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Welcome to Christianity Board...you will find there are plenty of members skilled in the knowledge of His Word in this forum.Hello my name is Mi though I guess here I’m going by Skovand. I have been a Christian since I was baptized into Christ in 08. Though I begin studying the Bible in 07 with disciples in Portland.
I don’t have a specific denomination, it’s more of a specific paradigm about the Bible but doctrinally I am most closely to the Churches of Christ born out of the American restoration movement. Though within the denomination there is a wide span of biblical understanding and I fall on the progressive liberal side of Christianity. Im a evolutionary creationist which is very different from intelligent design beliefs like YEC or OEC. I understand the closed handed topics, and I don’t fully agree with them but I’m not particularly here to debate as much as discuss and enjoy time online. I will wax and wane between how active I am here since I work Monday through Friday 5am-130pm at a metal shop ( not music but actual metal manufacturing) and then from 230-830 I work as a subcontractor building and maintaining water gardens and ponds. Im working on my certifications for landscaping and pesticide management. Im big into native plants and how ecology and habitat systems play a role in developing functional and attractive residential gardens that can help combat some of the anti stewardship practices our species have developed.
I take studying the Bible very seriously. I read weekly and by read I mean studying with a purpose. I read lots of commentaries and books by scholars. Also listen to several podcasts on the subject. I am most influenced by NT Wright, Tim Mackie, Pete Enns, Francis Collins, John Walton and Richard Friedman. I also like Heiser.
Im big into horror genre as entertainment and that includes not just watching, reading and listening to it but also into documentaries on the evolution of horror, behind the scenes and the tropes used. Really enjoy horror as a social commentary.
I really enjoy hiking and foraging when I have time. I hike probably 10-20 hours a week. Though now it’s closer to 5-10 hours a week. I like lifting and biking. Live alone with my cats on a dead end street in the country of Alabama.
@Heart2Soul Very good point......You read the Bible...awesome! Then you have read that we, as born again Christians, should avoid the very appearance of evil.
Why?
Because it opens doors for the enemy to sneak in.
Have a blessed day!
..Im big into horror genre as entertainment..
narf!Well I think the same about your social skills.
Yah cant use evolution to create? Why not?Scripture says God created the heavens and the earth and everything therein. How can you claim to be a Christian in one sentence and call Almighty God a liar in the next sentence
..Im a evolutionary creationist..
Interesting post. You introduce yourself with some of what you believe( your opinion not scriptural) , and when another poster tries to give you some sound direction you aren’t interested and know they are to be ignored. My question is how did you learn about God ? I would think it would be from scripture that was shared with you, and or from scripture you have read. I see already what type of Christ follower you are you believe what you accept and reject what you , based on your opinion, don’t. Scripture says God created the heavens and the earth and everything therein. How can you claim to be a Christian in one sentence and call Almighty God a liar in the next sentence ? You are following yourself not God.
I see the hand of god everywhere. Even when it’s hot and a cloud blows over me and the wind picks up. Does not mean I think he supernaturally made it happen.Yes, on the one hand we know evolution exists simply by looking at the survival of the fittest, but at the same time there seems to be a guiding hand behind it.
Senator John McCain summed it up nicely with- "I believe in evolution, but when I hike the Grand Canyon at sunset, I see the hand of God there also"..:)
Have you ever looked into the way that verse can be better translated? If horror is evil that means the Bible is evil as well since it’s full of horror.@Heart2Soul Very good point......
I have read the Bible which is why I disagree with you. Maybe some verses to showcase it?Welcome to Christianity Board...you will find there are plenty of members skilled in the knowledge of His Word in this forum.
Your personal likes and dislikes are specific to you. There may be others who enjoy the same things but yet they are still specific to you. Everything has an effect on individuals in different ways.
My concern about horror movies is the character in the movie. I won't watch demonic movies...i.e. The Exorcist,...or witchcraft movies...i.e. The Craft...simply because the mind is too vulnerable to the things it sees and hears.
You read the Bible...awesome! Then you have read that we, as born again Christians, should avoid the very appearance of evil.
Why?
Because it opens doors for the enemy to sneak in.
Have a blessed day!
@Skovand1075 Well, it's a Scripture quotation.Have you ever looked into the way that verse can be better translated? If horror is evil that means the Bible is evil as well since it’s full of horror.
just think about it. Do you think god wants us to avoid the appearance of evil even when it’s not actually evil or does it mean we need to avoid all forms of evil.
