Audio Q and A: Difference between revisions

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#    Are the Ten Commandments still a valid covenant or constitution?  If so, do the commandments only apply to interpersonal relationships, such as between two individuals, or do the commandments also govern community, social or national relationships too?  And if so, how could the commandments be understood in regards to larger groups of people like communities, nations, states, countries.  Can nations violate the law of God?  Can nations, lie, covet, steal and murder?  Can nations commit a type of adultery?  Can nations have other gods?  Can nations make graven images?  Can nations take the name of the Lord in vain?  Can nations violate the Sabbath law?
#    Are the Ten Commandments still a valid covenant or constitution?  If so, do the commandments only apply to interpersonal relationships, such as between two individuals, or do the commandments also govern community, social or national relationships too?  And if so, how could the commandments be understood in regards to larger groups of people like communities, nations, states, countries.  Can nations violate the law of God?  Can nations, lie, covet, steal and murder?  Can nations commit a type of adultery?  Can nations have other gods?  Can nations make graven images?  Can nations take the name of the Lord in vain?  Can nations violate the Sabbath law?
#    Do all the stories, parables, chapters and verses in the Bible apply to all individuals, all the time, regardless of personal choices?  It seems that some precepts are directed at specific people in specific circumstances, so if I am not doing exactly the same things those people did in those specific instances, then those precepts would not apply to me and I couldn’t twist them to make those precepts fit a completely different situation or status?  For a type of worldly example, the United States laws that deal with the distillation of alcohol are written out in the United States code, which I might read, but if I am not distilling alcohol, those precepts, laws and regulations don’t apply to me, and I can’t take those laws and regulations dealing with the distillation of alcohol and apply them to my personal situation of being a manufacturer of wood glue?
#    Do all the stories, parables, chapters and verses in the Bible apply to all individuals, all the time, regardless of personal choices?  It seems that some precepts are directed at specific people in specific circumstances, so if I am not doing exactly the same things those people did in those specific instances, then those precepts would not apply to me and I couldn’t twist them to make those precepts fit a completely different situation or status?  For a type of worldly example, the United States laws that deal with the distillation of alcohol are written out in the United States code, which I might read, but if I am not distilling alcohol, those precepts, laws and regulations don’t apply to me, and I can’t take those laws and regulations dealing with the distillation of alcohol and apply them to my personal situation of being a manufacturer of wood glue?
#I have heard people use two terms, church and congregation.  Do they mean the same thing or do they mean different things?
#Does God ordain civil governments?  If so, then why do so-called Christian nations, like the United States, use a variety of methods, including economic sanctions, and military force, to topple or overthrow civil governments God has ordained?  If not, then what is God's purpose for allowing men to create their own governments and systems of law?
#There are several references in the Bible to left hands and rights hands.  There is even a verse in Matthew 6:3 where Christ tells us not to let our left hand know what our right hand is doing.  This obvious is a metaphor for something because I control both my hands. So I always know what both of my hands are doing.  So what is this metaphor trying to show us?
#


== Footnotes == <references />
== Footnotes == <references />

Revision as of 09:49, 23 October 2014

Work in progress:

