MehYam wrote:De Rigueur wrote:The passage is about the danger associated with unresolved anger ("first be reconciled . . .", "agree with your adversary quickly")
Interestingly, agreeing with your adversary quickly doesn't resolve anger, but builds it.
I think if you actually read it in full context, you'll see it doesn't say what you think it does. Read it:
Therefore, if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go and be reconciled to your brother; then come and offer your gift.
Settle matters quickly with your adversary who is taking you to court. Do it while you are still with him on the way, or he may hand you over to the judge, and the judge may hand you over to the officer, and you may be thrown into prison. I tell you the truth, you will not get out until you have paid the last penny.
The cases are both more specific than the general point you seem to be arguing with.
Lothar wrote:
Drakona wrote:when Lothar quoted the verse in that other thread, he was just being playful.
Actually...
My bad. I thought you were misquoting intentionally to make a funny serious point.
More seriously...
Will, you ask a lot of big questions all right in a row. I feel sort of like when a little kid comes up and goes, "Why is the sky blue? Where do babies come from? What makes cars work? Why does it rain? When do fish sleep?" I know most of the answers, but a lot of them take a lot of time to explain. And some are riddles of the ages.
Am I right in assuming then that it is unlikely that anyone has made it into heaven yet and we are a work in progress...eventually we will develop into a people that will make the grade?
To the first, it really depends on what you mean by "anyone has made it into heaven yet." If you're asking whether there are people in heaven right now looking down on us... the Bible doesn't give any indication that way, but it doesn't rule it out either. Catholics certainly think there are people in heaven. Some non-Catholics I've talked to also think so. I tend to think not, but that we'll all arrive at the same time. In my estimation, it's largely speculation, and not a very important point, and it certainly hasn't been a large doctrinal issue in church history.
But if you mean, rather, has anyone made it in, in the sense that they've finally become worthy? I can't really answer because the question is based on a faulty assumption: that getting into heaven is about making the grade. Going to heaven isn't something you earn, or something you eventually become good enough to deserve. First, living morally is hard to achieve. Even if you could hold to the high demands made in the Sermon on the Mount, there's no guarantee that that's all that's required to be truly moral. Even if you could hold to every command in all of scripture, and uphold every moral virtue society and others espouse, there's no guarantee you wouldn't have missed something.
At a more fundamental level, though, that's not what heaven's about. Heaven is not a reward for a well-lived life, or a society of moral people. Some people view God as a cosmic umpire for humanity, who has created heaven and hell as just rewards for earthly life. God does function as a judge and will repay people justly for what has happened on earth, but that is not what heaven is about. Heaven is not about you living in paradise, it's not about a reward for earthly deeds, it's not about you at all. It's about being with God.
All of the driving force of Christianity is a love affair with God--God's love for man, and man's love for God. If the idea of going away to pray excites you, if the very suggestion that you can see God fills you with delight the way you're delighted seeing someone you're in love with, if God's presence makes your heart leap up with joy, you'd like heaven, and God would like to have you there. If the idea of being with God just doesn't interest you--or worse, if it sounds like something you'd actively dislike and possibly find painful I imagine you probably wouldn't like heaven even if you could get there.
Heaven is not a cloudy mansion, a reward for earthly good deeds. It is a honeymoon between God and people who love him. I mean, there is a mansion involved--there is in most marriages where one party is exceedingly rich--but that is not the point, and should not be the point. The marriage analogy is just an analogy, but it does come from the Bible, and illustrates the point very well. Heaven is not about the mansion. Heaven is about God.
All of mankind is guilty before God, as I said in my first post. Very guilty, and the things we do are offensive and vile, even when we're trying to do right. The evil we do hurts God, it offends him, it makes him sad, and it destroys any chance we have of happily spending time with God (as much as offending a friend shuts the relationship down). And it works just like a friendhip--if we apologize, say we won't do it again, and ask God to forgive us... he's like a good friend that always does. And then we go back to spending time with him.
Those that are going to heaven are going because they know God, and love him, and he knows them. They've sinned hundreds of times, and they continue doing it, continue apologizing, and God continuously forgives them and loves them in spite of what they do. That's the Christian life--living with God, growing up morally educated by him, and spending time just enjoying being with him. And that's what heaven's for--for people who like doing that to just keep on doing it. Only more so.
Christians aren't necessarily any morally superior to others. From the moment they turn to God and say, "I'm sorry," it's not like God makes them perfect or anything. The difference is that God *declares* them innocent on the basis of their apology--that's forgiveness. The theological name for that is grace. (That's not to say behaving morally doesn't matter. Of course it *matters*, for all the same reasons it matters to people who don't believe in God, and then some. It just won't get you into heaven.)
One thing that frustrates me to no end is that people--even Christains!--upon hearing this, immediately say, "Oh, I get it... the thing I have to do to deserve going to heaven is to apologize to God." And then people begin to argue about how it's unfair to all the people that never heard about God in the first place, and others begin to talk about how God is being unfair to them by not proving his existence, and so forth.
That all misses the point entirely. The apology doesn't make you deserve heaven--the question is a total non-sequiter, because heaven is not something that is deserved, it's something that is given. The apology doesn't secure rights to property, it patches the relationship, so that it continues to blossom and ultimately blooms into heaven. None of us *deserves* anything other than hell--it's totally God's initiative that any of us get anything else. It's a free gift to people he loves and who love him.
Will Robinson wrote:Did god make heaven and hell? If so, why?
Did God make them? I think that might have some hidden assumptions about what they are. I think a safer answer is, God and man made them together. I do think hell is almost entirely manmade, and the pain therein is entirely self-inflicted--but here I am running off into philosophy (and conjecture!), and away from scripture, and my fellow Christians are most likely going o_0 Why are they made, what are they there for? That's a deep question. Regaurding hell, I honestly don't really know. Regaurding heaven, I know at least that it's for being with God, and I suspect he's got deeper purposes in mind, though I could only guess.
Will Robinson wrote:And if we are so far from worthy of entrance to heaven did he create us to be so flawed on purpose, as some kind of experiment maybe?
Not as an experiment, but he did make us the way we are on purpose. That's sound (though deep) theology. I have my own guesses as to why, but they are only guesses. The ultimate answer, I know, is "for his pleasure," it's just the how and why of that that are tough. Duper's got it right in saying that man's flaws are man's fault. If you ask whether God made us knowing that we would mess up, the short answer is yes. The longer answer is, he made us such that we would mess up and so that he would save us. If it sounds like I'm being vague and evasive, it's because I'm trying to gloss over some really deep and complicated ideas in a paragraph.
Will Robinson wrote:'WTF's up with that?!?'
LOL. I love your honesty. Hopefully I helped answer that a little. Between my two posts, you've heard the gospel--sin and grace are the two halves. It's the very heart of Christianity, and most other things should make sense in light of that.
-Drak