by jimwalton » Tue Oct 27, 2020 10:24 am
> What counts as worshipping, loving, and obeying God?
Worship is recognizing and rehearsing all of who God is, and giving all of myself to Him. Love is a relationship of sacrifice and devotion. Obedience is compliance with the will of God.
> It is said that a man may find God without ever encountering the Bible, and that the Word has been with God since creation.
The Bible says that the attributes of God can be seen in creation (Rom. 1.20), Paul doesn't claim that general revelation (seeing God in nature) is sufficient to save anyone. He does imply, however, that general revelation is sufficient to condemn. The created universe bears witness to the power and divine nature of the Creator, and those who say otherwise are accountable for their rejection of the creation’s witness to the Creator.
> To love is to know God, to seek truth is to seek God, how is that limited to specifically following the Bible?
Because truth is necessarily narrow. Of all the numbers, 2 + 2 only equals 4. Of all the theories about what happened to Amelia Earhart or who shot JFK, we can have all the theories we want, but after the truth is discovered, only that will be true. It is impossible that all the religions of the world are true since they contradict each other. A cannot equal non-A. Now, logically speaking, possibly none of them are true, but it's impossible that more than one are true. If there really and truthfully is a God, then there is truth about Him that must be followed, and all our theories go in the trash except the one(s) that is true. At best, only one religion can be true.
Besides, it is not true that to love is to know God. Humans can exercise and experience love outside of a knowledge of God.
And while it is true that to seek truth is ultimately and fundamentally to seek God, only with special revelation can such seeking be directed to spiritual truth.
> Why does the Bible itself say that those who have not heard have a general revelation of God
It's because God uses many means to reveal Himself to people. But general revelation only tells us of the logic of a God, it doesn't reveal all of Himself to us that is necessary for salvation.
> Point is, it is easy to show how someone professing another creed could still in fact be following God.
There are core truths in the Bible that cannot be ignored. We are not free to create our own version of Christianity; the Bible tells us what Christianity means, and that becomes our authority.
> No, I said that was the essentials, and it is.
This is not what the Bible teaches. The essentials in the Bible are:
- If you want to be part of the kingdom of God, you must repent and believe. Sin is presented as the antithesis of Jesus and it must be repented from. (Not just be a good person)
- That Jesus Himself is the access point, and Jesus is calling sinners to himself (not just be a good person)
- That one must be born of the Spirit, not just be a good person
- He is looking for faith, not just goodness.
- Obey the Law and keep the commandments (here's where being a good person is partially applicable).
- Do God's will (includes more that being a good person).
- Put the words of Jesus into practice (includes more that being a good person).
- Align yourself with Jesus, identify with him, and follow Him (includes more that being a good person).
- Love God
- Love Jesus
- Lose your life (deny self) for Jesus's sake
- good works (love of neighbor)
- Humility
- Live by the truth; come into the light, both of which are Jesus Himself
- Drink the "living water" that Jesus gives
It's far more than being a good person. We must teach ALL of what the Bible teaches, not just love (as important as that is). As a matter of fact, Jesus rebuked the "goodness" of the Pharisees as being inadequate.
> What counts as worshipping, loving, and obeying God?
Worship is recognizing and rehearsing all of who God is, and giving all of myself to Him. Love is a relationship of sacrifice and devotion. Obedience is compliance with the will of God.
> It is said that a man may find God without ever encountering the Bible, and that the Word has been with God since creation.
The Bible says that the attributes of God can be seen in creation (Rom. 1.20), Paul doesn't claim that general revelation (seeing God in nature) is sufficient to save anyone. He does imply, however, that general revelation is sufficient to condemn. The created universe bears witness to the power and divine nature of the Creator, and those who say otherwise are accountable for their rejection of the creation’s witness to the Creator.
> To love is to know God, to seek truth is to seek God, how is that limited to specifically following the Bible?
Because truth is necessarily narrow. Of all the numbers, 2 + 2 only equals 4. Of all the theories about what happened to Amelia Earhart or who shot JFK, we can have all the theories we want, but after the truth is discovered, only that will be true. It is impossible that all the religions of the world are true since they contradict each other. A cannot equal non-A. Now, logically speaking, possibly none of them are true, but it's impossible that more than one are true. If there really and truthfully is a God, then there is truth about Him that must be followed, and all our theories go in the trash except the one(s) that is true. At best, only one religion can be true.
Besides, it is not true that to love is to know God. Humans can exercise and experience love outside of a knowledge of God.
And while it is true that to seek truth is ultimately and fundamentally to seek God, only with special revelation can such seeking be directed to spiritual truth.
> Why does the Bible itself say that those who have not heard have a general revelation of God
It's because God uses many means to reveal Himself to people. But general revelation only tells us of the logic of a God, it doesn't reveal all of Himself to us that is necessary for salvation.
> Point is, it is easy to show how someone professing another creed could still in fact be following God.
There are core truths in the Bible that cannot be ignored. We are not free to create our own version of Christianity; the Bible tells us what Christianity means, and that becomes our authority.
> No, I said that was the essentials, and it is.
This is not what the Bible teaches. The essentials in the Bible are:
[list][*] If you want to be part of the kingdom of God, you must repent and believe. Sin is presented as the antithesis of Jesus and it must be repented from. (Not just be a good person)
[*] That Jesus Himself is the access point, and Jesus is calling sinners to himself (not just be a good person)
[*] That one must be born of the Spirit, not just be a good person
[*] He is looking for faith, not just goodness.
[*] Obey the Law and keep the commandments (here's where being a good person is partially applicable).
[*] Do God's will (includes more that being a good person).
[*] Put the words of Jesus into practice (includes more that being a good person).
[*] Align yourself with Jesus, identify with him, and follow Him (includes more that being a good person).
[*] Love God
[*] Love Jesus
[*] Lose your life (deny self) for Jesus's sake
[*] good works (love of neighbor)
[*] Humility
[*] Live by the truth; come into the light, both of which are Jesus Himself
[*] Drink the "living water" that Jesus gives[/list]
It's far more than being a good person. We must teach ALL of what the Bible teaches, not just love (as important as that is). As a matter of fact, Jesus rebuked the "goodness" of the Pharisees as being inadequate.