As other, they're not. As something I can take ownership of, they're both important.So tell me. What is more important to you God or his laws? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
How do you do that with some invisible absentee God? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
↪Gnostic Christian Bishop I mean only that there can be no single idea of this God; therefore, of those ideas I file under God, if I choose to adopt them as imperatives, then I can own them — tim wood
love God then love others. — hachit
Jesus simply his laws for us. — hachit
Wouldn't part of god's perfection be the laws he's set forth? — Terrapin Station
God loves us as a father, he want us to be content not happy.
Is that the best that you want for your children?
I want more for mine. I am happy and want all people to be.
— hachit
God defines love differently than you do. — hachit
where we don't (and I think it typically goes that we could not) understand, since we're not gods, — Terrapin Station
For instance, he is shown as a genocidal and infantasidal God and most people would not ever follow his lead to those immoral extremes.
How Christians end in adoring such a prick I cannot fathom. How they can set their moral sense aside for their tribalism is beyond me. It also happens in politics. We have a perfect example of this when the Republicans publicly held their noses when voting for truth-less Trump. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Do you believe that fool? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
We can not have real free will without allowing for the prospect that some of those choices will be evil. — Rank Amateur
The second kind (my insert, evil) is natural disasters etc, not acts of man. — Rank Amateur
It's not my view, but it's a pretty standard view for Christians. — Terrapin Station
For sure, as well as genocide. He defines that as good while I define it as evil.
We're you get that idea. — hachit
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