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What Dio Sez: (Dio on Catholicism & Christianity in General)
Heavy Metal Magazine (via Web Archive) ^ | 2000

Posted on 05/17/2010 9:46:10 AM PDT by markomalley

How has your Roman Catholic background inspired, affected or driven your lyrics writing.

"It's given me a lot of religious turmoil in some of the songs I've done. I never agreed with the message of the Catholic church, and still don't to this day. There are some things that are fine, and what I think is very important is the moral upbringing of the young people. But I mean, you could send people to the church of silly walks, and they're gonna get that. I just disagree so much with the way the Catholic church says things like if you're not a good person you'll die and go to Hell, there's a purgatory there . . . if I was talking with a Holy Ghost, it would scare the living Hell out of me. God's Son was nailed to a piece of wood up in the air . . . instead of really explaining it all, I think, at least from my perspective, they frightened us first, and then we're supposed to just believe everything, and follow the rules or you'll burn in hell or something. And I just totally disagree with that. I disagree completely with that idiom. The whole attitude about birth control -- I mean we are a country that took about 10,000 generations to reach the population we have now, which is 4 billion, and it'll only take a little over 1 generation to double it, but yet, you're supposed to not use birth control -- let's have more children! So, the Catholic church, though I think it's important that people grow up with moral values, I just always disagreed with their tactics, which I thought were fright tactics, as opposed to sitting down and explaining the situation."

What do you think of Jesus Christ?

"I think that He was a prophet. I've had a difficult time coming to terms with Jesus Christ as the Son of God. He was a great man for the time. He was the right Man for the right time. Let's put it this way: I think He was a hell of a lot better than Michael Jackson. I think the Christ figure is a very interesting piece of work, whoever wrote that piece. A lot of embellishment went on inside of it, I'm sure, but the one positive thing I can say about it I can say is that all of the work of Jesus Christ, all of His words, all of His teachings -- if they were his -- are certainly very positive attitude, and are to be admired. Anyone who believes in Jesus Christ as their Savior, I have no problem with that at all. But if it's not Jesus Christ, it's Buddha, you know? I mean, we're talking about religion in one small faction. Catholicism and Christianity are not the only religion on this planet. There have got to a situation where by there are others who are Christ-like. We ever know, in other religions, they have similar names for people. They seem to be edging the issue, because they don't want to put everybody off about Jesus Christ. My feelings are that the teachings were great, but in my mind, my religious beliefs are that you are God, and you are Jesus Christ, and you are the devil, and I am, and all the people I know around me are. But I don't need to go to some place and listen to somebody else to tell me whether I'm good or bad, or whether I'm right or wrong. I am my shrine. You are your shrine. We are all Jesus Christ, and again, I have no problem with anyone thinking Jesus Christ is this deity, someone up there. It's cool."

What do you think about His claims to be "the Way the Truth and the Life, No one comes to the Father but by Me?"

"Well, once again, I think that's one attitude being said. That's one creation within one religion. Again, I think it's been said in other religions. There are Christ-like figures in other religions as well. I just have a hard time saying what you obviously want me to say, which is that there is only Jesus Christ, because there isn't. I don't agree with that. There are other figures in other religions who are exactly the same, who were the same thing. It doesn't matter who you follow, as long as what you follow has good value, and can lead you down a good path."

I definitely want you to say what you believe, and not what you perceive what I want you believe.

"Well, you know me, I'm gonna say what I believe."

What do you think about the credibility of the Bible, specifically the New Testament?

"Well, once again, I hate to come off as doubting Thomas, you know, I'm supposed to believe without seeing the wounds in His feet and hands. But I think it's a hell of a book. I think Whoever put it together did quite an interesting job, but I think that it was . . . I think that things were put in there to capture a group of people so they would follow a religion. Again, I think that things in the Bible are, for the most part, good. You can find inconsistencies in everything, and certainly the Bible was taken such a long period of time to have been put together, we don't really know if some of the quotes were actually said by certain people. And it's too long ago for us to . . . you know, we're talking about miracles in this thing. Why aren't there miracles today? Why? Why don't we see miracles today? Christ could change water into wine. People rose from the dead. Why doesn't this happen anymore? It's probably because 2,000 years ago, somebody made up a pretty damn good story about it, and that's what we're believing today. And following a belief is wonderful, but I just don't happen to be one of those people. I believe in myself, and I believe in those around me. I don't need that to get me through my life. The Bible is a very interesting work, and I think if followed, not close to the letter, it's a wonderful pattern for your life."

