i'm not christian but i do have some questions

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Aug 21, 2022
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#1
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
 
Jan 14, 2021
1,599
526
113
#2
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)
Welcome and I hope my answers will give you some insight.

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?
I was raised in a Christian environment in my youth and always had an innate sense of Christian identity and Christian sensibilities, but I struggled with Christian identity outwardly for many years because I rejected the concepts and ideas in the way they were presented to me at the time. I counted myself among atheists and eventually just agnostics in my youth. It wasn't until much later when I actually got around to reading the Bible for myself that I started to become receptive. The seeds of different conversations I had had with different people of Christ eventually started to grow in my heart and mind. There came a sudden point of grief in my heart that I fully surrendered to the calling I felt.

2) what is your opinion on the LGBTP community?
Rebuke the sin, love the sinner. It is my understanding that male-male homosexual attraction has a significant causal relationship with environmental synthetic-estrogen contamination (also evident in wildlife studies), as well as childhood sexual abuse (pederasty). A war vet with PTSD is going to have trouble handling their instinctual responses to specific type of stimulation even to the point of violence. In a similar way, someone that has been altered by synthetic estrogen in utero, or by sexual abuse in childhood are going to also react to specific kinds of stimuli in sometimes undesirable ways. Such as perpetuated child-abuse in some cases. There was some speculation that some types of hyperpromiscuous-homosexual behaviour was also the result of parasitic infections that spread through anal sex or anal-oral interaction.

The laws of the land state that these are protected people, and insofar as that is the case they cannot be openly rebuked.

What I state is merely a private perception.

I recognize that in-the-moment impulses are not necessarily conscious choice, but the choice to limit exposure to sythetic estrogens and degenerate hyperpromiscuous culture is at least an effort from these individuals to make a change. My personal perception is that monogamous hetereosexual relationships that result in jointly raising children are the happiest relationships.

I believe that no Christian community should endorse the rainbow flag or other political markings.

3) what is your opinion on atheists?
There was a Talmudic Rabbi that once wisely stated that a self-titled atheist isn't really "without God" or "rejecting God", only that they are rejecting the human depictions of what God is. And therefore instinctually rejecting what they percieve to be idols.

I believe that some self-titled atheists are Christians waiting to be self-realized. Much like Saul became Paul, some people will become Christian when the time is right. The purpose of this delayed transformation can be so that the person may gain perspective in their experiences and be able to later reach out to certain types of people that would otherwise be hard to reach.

4) have you ever questioned your faith?
When I counted myself among atheists and agnostics, yes.

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
An idol is nothing in itself. If a story becomes an idol, it can be a problem, but generally no.

Many stories are just an aspect of language and a method for communicating abstract ideas.

I have some questions for you:

1) In terms of your agnosticism, do you count as an epistemological pluralist or reductionist?
2) Since you asked about LGBTP, do you count yourself as part of that community?
3) Have you read Pauline epistles in the New Testament? Do you have an opinion of them?
4) What is your perception of Christianity in general?
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,348
113
#3
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?

First, I want to say I believe you already know the answers to the questions you are asking or already have a position most likely firm in.

1. I did not convert to Christianity; I am in a personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ as I was formally introduced in 1981 when I repented of my sins and saw I needed God s forgiveness for the sins and have done in my life at that time. My eyes were open to the reality of the Lord Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit by the preaching of the gospel of the Lord Jesu Christ.

2. I have no opinion, nor would it matter of the LGBTQ sexual preferences. The only one that matters is God's.

3. I have no opinion of atheists other than it is a belief system of faith in nothing that causes everything we see.
4. yes, but I find more than enough in the word of God prayer, and creation to confirm what I beleive.
5. I believe harry potter and anything you take out of the context of just entertainment is an issue that speaks to the power behind or unseen.
 

blueluna5

Well-known member
Jul 30, 2018
658
393
63
#4
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
1. When did I become a Christian? Since childhood. As early as I can remember. My mother found me looking at the stars at 3 and I held out my hand and said God was holding my hand. It's interesting bc I would say things not knowing scripture at the time. But "he holds me by my right hand" is in the Bible. Also even though I believed so young I've been rebellious off and on. I've certainly not listened to God my whole life. But it has helped me tremendously when I do. I even had a close encounter with a child predator as a kid. I'm sensitive to the energy of others and my mother listened to me thankfully. That's the simplest way I can describe it.

