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@TheUnderdog
For a Christian to commit suicide would be like an Olympic athlete bowing out of the games. Except a lot worse.
Is that it?
"Go and attack the Amalekites and completely destroy everything they have. Don't leave a thing; kill all the men, women, children, and babies;
- God killed all the firstborn in Egypt
- God killed everyone on earth except for Noah
- God destroyed Sodoma and Gamorah
- God ordered the genocide of Jerico and a hundred other cities in the book of Joshua
- God led foreign kingdoms to invade and genocide on Israeli soil
- GOD DID NOT PROTECT HIS PEOPLE FROM THE HOLOCAUST; so that had to be part of his plan aswell
My point is that a christian is going to heaven regardles of suicide or not. Therfore, they are not commiting suicide in order to get to heaven, they are taking suicide to escape life on earth.
I don't believe I will ever have true faith in anything in the afterlife. What if you are wrong? What if there is nothing? It's a gamble. The next time you think you have faith in God, if there is a plane on fire that you are on and it's very high up in the sky, celebrate, because according to you, you are about to go to heaven.
But I would be having faith that I get to go to heaven. God's looking out for me, isn't he?
You don't know what God's plan is.
His plan could have had me commit suicide
Then what sins does God pay for?
If people know they are going to die in a plane crash, there are going to be lots of different responses. That's what happened on the Titanic. And it has happened in lots of other examples of impending tragedy as well. It is not incredibly unlikely for many people. And celebration is going to look differently in each situation. I doubt that many will pick up a glass of champagne. But some will be incredibly calm. And this is true. Others who have no clue will obviously be freaking out.
If however you are in a relationship with Christ, you won't want to commit suicide.
A person who is in a relationship with Christ has already had their sins forgiven, past, present, and future. Yet if you have rejected Christ, you actually stop yourself from the possibility of forgiveness if you kill yourself before you repent.
I don't know if murdering someone is worse that suicide.
How can something be in God's plan and not his will?I explained that above.
It would also be a gamble to not put my trust in Hades that he will spare me from the underworld and so I can join Zeus at Olympia, or take a gamble and sacrifice myself (or commit suicide) so I don't end up in Xibalba.It would actually be a gamble to put your trust in Hades. No one has ever historically tried to find Hades, or Zeus for that matter. No one thinks that they historically lived.
You must: [.................................................................]Have true Faith in Christ, in order to live the life, you were called to live according to his purpose.
So you've been taught about those books and no other book.
How do you define "true faith"?
How do you define "true faith"?Faith that goes beyond a simple statement.Faith that you apply to your life.Faith that produces works.Faith that produces good fruit.Like the fruits of the spirit:LoveJoyPeacePatienceKindnessGoodnessFaithfulnessGentlenessSelf-ControlFaith that creates a relationship with you and God.An intimate spiritual relationship.
9 days later
So simply converting to Christianity & undergoing the baptism ritual for instance, wouldn't alone make me a Christian in the "true faith" according to your definition, then?
You only mentioned four books and you said all that is required to be saved/go to heaven was what you said. So that's fine.
So simply converting to Christianity & undergoing the baptism ritual for instance, wouldn't alone make me a Christian in the "true faith" according to your definition, then?Depends on what you mean by converting to Christianity.