One thing that's always struck me about that whole thing is some of the . . . when you judge the Bible as a historical book, it does seem to stack up as well, if not better than, anything else, even the Odyssey, or some of the old ancient manuscripts.

"Well, yeah, that's . . . you only had one author of the Odyssey. You had quite a few for the Bible. And again, that's the problem for me. There were all those people who were writing the Bible, and just a collection of things that were written that they think were said, and what people were telling you were said at the time. I find that difficult to believe all of it's true. But again, the Bible as a collection of rules to live by, but because of the time period it was written, I just find it very hard to live by those rules in the world we live in. but if you take the generalities of the Bible, I think it's a wonderful piece of work, and a great way to live your life."

The thing that bothers me about taking that conclusion is that most of the general statements that Christ made, you can look at the dead language of Greek at the time it was used, and the writing styles that shifted around 50 A.D., you can pretty much date parts of the New Testament. Then His whole claim to be the only way wouldn't make Him a good prophet, because like a lot of Muslims believe that Jesus was a great prophet in the lineage of prophets. But a good prophet is not gonna stand up there and say, "I'm the only way to the Father." He's either a lair or He's a crazy man.

"Well, with those two options, that's pretty frightening itself."

Well, the other option is that He's telling the truth.

"Well, yeah, that's true. But I'm talking about the option coming viewpoint of the reader. You know, that either you believe or you don't believe. That, I find funny. You could just blindly go into it and believe it for the rest of your life. It's a good set of rules to live by for everyone, no matter what religion you're in. I think the interesting thing is the program, what is it, Ancient Mysteries? Mysteries of the Bible, I think it is. It's a great program, whereby they try to explain the falling of the walls of Jericho, etc., etc., etc., and all of those things. And you get to the end of it, and you realize that, hold on a minute. It wasn't all this blind, spiritual trust. There are actually some physical reasons why some of these things happened, which are not explained in the Bible. They're just told to you, and you're supposed to believe them blindly. Well, you know, if that's what it's like, just having somebody tell you, 'This is what you believe, and that's it. That's the way it is.' I think some of those are wrong -- not all of them, but some of them are wrong. So I have a problem with someone saying 'I am the way, and if you don't follow my way, you're screwed.' That's basically what was said, wasn't it?"

Yeah, but I don't think it sets it up to where you're not allowed to be a doubting Thomas. The doubting man who questions, there's certainly room for him to find answers to his search.

"Well, if Thomas had not, at the end of the day, been able to put his fingers into the wound, he still wouldn't have believed. So where does that lead. the doubting Thomas is the quintessential point of what people do and don't believe about the Bible. We don't have the opportunity to go and stick our fingers into the hands of Christ. We don't have that luxury. He did. That had to be proven to him, and of course, that therefore is that whole part of the Bible, which we're supposed to blindly believe. You should not have to put your fingers in the wounds of Christ to believe that there was a Christ and that He died for all of our sins. Again, blind faith, if you believe in blind faith, and want to believe that everything is exactly what it is, then that's fine too. But me, I just can't take the Bible for exactly what it says, because I've just lived so much of life, and have learned that things are not always what they're written to be."

I think I would throw myself in the camp of the questioner too, and I would just say that I've been satisfied with my search.

"I think that's wonderful. But for me, I've not really studied the Bible, nor do I intend to. Again, I've explained my religion to you, which is more tolerant than anything else, and I think it has its place for me. I think we all, as long as we walk a good path -- and I think Jesus is a good one -- we're obviously not talking about the Jews being wrong, because they believe that Christ was not the Son of God. We've all been able to coexist on this level, especially the Jews, who coexist pretty well. How can we say that the Bible is, especially the New Testament, is supposed to be the only correct thing? There's just too many other religions out there that believe too many other things."

I've known men that have set out to disprove it, and have had to change their minds when they just looked at the science proving the Bible, rather than disproving it.