2. LGBT community. Love is love is extremely naive. Is sexual love between a man and animal love? Is sexual love between a man and a child love? If it involves a child, an animal, or brainwashing the young I'm highly against it. If what stays in the bedroom between 2 consenting adults, stays in the bedroom you do you. I like someone at church who is in that community. I've had friends in the past in it as well.

3. I've had many friends who are atheists and I was in a long term relationship with an atheist. I once asked him, "Do you ever wonder if God is real?" He told me, "No, there's no way to ever really know. " I thought that was interesting bc I've always thought about it. I use to love studying philosophy even as a child. The allegory of the cave was my favorite. If you only ever see a shadow of a flower you'll never know what it really looks like. It's symbolic for God and even being brainwashed. Although I obviously didn't understand that last part until I grew up. Atheists tend to look at Christians as naive, stupid, and having "blind faith."

4. Questioned faith? Yes. The term "blind faith" does not describe Christianity. In fact God frequently gave signs to people in the Bible. There's objective faith. This would be studying history and finding out every ancient civilization had a world flood story (although they never met). You can definitely go through the rabbit hole with history and the Bible. Then there's subjective faith. This would be answered prayers and such. Sometimes I would tell God I wanted a sign. The tv would say "are you looking for a sign? I'm here to tell you that Jesus christ is real!" Or I once told God "if you control the storm (it was storming) show me how you take it away." As we were driving. I saw a storm on my left and on the right a double rainbow. It was so beautiful cars were pulling over to take pictures.

5. Are movies like harry potter, pokemon, etc problematic? No, definitely not the examples you provided.

So there's 2 parts to this. My husband and I watch horror movies, but our kids are not allowed. Why? I don't want them to think about such things or worry. I don't want it to seep into their subconscious, where they will actually experience it in dreams. Do you not know that you are a god? So yes, you can create anything in your dream and more if we're getting really honest. But garbage in, garbage out as it's said.

We watch it out of curiosity. We can separate fact from fiction..mostly anyhow. We always talk about the spiritual side of it. Did you know most movies/books have a symbolic spirtual component? A lot of horror movies even have scripture in it. Sandman where he goes to h*** is the current one we're watching.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,161
2,175
113
#5
I won't jump into answering every question just yet, but I don't want to leave the first one unanswered, nor miss the invitation to ask you a question in return.

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?
Since childhood, I asked different people what they thought about God, and considered their answers. So I guess I was looking for Him since then but it wasn't until I understood that I can't "see" as much as I wanted to know unless He revealed Himself to me. I can't recall specifically now, before He revealed Himself, if He had been speaking to me all along and asked me, "Who do you hope that I am?" or I volunteered the sentiment that, honestly, whether He is or not, of all those I'd heard of I wished He were at least like Jesus... and then I looked with all my heart, hoped, and I'd say even expected that if He were real that He would answer that prayer... and He knew the expectation that filled my heart and the crushing disappointment that would ensue if it went unanswered... and I'd have to write a book to tell you what I then saw, but why would anyone believe what I given to see if they didn't believe Daniel, or John, or... so I've yet to write it. But it's true, The Way has been provided where we can approach Him, each and every individual that desires to, when you search for Him with all your heart.


i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist.
Do you hold your heart back for the fear of a crushing disappointment?
Hoping, with expectation, to hear your answer.
 
Aug 21, 2022
29
3
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#6
Welcome and I hope my answers will give you some insight.



I was raised in a Christian environment in my youth and always had an innate sense of Christian identity and Christian sensibilities, but I struggled with Christian identity outwardly for many years because I rejected the concepts and ideas in the way they were presented to me at the time. I counted myself among atheists and eventually just agnostics in my youth. It wasn't until much later when I actually got around to reading the Bible for myself that I started to become receptive. The seeds of different conversations I had had with different people of Christ eventually started to grow in my heart and mind. There came a sudden point of grief in my heart that I fully surrendered to the calling I felt.



