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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Tom]
#105527
12/04/08 12:30 AM
12/04/08 12:30 AM
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OP
Active Member 2012
14500+ Member
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Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 14,795
Lawrence, Kansas
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The question is - Does God do anything to cause sinners to suffer in proportion and in duration to their sinfulness? Or, does He withdraw His protection and allow sin to cause them to suffer according to their words and works? What do you believe? I think you may have a misunderstanding in what I've been trying to say. Actually Rosangela's comment that we could not bear the guilt of our sin comes to bear on what I think. During our earthly life, Christ bears the guilt of our sin, meaning we do not need to come face to face with it. In the judgment, those who have rejected Christ, will come face to face with their sin and guilt, and will not be able to bear it. Those who have more sin and guilt will suffer more, not because God does something arbitrary, like burn them alive extra if they've sinned more, but because the fact of having more sin and guilt means there is more suffering when they come face to face with it.
Those who wait for the Bridegroom's coming are to say to the people, "Behold your God." The last rays of merciful light, the last message of mercy to be given to the world, is a revelation of His character of love.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105533
12/04/08 01:21 AM
12/04/08 01:21 AM
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SDA Active Member 2024
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Joined: Mar 2008
Posts: 1,984
CA, USA
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First of all, it is not a sin to hunt. Second, it does not violate the law to teach people how to hunt humanely.
hi brother, do you really believe that hunting is not a sin? if a person were hungry and there was nothing else to eat i might agree with you. but are you speaking of the "sport"? i cannot imagine God in His heaven looking down and seeing the different hunting parties going after the different animals He created for us to enjoy and not crying His heart out!! i believe in the eyes of God that hunting is one of the grossest sins there is. anyone who would take delight in hunting a defenseless, harmless creature minding its own busines for the thrill of killing....!! Actually, yeah, I agree hunting for sport is cruel. Hunting to feed your family is not. Jesus allowed demons to enter pigs knowing they would be drowned. Allowing animals to die for a good reason is not cruel. And, after His resurrection, Jesus cooked fish and ate it with His disciples. So, killing animals for food is not a sin. PS - My wife and I are vegans. However, we do eat "clean" meat on rare occasions. And, when eating outside our home, we are not strict about not eating animal byproducts. i am very glad to hear that we are in basic agreement about hunting!! i feel very strongly about that being an animal person. but i know people who hunt and eat meat and have not felt called to say much unless its in context, and then as gently as i can.
Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?
Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.
Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105606
12/05/08 12:00 PM
12/05/08 12:00 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,512
Midland
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Do you have inspired passages which state the God's direct punishment of the wicked serves to educate and enlighten the righteous?
How about these two: And turning the cities of Sodom and Gomorrha... I was referring to the second death of the wicked. For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, Perhaps, but do you agree Christ's death, or taste of death, and it's purpose is different than that of the wicked? Opinions shouldn't have anything to do with establishing the truth, right? Especially "testing truths". But what should we do when there are multiple opinions, each supported by passages as have been done by both Tom and you? You seemed to imply that God caused the Flood by ceasing upholding the fixed laws of nature, as if nature would implode upon itself if God didn't act supernaturally to prevent it. You also seemed to imply this state of things began during creation week. Is it unreasonable to ask you to post inspired passages to support this idea? Not unreasonable at all. I already gave you Genesis. I believe creation week was a supernatural act - don't you? Elihu thought God was sustaining the earth and life: Of a truth, God will not do wickedly, and the Almighty will not pervert justice. Who gave him charge over the earth and who laid on him the whole world? If he should take back his spirit to himself, and gather to himself his breath, all flesh would perish together, and man would return to dust. But, he may have been as wrong as you think I. How does God respond? "Or who shut in the sea with doors, when it burst forth from the womb; when I made clouds its garment, and thick darkness its swaddling band, and prescribed bounds for it, and set bars and doors, and said, 'Thus far shall you come, and no farther, and here shall your proud waves be stayed'? I recall another passage which I haven't found yet saying that God sustains life/earth/creation. K: And in what way could God act that could be considered cruel or torture? Just saying that God is holy and therefore nothing He does is cruel doesn't answer the question.