"Well, I have yet to see that proof, and when I do, maybe I'll be a believer. How can anyone possibly prove to me that Christ rose from the dead? How can you prove it? I mean, who's gonna tell me, 'Oh, I saw that!' That's what I mean. It's blind faith. You have to either believe that or not believe that. I'm not saying that I don't believe it. I'm just saying that the real question, especially the scientific one, there are not a whole lot of scientists out there who are true believers in what happened in the Bible, because it's such a physical aspect. So, it's not hard for me, but I just haven't gotten to the point where I need to believe that. I've came early upon the point that there is a Spirit greater than we are, but that doesn't necessarily mean that Jesus Christ is His son. But for those who believe that, I think that's fine. I have no problem with that at all. Certainly, if there was gonna be someone who was the Son of God, there certainly couldn't have been anyone better than Jesus Christ, with what He went through."

I guess, as CS Lewis puts it, if you look at the Bible text and you come with no predispositions, as in . . . one predisposition is that miracles cannot happen. And if you purge the Bible with that predisposition, you're coming at it in a biased manner.

"Yes you are."

But if you look at, like, the resurrection account, and you figure out historically, like, what does it mean when they put the Roman seal on a tomb? And the Roman seal is fortifies by some of the strongest men in the country at the time. And it's a stone that's too large for a man to move on his own. That was taken away. There were 500 witnesses at one point who saw the resurrected Christ. And the one thing that impressed me, when I looked at it, is that it at least provides a credible testimony. If it was gonna be tried in court. There are a lot of things that stand up, as far as the witnesses that saw the resurrection were alive when the New Testament was written, and so there should be a lot of books printed that disproved it, or said, "No, this isn't true what these people believe. They're out to lunch."

"That should be your approach to the Bible, as far as believing in the resurrection and what not, that are going to predicate what you actually do believe. If you go into it as a doubting Thomas, and don't care, then it doesn't really matter. It's for those who really want to, and need believe in that, that it's important to. It's not important to me. I'm not trying to belittle the historical nature of it all, but it's not something that I think about a lot. I try to live my life more in the example of Christ than not, and that's good enough for me."

It's certainly a good example. In your opinion, how does magic compare to a loving God who gave himself up . . . ?

"Well, magic is magic. Magic is not God-like, as far as, you know, I mean, you could equate magic with miracles, whether it's real or not real. But magic is a sideline. It's again, a thing of the mind. It's what people want to believe. They want to believe that magic can happen, because then there's their miracle. There are white magic and there is black magic. White magic is practiced by people who are usually God-fearing and God-believing, and all they want to do is use their own mind and their own tactic, so to speak, to discover their own lives and those around them. Black magic is completely different. It's very dark and foreboding, and I think that it should be an approachable kind of situation. There's nothing but negative inside of that. White magic is fine, because it's partially religion, and it is a religion. You know, witches have religion. Not that they're Satanists. Good witches believe in God. But magic is in the mind. I thing it's more the words that are used."

How do you feel about when you sand that song "Live for the King," when you ad libbed the verses at the end on the Kerry Livgren solo album . . . how was that experience for you?

"Well, I didn't realize that Kerry was a born again Christian. I didn't realize that the song was a Christian song. I had no idea whatsoever, and he didn't tell me that until after I had completed my performance. So I sang the song as to how I saw it. It wasn't a God-like thing, and it wasn't talking about King Leer, or something. I think the music and the lyrics that he wrote, and the way he wrote them, just led me to the way I performed it. He told me afterward that that was exactly the performance he wanted, and that he wouldn't have done it any differently himself. So, perhaps unconsciously, I did realize what it was about, and dealt with it that way. But I honestly didn't realize that it was a Christian song."

That was a mark of a true professional.

"The other one, 'Mask of the Great Deceiver,' that we did on the other one. I kind of got the message on that one. That wasn't so difficult. That was kind of where I was coming from anyway, in Black Sabbath at the time, and 'Mask of the Great Deceiver,' I mean, just the words themselves kind of conjure up images from, like bad vibes somewhere, so that wasn't a problem. But again, after he told me what the songs were about, after I'd performed them, he told me how pleased he was and that was the way he wanted them done, I mean, I was just really gratified that was able to please him. It wasn't something that really changed me around in a Christian or religious attitude, because I've always had the same one. We're here to help each other and not to hinder each other. Maybe it's just my beliefs in the fact that there is good and evil, and I'd rather be on the good part of it, that unconsciously directed how it came out."

