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Post by Eλευθερί on Apr 8, 2019 0:18:27 GMT
I know there are a bunch of places in the Gospel where Jesus calls for killing evildoers. But for the life of me, I can't remember which verses those are. Can someone please help me out? 
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Post by lowtacks86 on Apr 8, 2019 0:26:39 GMT
In his mind he probably sees overthrowing their dictatorship government as "humanitarianism" for the people of Venezuela. Of course this type of "spreading Democracy" militarism almost always results in disaster (Vietnam, arming the Mujuhideen, Iraq War). Though the people in charge really don't give a shit about spreading democracy, just an excuse for military contractors to line their pockets and perhaps a new oil source for the US. Neoconservatism/US expansionism/military globalism/whatever you want to call it is a poison on the US government.
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Post by rizdek on Apr 8, 2019 8:54:13 GMT
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Post by Vegas on Apr 8, 2019 15:09:45 GMT
Eλευθερί
John 7:14 And THE LORD spoke unto his disciples "Petey… Li'l Matthew... Pop a cap in this dumb n****a's ass."
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Post by rizdek on Apr 9, 2019 8:43:44 GMT
Jesus tells a parable about a ruler.
Luke 19
It could be that the ruler in the story represents Jesus himself as Lord. In which case, it would seem he would be calling for the death of those who do not follow him....ie evildoers.
It's not Jesus, but Paul writes that the wages of sin is death.
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Post by CoolJGS☺ on Apr 9, 2019 10:58:00 GMT
Someone could and probably has written an account about Jesus this year that the Bible will never contain.
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Post by CoolJGS☺ on Apr 9, 2019 11:19:58 GMT
Jesus tells a parable about a ruler.
Luke 19 It could be that the ruler in the story represents Jesus himself as Lord. In which case, it would seem he would be calling for the death of those who do not follow him....ie evildoers.
It's not Jesus, but Paul writes that the wages of sin is death.
The beginning of the parable says it's for ones thinking his kingdom was going to be established at that time. It's not really a direct ratio kind of parable. He is telling them it will be later and benefits those with faith. And yes, he's going to kill a lot of people who are against him. Paul's writing in Romans have nothing to do with violence.
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Post by rizdek on Apr 9, 2019 15:37:09 GMT
Jesus tells a parable about a ruler.
Luke 19 It could be that the ruler in the story represents Jesus himself as Lord. In which case, it would seem he would be calling for the death of those who do not follow him....ie evildoers.
It's not Jesus, but Paul writes that the wages of sin is death.
The beginning of the parable says it's for ones thinking his kingdom was going to be established at that time. It's not really a direct ratio kind of parable. He is telling them it will be later and benefits those with faith. And yes, he's going to kill a lot of people who are against him. Paul's writing in Romans have nothing to do with violence. How do you know?
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