God is love, therefore, He cannot be cruel. Otherwise, He would cease to be God. When a State executes a criminal it is not considered cruel. Nor it is considered torture. God often commanded His chosen people to kill sinners. Not even stoning someone to death was considered cruel. Okayyyy, I guess you did just say it..... Do you see where Hitler comes from? Where Islam extremismcomes from? They are just doing God's bidding and therefore anything they do is "love". Also, not much different than the judge saying he can run traffic lights because he is judge and nothing he does could be considered wrong - because he, as in his position, upholds the law! And that - is the world's history of cruelty and torture. The point is God did command Moses to stone two guys to death (and others as well) and it was not considered cruel or unloving. God can do things that would be wrong for us to do. Did you just support what I said right above? Also: Allowing animals to die for a good reason is not cruel. And a good reason is to watch animals fall over. That's not cruel. That's a good reason. - ? I do not believe God created a condition during creation week that resulted in water wanting to return to its pre-creation state and killing everything in the process the moment God should cease holding it back. Are you familiar with the theory of entropy? I made the assumption you were. Tom elaborated in trying to explain my statement. In the beginning, before God had performed a supernatural act, the earth was covered with water. All of it. This would be considered the natural, lowest ordered state. It would continue to be that way until work was performed in an intelligent way working against this state of disorder. He did. It would follow, that laws of disorder would tend towards it returning to that state unless additional work was maintained in an intelligent way to maintain that state. Whether you agree whether that happened/happens or not, doesn't that at least make logical sense? Also, God is just as responsible for killing the sinners He commanded Moses and others to kill. It doesn't matter that He didn't do it directly. Oh, I agree. Hitler telling his goons to kill someone is the same as he himself doing it. The part of disagreement is whether God told him to, (which is true in that instance) and why. The humane hunter story comes to mind. In Hosea 1:7, it says, "But I will have pity on the house of Judah, and I will deliver them by the LORD their God; I will not deliver them by bow, nor by sword, nor by war, nor by horses, nor by horsemen." In 2 Kings 19:35 and Isaiah 38:36 it says, "And that night the angel of the LORD went forth, and slew a hundred and eighty-five thousand in the camp of the Assyrians; and when men arose early in the morning, behold, these were all dead bodies." Disregarding whether it was the Lord doing the killing, the Israelites didn't have to do anything. Same thing with Gideon's army. So, wouldn't a question be as to why sometimes God kills people directly and other times He tells someone else to do it? A past question: When did the Israelites first kill people?
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105607
12/05/08 12:19 PM
12/05/08 12:19 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
5500+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 6,512
Midland
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Actually, yeah, I agree hunting for sport is cruel. Hunting to feed your family is not. Jesus allowed demons to enter pigs knowing they would be drowned. Allowing animals to die for a good reason is not cruel. And, after His resurrection, Jesus cooked fish and ate it with His disciples. So, killing animals for food is not a sin.
PS - My wife and I are vegans. However, we do eat "clean" meat on rare occasions. And, when eating outside our home, we are not strict about not eating animal byproducts.
In searching for God daily sustaining life, I came across this in Counsels on Diet and Foods, pg. 412. I write to you, my brother, that the giving of prescriptions for the eating of the flesh of animals shall no more be practiced in our sanitarium. There is no excuse for this. There is no safety in the afterinfluence and results upon the human mind. Let us be health reformers in every sense of the term. Let us make known in our institutions that there is no longer a meat table, even for the boarders; and then the education given upon the discarding of a meat diet will be not only saying but doing. If patronage is less, so let it be. The principles will be of far greater value when they are understood, when it is known that the life of no living thing shall be taken to sustain the life of the Christian.
The following pages in the chapter speak more about this. In North America, if not everywhere, there really can be no justification for killing animals for food. Spending $500 for a gun, more for permits, to kill a deer for food seems a leeettle inefficient. Besides, what do the deer eat? Keep in mind grass is just a part of their diet. They eat many other plants. Someone may not like eating plants because "animals are so tasty", but it does do your health much better. Now if you want to argue that killing animals is necessary and more efficient for preserving the plants for consumption, fertilizing them, preventing global warming, you may have a valid point. Killing animals might be fun. Eating animals might taste good. But I would find it hard for anyone to justify killing animals is needed for food.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: kland]
#105612
12/05/08 02:54 PM
12/05/08 02:54 PM
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SDA Active Member 2014
Veteran Member
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Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 936
Quebec
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Kland,
Agreed that taking life is outside the desire of a Christian. The Passover lamb was slain with remorse but at God's express command.
