TEXASBULL
Member
One of the biggest sticklers in the Christian religion is "faith".
Without faith it is impossible to please God. We must have faith that Jesus died and rose again for our sins.
My question is this. How come numerous people in the Bible did not have to display the same kind of faith that we have to?
Moses got a burning bush that spoke, Abraham talked to God personally on the mountain, Peter saw Jesus walk on water, Paul got knocked off his donkey and a bright light spoke to him and even blinded his eyes.
Doesn't this seem like a cheap way out for those men? how easy would it be for you to believe if you had an experience like that? They are supposed to be the father of faith, but what I see as a bunch of people who got a head start on faith.
I mean how many of you out there, if you actually heard with your ears, saw a bright light or an angel visit you, or actually sell Jesus healed somebody or walk on water, would still have doubts?
It seems to me like every few pages in the Bible, God is doing some type of miracle that breaks scientific law. Yet he refuses to do one of those miracles for us today. He still wants us to believe and have the same faith that Peter had.
He wants us to be as fervent in our beliefs just by reading the stories in a book. Is that fair?
If God came down to you like he did Saul of Tarsus, knocks you off your donkey, blinded your eyes with a bright light, and spoke to you in an audible voice, wouldn't you also spend the rest of your life preaching about and talking about this God?
Christians want us to become the Disciples of Christ, but the disciples had unfair head start on the rest of us.
Discuss please
Without faith it is impossible to please God. We must have faith that Jesus died and rose again for our sins.
My question is this. How come numerous people in the Bible did not have to display the same kind of faith that we have to?
Moses got a burning bush that spoke, Abraham talked to God personally on the mountain, Peter saw Jesus walk on water, Paul got knocked off his donkey and a bright light spoke to him and even blinded his eyes.
Doesn't this seem like a cheap way out for those men? how easy would it be for you to believe if you had an experience like that? They are supposed to be the father of faith, but what I see as a bunch of people who got a head start on faith.
I mean how many of you out there, if you actually heard with your ears, saw a bright light or an angel visit you, or actually sell Jesus healed somebody or walk on water, would still have doubts?
It seems to me like every few pages in the Bible, God is doing some type of miracle that breaks scientific law. Yet he refuses to do one of those miracles for us today. He still wants us to believe and have the same faith that Peter had.
He wants us to be as fervent in our beliefs just by reading the stories in a book. Is that fair?
If God came down to you like he did Saul of Tarsus, knocks you off your donkey, blinded your eyes with a bright light, and spoke to you in an audible voice, wouldn't you also spend the rest of your life preaching about and talking about this God?
Christians want us to become the Disciples of Christ, but the disciples had unfair head start on the rest of us.
Discuss please
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