Rebuke the sin, love the sinner. It is my understanding that male-male homosexual attraction has a significant causal relationship with environmental synthetic-estrogen contamination (also evident in wildlife studies), as well as childhood sexual abuse (pederasty). A war vet with PTSD is going to have trouble handling their instinctual responses to specific type of stimulation even to the point of violence. In a similar way, someone that has been altered by synthetic estrogen in utero, or by sexual abuse in childhood are going to also react to specific kinds of stimuli in sometimes undesirable ways. Such as perpetuated child-abuse in some cases. There was some speculation that some types of hyperpromiscuous-homosexual behaviour was also the result of parasitic infections that spread through anal sex or anal-oral interaction.

The laws of the land state that these are protected people, and insofar as that is the case they cannot be openly rebuked.

What I state is merely a private perception.

I recognize that in-the-moment impulses are not necessarily conscious choice, but the choice to limit exposure to sythetic estrogens and degenerate hyperpromiscuous culture is at least an effort from these individuals to make a change. My personal perception is that monogamous hetereosexual relationships that result in jointly raising children are the happiest relationships.

I believe that no Christian community should endorse the rainbow flag or other political markings.



There was a Talmudic Rabbi that once wisely stated that a self-titled atheist isn't really "without God" or "rejecting God", only that they are rejecting the human depictions of what God is. And therefore instinctually rejecting what they percieve to be idols.

I believe that some self-titled atheists are Christians waiting to be self-realized. Much like Saul became Paul, some people will become Christian when the time is right. The purpose of this delayed transformation can be so that the person may gain perspective in their experiences and be able to later reach out to certain types of people that would otherwise be hard to reach.



When I counted myself among atheists and agnostics, yes.



An idol is nothing in itself. If a story becomes an idol, it can be a problem, but generally no.

Many stories are just an aspect of language and a method for communicating abstract ideas.

I have some questions for you:

1) In terms of your agnosticism, do you count as an epistemological pluralist or reductionist?
2) Since you asked about LGBTP, do you count yourself as part of that community?
3) Have you read Pauline epistles in the New Testament? Do you have an opinion of them?
4) What is your perception of Christianity in general?
1) sorry, i don't know what these mean even after searching for a definition, if you could explain these i'd be happy to answer.
2) yes, i'm bisexual, and from your response it seems you think things can make a person gay, right? i would like to know more about this parasite, what's it's name? i'd like to investigate this since everything i've been told suggests that transgender and attraction to the same gender are influenced by brain structure which i don't think a parasite can manipulate.
3) unfortunately not, is that a book in the bible? if so, i do plan on reading the bible eventually, i just haven't gotten around to it.
4) for the people in the group i prefer to base my opinions on an individual level, i'm not going to assume every christian is homophobic just because some are, but in general my opinion of the idea of christianity is not great. your god seems heartless, throwing the children he apparently loves into hell because they didn't believe in him, or for something they can't control.
 
Aug 21, 2022
29
3
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#7
First, I want to say I believe you already know the answers to the questions you are asking or already have a position most likely firm in.

1. I did not convert to Christianity; I am in a personal relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ as I was formally introduced in 1981 when I repented of my sins and saw I needed God s forgiveness for the sins and have done in my life at that time. My eyes were open to the reality of the Lord Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit by the preaching of the gospel of the Lord Jesu Christ.

2. I have no opinion, nor would it matter of the LGBTQ sexual preferences. The only one that matters is God's.

3. I have no opinion of atheists other than it is a belief system of faith in nothing that causes everything we see.
4. yes, but I find more than enough in the word of God prayer, and creation to confirm what I beleive.
5. I believe harry potter and anything you take out of the context of just entertainment is an issue that speaks to the power behind or unseen.
nope, i've never spoken to a christian in my life, and these are questions about individuals experience and opinions, not christianity itself. i doubt i already know these things, assumptions maybe but i can't know these things and apply them to every single person in a group. and atheists don't necessarily say that the universe came from nothing, just that it wasn't designed. also god has a sexual preference?
 