"Killing animals might be fun." Yes taking life is fun for those who need to conquer and subdue. The root motivation behind competitive athletics and war.
Jesus came not to take life, but to give His own. A different nature. "Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus" Phillipians 2:5
(Conversely, some cultures such as the Inuit ('Eskimo') are based in a hunting existence.)
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Tom]
#105669
12/06/08 06:11 PM
12/06/08 06:11 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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M:Tom, the DA 758 quote you posted does not say the holy angels needed to behold Christ and Him crucified to clear up certain misunderstandings they had concerning the law and love of God.
T:The quote points out that Christ's death was not just for us, but for the angels and unfallen worlds as well. Christ's death resolved the Great Controversy. The chapter goes into depth explaining this. There are other passages as well which point out that apart from the cross, the angels would be no more secure than they were before Lucifer rebelled.
M:Christ's death did not end the GC. Why not? Ellen says it is because there are unresolved issues. "Yet Satan was not then destroyed. The angels did not even then understand all that was involved in the great controversy. The principles at stake were to be more fully revealed. And for the sake of man, Satan's existence must be continued. Man as well as angels must see the contrast between the Prince of light and the prince of darkness. He must choose whom he will serve. {DA 761.3}
Again, she does not say the holy angels were unclear about God's law and love. Instead, she says they are unclear about certain aspects of Satan's rebellion. You seem to be confusing being unclear about Satan with being unclear about God. But the two are worlds apart. There is no comparison.
T: It's not a confusion, MM. To the extent that the angels were unclear in regards to Satan's character, they were unclear about God's. Think about it. Satan was making claims about God. If Satan was trustworthy, then there was a chance these claims were true. Tom, nowhere does it say in the Bible or the SOP that the angels were unclear or uncertain about the law and love of God. The loyal angels made up their minds about Lucifer's accusations before God cast him out of heaven. They were convinced he was wrong about God. They weren't, as you seem to be suggesting, all along hoping he was wrong but not knowing for sure until the cross (even though the cross didn't explain everything to them). The point of the Ever Lasting Father story is in what the neighbors would have thought had they seen the Father explaining to the son the principles of hunting. Just as the father in the story had no desire that his son should hunt, so did God have no desire that the Israelites should kill. What others sins did God, against His wishes, teach the Jews to commit? And why? Also, what did the "neighbors" think about God teaching the Jews how to kill? BTW, where in the Bible does it describe God teaching the Jews how to kill? Regarding your question if Jesus did anything like your understanding of what happened with Moses, the answer is no. This has been my whole point. You should readjust your understanding of what happened with Moses to agree with what Jesus did and said. I don't understand your point. A yes or no answer to the following question would helpful and greatly appreciated - Did God command Moses to kill sinners? If so, why? If not, then who did? Please explain your answer thoroughly. Thank you.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Tom]
#105671
12/06/08 06:47 PM
12/06/08 06:47 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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The question is - Does God do anything to cause sinners to suffer in proportion and in duration to their sinfulness? Or, does He withdraw His protection and allow sin to cause them to suffer according to their words and works? What do you believe? I think you may have a misunderstanding in what I've been trying to say. Actually Rosangela's comment that we could not bear the guilt of our sin comes to bear on what I think. During our earthly life, Christ bears the guilt of our sin, meaning we do not need to come face to face with it. In the judgment, those who have rejected Christ, will come face to face with their sin and guilt, and will not be able to bear it. Those who have more sin and guilt will suffer more, not because God does something arbitrary, like burn them alive extra if they've sinned more, but because the fact of having more sin and guilt means there is more suffering when they come face to face with it. I don't see any difference in what I said and what you just said. We said the same thing, right? However, that isn't all I believe about it. I believe God also uses fire to punish them. I realize you disagree. I find this no more arbitrary than all the other times God used fire to punish and destroy sinners. Unless someone douses themselves with gasoline and lights themselves on fire, using fire to destroy someone is arbitrary. All those times God used fire to destroy someone was arbitrary. That is, nothing they did caused nature to set them on fire. Fire doesn't go around burning people up because they sinned. That's not how it works. Ellen makes it clear in the GC that experiencing the undiluted effects of their accumulated sinfulness is not enough to cause sinners to die at the end of time. She describes them turning upon one another in fits of rage, blaming one another for being excluded from heaven. To put end to the madness, God rains