I find myself agreeing with Norm and Tina, despite being moved by XJWBill's plea, in effect to "say it isn't so!"
I have recently begun a Bible study class in a non-denominational Christian church called "Experiencing God." The workbook was written by a Baptist minister who apparently works in British Columbia, Canada and a cohort who designed the Exercises.
Now, I have felt very comfortable at this church which I selected as my alternative to the Kingdom Hall, until I got a closer look at the mindset of some of its members.
I have mentioned this on chat, but a recent study lesson asked the following:
How close do you think your country is to the judgment of God? Check one.
1. I do not believe God will bring judgment on my country.
2. I believe God's judgment is a long way off.
3. I cannot understand why God has waited this long. I believe we are on the verge of a major judgment from God.
4. I believe we are already experiencing a disciplinary judgment like that described in Isaiah 5:1-7.
5. I believe we have already come through an experience of God's judgment.
What evidence can you list to support your answer?
What effect does your belief have on the way you live your life?
I answered Number One. It was not the expected answer and raised eyebrows in my "quad." (The class was broken down into smaller groups in order to discuss these things more intimately).
I believe that all political entities are transient. If the entire earth belongs to Almighty God (as the Bible teaches) then individual nations need not fear judgment. Rather, individual Christians should. To me, those claiming to be Christians and not living a Christ-like existence would be those who needed to fear judgment. Primary to a Christlike existence is loving God and loving neighbor as oneself.
As Norm (and Bill) demonstrated above, many who claimed to be Christ's disciples did not practice Christ's Way, making Christianity a hollow excuse for a religion supposedly based on love.
At my class, I was chastised because the God of the Bible was seen to be the judgmental Yahweh of the OT, who had judged nations in the past many, many times, devoting them to destruction, or, in the case of chosen Israel, allowed bad things to happen to them as punishment. (This even happened once since Christ's day -- when Jerusalem fell to the Romans and temple service was ended.) One student even had the take that the reason for WWII was that GERMANY had become faithless, so the other Christian nations had to punish her as an expression of God's wrath.
This discouraged me no end! (BTW, the majority of students chose #'s 3 & 4 as their answers.) The others were praying for a Great Revival in the U.S. beginning with President Bush and Attorney General John Ashcroft, both professing Christians. Why? So the U.S. would escape adverse judgment.
When I still politely disagreed, I was chastised. Judgment is foretold. Judgment had been wreacked on those who went against God in the past. Judgment will come! (And how could I not clearly see that from the Scriptures as 'all Scripture is God-breathed, etc."? -- I nearly choked!)
It would be lovely, indeed, if Christianity today preached tolerance and understanding based on the words of Jesus that Bill set out for us above. But I fear Norm has the more realistic take on the matter. If the people at my local church had their way, Christianity would be the State Religion not only in this country but worldwide.
And I truly fear for what those with dissenting viewpoints would undergo as citizens.
Perhaps Norm didn't go far enough, Bill. History demonstrates that horrible crimes have been committed in the name of OTHER religions worldwide as well.
But that doesn't excuse Christendom and its lemming-like adherents from culpability for the evil perpetuated in the name of Christianity! And there is No getting around that fact.
And Norm is right, too, that people like Mother Teresa are considered exceptionally GOOD in spite of their religion. She helped the poverty stricken in India NO MATTER THEIR RELIGION. No bias. Just love and compassion. Looked, in fact, for those most in need of love and compassion.
Love and compassion were NOT what was expressed at that workshop, which was considering "God's Plans versus Our Plans." Too often humans confuse the two.
And THAT has been the folly of Christian religionists down through history.
outnfree