Jesus is the son of God

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Uploaded by on Feb 23, 2008

Jesus is who he said he was. The son of the living God.

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  • @neuronstorm and knows whether your questions come from rebellion, anger, bitterness, or are legitimate and honest questions, or are a mix of those things and more. If they are honest questions, I've answered them reasonably, rationally, and truthfully. May God bless you, please turn to Him in humility and truth, admit you need Him, and let the Most High God, the True God, bless you with His Presence in these one-hundred or so years of life you have to live, through the Name of Jesus His Son.

  • @neuronstorm perfectly good. Compared to Him (and His comparison is all that matters, seeing as good and evil are judged by comparing actions to His Nature) you have sinned, and are a sinner; "One who does evil." A person who commits both evil and good is still a sinner in nature compared to God. It has nothing to do with not groveling rightly; it has to do with whether or not you accept the Way, Truth, and Life (Jesus Christ) when it has been presented to you. No, the true Deity sees your heart

  • @neuronstorm unwarranted claim, the point of the Most High is that He is the only True God, not just because He says so, but precisely because He is the creator of all existence and it's Author. If you have a god who is not that, He isn't the Most High, the uncaused Cause. You have questioned it, and I've answered it. The 'character' is God Almighty. No, compared to God no person is good-if a being has done even one act less than perfectly loving, you're not perfectly good, and God is just that,

  • @neuronstorm heaven afterwards. He rose from the dead physically, and went to heaven for our sakes not just His own; He opened the way for US to be raised from the dead someday, that it might not have the final say, but rather life will. Sacrifice supreme in everything He did. Agreed He doesn't protect us from physical pain, He promised trials here and suffered with us. Your last sentence makes no sense on that message, it isn't about length of time. Now your last message: Uh no it's not an

  • @neuronstorm left His glory, laid it all down, lowered Himself to the point of being born as an infant and living a human life, and then dying a shameful, suffering filled death of flogging, beating, mocking, spitting, and crucifying, then on top of it all being spiritually alienated from the Father in death-for the Divine to suffer as we do, spiritually and physically, is more than we deserve and a sacrifice. He didn't just disappear, He DIED. There's a difference. And He didn't just go into

  • @neuronstorm to be separated from God or slave to sin. I have made you free from that. And He has. Now, on to your next message; He did pay the ultimate sacrifice, not by virtue of it's length, but by who He is. If God reached down to man through His Son, and Jesus was uniquely Divine, His death has infinite value. If it were a man saving another man, dying and *staying* dead forever (not nonexistent, but still, dead) would be the ultimate sacrifice. But this isn't simply a man. This is God, who

  • @neuronstorm commit, but rather, telling us that we are responsible for our sin, and that we *should* confess to having committed the crime (that's called repentance,) but NOT leaving it at that. Instead, He added, I will take the just consequences for your sin, your rebellion, your unloving actions, the physical and spiritual death that naturally will follow, and I will suffer it for you, because I am strong enough to do so. Because I have, even though you are responsible, you no longer have

  • @neuronstorm than a regular man's death even logically. For the Deity to become man and die a man's death-that trumps a noble death of a man in any logic. Now, as for taking sin and bearing it on Himself, this is what is meant: the one man who never did anything unloving or sinful to any other human or God willingly died in the place of every man who has, and thus deserves death which unloving, sinful actions bring. No vision. Not taking responsibility. Not confessing to a crime you didn't

  • @neuronstorm of existence, we believe that the soul, the "I," continues to exist after the physical body has died. Thus Jesus died as real a death as *any man* has ever died. He did not pretend to die. He did not disappear for awhile just to come back. He died a full, meaningful death, and sacrificed His life as much as any man ever has, in a sacrificial fashion, at the hands of others. And if He really was (He was) God reaching out to man, God's Son, dying for man, that's a lot more meaningful

  • @neuronstorm Ok I just wanted to respond to some of your questions here that you posted. First of all, you are defining in the first post that death is the end of existence, thus for someone to die and not exist anymore, ie "die a real death" for other people's sake or for a cause is "more impressive" than dying and rising from the dead, coming back to life. Well, that's flawed logic from the start, and it's at odds with the entire Christian world view. Christians do not believe death is the end

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