RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion



Message


Kirata -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/8/2016 12:39:05 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwird

Don't blame whatever intolerance for 'non-believers' on the entire lot.

But in any case I've yet to meet one among them who had real uno's silly interpretation of what is a religion or not.

Agreed on both counts.

K.




HoneyBears -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/8/2016 8:40:41 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Charles6682

Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit is claimed to be an unforgivable sin. That did catch my attention because I did say some foolish things about the Spirit before, even though I didn't mean it.


Keep in mind, OP, that unless you are fluent in a scripture's mother tongue, meaning can get lost in translation.
What I say in English can get taken literally or misunderstood in the same language!

This is my broad understanding of the Holy Spirit. Permeating essence of the Life Force.
Native Americans and other indigenous peoples call it the Great Spirit, as evidenced by the workings of Nature.

I have to stick to simplistic terms because we may all interpret the Holy Spirit differently.
In religion, it is the least understood cornerstone of the [Holy] Trinity, God manifested as a Triune Being.

If one believes in nothing else, one can feel the subtle effect of the Holy Spirit within ourselves operating as the human conscience.
IMO, this germ-seed of conscience is inborn within each of us. A sense of right and wrong. If intuition is our sixth sense - based on enhanced instincts - then this would be our seventh.

Even before we fully come of age into the exercise of our own free will, we feel the palpable conviction of the Holy Spirit operating inside of us.
It grows when nurtured and cultivated by our moral compass as guided by others during our childhood, but it is like a gentle breeze or the still, small voice of a whisper.

To grieve the Holy Spirit is to deny the existence of the higher faculty of this innate conscience ....
To have rejected one's conscience so many times throughout one's life, that one has snuffed out what should have been the navigator of one's ship, one's co-pilot, one's comforting guiding light,
... to become amoral and wreak havoc, to cause others to lose their way or to lose their faith.

The repeated acts of mutiny against Self (against oneself as captain of one's own vessel) are the blasphemy, not the mere uttering of words.
It is the willful cutting off of oneself from the lifeline of the Collective. It is not so much unforgivable as it is irreversible damage once reaching critical mass -- the self-imposed point of no return.

-- Lisa




Termyn8or -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/9/2016 1:28:30 PM)

About this holy spirit or holy ghost, just exactly where is that mentioned in the Bible ?

T^T




bounty44 -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/9/2016 1:53:09 PM)

mark 3:22-30, luke 11:14-26, 12:8-10.

those are the verses that deal specifically with the op.

the holy spirit (or holy ghost, depending on the translation you read) is mentioned predominantly throughout the new testament, and sometimes in the old both specifically, and with allusion---too numerous to list.




WickedsDesire -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/9/2016 2:13:34 PM)

Ah! cake I had a huge scone today & Tis why my tongue can thrash women’s nether regions with sheer delight and invoke a good 40 screaming orgasms from the mongrels before I devour their soul…. and scripture I know.

It would appear you do not. You will find the book of many a story - King James ((tranlation - yes something can be lost in trnaslation to the one who said that) – good name james) refers to gods, and probably about 700-800 times and that is where the schizophrenia comes from of the holy trinity, or holy ghost malarkey that you waffled on about it


I thought god, or was it the council of gods tried to wipe out human kind with the Deluge - not something I would forgive myself no need to mention the 10 poxes of Egypt was it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZNeq2Utm0nU BlasfeeEEMUR




bounty44 -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/9/2016 2:14:01 PM)

Charles hodge, of "systematic theology" which is a standard and respected text in protestant circles writes:

"according to the scripture, however, the chief sins of men consist in their wrong judgments, in thinking and believing evil to be good and good to be evil. this in its highest form, as our lord teaches us, is the unpardonable sin or blasphemy against the holy ghost....It is, as the bible clearly reveals, because men are ignorant of god, and blind to the manifestation of his glory in the person of his son, that they are lost." p 306-7.




dcnovice -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/9/2016 5:07:53 PM)

quote:

Is there an Unforgivable Sin?

Wearing white shoes after Labor Day.




FieryOpal -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/11/2016 4:21:26 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

mark 3:22-30, luke 11:14-26, 12:8-10.

those are the verses that deal specifically with the op.

the holy spirit (or holy ghost, depending on the translation you read) is mentioned predominantly throughout the new testament, and sometimes in the old both specifically, and with allusion---too numerous to list.

