To: ConservativeDude
The mistake "liberal Christians" make is centering around a gospel of social justice and getting along with others. Christ's teachings, although they bring personal peace to their practitioners, are intended to be divisive. Jesus was not a "consensus builder." Instead, he told listeners, "If ye believe not that I am he, ye shall die in your sins." His message and ministry provokes the hearer to committment that leads to eternal life, not temporal prosperity or security. The proponents of "liberation theology" place Marx and Jesus on the same pedestal.
It's not the intent of "non-liberal Christians" (I'm not a fundamentalist, but I'm not a "liberal Christian," either) to give offense. But you have to take a stand upon the divinity of Christ, which makes him more than a great teacher or even a prophet.
I like Bill O'Reilly's question posed to Patricia Ireland, who is now the head of the YWCA - a supposedly Christian organization. When he asked her if she was a Christian, she said she didn't know what he meant by that, that she had a Christian upbringing. He called her on that answer and said, you know what I mean--a Christian believes that Jesus Christ is God. She hemmed and hawed her way out of that one, but O'Reilly, bless his heart, really nailed her on that one.
I'm sure many here will agree that "liberal Christians" are those who simply lack faith in Jesus Christ. They draw near to him with their lips, but their hearts are far from him.
Greg West
15 posted on
05/23/2003 8:40:33 AM PDT by
gregwest
To: gregwest
very well put, indeed
To: gregwest
Excellant post,
I agree almost completely. People like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton amaze me that they call themselves "Christians" and reverands none the less. I would say that a great deal of their beliefs contridict what the Bible says.
19 posted on
05/23/2003 12:42:31 PM PDT by
Blue Scourge
(You cannot be a victim and a hero simultaneously - Hon. Clarence Thomas)
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