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Hi Jonathan, No time
for me to linger here (however tempting it is to makes jokes about us not being
fruits!). Just wondering when you
posted your question that no one answered? Because I remember David M posting
that question several months ago and getting several thoughtful replies; one
from myself. Would you kindly tell me what you mean by “fundamentalist”? And what don’t you like about them/their
beliefs specifically? (Other than their patriotism?) Thanks, Izzy From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jonathan Hughes Morning all, I picked my sister up from the airport
last night. She lives in the There is nothing like a nice, ripe
peach. So soft, juicy, delicious, sweet, everything a peach should
be. But not all peaches are like the perfect peach. Many peaches
are hard, unforgiving to the touch, un-impressionable. They look great
from the outside, the fuzz in the right places, the colour just right. But
when you pick one up it is hard. Your thumb leaves no imprint. You
put the peach down and search for one that is impressionable, one that will be
sweet to the mouth. Of course you keep an eye on the first peach; you
hold it again tomorrow but it is still hard. Each day you lightly touch
it hoping for that softness, hoping against odds that the peach will become all
that it is meant to become: the perfect peach. Although it still looks
beautiful on the outside it begins to rot on the inside. Within a few
days, this peach that had so much potential is now rotten, beginning to smell. I would like the TT forum to become more
like the soft peaches: impressionable, teachable, and pliable. This is my
main problem with fundamentalists; they have lost the ability to be molded, to
become soft, teachable. Rather, they look great from the outside, perhaps
looking like the model Christians. They do most things right; they look
like good peaches. But when you pick one up, attempt to become more
intimate with that peach you notice that it is hard on the inside. A nice
looking peach, but little visible fruitness. These peaches tend to be
rather angry, responding out of their hardness, their rigidity. Softness
is considered too feminine, too liberal. Meanwhile, they slowly rot inside,
their juice drying up. My very first post on Truthtalk was about
epistemological humility; the changes that occur in our doctrines as we become
closer to God. I asked for examples from people (after providing a few of
my own) on where God had changed them, molded them differently from what they
first believed. I found it astounding when none of the
‘fundamentalists’ on this forum replied, not one of them. It
appears that fundamentalists grow in the faith, just never change in it.
What an eye-opener for me. I beg of you, plead with you, allow the Spirit
to keep you humble, to be impressionable, to listen and hear the Spirit’s
voice in whatever guise it may come to you. Allow yourself to be healthy
peaches, full of juice and a delicate sweetness. Jonathan |
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