Åzurε
Shi-shi-shi-shaw!
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- Seen Jun 2, 2013
Okey dokey. Starting notes: I'm Protestant Christian. I'm not in a mood for outright debate, so don't expect a whole bunch of heated posting. I'm just typing what I'm thinking. And... Begin.
Hell is also, in my understanding, eternal separation from God, and as much a state of being as a location.
Christianity teaches that humans are sons (gender-neutral pronoun, I think) of God in two ways: One, more generalized and in the sense that everything originates from God. Two, faithful Christians are considered children in almost every way. In that God is an authority to them, in that God gives an inheritance (common occurrence when the phrase was written), and that they are to honor Him in the a manner akin to the way a Hebrew child was to honor their parents. Heck, I bet I could work up a sermon on this, but anyway. Next bit.
There is no particular antichrist. First and Second John are the only books to use the word in the NIV, and myths about a particular antichrist (note that this bit of thought is pure speculation) appear to have been already spreading then.
The rest: Catholicism is a great deal different than Protestantism, which is what I have experience with. Example A: the Pope. It's a nice idea, I can see it reinforcing unity, but he seems to have progressed among the more devout Catholics into being above normal people on some levels. Also, praying to beings other than God is directly unbiblical.
Also, Ghandi.
Wall of text: En fin.
Lucifer fell "like lightning", but is not yet contained in Hell. In the book of Job, he (now Satan) says he has been walking the earth, or among man.Actually, the Christian version is that Lucifer was an angel created by God who refused to kneel before humans. He was extremely vain and was banished by God to Hell, where Lucifer currently rules. God is not Lucifer's father. According to Christianity, the only "son" God has is Jesus (and if you want to broaden on some of the things taught, Christianity also teaches that every human is the daughter and son of God, but I don't believe that's to be taken literally).
Hell is also, in my understanding, eternal separation from God, and as much a state of being as a location.
Christianity teaches that humans are sons (gender-neutral pronoun, I think) of God in two ways: One, more generalized and in the sense that everything originates from God. Two, faithful Christians are considered children in almost every way. In that God is an authority to them, in that God gives an inheritance (common occurrence when the phrase was written), and that they are to honor Him in the a manner akin to the way a Hebrew child was to honor their parents. Heck, I bet I could work up a sermon on this, but anyway. Next bit.
"Even the demons believe". An interesting parallel, if nothing else.In the Qu'ran, Lucifer is a Djinn who also refused to kneel before humans because he did not believe humans were better than Djinns. He told God that he was going to prove Him wrong - that humans were actually evil at heart, and not benevolent as God said. He was granted eternal life as to try and prove God wrong, while God looked down on the foolish Djinn. God rules over Hell, not Lucifer. Lucifer is merely a presence now who seeks to corrupt humanity with atheism and, I'm assuming, polytheism. He uses many resources to attempt to corrupt us as to prove the Almighty Creator incorrect (the media, being the biggest one).
Contrary to popular belief, Djinns are not "demons". There are good Djinns, and there are bad Djinns. Djinns generally even believe in God. It was a separate race which lacked intelligence, but acquired mystical capabilities instead. Humans were deemed the intelligent species, while angels are but mere slaves of God - slaves incapable of going against God's will and incapable of thinking for themselves.
Same basic story, but a bit different from each other at the same time. Lucifer is the "misleading light in the darkness", the bringer of false light. He is therefore the Anti-Christ of both the Bible and the Qu'ran.
There is no particular antichrist. First and Second John are the only books to use the word in the NIV, and myths about a particular antichrist (note that this bit of thought is pure speculation) appear to have been already spreading then.
Hmm. It was still her choice, though.Indeed, and that is why Eve was so easily deceived by the satanic reptile. The naiveness of a child is the innocence before knowing what's bad. It is after she consumed the apple that her naivety was lost.
First sentence: It's true, but I would like to note that while it is part of Christianity to evangelize and convert people (to a great degree, for their own good), it is not biblical to force it upon other people, or to look down upon those who don't believe. People who would do - and have done - that have seriously misunderstood the scriptures.Indeed, from my experience with both religions, Christianity is a religion that followers believe they must force on others, and scorn those who disbelieve them. That's why in history, Christians are the worst for converting people and killing those who opposed (in Canada, Christian Europeans kidnapped aboriginals and turned them Christian; in America, there was a huge Indian manslaughter because of different beliefs). In Islam, we are opposed to that, and we are taught to accept everyone's views and to respect everyone. An example would be when Arabia took over Spain for 800 years. Are the Spanish Muslim today? They could have been, but no, the majority are still Catholic because the Muslims never forced it on them.
The rest: Catholicism is a great deal different than Protestantism, which is what I have experience with. Example A: the Pope. It's a nice idea, I can see it reinforcing unity, but he seems to have progressed among the more devout Catholics into being above normal people on some levels. Also, praying to beings other than God is directly unbiblical.
Also, Ghandi.
Thanks for providing quote-fodder, Yusshin. I like reading your posts, because it's an atypical viewpoint from what I'm used to, and you're good at remaining reasonable. I have recently found a new love for people on the internet who don't think religion on the whole is stupid.Of course, there are good people and bad people in every religion and country, as are there the rare extremists in every religion on Earth. I'm sure some Muslims forced their religion on others, and I'm sure some Christians refuse to force it and tolerate others' religious choices. The examples above are just some major, historical examples of tolerancy differences between Christianity and Islam.
Wall of text: En fin.