Aug 21, 2022
29
3
3
#8
Do you hold your heart back for the fear of a crushing disappointment?
Hoping, with expectation, to hear your answer.
if you mean love then i don't think so. i've never met someone i'm actually attracted to or want to further my relationship with, but not out of fear of rejection, more so i'm just not interested.
 

Mem

Senior Member
Sep 23, 2014
7,161
2,175
113
#9
if you mean love then i don't think so. i've never met someone i'm actually attracted to or want to further my relationship with, but not out of fear of rejection, more so i'm just not interested.
Ok, I'd say that you've hardened your heart, or at least have the wrong idea of what love it means to love. I'm not saying that you don't love or know love, you've just believed someone else's misrepresentation of it as the real thing and, inherently knowing the real thing, figure it just isn't there, at all. We are made in God's image but each of us has done his or her part in distorting, even disfiguring, it.

There was a rainbow yesterday which reminded me of a lesson about it being a sign God gave to us through Noah, after the flood. It says that the rainbow is essentially an illustration of God's bow (and arrows) always being pointed away from us and turned upon Himself ever after. I believe this represents God's true character.

And when Moses asks Him to see Him, God said, "nobody can look at me and live..." I don't think He meant He'd kill them as much as He meant nobody can withstand the glory emanating from Him. But God granted Moses' request saying, "I will place you in the crevice of the rock and put My hand over you..." I believe this is alluding? to Jesus, who is sent to "absorb that death" so that we might 'see Him face to face,' and live. His desire is that we return, and abide with Him, forever in His care.
 

PennEd

Senior Member
Apr 22, 2013
13,586
9,104
113
#10
1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?
Welcome to the site!

1. I always knew, as I believe everyone does at one time, that there was a God. I grew up Catholic, but if anything, that turned me off from religion. Yrs later, my brother gave me the ONE true Gospel unto Salvation, and I am certain the Lord drew me to that his Church, and shortly thereafter was saved.
2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?
2. They need Jesus like every other person on Earth.

3) what is your opinion on atheists?
3. I don't believe there is such a thing as a true atheist. Deep down, atheists have suppressed the truth that they knew, because they want to sin, and hate the idea of being held accountable for the sin they commit.

4) have you ever questioned your faith?
4. I have never questioned whether God existed, that Jesus is His Son, and had died to pay my sin debt, and was resurrected from the dead. I did at one time thought that I had sinned too much and was separated from Him, but realize that was attacks from Satan.

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
5. We have freedom in Christ. If someone thinks it's sinful to engage in those things, then to them, it is sinful and they shouldn't engage in them.


I pray in Jesus name that you would confess with your mouth Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that He rose from the grave.
 

phil36

Senior Member
Feb 12, 2009
8,345
2,157
113
#11
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?

Hopefully this will answer your questions Hydraxolotl

 

oyster67

Senior Member
May 24, 2014
11,887
8,705
113
#12
1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
Same questions as in you intro? ok.

1.) I was born lost in sin and darkness. I just asked Him into my heart. I have been growing ever since.
2.) When they come to Jesus, He will make them clean and new, just like He did for me.
3.) He made a believer out of me. He wants to do the same for you. You have nothing to lose, and everything to gain.
4.) Not since I have been born again. I've got my eyes set on the prize. Will you join me today, my friend?
5.) Not for me personally. Don't know much about it, really.

.
 

oyster67

Senior Member
May 24, 2014
11,887
8,705
113
#13
god has a sexual preference?
God loves everybody, for sure. That includes you and me.

John 3:16

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”

.
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
8,318
3,619
113
#14
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not,
For starters, it is possible to know there's a Creator God just by looking around at the creation. Evolution has been proven a farce and many evolutionary scientists (those who aren't self-deluded at least) are turning to creationism.

