All content in my name "Lee Mowat" is free to copy or reproduce..

STUDIES WITH LEE MOWAT
 
 
 
 
 
Although the Romans did not invent crucifixions they perfected it as a form of torture and capital punishment that was designed to produce a slow death with maximum pain and suffering..

Where was God to save your arm?-You begin the answer and following answers from the viewpoint of either excusing God or diminishing the calamity...

 
Our new righteousness which is not Gods moral righteousness-or accredited righteousness is: " positional righteousness" through faith..

Satan imitates Christianity-better than Christians.

 

I turn my mind to the Father and propose-if it is your will for me to be here and to be in the circumstances that I am in then let the pear which I have chosen fall to the ground..

So what difference does it make-if God proves his existence to you and by what means then can you be convinced?...

To fellowship with a Holy God-you must be Holy yourself otherwise that would mean that this God is not so Holy after all.

 

It entered my mind-" what is wisdom if you so easily cast it aside as a worthless object when giving in to temptation?"..

Finally in the same truth that our Bibles today are not the original scriptures- and vary from publisher to publisher and version to version making void as the final authority as being the very words of God..

Oh for the sanctity for human life! and the respect for the dead!-These are but a few of several sins that are leading the way for greater unchartered sin..

 

I sat down whilst they all waved their hands and wobbled on the spot-not having the faintest idea of what was being sung or that the Lord might well be looking on shaking his head...

Slowly the brave/insane descended to the stage area-and the stars of the show did their prayer performances over these people and then the true insanity began.....

At the end of the meeting nobody spoke to me-and so I went home. ............

 
At the end of his study he suggested we all pray to be free-in the spirit and I decided it was time for the toilet so as I could hit my head against the wall a couple of times. I was apprehensive about leaving my wife alone with them but I had to go and when I returned the inevitable had paid a visit.......................

If wrongly America was judged to be a Theocracy-and under the same conditions as Israel of the past why would 11th September be seen as "" God punishing" or " allowing" on the basis of National immorality?..........

At one point in our lives there arrives the time when we begin to die.-Most people reach this point at around the age of 30 years

 

With globalisation and European law entering into participating European countries there are many laws and values unique to individual countries being overridden by conflicting rules and regulations that have to be abided by participation of national governments in the European institution.

If God comes to live in a person and this is a reality for Christians how can there be a necessity for faith in God from then after.

Oh you doubting Thomas! do you live by faith or rely on other peoples opinions?

 

I'm really fed up with myself that I defended my printed Bible as Gods word. One of the frequent retorts I kept giving was is it impossible for God to enable the Bible to be brought to us 2000 years unchanged?

lNothing that we do in the flesh avails anything except
Except? you ask, yes except! 
James 1:27

This study starts off by condemning the marketing techniques of the organised church having done so then goes on to reinforce marketing techniques in the church under the guise of spiritual unity great! this stuff makes me puke!

 

Hebrews Verse 1 is saying that God has throughout history and in various ways made known to his people that he is their father and this can be seen in the likeness of pieces of a jigsaw puzzle put together to which makes this point.

Its meant to be hard its all part of Gods plan if you endure the answers will come you may already know the answer anyhow.

 

If even you disagree with me regarding the name of the son you must admit these ere questionable discrepancies.

I don't think it is Gods intention for me to view his love as an alarm bell at which I flee for safety but what does he expect?

Chapter one-The Gust 
UP WITH THE RANKS OF THE QU'RAN HERE IS MY FAKE HOLY BOOK

Quite a lot recently I have been thinking over the time when I will meet the Lord face to face. So many things have passed through my mind

The question involved moral physical positions in the act of making love. After a minute of hysterical laughter

Most people detest me even at the mention of my name-the majority burn with anger and resentment and bitterness.

My vicar once gave me his white Holy collar to aid me in prayer he is a wonderful Holy and sacred man.

Save Our Planet! 
Who's planet? 
Quite an assumption to say our planet! who said it was ours?

