Do You Identify Yourself as a Christian?

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Do You Identify Yourself as a Christian?

  • No, I'm not a Christian.

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I'm Unsure if I am a Christian or not.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    13

RaceRunner

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2022
1,576
289
83
#1
Please don't vote if you are not confident which one of these 4 poll answers identifies you.
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
56,298
26,339
113
#2
I am confident none of those options identify me.
 

maxwel

Senior Member
Apr 18, 2013
9,415
2,489
113
#3
I identify as someone who wonders why you post so many polls...
especially since your questions are both extremely specific, and also extremely unimportant to the average Christian.

Doing research for a class, or is this just your job?


.
 

RaceRunner

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2022
1,576
289
83
#4
I identify as someone who wonders why you post so many polls...
especially since your questions are both extremely specific, and also extremely unimportant to the average Christian.

Doing research for a class, or is this just your job?


.
If Christians didn't find these Christian issues important, they wouldn't have joined ChristianChat; I am also very interested in these Christian issues.
 
P

pottersclay

Guest
#5
Heres a thing or two ive learned some yrs back.
I dont identify myself as a christian anymore, why?. Ive learned that it tends to seperate and distance people from being real. In fact it seems to close many doors of opportunity to share the gospel. People seem to be put on guard for 2 reasons. One they wait till you have a weak moment and then tell you and remind you of it. Or they put on some I'm spiritual too act and pretend to be a GOD fearer too.
Intresting enough jesus made him self of no reputation. In fact he was more interested in who they siad he was.
Thats the example i follow.
I'm a sinner saved by grace just like many here. I prefer to acknowledge other believer as saints.
The title christian opens up a whole can of worms. Baptist, catholic, protestant, mormon, J.W the list goes on.
Many believe that knowing JESUS is salvation which is true to a point. The real question is does JESUS know you?
 

JaumeJ

Senior Member
Jul 2, 2011
21,247
6,540
113
#6
The most important aspect of any believer is to never be ashamed of the Gospel, of Jesus Yeshua of course.
 

maxwel

Senior Member
Apr 18, 2013
9,415
2,489
113
#7
If Christians didn't find these Christian issues important, they wouldn't have joined ChristianChat; I am also very interested in these Christian issues.

1.) "If Christians didn't find these Christian issues important, they wouldn't have joined ChristianChat."
That is irrational and nonsensical.
You're claiming that if other Christians aren't deeply concerned about the exact same, small, narrow, and peculiar range of topics you're using to interrogate people... then they wouldn't be here.
That is just absurd.

That doesn't sound like something a Christian would say.


2.) "I am also very interested in these Christian issues."
Yes, you're interested in a very peculiar, theologically impotent, and narrow range of Christian issues...
issues which have more to do with demographic data than with theology.

To clarify,: you tend to raise a general area of thought, a topic, which Christians are concerned about... but then you ask a VERY SPECIFIC QUESTION, and that odd and specific question is something genuine Christians have little interest in.

These aren't the kinds of questions most Christians generally talk about.


3.) You never answered my question, you merely redirected the subject to AVOID my question.

This is not the way Christians generally chat. Rather, this is the kind of thing normally done by someone skilled in rhetoric and debate, or someone skilled in psychology.

* For clarity, I'll ask again: Are you here doing research for a class, or is gathering this data merely your job?

Avoiding honest, straightforward questions, is not something genuine Christians tend to do.


4. Conclusion:
a.) You're a new member, you do little but post odd polls, asking odd questions, about things Christians aren't that concerned about... questions that have more to do with demographic divisions than theology.
b.) Then you act dismissive and even irritated when people don't answer your questions exactly as you'd like.
c.) There is nothing normative, or Christian, about any of your behavior.
d.) I'm sure everyone would like to know what you're actually doing here.