In the Old Testament, the phraseology is "the Spirit of the LORD" (Adonai, which ties in with the Lord God as Logos) e.g. coming over [a prophet, high priest, Levite, patriarch/judge/king] an individual, experiencing a mystical epiphany or prophetic vision, being endowed with supernatural strength or healing ability, the manifestation of miracles, etc.

Termyn8or, check out Psalms and references to the shepherd-king David, also Samson, the books of the prophets. I'm not sure if this ties in with angelic visitations, though.




bounty44 -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/11/2016 4:56:48 PM)

in some cases yes, it is the "spirit of the lord" or the "spirit of god."

in some places it's simply "spirit."

in Isaiah 63:10 it is "his holy spirit" and it is also "holy spirit" in psalms 51:11.




FieryOpal -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/11/2016 5:08:22 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: bounty44

in some cases yes, it is the "spirit of the lord" or the "spirit of god."

in some places it's simply "spirit."

in Isaiah 63:10 it is "his holy spirit" and it is also "holy spirit" in psalms 51:11.

Cool, thanks for the clarification, since I was relying on memory and was being lazy. [:)]




MrRodgers -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/11/2016 7:11:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: dcnovice

quote:

Is there an Unforgivable Sin?

Wearing white shoes after Labor Day.

I've heard that. I however, do not feel as if one will spend an eternity, burning in hell...for that.

A more relevant topic and a much longer list, would be what we know are a plethora of horrendous sins that must be forgivable, for they occur quite regularly throughout history and all too often in the otherwise righteous pursuit of not just a profit but...a greater profit.




dcnovice -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/11/2016 7:19:38 PM)

quote:

I've heard that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoQPu3K13Gs [:)]




tweakabelle -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/12/2016 12:01:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: dcnovice

quote:

I've heard that.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IoQPu3K13Gs [:)]

Too funny! And it offers a promise of redemption for all those fashion victims out there ......




Edwird -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/12/2016 1:48:34 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: HoneyBears


quote:

ORIGINAL: Charles6682

Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit is claimed to be an unforgivable sin. That did catch my attention because I did say some foolish things about the Spirit before, even though I didn't mean it.


Keep in mind, OP, that unless you are fluent in a scripture's mother tongue, meaning can get lost in translation.
What I say in English can get taken literally or misunderstood in the same language!

This is my broad understanding of the Holy Spirit. Permeating essence of the Life Force.
Native Americans and other indigenous peoples call it the Great Spirit, as evidenced by the workings of Nature.

I have to stick to simplistic terms because we may all interpret the Holy Spirit differently.
In religion, it is the least understood cornerstone of the [Holy] Trinity, God manifested as a Triune Being.

If one believes in nothing else, one can feel the subtle effect of the Holy Spirit within ourselves operating as the human conscience.
IMO, this germ-seed of conscience is inborn within each of us. A sense of right and wrong. If intuition is our sixth sense - based on enhanced instincts - then this would be our seventh.

Even before we fully come of age into the exercise of our own free will, we feel the palpable conviction of the Holy Spirit operating inside of us.
It grows when nurtured and cultivated by our moral compass as guided by others during our childhood, but it is like a gentle breeze or the still, small voice of a whisper.

To grieve the Holy Spirit is to deny the existence of the higher faculty of this innate conscience ....
To have rejected one's conscience so many times throughout one's life, that one has snuffed out what should have been the navigator of one's ship, one's co-pilot, one's comforting guiding light,
... to become amoral and wreak havoc, to cause others to lose their way or to lose their faith.

The repeated acts of mutiny against Self (against oneself as captain of one's own vessel) are the blasphemy, not the mere uttering of words.
It is the willful cutting off of oneself from the lifeline of the Collective. It is not so much unforgivable as it is irreversible damage once reaching critical mass -- the self-imposed point of no return.
-- Lisa


What an excellent post.

I can't even think about what I might disagree with or not, because there is certainly some resonance there.

Regarding the matter of "repeated acts of of mutiny against Self", I wonder if the idolatry of the Greeks, the Romans, the British empire, etc. work to the point of disincentive to go by 'the Self' as a guide. Religion is confusing, because there is so much that resonates with the spirit sometimes, yet so much contradiction to what one actually feels if trying to go by own spirit.

quote:

To have rejected one's conscience so many times throughout one's life, that one has snuffed out what should have been the navigator of one's ship, one's co-pilot, one's comforting guiding light,
... to become amoral and wreak havoc, to cause others to lose their way or to lose their faith.