A fake pair of scales is disgusting to JHVH: a genuine plummet is delightful

Let us begin with me. I am white I am racist but I am not a racist .

Many Christians today are Spiritually fat off the blessings in Christ.

Respect for authority generally and respect for the ministerial office in particular is much reduced.

Sin is defined by the Law of God which was given to Moses by God.

Whether we care to admit this or not-the fact remains that we are slaves.

So are you contemplating suicide? 
Basically to put suicide in a box..

How long I wonder till the time arrives when political correctness becomes Law and the preaching of Christianity becomes an act of terrorism in the eyes of the Law.

This subject came to mind this morning as my wife was picking a cd from our collection to play on her journey to work.

For the most part in religions trials and tribulations are seen as a test of God. Generally the thinking in this is that God wants to see how faithful we are

How can I reconcile the promises of God with what I see around me in the world today? How can I believe in something I can't even see?

 
 
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Name: Sue
Subject: Irreconcilable differences
Question -
I was brought up in the Christian church, and, currently, I consider myself somewhat lost.

I tell you this only so that you know I am not some
kind of atheist on a quest to disprove biblical validity. I am merely a believer who is having a difficult time believing.
I am writing to ask of you, in general terms, I suppose, about the difference between the scientific and the religious worlds.

I wonder, is one always superior to the other?

While modern day science has proved spectacular things and created revolutionary technologies, is it always
subject to the word of the Bible?

Do religious documents always take precedent over what science has taught us and what it will teach us in the
future? If so, how does one decide which scientific “facts” are acceptable and which are not, according to the Bible and to the church.
For example, the formations of the Colorado Plateau and the Grand Canyon suggest millions of years of erosion, while we are told that the Bible dates the earth to only 6,000 – 10,000 years old.
Perhaps this is a question that no one can answer for me, but how am I to believe that stories written 3,000 years ago by an uneducated, nomadic people are superior to modern day research and scientific testing?
In your opinion, sir, is there no way to bridge the gap between the scientific and religious worlds?

Will they always be separate?

Will one always take precedent over the other?
I appreciate your time in reading over and responding to my questions.
Thank you.

Answer -
Dear Sister Sue,
"I was brought up in the Christian church, and, currently, I consider myself somewhat lost."
The Bible says; "Mar 9:40 for he who is not against us is for us;" and "Joh 17:12 While I was with them in the world, I kept them in thy name: those that thou gavest me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the
son of perdition; that the scripture might be fulfilled.
Joh 17:13 And now come I to thee; and these things I speak in the world, that they might have my joy fulfilled in themselves.
Joh 17:14 I have given them thy word; and the world hath hated them, because they are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
Joh 17:15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.
Joh 17:16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.
Joh 17:17 Sanctify them through thy truth: thy word is truth.
Joh 17:18 As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I also sent them into the world.
Joh 17:19 And for their sakes I sanctify myself, that they also might be sanctified through the truth.
Joh 17:20 Neither pray I for these alone, BUT FOR THEM ALSO which shall believe on me through their word;"
I simply wish to state to you that though you may consider yourself lost, you are not lost to Christ, and your self judgment is a notable one.
In answer to your question i have found everything that i would want to say on this subject on a web site below, but i will paste the content anyhow;
 

By Gary F. Zeolla

"Distant Origin" was the title of a recent episode of Star Trek: Voyager.

1 In the show, an alien scientist (a "Voth") was proposing a new theory as to the origin of his species.

But the leaders of his planet opposed his theory because it was "contrary to doctrine" and declared "heresy."

He was eventually forced to recant his view and agree to not conduct further research in that particular subject.

2 The apparent implication was that religion stands in the way of scientific progress.

But is this claim true?

More specifically, does the Christian faith impend scientific progress?

The Christian Origins of Science

At the time the above episode of Voyager aired I was reading a very interesting book titled The Soul of Science: Christian Faith and Natural Philosophy, by Nancy R. Pearcey and Charles B. Thaxton.

3 This book addresses the implications made in Voyager.

Francis Schaeffer also addresses this topic in How Should We Then Live? and other books in his Complete Works.