.
 

oyster67

Senior Member
May 24, 2014
11,887
8,701
113
#8
If Christians didn't find these Christian issues important, they wouldn't have joined ChristianChat; I am also very interested in these Christian issues.
:unsure: Oyster still loves you, RaceRunner. ;)
 

Aaron56

Well-known member
Jul 12, 2021
2,570
1,459
113
#10
Ever notice how the writers of the New Testament letters never once use "Christian" in their salutation (beginning greeting)? There's good evidence that the believers did not call themselves "Christians" but that "Christian" was what others called them. This would have been consistent with the Roman Empire's tradition of calling followers after the names of their leaders/teachers. Rome co-opted the term "Christian" to suit their own purposes. It made the label for those in the House of God very Roman-sounding.

I prefer to call myself and others believers "believers", "saints", "brothers", "the church", "sisters", "sons of God" and any other word used in the NT salutations.
 

RaceRunner

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2022
1,576
289
83
#11
1.) "If Christians didn't find these Christian issues important, they wouldn't have joined ChristianChat."
That is irrational and nonsensical.
You're claiming that if other Christians aren't deeply concerned about the exact same, small, narrow, and peculiar range of topics you're using to interrogate people... then they wouldn't be here.
That is just absurd.

That doesn't sound like something a Christian would say.


2.) "I am also very interested in these Christian issues."
Yes, you're interested in a very peculiar, theologically impotent, and narrow range of Christian issues...
issues which have more to do with demographic data than with theology.

To clarify,: you tend to raise a general area of thought, a topic, which Christians are concerned about... but then you ask a VERY SPECIFIC QUESTION, and that odd and specific question is something genuine Christians have little interest in.

These aren't the kinds of questions most Christians generally talk about.


3.) You never answered my question, you merely redirected the subject to AVOID my question.

This is not the way Christians generally chat. Rather, this is the kind of thing normally done by someone skilled in rhetoric and debate, or someone skilled in psychology.

* For clarity, I'll ask again: Are you here doing research for a class, or is gathering this data merely your job?

Avoiding honest, straightforward questions, is not something genuine Christians tend to do.


4. Conclusion:
a.) You're a new member, you do little but post odd polls, asking odd questions, about things Christians aren't that concerned about... questions that have more to do with demographic divisions than theology.
b.) Then you act dismissive and even irritated when people don't answer your questions exactly as you'd like.
c.) There is nothing normative, or Christian, about any of your behavior.
d.) I'm sure everyone would like to know what you're actually doing here.



.
I am gaining a better understanding of Christianity.
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
7,622
3,196
113
#13
4. Conclusion:
a.) You're a new member, you do little but post odd polls, asking odd questions, about things Christians aren't that concerned about... questions that have more to do with demographic divisions than theology.
.
You've noticed that too. Every poll this guy's started has been deliberately designed to cause divisions. I think he gets sadistic pleasure in controlling people and gets bent out of shape if someone doesn't fall in line.
 

RaceRunner

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2022
1,576
289
83
#15
I am gaining a better understand of Christians opinions.
 

RaceRunner

Well-known member
Oct 13, 2022
1,576
289
83
#16
You've noticed that too. Every poll this guy's started has been deliberately designed to cause divisions. I think he gets sadistic pleasure in controlling people and gets bent out of shape if someone doesn't fall in line.
If my polls were really designed to cause division, I wouldn't have voted on my polls.
 

ResidentAlien

Well-known member
Apr 21, 2021
7,622
3,196
113
#17
If my polls were really designed to cause division, I wouldn't have voted on my polls.
How do you figure? How does voting in your own poll prove you're not out to stir up division?
 
Oct 16, 2020
58
36
18
Austalia
#19
I'm a sinner saved by grace just like many here. I prefer to acknowledge other believer as saints.
The title christian opens up a whole can of worms. Baptist, catholic, protestant, mormon, J.W the list goes on.
Many believe that knowing JESUS is salvation which is true to a point. The real question is does JESUS know you?
I encourage you to change the tense on your statement. You WERE a sinner saved by grace, but you are now a new creation that has thrown off the shackles of being a slave to sin and you are now a slave to righteousness. By saying "I am" you are still inadvertently identifying with what you were before, but you are no longer that person. You may still struggle with sin, as do we all, but you are no longer a sinner, you have been made righteous by Christ and to continue to call yourself a sinner only lessens the glory and miracle of what God did to redeem you and make you a child of God.