Kerry's another one of those examples of a doubter, and he was definitely a "Religion of the Month" club member, who was seeking truth through Buddhism, Urancha, Hinduism, North American spiritism, and he came to the conclusion -- he ran into New Testament Christianity, and couldn't get around it. And he finally concluded that this was the ultimate truth.

"Well, I'm always very pleased to see people who have gotten to the point where, 'Hey, this is what I believe in.' I think that's great. I just think that those are people who need to have those kind of beliefs, and I don't. I believe in what I believe in, and what I believe in, I think, is the correct belief for me."

Have you ever looked at the Old Testament's forbidding of magic of all types, which would definitely fly in the face of all the white magic followers?

"I never have gotten really so into the magic vs. non magic in the Bible. I really never even thought about it. I don't draw any of my story lines from anything that I've read. I'm sure that I'm affected by it, just like everything in the Bible. Consciously, I don't think I'm really affected by something like that. Those are subjects that I just prefer to stay away from. 'Jesus, Mary and the Holy Ghost,' that was about growing up as a child, about being told that this is what I have to believe in and this is what I don't have to believe in, and it was presented to me in a very depressing, dark and frightening way. That was a lightning streak. I don't go off on Bible stories with these attitudes. In Black Sabbath, for example, everyone thought that everyone in that band was a Satanist, and they were cutting up babies on stage, blood dripping everywhere. It was a stupidest thing that ever happened, because everybody in that band was like a good Catholic. And it just happened to be a name. You know, once you've got a name like Black Sabbath, it all of the sudden conjures up all these incredible images, so they pigeonhole what you are and what you're gonna be. But, being in a band like that, you have a tendency to write about dark things, and then you become. But like the wise professional musicians that we are, we didn't deny anything, because it made for better publicity. I don't think that anyone could especially that band apart and find anything from the dark side. We were just musicians and nothing else. And I use Black Sabbath as the best example of that."

I think if I was in a band or an artist group that was called something like Holy Jihad or Terrorists for Allah, and I had this whole imagery wrapped around me of a bomber, and you come to my concerts, and there was gonna be explosions and flash pots, and I always carried the illusion of being somewhat, that I was gonna kill and Israeli in my next tour -- there was no doubt, I think every once in a while, I would come away and step back, and feel kind of strange. I don't know if that's a good analogy or not. I just pulled it out of the air on the spot.

"Well, it's a wrong analogy for what I was talking about. Again, Black Sabbath was just a name. There were no songs 'Praising' the devil . . . none. You have to look inside the work of people who . . . Holy Jihad, or 'We are the Palestinian terrorists, and we're gonna kill you tomorrow thing.' It's a different situation. Black Sabbath didn't mean anything other than two words that were put together. They were just words. It didn't mean that there was going to be that every Sabbath day there was gonna be a sacrifice or whatever. It wasn't like that."

But certainly, if you look at marketing, and whether or not the marketing has a different meaning for the artist who created it or not, you're smart enough to know that the album cover for Holy Diver and some of the photographs and publicity shots in the Sabbath days or your early solo days, I'm sure it helped record sales, but did you feel any responsibility, or how did that feel being marketed in that way, whether or not you really . . .

"Well, that was my own problem. I won't take the blame for that one. I won't take the blame for it, because no one understands. The question I was always asked about that album was, 'Why do you have a monster, or a devil figure killing a priest?' And my reply has always been, as far as I'm concerned, it was a priest killing a monster. It's all in what you're told. I wanted to do it that way, because I wanted people to ask me that question, so I could say, 'Why don't you look inside the package?' That was the whole point of it. Why couldn't that devil look like he could be God. Why couldn't he? Do we really know what God looks like? No, we don't. We have no idea. So that was the reason I did that. It was not for marketing at all. Apparently, if you look at the Dio logo, and you turn it upside down, and look at it from left to right, it apparently looks like it says 'devil.' I've been asked about that many times. And my reply is, 'Sorry. I don't know anything about that. I mean, that just happens to be some incredible coincidence. You can kind of conjure up that maybe that's what it says, but it doesn't have to be that way at all. That lettering -- how could I possibly be so bright to know that DIO written that way could possibly say 'devil.' I'm not that smart. A lot of things are created by people who want to create them. I don't feel responsible at all. I feel no responsibility for doing anything in a harmful way, because always re-ask that question, 'How do you know it's not a monster killing a priest, or the other way around?'"