4 Also, Henry M. Morris’ book The Biblical Basis for Modern Science is devoted to this subject.

5 Quotations from these books will be utilized in this article.

6 Pearcey and Thaxton’s book begins by stating, "The most curious aspect of the scientific world we live in, says science writer Loren Eiseley, is that it exists at all…. Science, Eiseley concludes, is not ‘natural’ to
mankind at all."

One evidence that science is not "natural" to humans is, "… several great civilizations have arisen and fallen without the benefit of scientific philosophy."

So how did science begin? "In short, it is "an invented cultural institution." Moreover, science, "… demands some kind of unique soil in which to flourish."

The authors identify that "soil" as the Christian
faith, "Christianity provided both intellectual presuppositions and moral sanction for the development of modern science."

Moreover, "Scientists and historians such as Alfred North Whitehead and Michael B. Foster became convinced that, far from impending the progress of science, Christianity had actually encouraged it—that the Christian culture within which science arose was not a menace but a midwife to science."

The authors conclude, "It should not be terribly surprising that Christianity was an important ally of the scientific enterprise.

After all, modern science arose within a culture saturated with the Christian faith.

It was Christianized Europe that became the birthplace of modern science—there and nowhere else."

7 Francis Schaeffer also refers to Whitehead, along with J. Robert Oppenheimer.

He states that "Whitehead was a widely respected
mathematician and philosopher" while "Oppenheimer … wrote on a wide range of subjects related to science, in addition to writing in his own field on the structure of the atom and atomic energy."

Schaeffer then writes, "As far as I know, neither of the two men were Christians or claimed to be Christians; yet both were straightforward in acknowledging that modern science was born out of the Christian world-view."

8 And further, "Whitehead was absolutely right about this.

He was not a Christian, but he understood that there would have never been modern science without the biblical view of Christianity."

9 The early scientists, including the founders of many scientific disciplines, held strong Christian convictions. In the first appendix to his book, Morris lists forty-one "Scientific Disciplines Established by Bible-Believing Scientists."

10 Morris observes, "Some skeptics might say that such men were merely products of their times—that everyone believed in God and the Bible at the time.

But that’s exactly the point! It was no coincidence that it was in the milieu of the Reformation and the Great Awakening that modern science first grew and began to thrive."

11Why the Christian Worldview?
So modern science developed within the Christian worldview and those who laid the foundations for modern science held Christian beliefs. Moreover, even non-Christians acknowledge that science developed within the Christian framework. 

But why did modern science develop within the Christian worldview - "there and nowhere else?"

Pearcey and Thaxton write:
Scientific investigation depends upon certain assumptions about the world—and science is impossible until those assumptions are in place.

As Foster argues, Western thinkers had to ascribe to nature the character and attributes that made it a possible object of scientific study in advance
of the actual establishment of science. 

As Whitehead puts it, "faith in the possibility of science" came antecedently to the development of actual scientific theory.

12 What are some of these assumptions that have to be in place for science to develop? Schaeffer writes, "Christianity believes that God has created an external world that is really there; and because He is a reasonable God, one can expect to be able to find the order of the universe by reason."

13 Three main presuppositions are presented here: The world is real; God is reasonable; the order of the universe can be determined by reason.

Schaeffer writes further, "Living within the concept that the world was created by a reasonable God, scientists could move with confidence, expecting to be able to find out about the world by observation and experimentation.

This was their epistemological base—the philosophical
foundations with which they were sure they could know (Epistemology is the theory of knowledge—how we know, or how we know we can know)."14

So believing a reasonable God created a reasonable world provides a basis to believe it is possible to "know" the world.

Morris adds that scientific research requires, "… a world view in which like causes like effects, where natural phenomena follow fixed and intelligible laws, and where we can have confidence that we can think
rationally and meaningfully."

15 Morris is saying it is necessary to assume nature follows fixed laws and that humans can think rationally for science to function.

The Christian doctrines of the universe being created by a rational God and humans being created in the image of this God provides a basis for these requirements.

