Ellen Brown
Well-Known Member
It feels sad that through all of Human history, most people seek and see a God that makes lots of hard to obey rules for a people that seem unable to follow any of them.
Some of us have brutal, punishing parents who were taught to be that way by um brutal punishing parents, who were taught to be that way by "someones" view of God as, you guessed it, brutal and punishing.
It confounds me that anyone can independently read the Bible (I stubbornly insist on the KJV for me), you can choose your own poison, and finish the OT with a view of God as anything but merciful and loving. He even tells us very simply what pleases him. Micah 6:8.
For reasons unclear to me, many/most of us are taught a guilt ridden, condemning, dependence demanding version of God, and it is almost impossible to disabuse them of that notion. This is true to everyone from Hasidic Jews, to Mormons, to Catholics, to perhaps even Muslims?
Why do we insist that God has all these demands and toilsome Covenants that are impossible to obey?
I would perhaps not be thinking this way had I not reached the point where I knew that I was a complete failure at religion. Beyond all logic and reasonableness it was still clear, even expecting to burn in Hell, that God exists and I had done my very best to please whoever Created me.
Perhaps complete failure is the birth of true love and reverence for God?
Some of us have brutal, punishing parents who were taught to be that way by um brutal punishing parents, who were taught to be that way by "someones" view of God as, you guessed it, brutal and punishing.
It confounds me that anyone can independently read the Bible (I stubbornly insist on the KJV for me), you can choose your own poison, and finish the OT with a view of God as anything but merciful and loving. He even tells us very simply what pleases him. Micah 6:8.
For reasons unclear to me, many/most of us are taught a guilt ridden, condemning, dependence demanding version of God, and it is almost impossible to disabuse them of that notion. This is true to everyone from Hasidic Jews, to Mormons, to Catholics, to perhaps even Muslims?
Why do we insist that God has all these demands and toilsome Covenants that are impossible to obey?
I would perhaps not be thinking this way had I not reached the point where I knew that I was a complete failure at religion. Beyond all logic and reasonableness it was still clear, even expecting to burn in Hell, that God exists and I had done my very best to please whoever Created me.
Perhaps complete failure is the birth of true love and reverence for God?