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In order to sin, you have to believe in the Christian fantasy world and believe in sin. The rest of us in the real world are making choices, some are good and some are not.

I don't understand why they can't distinguish their religion from reality.

2007-04-04 05:19:21 · 23 answers · asked by St. Tom Cruise 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

23 answers

If they realised everybody else wasn't at least as self loathing as they are, they'd feel awfully alone, wouldn't they?

2007-04-04 05:25:41 · answer #1 · answered by Orac 4 · 2 1

It's not a case of distinguishing religion from reality, it is a case of not being literate in their own holy book.

There is no biblical idea of original sin, and indeed, if you are a biblical literalist who believes in it (although I find that a contradiction) then you know it could not exist in non-semetic peoples....Hell, let's just say non-Jews, because the Phoenicians and Carthaginians didn't claim to be descended of Adam and Eve,

That leaves the source of sin as either the Exodus covenant (which only applies to Jews, and only three generations of them if you are a literalist) or a personal covenant with god.

In otherwords, if you're not descended from Jews (there is nothing wrong with being so descended, but I'm an inbred Scottish American) and you don't have a personal covenant with the Abrahamic deity you LITERALLY CANNOT SIN by a biblically literalist point of view.

Why on earth people would claim to be "Biblical Christians" and then say "we are all sinners" is beyond me. The only way to do so is to intentionally mistranslate the Bible or take passages out of context.

2007-04-04 05:30:04 · answer #2 · answered by LabGrrl 7 · 0 2

Whether or not you believe in th e Christian faith does not seem to be the underlying issue here. First let's define sin. Most people define sin as to offend against a principle, standard, etc. As human beings we all have some underlying standards or principle that we follow. One of the biggest is not to kill. Most people believe that they do not have the right to take someone's life mainly because they don't want someone else to take their life or the lives of their loved ones. If someone violates one of these principles, following our example, someone kills their neighbor. This is considered a sin because it violated this underlying principle that most people believe is a human right. The right to life. This person is considered a sinner because he did made a bad choice. Whether he is called a sinner or a bad person or whatever you want to call him, he made this choice and nobody, Christian or whatever, will think of him the same way.

2007-04-04 05:48:06 · answer #3 · answered by Vacationer 3 · 0 1

By claiming that there is no "sin", you imply that there is no absolute right or wrong....that what is right and wrong are subject to each person's own judgement. Image the chaos that would result in each person making up their own laws and morality. Better still, you don't have to imagine it....just look around or pick up a newspaper. It's happening today. What we see today is a basic lack of respect for people....a lack of kindness, a lack of simple courtesy, a lack of respect for authority of any kind.

Sin is very simply defined as a transgression against God's law. Much the same as a transgression against the laws of the state. Have you ever taken something that wasn't yours, maybe as simple as a piece of penny-candy from the store when you were little? Have you ever told a lie? If everyone reading this answers truthfully, then we're all in the company of liars and thieves, yet most of us do not judge ourselves to be so because we craft our own idea of morality to suit our behavior.

No one wants to admit that they violate the law....no one wants to admit that they have sin in their life. However, there must be an absolute moral standard in order for society to function and for people to live together peacefully. When there is not, you see exactly the kind of strife that we have in our world today. Admitting that we each have sin upon us is the first step toward putting aside our own self-centered nature.

2007-04-04 05:36:53 · answer #4 · answered by Marcus75 3 · 0 1

you quite have performed your examine, attaboy (and that i actually advise it, I quite have a severe face on, in case you cant see it). Morals are defined by the circumstances, what replaced into reliable then is undesirable now and vice-versa. the important element is to look previous the main factors in leviticus and deutoronomy and concentration on the important stuff, like the call for charity, cleanliness, peace, and justice. i think of the Christian gospels are the best at talking those abstracts that have been given confuzzled by the mistranslations and the changing circumstances. Dont forget that the OT replaced into written for a collection of nomads unfold by the Fertile Crescent. there replaced right into a feeling of order and strictness that had to be widespread. attempting to prepare them to society those days is like attempting to in good shape an american plug in a eu outlet, or diesel in a petroleum engine. lots of the regulations back then have been made to maintain the society and save human beings super (as in style) and healthful. in reality, lots of the regulations, whilst thinking a grain of salt, experience those morals you have. the element i'm attempting to make is that the religion is powerful at its middle, yet its been coated with each and all of the muck from its previous. in case you could look previous that, you will discover how reliable that's.

2016-10-21 00:19:28 · answer #5 · answered by porix 4 · 0 0

How real is death?

Just wait a few more years and you should get your answer naturally.

Fantasy world is seeing the complexity of life around us and actually believing it all happened by chance. The mathematical odds of that happening are impossible to calculate. Literally impossible to calculate.

So who is living in fantasy world. Use a little common sense, do some math, observe the human eye, rotation of planets, and deal with it: somebody designed this place.

2007-04-04 07:08:53 · answer #6 · answered by realchurchhistorian 4 · 0 1

I love your statement even though you put it in the form of a question:

Why can't Christians understand that NOT everybody is a sinner.

I am a Christian and I am, sin free.

The song writer put it best;

Tis a kingdom of peace, it is reigning with in. It shall ever increase in my soul. We posses it right here, when we're saved from all sin; and twill last, while the ages shall roll.

Jesus told us it is possible and the apostles told us it is possible. Why doubt the scriptures when they say it is possible.

2007-04-04 05:50:28 · answer #7 · answered by 1saintofGod 6 · 0 0

The Christian sees that God has created all and ..... in Romans 3:23 it says that "... all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."

If the dog in the yard does not believe he is a dog, does that make him any less a dog?

If you, a human creation of God's doing, is a sinner .... does your disbelief make it any less so?

That is how a Christian probably believes and sees it.

Kev

2007-04-04 06:08:29 · answer #8 · answered by Hobgoblin Kev 4 · 0 1

Its probably because all christians are sinners. including jesus. thts why he was crucified. according to jews and romans jesus must have sinned. so they punished him for the sins. only sinners get punished. if christians believe they are sinners, fine.

there are other religions which care a damn about sin. since is what one commit in this world. nobody is born in sin. sin is an act that can be corrected by good actions. it cannot be corrected by believing in jesus and accepting bible. that is even greater sin, because you are encouraging people to commit more sins.

in reality nobody is sinner. everybody is born good. only christians and bible categorises man and woman as sinners. if punishment in hell is the reward for sin or sinning, then hell is filled with christians. i doubt jesus can save them, when he could not save himself from jews n romans.

2007-04-04 05:35:42 · answer #9 · answered by Raja Krsnan 3 · 0 1

Im a Christian but i dont like word ´sin´either. I just think there are things all of us do that are not good. I bet you did something bad in your life, eg you lied or gossiped, didnt you? And Christians call these bad deeds sins. Its just a word describing it, nothing more. If you prefer to call it differently, than do so, its ok.

2007-04-04 05:34:56 · answer #10 · answered by eldridan 3 · 0 1

lol, no, we're all sinners. Sin is anything that goes against the will of God. He exists, loves, grants mercy, and judges whether or not anyone believes He exists. Sin is anything from telling a lie to stealing a pencil to lusting over someone, to seeking revenge for something, and the list goes on.
Everyone has done or does those things on a regular basis. So, everyone sins. "Sin" is the label put on the actions, which we all do. Which, is why we need Jesus Christ in the first place. He redeemed us of our sins.

2007-04-04 05:25:21 · answer #11 · answered by Evan S 4 · 0 3

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