Pearcey and Thaxton elaborate on some of the above points, while adding a few more.

They also contrast these points with the teachings of other worldviews.

They show how the Christian presuppositions could lead to the rise in modern science while the teachings of the other belief systems could not.

The points they discuss are summarized below:

16
1. Nature is real: The first point was referred to above by Schaeffer when he said, "God has created an external world that is really there."

The external world is really there. No kidding! Right? Well actually, "… many belief systems regard nature as unreal…. Hinduism, for instance teaches that the everyday world of material objects is Maya, illusion."

If one believes the world is not really there, then there is not an incentive to investigate it.

But the Christian doctrine of a real creation provides an incentive (Gen 1:1; Neh 9:6; Rev 4:11).

2. The universe is good: Pearcey and Thaxton write, "The ancient world often equated the material world with evil and disorder; hence it denigrated anything to do with material things…. Many historians believe
this is one reason the Greeks did not develop an empirical science, which requires practical, hands-on observation and experimentation."

However, the Christian faith teaches the creation is "good." Even with the Fall, this goodness is not eradicated. This higher view of nature led to
the Christian belief that the material world is worthy of investigation
(Gen 1:31; Ps 111:2,3; 1Tim 4:4).

3. Relationship of God and nature: Animism and pantheism teach that God and nature are in some way the same. Animism is, "The idea that all things in the universe are invested with a life force, soul, or mind" while "Pantheism is the belief that God is all, and all is God." 

Either way,such beliefs impend the investigation of nature.

Pearcey and Thaxton explain, "As long as nature commands religious worship, dissecting her is judged impious. As long as the world is charged
with divine beings and powers, the only appropriate response is to supplicate them or ward them off.…"

However, the Christian faith teaches God is transcendent. This term refers to, "… the distinction and separateness of God from creation." He is over
nature, not the same as it. This doctrine enabled scientific studies to begin, "The monotheism of the Bible exorcised the gods of nature, freeing humanity to enjoy and investigate without fear. When the world is no
longer an object of worship, then—and only then—could it become an object of study" (Ps 102:25-27; Acts 14:14; Hab 2:19-20).

4. One God, not many: Polytheism is, "The belief in the existence of more than one God." But if many gods had created the universe there would be no reason to assume it is coherent and dependable. Each god may have created his portion with different physical laws. Yet, as Morris indicated above, the assumption that "natural phenomena follow fixed and intelligible laws" is necessary for scientific studies.

However, the Christian faith teaches monotheism, "The belief in only one God."17 Moreover, "The God revealed in the Bible is trustworthy and dependable; the creation of such a God must be likewise dependable." So Christian monotheism provides a basis to believe the universe follows fixed and intelligible laws (Isa 43:10; 46:8-11; Ps 19:1,2; Jer 10:11,12;
Rom 11:29).

5. Laws of nature: The next point builds on the two above. As indicated, the universe follows fixed and intelligible laws. These laws are generally
called the laws of nature. This phrase, "… is so familiar to the modern mind that we are generally unaware of its uniqueness. People in pagan cultures who see nature as alive and moved by mysterious forces are not likely to develop the conviction that all natural occurrences are lawful and intelligible."

Contrary to this view, "The Biblical God is the Divine Legislator who governs nature by decrees set down in the beginning…. The order of the reasoning is important here. The early scientist did not argue that the
world was lawfully ordered, and therefore there must be a rational God.
Instead, they argued that there was a rational God, therefore the world must be lawfully ordered."

So the Christian doctrine of a rational God provides a basis for belief in a rational universe (Gen 8:22; Ps 104:3-33; 148:6; Job 28:26,27; Jer 5:24;
31:35; 33:20; James 1:17).

6. The Imago Dei: For science to proceed, along with a belief in a rational universe, it is also necessary to believe that humans have the rational capacity to understand the universe. For instance, the Chinese
did not developed modern science because they, "…had no belief in an intelligible order in nature nor in the human ability to decode an order should it exist."

