I know Aimee personally, and can attest to her honest character and her deep love for Jesus Christ. In Aimee, we are given a unique gift, because she has been called out of that wicked lifestyle, and can show us the dangers of things we know nothing about.
I know that for some people, Aimee might seem like a "new" member here because they're not familiar with her posts and testimony, but she's been here a long time.
Although I haven't met Aimee in person (some members on this site have), I wanted to second Grace's statements about Aimee's stance as a Christian. For those of us who have known her for some time on the site, there are no doubts about her faith. She just has a different perspective, and unfortunately, has faced a lot of opposition we never have because we haven't experienced the background she came from.
I have a great book called "Dreams, Prophecy, and Evangelism" by an author named Doug Addison who was raised in the New Age lifestyle and delivered as a Christian. He talks about one instance in particular in which a woman was "praying" for him but he knew something else was going on--she was actually a witch and was trying to put a curse on him. Mr. Addison had a keen spiritual sensitivity from childhood, and when he became saved, he was able to discern the source from which people were working. He explains things in a way that's both fascinating but won't creep out the average reader--check it out if you can.
As for Yureason--when you were under your first name, I complimented the fact that you would type out long, and what seemed like at the time, dedicated prayers for other people.
The thing is, as I read them more closely (under all the names you've chosen for yourself), they seem a lot more like spiritual manipulation. There seems to be a distinct pattern to your posts:
1. You talk about how deeply lonely you are, and for that, I sympathize with you. I truly do.
2. But then... It always turns into how people do you wrong. Somehow they've committed some kind of sin against you, either by not talking to you as much as you want, or by talking to other people and supposedly leaving you out, and you always see other people's conversations as purposely ignoring you.
3. Your final reaction is to always, always, accuse people of "not being Christians". Your posts are full of laments about the people on this site claiming to be Christians but not actually being Christians.
But a further examination of your lengthy, hyper-spiritual-sounding rants (under all 3 of the names I've noticed you as so far--maybe I've missed a few) all have the same message: "You are not acting the way I want you to, and you are not treating me the way I wanted to be treated. Therefore... I am going to question your faith, and say that you aren't a Christian at all, and I'm going to type out a long prayer asking God to behave in a way that better suits the way I want to be treated."
I'm pointing this out because it's all in reference to your posts (nothing hidden, nothing private), and as I said before, you have a very distinct style of communication. Unless you change that (and your message behind it) drastically, people will always recognize you.
I do feel sorry for your pain, whoever you are. But telling people they aren't Christians when you don't agree with them or feel they don't pay enough attention to you just isn't the way to go about it.
GrumpyCrumpet, I sincerely apologize for derailing your thread a bit, but I felt the need to say something. (Should I just say, "Bless my own heart" before you do?
Just kidding!
)