To those born with such sense of conscience, the issue is trying to keep out the noise. The Mesopotamians, the ancient Greeks, the Romans, the European powers, the Austro-Hungarian empire, the British empire, Russia, the Ottomans, etc, were all about the noise, and so no surprise that their religions were all about the noise. Noise to drown out the conscience, to drown out the Self. The Self that understood community, and the ancient knowledge that serving Self and community were the same, thereby being master of both.





MrRodgers -> RE: Is there an Unforgivable Sin? (10/12/2016 9:35:10 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Edwird


quote:

ORIGINAL: HoneyBears


quote:

ORIGINAL: Charles6682

Blasphemy of the Holy Spirit is claimed to be an unforgivable sin. That did catch my attention because I did say some foolish things about the Spirit before, even though I didn't mean it.


Keep in mind, OP, that unless you are fluent in a scripture's mother tongue, meaning can get lost in translation.
What I say in English can get taken literally or misunderstood in the same language!

This is my broad understanding of the Holy Spirit. Permeating essence of the Life Force.
Native Americans and other indigenous peoples call it the Great Spirit, as evidenced by the workings of Nature.

I have to stick to simplistic terms because we may all interpret the Holy Spirit differently.
In religion, it is the least understood cornerstone of the [Holy] Trinity, God manifested as a Triune Being.

If one believes in nothing else, one can feel the subtle effect of the Holy Spirit within ourselves operating as the human conscience.
IMO, this germ-seed of conscience is inborn within each of us. A sense of right and wrong. If intuition is our sixth sense - based on enhanced instincts - then this would be our seventh.

Even before we fully come of age into the exercise of our own free will, we feel the palpable conviction of the Holy Spirit operating inside of us.
It grows when nurtured and cultivated by our moral compass as guided by others during our childhood, but it is like a gentle breeze or the still, small voice of a whisper.

To grieve the Holy Spirit is to deny the existence of the higher faculty of this innate conscience ....
To have rejected one's conscience so many times throughout one's life, that one has snuffed out what should have been the navigator of one's ship, one's co-pilot, one's comforting guiding light,
... to become amoral and wreak havoc, to cause others to lose their way or to lose their faith.

The repeated acts of mutiny against Self (against oneself as captain of one's own vessel) are the blasphemy, not the mere uttering of words.
It is the willful cutting off of oneself from the lifeline of the Collective. It is not so much unforgivable as it is irreversible damage once reaching critical mass -- the self-imposed point of no return.
-- Lisa


What an excellent post.

I can't even think about what I might disagree with or not, because there is certainly some resonance there.

Regarding the matter of "repeated acts of of mutiny against Self", I wonder if the idolatry of the Greeks, the Romans, the British empire, etc. work to the point of disincentive to go by 'the Self' as a guide. Religion is confusing, because there is so much that resonates with the spirit sometimes, yet so much contradiction to what one actually feels if trying to go by own spirit.

quote:

To have rejected one's conscience so many times throughout one's life, that one has snuffed out what should have been the navigator of one's ship, one's co-pilot, one's comforting guiding light,
... to become amoral and wreak havoc, to cause others to lose their way or to lose their faith.



To those born with such sense of conscience, the issue is trying to keep out the noise. The Mesopotamians, the ancient Greeks, the Romans, the European powers, the Austro-Hungarian empire, the British empire, Russia, the Ottomans, etc, were all about the noise, and so no surprise that their religions were all about the noise. Noise to drown out the conscience, to drown out the Self. The Self that understood community, and the ancient knowledge that serving Self and community were the same, thereby being master of both.



Translation: By far, most ancients were pagan, most Christians before (from 400 AD) and Muslims (from 1258 AD the sacking of Baghdad) of power used [it] for more power. The mongols didn't give a shit to leave in Islam but the Caliphate [it] chose to fight and got wiped out. Math (and science) was the 'devil's' work. And even after the Arabs invented (discovered) algebra. (written in Baghdad about 825 A.D. by the Arab mathematician Mohammed ibn-Musa al-Khowarizmi)

So let your spirits take you where they will. Non of what you have establishes or create an actual regime for an...unforgivable sin and in fact helps to refute the whole concept of sin.




Page: <<   < prev  1 2 [3]

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
0.046875