However, the Christian doctrine of the Imago Dei teaches humans are created in the image of God. And since God is a rational Being, we are also rational beings. Even with the Fall, the Imago Dei was not
eradicated. So the Christian teaching of the Imago Dei provides a basis to believe we can understand the universe (Gen 1:26,27; 9:6; James 3:9).

7. Creatio ex nihilo: Pearcey and Thaxton observe, "In all other religions, the creation of the world begins with some kind of pre-existing substance with its own inherent nature. As a result, the creator is not
absolute and does not have the freedom to mold the world exactly as he wills. For example, in Greek philosophy the world consists of eternal matter structured by eternal rational universals called Ideals or Forms."

The creator would try to create objects following the pattern of one of these Ideals or Forms; but the "inherent nature" of matter could prevent him from forming it exactly as he wanted. "As a result, the Greeks
expected a level of imprecision in nature, certain fuzziness at the edges."

However, the Christian faith teaches the doctrine of Creatio ex nihilo.
This phrase means, "God created without the use of pre-existing materials."18 So God would not be limited by any "inherent nature" in pre-existent substances in His creating. He could create just as He willed.

The importance of this difference can be seen in how one interprets empirical observations, "For the Platonist, if a line in nature is not quite circular, that is because nature is an only partially successful approximation of geometrical Ideals. But for the Christian, if God wanted
the line to be circular, he would have made it that way. If it not exactly a circle, it must be exactly something else—perhaps an ellipse."

Being freed from the idea of Ideals, Kepler was able to postulate that the planets moved in elliptical, not circular orbits. "Thus the application of geometry and mathematics to the analysis of physical motion rests on the Christian doctrine of creation ex nihilo" (Ps 33:6; John 1:3; Col 1:16; Heb 11:3)

8. God created freely: This point is related to the one above. As indicated, Grecian philosophy taught objects in our world are approximations of eternal Ideals or Forms. These Ideals determine how an object is to be used.

As a result, Aristotle taught, "The scientist best understands a natural object by asking what it is used for. Once the purpose has been uncovered, in Aristotle’s view, the scientist knows all that is really necessary." So once you determine that a particular part of an animal is used for flying, it is enough to say it is a wing. 

Further study of it is unnecessary.

But Christians eventually rejected this concept. "The shift began when some Christians became troubled by the Aristotelian concept of Forms. The concept appeared to limit God’s creative activity, as though God had to make do with the prescribed properties of matter." This shift led to "voluntarist theology."

"Voluntarism insisted that the structure of the universe—indeed, its very existence—is not rationally necessary but is contingent upon the free and transcendent will of God."

The logical outcome of this theological framework was, "No armchair science, premised on how God must have organized things, was permissible.
Science must observe and experiment" (Ps 66:5; 107:43; 115:3; 135:6,7; Eph
1:11; Rev 4:11).

9. Transcending nature: As indicated in point #3, animism and pantheism teach that God and nature (and by implication, humans) are in some way the same. As such, "The human mind is thoroughly embedded in nature; it does not transcend it as subject against object. As a consequence humans are interested in knowing nature only in order to adapt and conform to it, not in order to harness its forces for practical ends."

However, as also indicated above, the Christian faith teaches God is transcendent over nature and we are created in His image. So we are capable of transcending nature. Thus, "Humans are free to manipulate it,
both theoretically and in mathematical formulas and practically by experiment. In this way, Christianity provided both an intellectual framework and a motive for developing technology" (Gen 2:15,19; 1Kings
4:29-34; Prov 25:2)

10. Motives for science: The mention of motive leads to the last point Pearcey and Thaxton discuss. The Christian faith provided motives to pursue scientific research. First, the early scientists believed
investigating God’s creation was a way of glorifying and serving Him.

For instance, "In one of his notebooks, Kepler broke spontaneously into prayer: ‘I give you thanks, Creator and God, that you have given me this joy in thy creation, and I rejoice in the works of your hands. See I have now completed the work to which I was called. In it I have used all the talents you have lent to my spirit.’"