But whether or not the God of the Bible is the Creator, I agree, it's impossible to know—in the natural state anyway. He must reveal it to you; and you must sincerely want the truth.

I hope you find what you're looking for.

Peace.
 
Apr 15, 2022
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#15
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
Your questions do not reflect your so call interest about Christianity.. You are a troll, nothing more or less.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,348
113
#16
nope, i've never spoken to a christian in my life, and these are questions about individuals experience and opinions, not christianity itself. i doubt i already know these things, assumptions maybe but i can't know these things and apply them to every single person in a group. and atheists don't necessarily say that the universe came from nothing, just that it wasn't designed. also god has a sexual preference?

I disagree with your statement in red that you did not have an understanding or preconceived opinion before you asked your questions. The last point to your question is that God has a sexual preference? God has no sex; He is Spirit. God created a sexual relationship between man and women by design; therefore, anything outside what God entrusted to man and women with is a perversion.
 
Jan 14, 2021
1,599
526
113
#17
1) sorry, i don't know what these mean even after searching for a definition, if you could explain these i'd be happy to answer.
2) yes, i'm bisexual, and from your response it seems you think things can make a person gay, right? i would like to know more about this parasite, what's it's name? i'd like to investigate this since everything i've been told suggests that transgender and attraction to the same gender are influenced by brain structure which i don't think a parasite can manipulate.
3) unfortunately not, is that a book in the bible? if so, i do plan on reading the bible eventually, i just haven't gotten around to it.
4) for the people in the group i prefer to base my opinions on an individual level, i'm not going to assume every christian is homophobic just because some are, but in general my opinion of the idea of christianity is not great. your god seems heartless, throwing the children he apparently loves into hell because they didn't believe in him, or for something they can't control.
1) If I were to rephrase this one, do you engage truth like Schrödinger's cat where everything is considered valid until it is ruled out (pluralism/superposition/ambivalence)? Or do you view things in terms of ideas by default are considered untrue until they can be demonstrated to be necessarily or most compellingly true (reductionism)? Basically, within your agnostism, do you consider the statement "God exists" to be valid or invalid by default? Are you ambivalent or skeptical?

2) synthetic estrogen exposure in the womb has been demonstrated to increase homosexual preference in mice (which includes morphological changes in brain structure during development in utero). Because there is less ability to have experimental control for factors in human development, it is harder to clearly demonstrate the trend in humans. But it is logical that it would reasonably be applicable to humans as well. These people would be "born that way" but for a reason different than simply genetics. Genetics could lead to a predisposition to sensitivity to synthetic estrogen exposure. Take it with a grain of salt as you will, this is just based on a personal perception from papers I've read.

Sexually abused children have shown a higher predisposition to partake in child abuse in their later life. I don' t think that is a disputed point?

And the parasite speculation related to hyperpromiscuous behaviour was based on anecdotal evidence that antiparasitic medication reduced hyperpromiscuous behaviour and homosexual preference in some cases. The nature of some parasites' ability to change the behaviour of hosts to allow for parasite infection transfer and proliferation is likely where the initial speculation came from. This wouldn't be attributed to all homosexual behaviour, only some kinds of hyperpromiscuous behaviour. You can take that with a grain of salt too, it was speculative anecdotal evidence that I had come across at some point.

The main points were from environmental synthetic estrogen and psychological damage from child abuse. Synthetic estrogen pollution is a problem. Child abuse is a problem.

3) Different passages describe the need to understand the Bible from the perspective of the New Testament to avoid a "veiled understanding". If you look at books like Corinthians and Galatians first, you may have an easier time getting a feel for the Christian perspective.

4) [...] i'm not going to assume every christian is homophobic just because some are,
In the same way that pointing an alcoholic to rehab isn't "alcoholo-phobic", or seeking to mitigate unwanted violent outbursts from some war vets with PTSD isn't "war-vet-phobic", or seeking to have criminal pedofiles be segregated from society isn't "pedofile-phobic", the same is true for addressing homosexual impulse as a sinful impulse isn't homophobic. There is no fear or hatred, it is simply an observation within a school of thought that certain behaviours and conditions are not optimal for long-term happiness and wellbeing. You can reject that school of thought, but at the very least recognize that esteeming something as disagreeable or even degenerate does not necessarily come from a place of hatred or fear.

