Adding to what Xan and Desert have said. Your statement is a common one from my perspective, except for the part about God doesn't mind which I can't buy. If one goes too far in thinking their sins "don't matter" and just keep on unrepentantly sinning and feel secure just because they are believers, one falls into the area of "cheap grace" - fundamentally one is saying they know better than God's Word (i.e. they are worshiping themselves or their logic). In essence, they are choosing to spit in God's face - I don't think that is a good idea, but that is really up to God to judge and meet out the consequences, not me. Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote a book titled "Cheap Grace" if you wish to pursue in detail sometime.Pointedstick wrote:I agree, the correct translation is "murder", not "kill".Desert wrote: No, it's not twisted logic to differentiate between justifiable killing and murder, from the Bible. The word "kill" in "thou shalt not kill" is better translated as "murder." See this link:
http://www.biblestudy.org/question/what ... -mean.html
My definition of murder: killing that's is pre-meditated and not done in self-defense.
Ergo, to me, killing in wartime, for capital punishment, and by a police officer to prevent a suspect from fleeing are actually murder and Christians should not participate in those activities. Right?
A looser definition of murder that includes things like killing in war and executing convicted criminals seems to me to be a totally hollow definition that allows the government to label any killing as "justifiable," putting us in the silly situation where God is prohibiting something that gets to be defined by man. There must be a Godly definition of murder that we should follow, right?
Besides, why bother to even follow the ten commandments anyway? We're all sinners and can't possibly hope to live up to God's standard of perfection, right? Isn't the only thing that really matters that we admit our sinfulness, accept Jesus as our lord and savior, and then breathe easy and stop wasting our lives trying to stop sinning? Given this "accept jesus and everything's fine" explanation that I very frequently hear, I don't really get what's so bad about sinning anyway. Go ahead and do that gay wedding. Jesus died for your sins. God doesn't mind.
Right?
Your statements really boil down to the Lutheran "Two Kingdoms" understanding of Scripture. Kingdom of the left deals with civic stuff, the right God stuff. God says we have rulers/authorities in the kingdom of the left to provide for order and reduce chaos so that we are free to hear God's Word and we should obey the rulers unless their direction conflicts with God's Word. God is in charge of both kingdoms. Prime example of a conflict of the two kingdoms is homosexuality. Our government says it is legal. God says it is not. Will an unrepentant man who has an ongoing ''homosexual relationship" go to hell if he is a believer? I don't know, that is up to God, but I would tend to think that if he truly is a believer and tries to live by God's will, he probably will not choose to have or continue in that lifestyle in the first place. If the government says he MUST marry another man (or MUST do things that are clearly forbidden in Scripture), I think he should say NO and be willing to fact the consequences of disobeying the government in order not to lose his salvation - however, my reasoning ability is not quite up there with God's mind. So, I really don't know, that is God's business. As for the guy with a pizza place having to serve at a gay wedding because the government says he must do so to comply with the law, I expect prison guards have to serve murderers and rapists and pedofiles and all sorts of perverts to comply with their authorities' rules? What's the difference? We all serve sinners all the time. Churches are filled with nothing but sinners, even the pastors. Hypocrites? Yep, all of us are. That is why I go to church with that rag tag bunch of sinning hypocrites - to know and reinforce and hear again and again that I am forgiven because of what Jesus did, not because of what I or they do or did.
... Mountaineer
Simonjester wrote:isn't there a difference between serving sinners and participating in the sin? i would bet those bakeries all happily serve gays and all other manner of sinners when its a birthday cake, the question is, is making a cake for a wedding participating in the sin? and is a gay wedding even a sin? its not sodomy or lying with men, its just a ceremony that the people who are into that stuff are having to celebrate a legal contract (and sometimes their own understanding of a union before god), so how is serving that celebration a sin for the server?Mountaineer wrote: As for the guy with a pizza place having to serve at a gay wedding because the government says he must do so to comply with the law, I expect prison guards have to serve murderers and rapists and pedofiles and all sorts of perverts to comply with their authorities' rules? What's the difference? We all serve sinners all the time. Churches are filled with nothing but sinners, even the pastors. Hypocrites? Yep, all of us are. That is why I go to church with that rag tag bunch of sinning hypocrites - to know and reinforce and hear again and again that I am forgiven because of what Jesus did, not because of what I or they do or did.
... Mountaineer
seems to me like not serving them is more of a political statement about government granting/recognizing that legal contract than it is a religious objection... they should have just fought for the right to refuse service to anyone for any reason or no reason and left religion out of it... its their business, they should be able to choose whom they do business with no explanations or religious exceptions required..