Second, "Christians found Biblical justification for an active use of nature in the creation account (Genesis 1:28), where God gives human beings ‘dominion’ over the earth. Dominion was understood not as license
to exploit nature ruthlessly but as a responsibility to cultivate it, care for it, and harness its forces for human benefit."

In addition, Christians found significance in Adam’s naming of the animals. In Hebrew, "… to name something is to assert mastery over it."
Also, "… a name should express the essential nature of a thing."

So Adam had to carefully analyze the animals to give them appropriate names. "Thus Genesis appeared to give divine justification to the study and analysis of the natural world."

Further, science was viewed as one way of alleviating the effects of the Fall (Genesis 3). "Thus science was permeated with religious concern for the poor and the sick, with humanitarian effort to alleviate toil and
tedium."

This last point was particularly revolutionary, "… the idea of improving one’s life cannot occur to people trapped in a cyclic, fatalistic, or deterministic view of history" (Ps 19:1-6; 115:16; Ezek 34:4-Matt
25:32-45; Acts 20:35; 1John 3:17,18).

Does Science have a Future?

Voyager was partially correct. There are some religious and even philosophical views that can impend scientific progress. But the Christian faith is not one of them! In fact, the Christian faith provided the basic presuppositions that made the scientific revolution possible and it provides motives for scientific study.

But this conclusion raises a very interesting (and possibly disturbing) question. If the Christian faith originally provided the impetus for the scientific revolution, can science continue when Christian beliefs are no longer generally accepted in a culture?

Pearcey and Thaxton write:
Belief in a rational God led to the assumption of an ordered, rational universe. "And science today," says Eiseley, is still "sustained by that assumption." The question is: How long will that assumption continue to
sustain science?

It may turn out that science is detachable from the Biblical presuppositions and motivations that sustained its initial development.
Science may prove itself to be self-sustaining, driven by sheer intellectual curiosity and technological success.

Yet, once separated from the teaching of divine creation, science has no philosophical ground for its most basic assumption—the lawfulness of
nature."

19 Schaeffer says similarly:
What then has happened to science? In brief, science, as it now usually is conceived, has no epistemological base—that is, no base for being sure that what scientists think they observe corresponds to what really
exists.… men can go on learning about the universe. But the point is that the humanist has no base for knowing within his own philosophic system.
His optimism about knowing the external world is weakened.

20 So now the tables appear to have turned. Not only is the Christian faith not an impediment to scientific progress, it just may well be necessary for its continuation. The Christian faith provided the epistemological base for scientific studies. Can science continue without that base? Only time will tell.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------
------

Clarification

To respond to a comment I received, the above article is referring to the historical realities: modern science originated in monotheistic countries, not pantheistic ones. It is true that today there are pantheists who are
concerned with scientific investigation, but that is more because of western influence not because of anything inherent in pantheism. If it was the latter then modern science should have originated in some pantheistic
country rather in theistic ones.

The links below are direct links to where the book can be purchased from .

Footnotes: All Scripture references from: The New King James Version.
Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1982, unless otherwise indicated.
1 Originally aired April 30, 1997 on UPN.
2 The story-line paralleled the popular conception of events surrounding
the Galileo controversy and his support of Copernican’s heliocentric theory. Many believe this incident was a case of "religion vs. science."
This misconception is addressed in my article Science and the Bible. The book mentioned in the next note also discusses this controversy on pages
37-40 and 63-66.
3 Nancy R. Pearcey & Charles B. Thaxton. (Wheaton, IL: Crossways Books,
1994).
4 Francis A. Schaeffer, . (Westchester, IL: Crossway Books, 1982).
5 Henry M. Morris, The Biblical Basis for Modern Science (Grand Rapids,
MI: Baker Book House, 1984).
6 The reading of any of these books is highly recommended.
7 Pearcey and Thaxton, pp. 17-21.
8 Schaeffer, - Complete Works. Vol. 5, p.157.
9 Schaeffer, - Complete Works. Vol. 5, p.27.
10 Morris, pp. 463-464.
11 Morris, p.29.
12 Pearcey and Thaxton, p. 21. Italics in original.
13 Francis Schaeffer, Pollution, p.27. Italics in original.
14 Schaeffer. How?, pp. 158-9. Italics in original.
15 Morris, p.29.
16 Unless otherwise indicated, all of quotes in the following section are
from Pearcey and Thaxton, pp. 21-37.
17 Definitions from: George A. Mather and Larry A. Nichols, (Grand Rapids,
MI: Zondervan, 1993), pp. 22, 219, 277,223,186, respectively.
18 Millard J. Erickson, Concise Dictionary of Christian Theology (Grand
Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1986), p.38.
19 Pearcey and Thaxton, pp. 41-42. Italics in original.
20 Schaeffer, How?, p.206. Italics in original.

