a book of Prophecy and a Gospel account. All of John's writings deliberately were written with denouncing Gnosticism as a focus.
In that very popular verse where Jesus says "If they were with us they would not have left us", I THINK in John 6...John is speaking about gnostics. But this verse is always used by those that believe in unconditional eternal security to show that they were never saved to begin with.
So many times, we try to make scripture say what we want to hear instead of what it says.
OTOH,,,,there's just too much to know.
I can't remember that it's about homosexuals.Jesus was talking about giving up everything they thought they knew in order to follow God...about eating flesh and drinking blood. Jesus wasn't speaking literally but figuratively. But even still, it upset the Jewish hordes that were following him solely for the food He had provided at the preceding miracles.
Your quote reminded me of Peter's letter that was referencing the homosexuals that had glommed onto the Christian faith but didn't want to give up homosexuality. Peter quoted the proverb of Solomon saying that "A dog returns to it's vomit" also in that section.
I don't believe you are harsh or judgmental. You are just sharing your ideas and I appreciate this.
A question. I thought the Bible says that it was Jesus who was our bridegroom.
My problem with the Bible is all the different translations. I don't know which one is closest to the original. In some of the older translations they use the word, "rach' to describe the Holy Spirit which is the feminine gender. Why did they change this?
As a writer one of the hardest things is to choose a gender pronoun when writing about an individual. I was taught to always use a male pronoun even when talking about a woman. These days we are allowed more freedom to say he or she or to use the plural, "people." That is what I do most of the time.
So I have always wondered if God refers to himself as male or the man who wrote the scripture who was following the norms of his time.
I am not really worried about the whole thing because I know God is spirit and has no gender. It only comes up for me when I personify God. If I am going off the deep end I wonder who gave birth to Jesus. LOL
I did read one article where the author said God has been referred to as a male because he is an authority figure just as men were back then. Here is a loaded idea. As women because authority figures does our image of God change. The feminists think so.
In conclusion . . . I like the male image of God. I really do. I just want some feminine qualities. Someone on this board suggested I can turn to Mary, the mother of Jesus, for my feminine fix because it helps me fit in better with a religion which is still very patriarchal. I think this is what I will do.
Gnostics are not saved.In that very popular verse where Jesus says "If they were with us they would not have left us", I THINK in John 6...John is speaking about gnostics. But this verse is always used by those that believe in unconditional eternal security to show that they were never saved to begin with.
So many times, we try to make scripture say what we want to hear instead of what it says.
OTOH,,,,there's just too much to know.
Does someone here have a problem with genders?I am not sure I understand the gender idea about God.
If you know the cross, the cost of the walk of love, nothing in us compares. And this is not based on does God understand me better if they are a female view or a male view?
What this speaks to me is of not seeing Jesus as a person. I love women because they care more about making contact with individuals and how they respond, and less about competition. What I love about Jesus is He knew it all, and laid a path before me to walk and learn.
Whether I am male or female the road is the same. And God knows me, intimately, down to the hairs on my head. It is in having an open heart and letting pain out, forgiveness and the cross and love in, that we begin to see the realities as they are.
I think because God is allied often with our relationship or lack of it with our fathers, we often want a sympathetic female voice, but this illustrates our need to resolve our feelings with our earthy father, to be able to see the love our heavenly Father has for us. God bless you
In that very popular verse where Jesus says "If they were with us they would not have left us", I THINK in John 6...John is speaking about gnostics. But this verse is always used by those that believe in unconditional eternal security to show that they were never saved to begin with.
So many times, we try to make scripture say what we want to hear instead of what it says.
OTOH,,,,there's just too much to know.
Great post.wondering,
First John was written to refute the Gnostic heresy. So was Against Heresies by the early church father, Irenaeus.
What Gnostics believe is as easy as finding a needle in a haystack. However, here are some basics:
This is contrary to biblical Christianity where salvation is found only in Jesus (Acts 4:12). For the Gnostics, they redeem themselves by examining the inner 'spark' that needs to be set free from the evil fleshly body.
- It is based on the Greek word, gnōsis, knowledge. For Gnostics, what is known has changed many times ever since the Gnostic hay day of the 1st century.
- You need to acquire mystical knowledge, which is Gnostic salvation.
- Yes, there is a Great God, but he's unknowable.
- A Demiurge (Creator) is not all-good, but is 'a bungling and incompetent fool that creates the world as a spiritual prison'.
- For Gnosticism there is a distinction between the highest, unknowable "alien God" and the "creator" of the material - the Demiurge - who is a lesser creator God who messed up in creating the world. Instead of getting a 'good universe', this inferior god infected the world with sin and pain. Along with that comes spiritual, gnostic blindness.
- As for the human body, a built-in good soul/spirit is trapped in an evil, material body.
Some Gnostics deny God's existence and human beings become deities.
Gnosticism and Christianity are mutually exclusive. Why? I cannot improve myself by human wisdom because, 'The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instruction' (Prov 1:7 NIV).
Oz
I never say that someone cannot be saved.Gnostics are not saved.
None of them.
So what's your point?
You think gnostics are saved?
Show me where in the Bible it says that.