/bsg/ -Bible Study Verses General.

How does it feel that Arabs are conquering Europe right now and you can't do shit about it weakass ytboi you can't do shit about it lol
mudslimecacas what is this
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mudslimes that pretend to be "heckin based and redpilled" while simultaneously being committed to the ethnic and cultural replacement of europe are a big problem in our online communities
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What's also humorous is that a bunch of these are laws made just for the Israelites during their trials and times before Christ, so if anything, this image might as well be attacking the Jews and the Tanakh for these commands in addition to us. Strange how often you see atheists attack either Islam or Christianity, yet it's so uncommon to see a direct attack on Judaism in comparison.
is this something us valid Christians have to still do or is this a remnant of the past
 
is this something us valid Christians have to still do or is this a remnant of the past
If it isn't re-affirmed through the tradition of the church or through Christian (New Testament) scripture itself, then I'd say you could call it the latter, a remnant of old Jewish law. We don't need to avoid things like wearing mixed fabrics, for example.
 
"The LORD said, “What have you done? Listen! Your brother’s blood cries out to me from the ground." Genesis 4:10

Context is Cain's murder of Abel.
early jewish and christian legends and explanations surrounding this text are quite fascinating.
One of the jewish traditions hold that Abel's body was spat out of the earth because Adam was to first die as the first man since God told him that "to dust you'll return", and that he couldn't be burried before Adam died.

Anyway, the way this is sentenced is interesting I think, that blood cries out from the ground is also quite metal imo
 
>Paraphrased, God tells Cain in Gen 4:10, “The rivers of your brother’s blood desperately cry to me from the ground for revenge.”
Kino.
 
One of my favorite miracles of Saint Paul is the tale of Eutychus, where a young man of the name who had been listening to Saint Paul's teachings one night fell asleep during the long time of talking as he sat on an open window's edge, and, in the midst of his slumber, took a tumble from the third story of the building, which killed him, only for him to then be, by God's gracious blessing, resurrected by the embrace of Saint Paul, who then took Eutychus back into the building, ate with him and the rest of the crowd gathered there in the room, and continued their long discussion of the faith until the new day arrived. The story is found in The Acts of the Apostles, in the twentieth chapter.
>On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul talked with them, intending to depart on the next day, and he prolonged his speech until midnight. There were many lamps in the upper room where we were gathered. And a young man named Eutychus, sitting at the window, sank into a deep sleep as Paul talked still longer. And being overcome by sleep, he fell down from the third story and was taken up dead. But Paul went down and bent over him, and taking him in his arms, said, “Do not be alarmed, for his life is in him.” And when Paul had gone up and had broken bread and eaten, he conversed with them a long while, until daybreak, and so departed. And they took the youth away alive, and were not a little comforted. - The Acts of the Apostles, Chapter 20, Verses 7-12
 
What is the unforgivable sin?
There is a friar whose text I read on this topic, Friar Lawrence Farley, who explains it better than I could.
>The context of Christ’s declaration reveals it: the sin against the Holy Spirit is the sin of rejecting Christ as a blaspheming deceiver. The Pharisees saw Christ’s miracles and His spectacular exorcisms. They could not deny the reality of the exorcisms; they just said that He could only do such things because He was in league with Satan. “It is only by Beel-zebul, the prince of demons, that this man casts out demons” (Matthew 12:24). (Note in passing their malevolence and hatred of Jesus: they cannot even bring themselves to say His Name. He is “this man”.) This is not just slander against Jesus, but against the Spirit of God Himself, for it declares the Holy Spirit through which Jesus cast out demons (Matthew 12:28) was an unclean spirit. Our Lord’s foes were in fact setting themselves against all that God was doing, rejecting His coming Kingdom as a deception and a fraud. That Kingdom was the only place where grace and forgiveness flowed into the world, so that by continuing to reject the Kingdom, they rejected with it the only source of forgiveness. Blasphemy against the Holy Spirit was not unforgivable in the sense that God refused to forgive those who repented of it, but because in persisting in this sin they cut themselves off from the possibility of forgiveness.
 
If it isn't re-affirmed through the tradition of the church or through Christian (New Testament) scripture itself, then I'd say you could call it the latter, a remnant of old Jewish law. We don't need to avoid things like wearing mixed fabrics, for example.
Isn’t modern rabbinical judaism based off the Talmud way more different then old actual judaism and also dont rabbis today dismiss the Old Testament and Torah as just myths?
 
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