Voyager, Science, and the Christian Faith. Copyright © 1999 by Gary F.
Zeolla of Darkness to Light ministry (www.dtl.org).
http://www.dtl.org/apologetics/article/voyager.htm
I feel the only thing left worth commenting, is that mankind is by nature
"an abuser of things" it can be science or religion or money or drugs or
people or strengths or weaknesses and for many different reasons around
self satisfaction, but something which is abused-does not necessarily make
the abused thing a naturally bad thing.

 

may 6th 2004

 
STUDIES WITH OTHERS
 
Have you ever thought that you were different to others? That your concepts are sometimes a bit way out?
God lives in the heavenly temple set within an ivory palace -- one of a number of such palaces -- on the heavenly mount Zion. His throne is set beneath a rainbow that casts a powerful greenish hue like emerald.
The Jews chosen and loved by God:
De 7:6 For thou art an holy people unto the LORD thy God: the LORD thy God hath chosen thee to be a special people unto himself above all people that are upon the face of the earth
 
All Catholics who by the grace of God trust Christ as their Lord and Saviour sooner or later face this problem.
The Facts About Nostradamus
And His Prophecies
 
The following web sites have been listed to help porn strugglers escape the web of temptation.
Probably the most intriguing Scripture reference to angels from a human perspective is the one that says
Plainly Josephus distinguishes between those books written before and after Artaxerxes.
 
I'm still amazed - and increasingly intrigued - by the account in the book of Genesis of the stunningly long lives of Adam and Seth and Jared and Methuselah.
All sorts of things can trigger our anger. Sometimes the emotion is appropriate when directed at crime or at hypocrisy evil and sin
In fact this tree (the one we decorate and put our presents under) is described as a pagan act and symbol in our Scriptures.
 
A worldview should pass certain tests. First it should be rational. It should not ask us to believe contradictory things
Take heed of forming plans for happiness as though it lay in the things of this world which soon pass away
 Sure Paul condemned men who changed the
natural use and burned one toward another.
But that's not us. We didn't change anything. We were born this way.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
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hey its a long list yeah?

 

 
   
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, apologetics, bible studies, family, Christian women, Christian men, Christian disciple, Christian children, help, religion, Islam, Muslim, Islamic, books, faith, God, spiritual, government, evangelism, database, love, life, Father, Holy, why, how, when, who, what, can, Chrétien, maison, eglise, France, Paris, Lee Mowat, house church, evolution, truth, meaning, life, Jewish, Yahweh, yeshua, leader, shepherd, flock, peace, prayer, prosperity, heaven, rapture, Romans, genesis, dictionary, theology, Bible, Christian, Doctrine, Agnosticism, Amillennialism, Angel, Antichrist, Antinomianism, Apocrypha, Apologetics, Apostle, Arianism, Arminianism, Atheism, Atonement, Baptism, Baptismal, Regeneration, Blasphemy, Calvinism, Canon, Christ, Christian, Christology, Church, Circumcision, Common, Grace, Communion, Condemnation, Consubstantiation, Conversion, Conviction, Covenant, Covenant, Theology, Creation, Cult, Death, Deism, Demon, Dichotomy, Disciple, Dispensation, Divinity, Edify, Efficacy, 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