frank I will reply here because I don't want to pull Agu's thread out too thin.
Forgiveness:
Often the Christian God is thought of as a God of love and forgiveness, but just as often it is forgotten that He is the God of justice and holiness as well.
Hence, when I consider forgiveness, Christ's work comes to mind. By no means was it necessary for God to offer a solution to the law that cannot be kept, but He did so anyway by the sacrifice of Christ. He died that we may have life, yet refusing this grace brings death. As does refusing antivenom after a toxic snake bite. — Waya
Most everyone knows of Trump but few of Seneca. Why is that?
5m — Hanover
Does that forgiveness extend to the hundreds of thousands of years prior to Christ's birth (as far as Homo sapiens has existed) or is it only afterwards? If so, why did it take so long? Or am I misunderstanding? What does accepting this grace mean? — yatagarasu
Jesus we know only by what was written of him decades after his death. What was written of him can be obscure, and sometimes confusing. — Ciceronianus the White
I have always felt that Christianity the religion (and its metaphysical speculative grounds) was quite far removed from the teachings and example of Jesus. So much so that I am not sure Jesus would approve of Christianity any more than he did of the priests and temple in Jerusalem. — prothero
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