It's hardly the fault of the war vet that they experience PTSD. The question is whether they reasonably attempt to address it or not.

With homosexual tendency, it isn't necessarily going to be the perogative of every Christian to hold nonChristians up to Christian standards. Some might be vocal, but others may have a patient indifference in recognition of the fact that if God wants you on the right path you'll eventually be there.

Even when dealing with idols and the sin of idoltary, the message Paul gave in some of his writings was not to burn down idols and shake the world of nonbelievers, but simply not to partake or encourage those things.

There is a danger for Christians to become highminded, and so the intention is not to shun those that have homosexual urges, but to be mindful of things which are not condusive to longterm wellbeing. But like with a drug addict, addictions and other physiological compulsions aren't wished away by a mere word or voiced intention. There has to be a willingness to change and steps taken to address that physiological drive.

but in general my opinion of the idea of christianity is not great. your god seems heartless, throwing the children he apparently loves into hell because they didn't believe in him, or for something they can't control.
Romans 9:20 speaks to this. The rebuttal is essentially "Who are you to question the creator?" But at the same time, God never gives us more than we can handle (1 Cor 10:13).

To some this can be very unpalatable. There have been many cultural Christians that take a preference for Buddhism and the like that don't have a message of hellfire, etc. Wheat and tares is certainly a topic that comes up in Christianity. Not everyone is saved. But the categorization of who will be saved and will not be saved isn't always certain. God will show mercy to those that He shows mercy.
 

Dirtman

Well-known member
Jul 19, 2022
1,151
441
83
#18
1. I became a Christian as a teen. A neighbor would take me to church with them

2 and 3. All sin is damning and all humans are sinners condemned by sin.

4. Yes. It happens.

5. It is only a problem for those to whom it is a problem.
 

CherieR

Senior Member
May 6, 2017
2,271
1,429
113
#19
i am an agnostic, basically meaning i don't believe we can know whether there is a god or not, but for the most part i live my life like an atheist. below i will list a few questions i would like answered to better understand where you all are coming from, and feel free to ask me anything too. (this is a repost, i was told it would fit better here)

1) how did you convert to christianity or were you christian since childhood?

2) what is your opinion on the LGBT community?

3) what is your opinion on atheists?

4) have you ever questioned your faith?

5) do you believe media like harry potter or pokemon to be problematic? why or why not?
1) I believed in Jesus as a young child.

2) I believe people in the LGBT community ought to feel welcomed and loved in the church. I think that many in the LGBT community has felt hurt and not welcome at church which is unfortunate and I can understand that . I don't believe people can help who they feel attracted to. I believe Jesus loves people in the LGBT community.

3. I get the impression that many atheists don't believe there is any proof of a God. I think many atheists don't believe in an afterlife though some do. I think there are atheists who ask good and challenging questions about Christianity. I believe Jesus loves atheists and that we as Christians should love atheists too.

4) Yes. Many doubts about mine own acceptance with God. I have read Scripture which often has been a comfort to me in this though I find I still wrestle with this insecurity. I've had questions regarding hell. I've talked to a friend once about Jesus death on the cross and how far in the distance it felt to me . I never stopped believing in Jesus and his death and resurrection as far I can remember. I have looked into apologetics.

5) I personally like Pokemon Indigo League and grew up with that one. I haven't watched as much of the newer episodes. I don't know too much about Harry Potter. I've only watched and enjoyed one Harry Potter Movie. I tend to enjoy the fantasy / sci-fi genre in general. I have heard negative feedback on the books though having not read them myself I cannot make a personal judgement on it .
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
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#20
and feel free to ask me anything too...
Well the questions you should be asking yourself is "Why am I focusing on peripheral issues which are really no concern of mine?" "Why am I not focusing on Christ to see what He has to say?" Opinions are just opinions. Facts are facts. And the fact of the Creator is inescapable.