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I guess the question that would be asked of John
is, How do we account for people who say they are trusting God's gracious
reconciliation, but don't appear (that necessarily means, "don't appear to us")
to be interested in living in that reconciliation at all? I am sure
that nobody on TT is really (non-rhetorically) accusing John of being such
a person.
I said what my own answer would be if I were
challenged as being such a person: I do not concern myself with [other
people's] (or my own) judgment. I trust God to complete the work begun in
me; he has until the Day of Jesus Christ (and may well do a hefty
passel of it right then!). But that's because I am confident of my own
relationship to Christ and my desire to live it out. What do we say about
other people? Do we just decline to make a judgment? Is that a
cop-out? Do we stoutly trust that they are in a process of growth whose
germ we cannot yet see? Or do we conclude that they are in defiance of the
ground of their own existence and therefore self-destructing? And if
so, can a similarity be acknowledged between that and David's
position?
Debbie
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- [TruthTalk] to be fair Debbie Sawczak
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Debbie Sawczak
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Knpraise
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Bill Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Kevin Deegan
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Bill Taylor
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Debbie Sawczak
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Knpraise
- Re: [TruthTalk] to be fair Kevin Deegan