  1. What is the Kingdom of God?
    1. Is there a difference between the kingdom of God and the kingdom of heaven?
  2. How can I get to Heaven?
    1. Is the Kingdom of God where we go when we die?
    2. Didn’t Christ say He was giving the Kingdom of God or heaven to His little flock[1]?
    3. Why do churches teach and preach that the kingdom of heaven, aka the kingdom of God, is no longer a physical kingdom on earth?[2]
    4. If the kingdom of God is a government, and it has its own laws and jurisdiction like any other government, why do people think they can be loyal citizens of two different governments? Their civil government and the kingdom?
    5. Did God really say that we can give our allegiance and fidelity to both?
  3. What does the word “god” mean as used in the Bible?
    1. When the bible mentions God or gods is it really just talking about unseen deities that people worship through religious rituals and ceremonies?
  4. Does God love me?
    1. Or does God hate me?
    2. Who are the Nicolaitan?
  5. What have the "poor" ever done for me?
  6. Didn't Jesus already die for my sins?
  7. Won't Jesus fix all this when he comes back?
  8. What is a "tithe"?
  9. Should I be living like the Amish?
  10. Why should I care about Jesus?
  11. Does God answer prayers?
  12. Who is the Anti-Christ?
  13. Isn't Jesus's real name "Yeshua"?
  14. Is it lawful to pay taxes?
  15. Should babies get baptized?
  16. Why do bad things happen to good people?
  17. What is the "rapture"?
  18. How much should I give in church on Sunday?
  19. Which religion is right?
  20. What is the Holy Spirit?
  21. Are "Christmas" and "Easter" evil?
  22. Is "money" evil?
  23. What is "sin"?
  24. How should I pray?
  25. How can we get prayer back into public schools?
  26. Is Sunday the Sabbath day?
  27. Is gay marriage Godly?
  28. What are the "weightier matters?
    1. of law, judgment, mercy and faith"
  29. Is there any evidence that civil governments today recognize the Law of God? And if so, how do those nations interact with the Law of God? Is the Kingdom of God recognized by the Law of Nations? Or is the Law of God just something that doesn’t really have any force of law at all, but is mere fiction, and only the law of men through the written will of various legislative bodies, like kings, parliaments, legislatures, congresses, etc. the only forms of law that have any legitimacy to be obeyed? Therefore, the Law of God doesn’t have to really be obeyed by anyone because its merely religious fantasy for those that believe?
  30. I have heard many Christians say that it is impossible to keep the law of God as presented in the Old Testament. In a sense, God’s original law was imperfect. God didn’t know what he was doing, really, so He created a temporary form of law until He could come up with a new constitution, covenant, or contact, which would then make the old covenant null and void. If this is so, why do ministers in churches still preach on certain precepts in the Old covenant, such as the tithing statutes, but other precepts have been done away with, taken out of the way, no longer having to be obeyed simply by saying some words about believing in Jesus? Is this really how God works? Is God incompetent? Is God not really omniscient and omnipotent, therefore unable to make His law perfect the first time, where men merely have to comprehend God’s law, understand God’s law and then come into agreement with God’s law in order to know how to keep it. The United States as a civil government has millions of laws and regulations, yet citizens are expected to know, understand and keep all those laws and regulations that affect them. Why is man’s law superior to God’s law in such a way that God’s law couldn’t be kept and therefore had to be made null and void? Does that mean we don’t have to keep the laws of man just because we say that those laws are too hard to keep?
  31. Are the Ten Commandments still a valid covenant or constitution? If so, do the commandments only apply to interpersonal relationships, such as between two individuals, or do the commandments also govern community, social or national relationships too? And if so, how could the commandments be understood in regards to larger groups of people like communities, nations, states, countries. Can nations violate the law of God? Can nations, lie, covet, steal and murder? Can nations commit a type of adultery? Can nations have other gods? Can nations make graven images? Can nations take the name of the Lord in vain? Can nations violate the Sabbath law?
  32. Do all the stories, parables, chapters and verses in the Bible apply to all individuals, all the time, regardless of personal choices? It seems that some precepts are directed at specific people in specific circumstances, so if I am not doing exactly the same things those people did in those specific instances, then those precepts would not apply to me and I couldn’t twist them to make those precepts fit a completely different situation or status? For a type of worldly example, the United States laws that deal with the distillation of alcohol are written out in the United States code, which I might read, but if I am not distilling alcohol, those precepts, laws and regulations don’t apply to me, and I can’t take those laws and regulations dealing with the distillation of alcohol and apply them to my personal situation of being a manufacturer of wood glue?
  33. I have heard people use two terms, church and congregation. Do they mean the same thing or do they mean different things?
  34. Does God ordain civil governments? If so, then why do so-called Christian nations, like the United States, use a variety of methods, including economic sanctions, and military force, to topple or overthrow civil governments God has ordained? If not, then what is God's purpose for allowing men to create their own governments and systems of law?
  35. There are several references in the Bible to left hands and rights hands. There is even a verse in Matthew 6:3 where Christ tells us not to let our left hand know what our right hand is doing. This obvious is a metaphor for something because I control both my hands. So I always know what both of my hands are doing. So what is this metaphor trying to show us?

== Footnotes ==

  1. Luke 12:32 Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom. Luke 22:29 And I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me; Matthew 21:43 Therefore say I unto you, The kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof.
  2. For mortal man, a kingdom is a form of government. We see this all through the bible, even through the history of the kings of Israel and the kings of Judah. We see foreign kingdoms as governments in the Bible and secular history. We even see kingdoms as governments still today.


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