What you may read as God himself literally speaking, another Christian may understand that as an expression of the author's views of God, filtered through his culture and mythologies, in symbolic form.
There are very few places, I can probably number on one hand, where this thought process applies. The Scriptures are very clear to Hebrew and Greek scholars, Christian and Secular, as to when Yahweh is speaking. With the exception of the book of Jeremiah which has moments of interpretation needed.
The whole "Thus says the Lord..." and "...then you will know that I am The Lord" are kind of good indicators, I would say.
But with this perspective of yours, what do you say about the Ten Commandments? Was that YHWH speaking or not?
Paul's views are rather liberal, which is why they resonate with me.
No, I don't believe they are liberal. I believe they match Scripture and follow along with it in harmony. They are not more liberal or less liberal that the rest of the Bible. Paul excels in Biblical commentary and apologetics which is why his style is so engaging, and he considers his gentile mindset in his style, hence the appeal. But I don't see examples where he is more liberal that the rest of the Bible. If he was, the Jews would have had the perfect excuse to trial him - but of course they had none. They had to invent excuses to persecute him.
It all needs to be balanced, not lopsided to only one idea of truth, and limited to that alone. It needs to be an open system, not a closed one.
Okay, so in your balanced view of the Scriptures, with all the influences you have absorbed, what is your interpretation of
Exodus 20:3?
And do you feel it is okay for Christians to have other views you don't agree with?
I do. I'm not so bold as to think I have understood everything correctly. I'm constantly refining my understanding, challenging it and adapting it. I have had to correct my path at the direction of wise old men and through the simple words of young children.
It is a shame that Christianity is a bit of "hodge-podge" mess these days. However, that was indeed prophesised to happen in these last days. It was foretold that their would be corruption in the Body with the minority being true disciples.
In my personal opinion, one shouldn't draw near to a church to learn the Word these days. It's too risky. Rather, they should turn to the Word itself and do the best they can to read it with no preconceived ideas and humility. Then they will find the truth to all things. These are dark times.
The bottom line of it is, that Paul does not say to them, "Yes, you must obey the days observed, and follow the law legalistically." He concludes the very liberal perspective, which I share with him here, that God judges the sincerity of their hearts before him. In other words, God is bigger than religion. He judges the truth of our hearts, not the correctness of our ideas and things we choose to believe while trying to figure out life.
Yes, I know of the passage in Romans 14 well - one of my favourites actually. Paul does indeed ask the Body of Christ to find harmony with each other and for the more learned amongst them to not trouble the newbies joining. However, that is not the continuous advice for that newbie on year 5, 10 and 15 - surely you must appreciate that?
So, if a gentile from Ephesus joined the church in the first century, it wouldn't be wise to hit them with the whole Torah as a conditioning of joining. They would likely get scared and wonder off! So learning the ways of righteousness was to be done at a steady pace in their gatherings each Sabbath. "For Moses has had throughout many generations those who preach him in every city, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath." Acts 15:21. The Spirit would then convict the chosen in their heart on the Torah and obedience to it. Not to follow the legalistic letter of the Law in fear, but to do so in truth, love and desire to serve the Most High.
You are right in what you say. God looks at the heart. But it seems you are coming from a stance to say "He looks at the heart, not obedience to Him". But then wouldn't your heart then be saying "I'm not bothered about obeying Him"?
But yes, God is bigger than religion I agree. In fact, true Christianity is not a religion at all - but a citizenship.
But I push back against those who say they know the Truth, because they have a limited perspective of scripture or truth, and proclaim that as Truth. "It's not my words, but God's words!", for instance.
So let's imagine in an alternate reality that people DID in fact know the ultimate truth. How would they get that message through to you? Or would the very fact that some say "here is the truth" invalidate the claim for you?
What I'm asking is do you believe in an ultimate truth which is specific (recorded in Scripture)? Or is specific truth an entirely subjective concept to you and you only allow non-specific truth to exist (i.e. "there is a God and He is love")
But is it really confusion, or just different perspectives of truth?
Unfortunately, it is confusion.
Such people ignore certain Scriptures that do not agree with their theology or twist the context beyond reasonable measure. Most of these "perspectives" require you to avoid the plain reading of Scripture. And they do not often have a decent understanding of the Old Testament, but just the New.
that does not matter to God.
Quite a bold statement. You didn't even preceed it with "I think..."
Okay, you say it doesn't matter to God. How do you know that? What truth are you basing that on?
Please provide a quote from the words of the God Himself or the Messiah to show such obedience doesn't matter. Or will you need to turn to Paul again or more specifically Romans 14?
A believer in YHWH and His Son should be careful not to base their understanding entirely in the writings of Paul, lest they miss the background context of his writings.
That statement from scripture, is a Jewish or Christian perspective, of course.
Hmm, not really. I'm desperately trying to see how you can say the ten commandments are not God's words but a Jewish/Christian perspective, but I can't see it.
o I think it is safe to say, that all religions are perspectives of the Divine, with their own respective pathways and traditions.
Well, that's the real kicker isn't it. Every other religion is probably fine to fall under that umbrella you opened. But not the one detailed in the Holy Bible.
YHWH says He is the only one and there is none other: "Do not tremble, do not be afraid. Did I not proclaim this and foretell it long ago? You are my witnesses. Is there any God besides me? No, there is no other Rock; I know not one." - Isaiah 44:8
That is why I asked this question on this thread originally: "If you believe that YHWH exists, do you think he is factually incorrect or a liar?" Because He says He doesn't fit into a pantheon of others. He says there is no structure of others. He is the only one and above all - the only true God and Creator. Hence the option is actually (a) you believe in any or all the gods you want to, but not YHWH, (b) you believe in YHWH but not any other "gods".
Anyway, thanks for your reply. I can understand your perspective and you voiced your opinions well and respectfully. It's always fascinating to share with others on their views of the matter.
Peace.