Then what’s evil? Is evil horror stories or is evil sin? Is evil being a crappy person who uselessly bothers others or is it enjoying doing tribal stories? Lots of ways to dig into it.
..Then what’s evil? Is evil horror stories or is evil sin?..
@Skovand1075 Well, it's a Scripture quotation.
"22 Abstain from all appearance of evil.
23 And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ." (1 Thess. 5.22-23)
Why are you not most influenced by God's Word?I am most influenced by NT Wright, Tim Mackie, Pete Enns, Francis Collins, John Walton and Richard Friedman. I also like Heiser.
I've had some misgivings also about NT Wright's doctrinal position, in places, @Heart2Soul ...Why are you not most influenced by God's Word?
I just researched these men you admire and allow to influence you in interpretation of scripture.
I was rather dismayed that Wright and Mackie both teach justification is a process to be obtained at a future time.
This is a quote from the link below....
What’s Wrong with Wright: Examining the New Perspective on Paul by Phil Johnson
So in Wright’s estimation, justification is an ecumenical and ecclesiological issue, not a soteriological one. Page 158:
Paul’s doctrine of justification by faith impels the churches, in their current fragmented state, into the ecumenical task. It cannot be right that the very doctrine which declares that all who believe in Jesus belong at the same table (Galatians 2) should be used as a way of saying that some, who define the doctrine of justification differently, belong at a different table. The doctrine of justification, in other words, is not merely a doctrine in which Catholic and Protestant might just be able to agree on, as a result of hard ecumenical endeavour. It is itself the ecumenical doctrine, the doctrine that rebukes all our petty and often culture-bound church groupings, and which declares that all who believe in Jesus belong together in the one family. . . . The doctrine of justification is in fact the great ecumenical doctrine.
Is there no soteriological or personal dimension in Wright’s understanding of justification, then? There is, and this is one of the most troubling aspects of his work. Like many today who are proposing new
And you see this most clearly in the fifth distinctive of Wright’s position that I want to highlight for you. Here is idea number five, if you’re making a list of these: According to Wright, Protestant and Reformed exegetes who in the mainstream of evangelical theology have all misread what Paul meant when he spoke of “the righteousness of God.” According to Wright, divine righteousness is not an asset that can be imputed from God to the believer. It has nothing to do with virtue or excellence or moral rectitude that can be imputed. Instead, God’s righteousness is simply His covenant faithfulness. And when Paul speaks of the believer’s righteousness as a righteousness that comes from God, he is talking about covenant membership, our status in the covenant, which ultimately must be maintained by our own faithfulness.
So I only read the first few sentence and stopped. I would expect better from staff to be honest. That’s a very immature question. I’m not even going to entertain responding to that question.Why are you not most influenced by God's Word?
I just researched these men you admire and allow to influence you in interpretation of scripture.
I was rather dismayed that Wright and Mackie both teach justification is a process to be obtained at a future time.
This is a quote from the link below....
What’s Wrong with Wright: Examining the New Perspective on Paul by Phil Johnson
So in Wright’s estimation, justification is an ecumenical and ecclesiological issue, not a soteriological one. Page 158:
Paul’s doctrine of justification by faith impels the churches, in their current fragmented state, into the ecumenical task. It cannot be right that the very doctrine which declares that all who believe in Jesus belong at the same table (Galatians 2) should be used as a way of saying that some, who define the doctrine of justification differently, belong at a different table. The doctrine of justification, in other words, is not merely a doctrine in which Catholic and Protestant might just be able to agree on, as a result of hard ecumenical endeavour. It is itself the ecumenical doctrine, the doctrine that rebukes all our petty and often culture-bound church groupings, and which declares that all who believe in Jesus belong together in the one family. . . . The doctrine of justification is in fact the great ecumenical doctrine.
Is there no soteriological or personal dimension in Wright’s understanding of justification, then? There is, and this is one of the most troubling aspects of his work. Like many today who are proposing new
And you see this most clearly in the fifth distinctive of Wright’s position that I want to highlight for you. Here is idea number five, if you’re making a list of these: According to Wright, Protestant and Reformed exegetes who in the mainstream of evangelical theology have all misread what Paul meant when he spoke of “the righteousness of God.” According to Wright, divine righteousness is not an asset that can be imputed from God to the believer. It has nothing to do with virtue or excellence or moral rectitude that can be imputed. Instead, God’s righteousness is simply His covenant faithfulness. And when Paul speaks of the believer’s righteousness as a righteousness that comes from God, he is talking about covenant membership, our status in the covenant, which ultimately must be maintained by our own faithfulness.