I think one of my reasons for asking that question was not so much to nail you against the wall, but to see how you felt, possibly, if you ever wondered what kind of image is being put across . . .

"Well, you know, I'm sure that that probably has happened, but it's nothing Judas Priest, or something, didn't do, or whomever. You know, 'Our child died because of you.' There does have to be some responsibility in some of that, but I don't see people with Marlboros worrying about things . . . you know, it goes right down the line. How politically safe do we have to be? It's all about education. If we educate our children enough for them to realize that this is not the kind of presentation that means anything. We need to tell 'em, 'This is a good world. When you see something like that, don't pay any attention to it.' Then you've been brought up, 'Okay, this is what it is.' There are always going to be those who are led down a wrong path, just because of themselves. They're perhaps not bright enough to understand, or because their genes have been put together wrong. There has to be some responsibility, certainly, but that doesn't mean there has to be censorship on everything."


TOPICS: Catholic
KEYWORDS: dio; ronniejamesdio
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(If you would like to read the rest, it's at the link above. I only copied the pertinent parts)

This interview was 10 years ago. I pray that he was reconciled to God since that time.

1 posted on 05/17/2010 9:46:10 AM PDT by markomalley
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To: markomalley
Rest in peace, Ronnie. You rocked!


2 posted on 05/17/2010 9:49:28 AM PDT by humblegunner (Pablo is very wily)
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To: markomalley

I suspect he knows the correct answers now. I hope it was not too late when he discovered them.


3 posted on 05/17/2010 9:53:48 AM PDT by Ingtar (My dog died yesterday, but less than expected. - Freeper Juan Meden)
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To: Perdogg; RockinRight; Grizzled Bear; qam1

Ping - of interest.


4 posted on 05/17/2010 9:55:01 AM PDT by SilvieWaldorfMD
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To: markomalley

Sounds like he was basically a Deist.


5 posted on 05/17/2010 10:11:58 AM PDT by RockinRight (I can see November from here!)
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To: markomalley

I worked at The Record World warehouse in 1984 to 1985. The Dio or Black Sabbath albums would have the songs written. Sick vile ant-christ talk. The worst words about the Redeemer ever. I hope someone prayed for His soul. Sad !


6 posted on 05/17/2010 11:39:37 AM PDT by johngrace
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To: markomalley
I just disagree so much with the way the Catholic church says things like if you're not a good person you'll die and go to Hell

Exactly what I said on a catholic thread the other day, that is the message of that church, completely opposite of what the true Gospel says, that all our good works are as filthy rags, we are saved by the Cross, nothing more, good deeds will not earn a place in heaven.
7 posted on 05/17/2010 11:41:46 AM PDT by Scythian
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To: markomalley

bflr


8 posted on 05/17/2010 11:44:41 AM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: RockinRight

Like a lot of people in the Western world these days, he’s a Mason without a fez.


9 posted on 05/17/2010 11:58:52 AM PDT by 0beron
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To: Scythian
Exactly what I said on a catholic thread the other day, that is the message of that church, completely opposite of what the true Gospel says, that all our good works are as filthy rags, we are saved by the Cross, nothing more, good deeds will not earn a place in heaven.

Let me ask you a couple of questions -- I'm not challenging you here, just want to see where you are coming from.

  1. Does a person have to repent of his or her sins in order to be saved?
  2. Does a person have to make an amendment to make Jesus the Lord of his life (on top of being repentant) in order to be saved?
  3. Does a person have to be baptized, if it is possible to do so, in order to be saved?
  4. If a person has a problem with a habitual type of sin, even after the above, is that person:
    1. Still saved, it doesn't matter what he does afterward
    2. Still saved, but he must continually repent of sin
    3. Not really saved to begin with
  5. If a person is saved, as above, but later on slips back into his sinful behavior (maybe he goes and commits a few murders, commits adultery repeatedly, or whatever), he will:
    1. still go to heaven, once he's saved, he's always saved and it doesn't matter what he does afterward
    2. not go to heaven, because he was never really saved to begin with
    3. go to heaven if he repent of these new sins prior to death
  6. If a person is saved, as above, but goes back to sinful behavior afterward and does not repent of that behavior before he dies, he will:
    1. go to heaven, because he was saved and it doesn't matter what the behavior was afterward;
    2. go to hell, because he was never really saved to begin with;
    3. go to hell, because he didn't repent of those additional sins after he was saved

    If the questions are not phrased correctly to allow you to answer, please expound for me.

