sandy whitelinger
Veteran Member
I believe that anyone who accept Jesus as their savior and He accept them then they are Christians. Scripture is full of misguided believers.So you believe the Gnostic Christians and Mormons are Christians then?
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I believe that anyone who accept Jesus as their savior and He accept them then they are Christians. Scripture is full of misguided believers.So you believe the Gnostic Christians and Mormons are Christians then?
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.
In Christianity, when one decides to become a Christian, it seems not to be important to understand everything about his or her faith, his or her denomination, etc (that is true with most denominations, but not all of them. I want to make that clear).
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.
This is kind of like asking should we understand all there is about life before we live it?
This is kind of like asking should we understand all there is about life before we live it?
Well if you knew all there was about your faith before you chose it would it still be a faith?Not exactly the same. We are alive whether we choose to be or not (unless we commit suicide). We do, however, choose our faiths, although we don't really choose to belief in God (usually).
If you break one law, you are guilty of all. God concludes us all as guilty. So, how does someone who is not perfect become perfect like God? (Hint: 2 Cor. 5:21)What is a "sinner" exactly? What is the definition of "Sin"?
(Hint: 1 John 3:4-10)
In Christianity, when one decides to become a Christian, it seems not to be important to understand everything about his or her faith, his or her denomination, etc (that is true with most denominations, but not all of them. I want to make that clear).
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.
I think its different from case to case. many people were born Christian. I don't think I see anything wrong with that. it must inspire them in various ways. I am not sure about understanding everything, but as people who were born into a Christian community or into a Christian tradition, it is an opportunity for them to develop this tradition, or to study its history for example to study about the church fathers, what is the purpose behind each of the four canonical gospels, the major reforms in Christianity, which are probably related to the denomination they belong to and a myriad of other topics.In Christianity, when one decides to become a Christian, it seems not to be important to understand everything about his or her faith, his or her denomination, etc (that is true with most denominations, but not all of them. I want to make that clear).
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.
If you break one law, you are guilty of all. God concludes us all as guilty. So, how does someone who is not perfect become perfect like God? (Hint: 2 Cor. 5:21)
Well if you knew all there was about your faith before you chose it would it still be a faith?
Sorry not criticizing. My point is you start out in faith just like a child starts out in life. You start as a child and you grow and develope spiritual into maturity. I have no idea what your faith is or if you follow the Bible. In the Bible though you are to come as a child.It seems that those who try to step into a faith with any kind of their own understanding struggle to get to know God.It is impossible to know everything about a faith. Instead of nitpicking on my wording, why don't you try to see what it is truly asking? You couldn't have come to this thread just to criticize it, do you have any kind of answer?
If you mean to fully understand all of the doctrine, I would say no. However, if you become part of a community that puts a lot of emphasis on doctrine and ritual and dogma, and you don't fully digest it for yourself, you can end up hitting something that you disagree with and ultimately drives you from religion.In Christianity, when one decides to become a Christian, it seems not to be important to understand everything about his or her faith, his or her denomination, etc (that is true with most denominations, but not all of them. I want to make that clear).
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.
In Christianity, when one decides to become a Christian, it seems not to be important to understand everything about his or her faith, his or her denomination, etc (that is true with most denominations, but not all of them. I want to make that clear).
I am asking if you believe a person should understand most of or all of a faith before they start following it. Not just Christianity, but any faith.