down fire from above and raises up fire from below. He also exposes Him to the fire light of His radiant brightness. Listen: Notwithstanding that Satan has been constrained to acknowledge God's justice and to bow to the supremacy of Christ, his character remains unchanged. The spirit of rebellion, like a mighty torrent, again bursts forth. Filled with frenzy, he determines not to yield the great controversy. The time has come for a last desperate struggle against the King of heaven. He rushes into the midst of his subjects and endeavors to inspire them with his own fury and arouse them to instant battle. But of all the countless millions whom he has allured into rebellion, there are none now to acknowledge his supremacy. His power is at an end. The wicked are filled with the same hatred of God that inspires Satan; but they see that their case is hopeless, that they cannot prevail against Jehovah. Their rage is kindled against Satan and those who have been his agents in deception, and with the fury of demons they turn upon them. {GC 671.2}
Saith the Lord: "Because thou hast set thine heart as the heart of God; behold, therefore I will bring strangers upon thee, the terrible of the nations: and they shall draw their swords against the beauty of thy wisdom, and they shall defile thy brightness. They shall bring thee down to the pit." "I will destroy thee, O covering cherub, from the midst of the stones of fire. . . . I will cast thee to the ground, I will lay thee before kings, that they may behold thee. . . . I will bring thee to ashes upon the earth in the sight of all them that behold thee. . . . Thou shalt be a terror, and never shalt thou be any more." Ezekiel 28:6-8, 16-19. {GC 672.1}
"Every battle of the warrior is with confused noise, and garments rolled in blood; but this shall be with burning and fuel of fire." "The indignation of the Lord is upon all nations, and His fury upon all their armies: He hath utterly destroyed them, He hath delivered them to the slaughter." "Upon the wicked He shall rain quick burning coals, fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest: this shall be the portion of their cup." Isaiah 9:5; 34:2; Psalm 11:6, margin. Fire comes down from God out of heaven. The earth is broken up. The weapons concealed in its depths are drawn forth. Devouring flames burst from every yawning chasm. The very rocks are on fire. The day has come that shall burn as an oven. The elements melt with fervent heat, the earth also, and the works that are therein are burned up. Malachi 4:1; 2 Peter 3:10. The earth's surface seems one molten mass--a vast, seething lake of fire. It is the time of the judgment and perdition of ungodly men--"the day of the Lord's vengeance, and the year of recompenses for the controversy of Zion." Isaiah 34:8. {GC 672.2}
The wicked receive their recompense in the earth. Proverbs 11:31. They "shall be stubble: and the day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts." Malachi 4:1. Some are destroyed as in a moment, while others suffer many days. All are punished "according to their deeds." The sins of the righteous having been transferred to Satan, he is made to suffer not only for his own rebellion, but for all the sins which he has caused God's people to commit. His punishment is to be far greater than that of those whom he has deceived. After all have perished who fell by his deceptions, he is still to live and suffer on. In the cleansing flames the wicked are at last destroyed, root and branch--Satan the root, his followers the branches. The full penalty of the law has been visited; the demands of justice have been met; and heaven and earth, beholding, declare the righteousness of Jehovah. {GC 673.1}
Satan's work of ruin is forever ended. For six thousand years he has wrought his will, filling the earth with woe and causing grief throughout the universe. The whole creation has groaned and travailed together in pain. Now God's creatures are forever delivered from his presence and temptations. "The whole earth is at rest, and is quiet: they [the righteous] break forth into singing." Isaiah 14:7. And a shout of praise and triumph ascends from the whole loyal universe. "The voice of a great multitude," "as the voice of many waters, and as the voice of mighty thunderings," is heard, saying: "Alleluia: for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth." Revelation 19:6. {GC 673.2}
While the earth was wrapped in the fire of destruction, the righteous abode safely in the Holy City. Upon those that had part in the first resurrection, the second death has no power. While God is to the wicked a consuming fire, He is to His people both a sun and a shield. Revelation 20:6; Psalm 84:11. {GC 673.3}
"I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the first earth were passed away." Revelation 21:1. The fire that consumes the wicked purifies the earth. Every trace of the curse is swept away. No eternally burning hell will keep before the ransomed the fearful consequences of sin. {GC 674.1} There is nothing in this description to suggest an undiluted knowledge of their sinfulness is what causes sinners to die. She makes it very clear that the different sources of fire God employs is what causes them to suffer and die.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105672
12/06/08 06:51 PM
12/06/08 06:51 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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i am very glad to hear that we are in basic agreement about hunting!! i feel very strongly about that being an animal person. but i know people who hunt and eat meat and have not felt called to say much unless its in context, and then as gently as i can. Amen!