    Thank you for your help (if you decide to answer me).


10 posted on 05/17/2010 12:19:45 PM PDT by markomalley (Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus)
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To: markomalley

Dio was heavily involved in a charity called “children of the night”. It helps kids not become teenage prostitutes, and helps them out of that life I believe. I think Ronnie was a good guy, hope he came around.

As far as Sabbath goes, here’s the lyrics to 1971’s (pre-Dio) “after forever”:

Have you ever thought about your soul - can it be saved?
Or perhaps you think that when you’re dead you just stay in your grave
Is God just a thought within your head or is he a part of you?
Is Christ just a name that you read in a book when you were in school?

When you think about death do you lose your breath or do you keep your cool?
Would you like to see the Pope on the end of a rope - do you think he’s a fool?
Well I have seen the truth, yes I’ve seen the light and I’ve changed my ways
And I’ll be prepared when you’re lonely and scared at the end of our days

Could it be you’re afraid of what your friends might say
If they knew you believe in God above?
They should realize before they criticize
that God is the only way to love

Is your mind so small that you have to fall
In with the pack wherever they run
Will you still sneer when death is near
And say they may as well worship the sun?

I think it was true it was people like you that crucified Christ
I think it is sad the opinion you had was the only one voiced
Will you be so sure when your day is near, say you don’t believe?
You had the chance but you turned it down, now you can’t retrieve

Perhaps you’ll think before you say that God is dead and gone
Open your eyes, just realize that he’s the one
The only one who can save you now from all this sin and hate
Or will you still jeer at all you hear? Yes! I think it’s too late.

Freegards, catch the rainbow, Ronnie!


11 posted on 05/17/2010 12:48:40 PM PDT by Ransomed (Son of Ransomed Says Keep the Faith!)
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To: markomalley

Well, those are all very good questions. I like to think as the plain things are the main things and that is, Jesus died on the cross for our sin, there is no other way to the Father but by Him. At the moment of Christs death the bible states the curtian keeping the people out of the holy of holies was torn right down the middle. This is why we pray in Jesus’s name and not Mary’s, and why we ask in His name, not because by tacking it onto the end of a prayer “it works” but rather the Father can only look upon us if we are without sin, and only when covered by the blood of Jesus are sinless and able to approach the father.

So, this morning let’s say I sinned, have I lost my salvation, I think not, but it should not become a habit. Baptism is an outward sign of an internal commitment, and symbolizes the being washed of my sins, Jesus said I should be baptized, should babies be baptized, no, there is no example in the bible of that. It would be silly to think baptising a baby would ensure that baby went to heaven, as if drinking a magic potion. But don’t worry, the Lord is just and no one is cast away that doesn’t deserve it (and we all do).

As for the rest of your question, ya, I know the kind of hell that life can bring, I suffered it in catholicism for 30 years, awash in guilt of my sins always sure I was beyond redemption and unloved by a holy God, did I commit the unforgiveable sin, because I just sinned did I lose my salvation, or because I think certain thoughts does it mean the Holy Spirit has left me, if I could only hunker down and be really good then maybe God would let me in ... all the while torn apart internally because I know my thoughts are only wicked all the time, and they are, I am a man, I am very honest about that, I am a wicked creature but by the grace of God should be snuffed out this very instant.

I would love to do a flowchart of your logic below and then ask you if you want to live like that. I used to, it really did a number on me, I am still damaged from that kind of thinking.

Wide is the path that leads to destruction, and many will say on that day Lord, Lord, did not we do .... but He will say depart from me and be cast out.


12 posted on 05/17/2010 12:51:15 PM PDT by Scythian
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To: Scythian

Bless your heart, you gave a very nice witness and I thank you for it.

But, frankly, you didn’t answer the mail. The closest you came was, “So, this morning let’s say I sinned, have I lost my salvation, I think not, but it should not become a habit.”

So what happens if it _does_ become a habit?

