The irony of being unable to parse the meaning of what I say and then accusing me of eating twinkies.
I'd help you with your English comprehension if I wasn't convinced you are a total idiot.
The irony of being unable to parse the meaning of what I say and then accusing me of eating twinkies.
what needed to be said on what "thou shall not kill" is a part of a covenant has bee shown. if the giver of the tablets says what's written on it is a covenant (agreement) then that's what it is.Veritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Sat Apr 23, 2022 4:27 amBe reasonable, show me which of my argument is wrong?DPMartin wrote: ↑Fri Apr 22, 2022 5:58 pmnice try, all of that you just posted is a no goVeritas Aequitas wrote: ↑Fri Apr 22, 2022 4:34 am
Rather you are the ignorant one.
1. Yes a contract is an agreement between two or more parties.
2. A Christian is one who has entered into a contract [covenant] with God/Jesus.
3. Every contract must have a specific Terms of Contract. Hope you get this very clearly.
4. Since a Christian entered into a contract with Jesus/ God, the Terms of Contract in the case of a Christian are ONLY in the Gospels of Jesus and no where else.
That the OT, Acts and Epistles which are not the direct words of Jesus cannot be terms of the contract for Christianity. These are merely appendixes and guides to the main contract.
5. The ten commandments are in the OT and regardless of which verse you quote from the OT, it cannot be a term of the contract between a Christian and God.
6. One overriding contractual term in the Gospels is 'love all, even enemies' and this will cover for 'Thou Shalt not kill'.
Prove my points above are wrong?
Actually it is you who really don't know what you're talking about.