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105673
12/06/08 07:41 PM
12/06/08 07:41 PM
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SDA Charter Member Active Member 2019
20000+ Member
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Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 22,256
Southwest USA
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Are you familiar with the theory of entropy? I made the assumption you were. Tom elaborated in trying to explain my statement. In the beginning, before God had performed a supernatural act, the earth was covered with water. All of it. This would be considered the natural, lowest ordered state. It would continue to be that way until work was performed in an intelligent way working against this state of disorder. He did. It would follow, that laws of disorder would tend towards it returning to that state unless additional work was maintained in an intelligent way to maintain that state.
Whether you agree whether that happened/happens or not, doesn't that at least make logical sense? No. You are assuming too much for it to be logical. God upholds the fixed laws of nature. Nature behaves the way it does because God upholds the fixed laws that cause it to behave the way it does. When our planet was just an underwater rock all the elements acted in harmony with the fixed laws God upheld. But when God rearranged those elements six thousand years ago He implemented new laws to maintain the new order of things. The newly arranged elements began acting in harmony with the newly implemented fixed laws God upheld. The old order of things no longer existed. Therefore, God stopped upholding the old fixed laws for the simple reason the old order of things no longer existed. Another illogical assumption is the idea that nature would naturally return its pre-creation state if God stopped supernaturally working against it. First, it assumes nature can do something without God, that it can obey its own laws. Second, it assumes an underwater rock is the original state. In reality, though, nature can do nothing on its own. It does what God makes it do through laws He established and upholds. The Flood, therefore, happened because God made it happen. The forces of nature obeyed the laws God implemented for the purpose of destroying the world and its inhabitants. Also, God made everything in the Universe out of nothing. Consequently, if we want to apply the laws of entropy to the Flood, as we currently understand them, we would be forced to conclude nature, if left alone, would eventually cease to exist. It would vanish altogether. So, wouldn't a question be as to why sometimes God kills people directly and other times He tells someone else to do it? Very good question. Do you have an answer? A past question: When did the Israelites first kill people? If Abraham is the father of Israel, then he was the first Israelite to kill someone. See Genesis 14.
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Re: The Covenants
[Re: Mountain Man]
#105675
12/06/08 08:03 PM
12/06/08 08:03 PM
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SDA Active Member 2024
Very Dedicated Member
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CA, USA
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Also, God made everything in the Universe out of nothing. Consequently, if we want to apply the laws of entropy to the Flood, as we currently understand them, we would be forced to conclude nature, if left alone, would eventually cease to exist. It would vanish altogether. that seems quite logical based on the bible and sop. if God didnt hold everything together, if He let go, what would happen?
Psa 64:5 ...an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them?
Psa 7:14 Behold, he travaileth with iniquity, and hath conceived mischief, and brought forth falsehood. 15 He made a pit, and digged it, and is fallen into the ditch which he made. 16 His mischief (and his violent dealing) shall return upon his own head.
Psa 7:17 I will praise the LORD according to his righteousness: and will sing praise to the name of the LORD most high.
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