If you (a presumably saved person) go out and commit repeated adultery against your wife (husband) with multiple partners of both sexes over a long period and are perfectly pleased and proud to have done so and never repent from having done so, even to your death, are you going to heaven or not?

If so, all well and good.

If not, was it because you were never _really_ saved to begin with, was it because you lost your salvation, or was it because you died in a state of sin?

Really simple questions. They don’t require a long testimony and I promise not to argue with your answer, once you actually give me one.

I do appreciate your answer, though. But please just answer the question and leave your “I’m glad I’m not Catholic” testimony out of it this time. Thanks.


13 posted on 05/17/2010 1:18:31 PM PDT by markomalley (Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus)
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To: markomalley
If someone does that

go out and commit repeated adultery against your wife (husband) with multiple partners of both sexes over a long period and are perfectly pleased and proud to have done so and never repent from having done so, even to your death, are you going to heaven or not?

My honest answer is they probably never were believers to begin with. But in the end I am not concerned with that person, I will stand or fall based on me, nobody else. However, God will chasten those he needs to, beleive me he does.

Let's consider just neglecting to read the bible, or arguing with your wife, or looking at pic's of scantadally clad women right here on the FR? Have you ever looked when you know you really shouldn't? What are you going to do? Best of luck to you my friend, and remember, a smoldering wick He will not snuff out ...
14 posted on 05/17/2010 1:26:17 PM PDT by Scythian
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To: Scythian
My honest answer is they probably never were believers to begin with.

Thank you.

15 posted on 05/17/2010 1:35:37 PM PDT by markomalley (Extra Ecclesiam nulla salus)
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To: NewRomeTacitus; cripplecreek; creeping death; JeffreyH; RandallFlagg; cschroe; rollo tomasi; ...

Heavy Metal Ping!

Thank you SilvieWaldorfMD!


16 posted on 05/17/2010 4:39:54 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear (Does not play well with others.)
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To: Scythian; markomalley
I just disagree so much with the way the Catholic church says things like if you're not a good person you'll die and go to Hell

The real message of the Bible is, you are bad and you deserve hell. But God loves you so much that He came to earth and paid the price you cannot afford so you can dwell with Him forever.

Pretty sweet deal.

17 posted on 05/17/2010 6:05:25 PM PDT by Grizzled Bear (Does not play well with others.)
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To: Scythian
that is the message of that church, completely opposite of what the true Gospel says, that all our good works are as filthy rags, we are saved by the Cross, nothing more, good deeds will not earn a place in heaven.

Sounds like you've skipped quite a bit of Scripture in buying into the once saved always saved lie. You want to talk the talk but not walk the walk.

"And you shall be hated by all men for My name's sake: but he that shall persevere unto the end, he shall be saved." Matthew 10:22

"For the Son of man shall come in the glory of His Father with His angels: and then will He render to every man according to his works." Matthew 16:27

"Wherefore he that thinketh himself to stand, let him take heed lest he fall." 1 Corinthians 10:12

"Wherefore, my dearly beloved, (as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but much more now in my absence,) with fear and trembling work out your salvation. For it is God who worketh in you, both to will and to accomplish, according to His good will. " Phillipians 2:12-13

"So faith also, if it have not works, is dead in itself." James 2:17

"Do you see that by works a man is justified; and not by faith only?" James 2:24

"For even as the body without the spirit is dead; so also faith without works is dead." James 2:26

"Behold, I come quickly; and my reward is with Me, to render to every man according to his works." Apocalypse 20:12

18 posted on 05/17/2010 7:24:49 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: markomalley; Irisshlass; informavoracious; larose; RJR_fan; Prospero; Conservative Vermont Vet; ...
+

Freep-mail me to get on or off my pro-life and Catholic List:

Add me / Remove me

Please ping me to note-worthy Pro-Life or Catholic threads, or other threads of general interest.

19 posted on 05/17/2010 7:26:12 PM PDT by narses ( 'Prefer nothing to the love of Christ.')
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To: A.A. Cunningham
Apocalypse 20:12

Correction,; that citation comes from Apocalypse 22:12.

"And I saw the dead, great and small, standing in the presence of the throne, and the books were opened; and another book was opened, which is the book of life; and the dead were judged by those things which were written in the books, according to their works." Apocalypse 20:12

20 posted on 05/17/2010 7:28:52 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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