Did you even read your own vanity post?
How about here:
The most basic Christian impulse is to care for one's neighbor and to love one's brothers and sisters. South Korea is absolutely paranoid about a sudden influx of North Koreans into their society. They are not willing to threaten the comfort and wealth they have developed for the sake of desperately poor cousins to the north. This is NOT a Christian response. It is selfish and profoundly immoral.
So Amos, if you are not willing to threaten your own comfort and wealth by inviting the homeless and illegal aliens to live in your house, then you are at least as bad a Christian example as those you accuse.
That, by your own definition would make you selfish and profoundly immoral.
I don't think you are. I just think you are wrong to judge the Christianity of South Koreans because they have not opened their country to waves of illegal immigrants.
Personally, I am not willing to allow the current waves of illegal immigrants to continue to freely cross our borders. Are you? Does that make me immoral?
Is this an admission that I have not said what you accuse me of? I do not think it is, but you have extrapolated from my words to your interpretation. I am willing to defend my words, not your misrepresentation of them.
To wit:
I never mentioned illegal aliens and I never said that anyone should bring anyone else into their home.
That there is a humanitarian crisis in North Korea is undeniable. That no steps are being taken by those in the South to end that crisis is equally undeniable. That Christians in the South are not demanding an end to the slaughter of innocents in North Korea is a blight on their Christianity.
When will Christians not only in South Korea but also here in the US demand an end to the slaughter of citizens by their own governments? When do political cosiderations end? When does moral outrage begin?
Finally, and, yes. If helping others overcome oppression means personal sacrifice, nothing is closer to Jesus' teachings.