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In article <089.30.11.05.667969000@srcbs.org>, BasicallyBlues says...
>
>
>
>Steve,
>
>here's an example of how you "thrashed" me?
He didn't say that. That was _your_ bad assumption.
>
>someone commits idolatry by saying:
It is not idolatry. See TItus 2:13, whcih clearly calls Christ God saying:
Waiting for the blessed hope and glorious appearing
of OUR GREAT GOD AND SAVIOR JESUS CHRIST (Titus 2:13).
So if Steve committed 'idolatry', then so did Paul. So you just called even Paul
an idolator! Nice job!
No wonder it is so easy to thrash you, no wonder you can't even tell when you
have been thrashed.
[snip]
--
---------------------------
Subudcat se sibi ut haereat Deo
quidquid boni habet, tribuat illi a quo factus est.
(St. Augustine, Ser. 96)
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((( Read http://srcbs.org for details about this group BEFORE you post. )))
Bob Felts wrote:
>
> >
> > Your "god" has no basis for "love." Love require interpersonal
> > relationships.
>
> Does it? Does the Scripture not say that we are to love ourselves?
> Love of self, while personal, doesn't seem to me to fit the
definition
> of interpersonal.
>
> If this is true, then the same can be said of a monolithic god.
Right?
>
"If" is the correct way of answering. It is interesting that this
phrase is quoted 7 times in the NT. "You shall agape your neighbor as
your self."
I think it pertainent to note that a counselor must know the telos of
every passage that he uses in counseling. It is not enough to
understand the grammatical-historical, biblical-theological or
systematic, and rhetorical aspects of a passage. These are essential,
and I should be the last one to say anything to undermine such work,
for each of these elements plays a vital part in biblical exegesis.
Yet it is possible to have all of these matters in mind in exegesis and
still misuse a portion of Scripture in preaching or counseling. Thus,
the story of the Seeking Father and the Pouting Elder Brother instead
becomes the Parable of the Prodigal Son. More to the point, the two
commandments to love God and neighbor are psychologized by those who
want to add to them a 3rd commandment, "love yourself," which they
then make basic to the other two, in spite of the fact that this is a
thought repugnant to the entire Bible, and the clear statement of
Christ that he is speaking of two commandments only, "On these two
commandments hang all the law and the prophets."
"L