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Jesus said, love your enemies! is that really hard to follow!

2007-12-04 07:29:38 · 45 answers · asked by Not of This World Returns 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

by thebigm5

I'm sorry but I did not post this questions to offend ANYONE

Can you forgive me?
If you don't believe in Jesus at least believe in his teachings which are great to follow, and don't harm anyone in any way!

2007-12-04 07:41:30 · update #1

45 answers

Of course not. I love all of mankind, and all of life, and all of things the same. It saddens me to think superstition was many times, (and will be again) responsible for mass genocide.

A person may be evil, but all persons have an eternity to redeem themselves.

2007-12-04 07:37:32 · answer #1 · answered by Maitreya 3 · 0 0

Well, no person is aware of precisely what made him transfer on them so badly however listed here are a few features: His father beat him plenty while he used to be a child and it used to be recognized in his loved ones his father might had been part jewish. Since his grandmother labored for a jewish loved ones then simply occurred to fall pregnant, by no means naming the daddy.And in view that of this likelihood of his father having jewish blood, the identical guy that abused him, might have began a few dislike.Plus it seems that his father used to be veryantisemiticc himself and might have motivated Hitler. Another is on the time in europe, for hundreds of years,antisemitismm used to be prime and expressedsociallyy. Another COULD be that once he aspired to emerge as a painter, the folks that grew to become him down wherein jews which result in being homeless. Another is that jews wherein in general rich and so different austrians/germans (no longer all) gotenvy edd them. Another is that a guy who signedd the treaty of Versailles's a jew, the treaty used to be a difficult blow for germany and austrians who felt strongly approximately their neighbours equivalent to Hitler-prompted extra hatred. But what made honestly him tick to the factor of the holocaust will by no means relatively be recognized.We can best wager amongst those recognized features. Hope that is helping

2016-09-05 21:00:16 · answer #2 · answered by pax 4 · 0 0

I have compassion for the child Hitler who could have been helped. I can have no compassion for the man Hitler who was responsible for nearly destroying the world. So I am a Christian who falls short of her Lord's commandment to love my enemies--for as an enemy of millions of innocent people, Hitler would have been my enemy, even if he had never touched me. As for hate, what is the point of wasting energy hating a dead person? Better to put that energy into stopping the cruelty going on today.

2007-12-04 07:41:15 · answer #3 · answered by ? 6 · 1 0

Hitler was a twisted man. Used and abused the bible and the Christian religion to satisfy his own desires. Unfortunatly so many Christians feel like he did. (not the killing just the strong feeling of hate and superiority) Hitler used those feelings to get a hold on the German people and turn them into killers.
Like I said a twisted man. It doesn't matter what I think of him. It's about what he faced at his judgment. He thought he was 1 either above the lord or 2 following what he thought God wanted.
and for the people he killed they died for no other reason then their beliefs. Most religions beliefs are so strong they are willing to die to protect them. I think that God rewarded them for this.
Do I think they are sitting with God yes I do. Hitler is burning in Hell.

2007-12-04 08:30:17 · answer #4 · answered by Ivy 4 · 0 0

I feel for those hurt by his actions, I feel for those out there that still hold him up as a hero, I even feel for those today that know little to nothing of the events that allowed him that position of power and inclined people to follow or not appose him as they should have. I feel nothing for Hitler, however, not even hate: I never knew him, he is dead and what ever his evil deeds cost him is his affair.
Yes, it is at times hard to love those that hate us or wish us harm but I strive to, daily.

2007-12-04 07:42:17 · answer #5 · answered by obbiegee 3 · 0 0

I don't hate Hitler. Hitler's not around. He's dead and gone.
Hitler died long before I was born. But if I WAS going to hate anyone it would probably be someone who's in the White House now, somebody as bad if not worse than Hitler.

2007-12-04 07:33:53 · answer #6 · answered by ? 6 · 2 1

I don't HATE Hitler for what he did, but I hate the act itself.
The act must stand as a warning to subsequent generations about what happens when absolute power is seized, and we pay the price of eternal vigilance for the freedom we hold.
I hate the oppression and murder of any human being, theist or not, for a principle of hatred based on creed.

2007-12-04 07:33:20 · answer #7 · answered by jonnyAtheatus 4 · 1 0

Just because somebody dies you shouldn't act as if they did nothing wrong! After all he done, Hitler deserves being hate in life AND death. But i am a non-believer so i guess Jesus wouldn't affect my views on it. It's still a load of rubbish really..
Would you still hate Hitler if he'd killed your whole family? That's what i thought. [[he hasn't mine btw im just saying some people.]]

2007-12-04 07:33:13 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Many do not hate Hitler but his ideals of the perfect and superior society and it being controlled by one person. He was psychotic and was on all kinds of drugs just to keep him going. He had hallucinations and was diagnosed as a child as a paranoid-schizophrenic. He had romantic illusions of the new Roman empire and the one perfect human race that could emanate the "God" like vision of earth with all people looking like the angels of heaven. The "God" complex. Freud took special interest in Hitlers exploits and wanted to analyze him if he was ever taken prisoner, but Hitler cheated everyone by committing suicide and taking everyone with him.

2007-12-04 07:42:11 · answer #9 · answered by Karma of the Poodle 6 · 0 1

Let me tell you a story told to me by an old man who was in the camps for about 3 years.

The camp he was in was liberated by the Russians. The Russians were so horrified by what they saw they offered to do to the guards whatever the Jews wanted them to do. Kill them, torture them, whatever.

The Jews said "Just forgive them."

His wife was in Auschwitz for about the same amount of time. I've never heard her say a bad word about the Germans.

So, no, I don't hate Hitler as a Jew. It would be pointless anyway. He is dead. To harbor hatred would continue the destruction into later generations.

Shalom,
Gershon

2007-12-04 07:36:58 · answer #10 · answered by Gershon b 5 · 1 1

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