To: sinkspur
"He doesn't attend every Sunday."
How often does he attend Sunday services? Isn't Sunday attendance sort of a mandantory part of the Christian faith?
14 posted on
11/22/2004 9:43:53 PM PST by
narses
(Free Republic is pro-God, pro-life, pro-family + Vivo Christo Rey!)
To: narses
Posh. Actually, in the Christian Bible, it says to profess your faith quietly and not shout it from the rooftops as the hypocrites do. So Bush is being a committed Christian.
16 posted on
11/22/2004 9:45:27 PM PST by
goldstategop
(In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
To: narses
Isn't Sunday attendance sort of a mandantory part of the Christian faith?Absolutely not.
31 posted on
11/22/2004 9:53:14 PM PST by
alnick
To: narses
In some denominations it is. Attendance is strongly encouraged because if allows for fellowship of the Body of Christ (Believers). One or two actually say it's a deadly sin to miss church / mass. That put's it back onto works, though and not through Salvation... Presitdent Bush, in having an opportunity to pray is still within his duties as a Christian.
To: narses
"Isn't Sunday attendance sort of a mandantory part of the Christian faith?" Everything is "mandatory" to religious legalists.
The emotionally and spiritually immature need guardrails to feel secure.
91 posted on
11/23/2004 5:55:52 AM PST by
Matchett-PI
(All DemocRATS are either religious moral relativists, libertines or anarchists.)
To: narses
We are told not "to forsake meeting together" as much for the support of the like minded community as it is for worship.
He has a home church in Texas, when he is in Washington he attends varioous churches.
We are not required to attend services.
94 posted on
11/23/2004 5:57:32 AM PST by
Wiser now
(A bitter, sour old woman is the crowning work of the devil.)
To: narses
"Isn't Sunday attendance sort of a mandatory part of the Christian faith?"
Actually, the first church met every day (Acts 2:46). We get so caught up in when, that we miss the whole point.
Like I've heard it said, "being right is not a fruit of the Spirit." (ref Gal 5:22-23)
96 posted on
11/23/2004 5:59:24 AM PST by
Preachin'
(Democrats know that they can never run on their real agenda.)
To: narses
What's your point? Are you insinuating that President Bush isn't either a real Christian or, if real, not good enough?
If so, you're wrong, as the discerning and perceptive can plainly see.
97 posted on
11/23/2004 5:59:27 AM PST by
cyncooper
(And an angel still rides in the whirlwind and directs this storm)
To: narses
"Isn't Sunday attendance sort of a mandantory part of the Christian faith?"
Only in churches where they make you feel guilty for missing a Sunday.
125 posted on
11/23/2004 7:41:32 AM PST by
Rebelbase
(Indiscriminate reprisals strengthen the terrorists. Targeted ones weaken them. Aim is everything.)
To: narses
It is best to go to church- but can you imagine the security they would have to put the church people through every Sunday? Under those circumstances, smaller, private services at Camp David might be preferable.
To: narses
One more clarification about church attendance -- salvation is about relationship, not form. It is about communication with your Lord and Savior, much as you would a marriage partner, and not just about meeting all the time in a building with a steeple and pews, etc. That has it's place, and we are to "forsake not the assembling of yourselves together", but having Michael W. Smith or other believers over for dinner and praying with them IS fellowship.
161 posted on
11/24/2004 7:40:23 AM PST by
Tuscaloosa Goldfinch
(THANK YOU LORD -- John Kerry is still just a senator.)
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