Lance says As you know, David, I have long believed that you do not know yourself.
 
Lance FESS UP you ben a readin that Pagan - Greek Philo stuff till it has filled yur mind.
More Flashes of Light.
"Know Thyself." This famous Greek maxim is attributed to any number of ancient Greek philosophers, including the great Socrates. However, according to the ancient historian Plutarch, "Know Thyself" was originally the admonition "Gnothi se auton" ("Know Thyself") inscribed on the Sun god Apollo's Oracle of Delphi temple in ancient Greece. Plutarch should know about the inscription on the Oracle, since he was once one of its caretakers. In deference to Socrates, it's known that Apollo's Oracle of Delphi identified him as being the wisest of all men.

Hey you too can become a Disciple of Light and explore the Perennial Wisdom Teachings : http://www.disciplelight.com/Learning/310_know_thyself.htm �Know thyself . . . for in thyself is found ALL there is to be known.�


Lance Muir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
'On judgment day, will David, like the ancient pagans who listened to Jonah
and Solomon have to say that (he) missed the big and obvious clues, while
(he) picked upon the smaller ones? When one fails to interpret scripture
correctly, one often interprets people incorrectly. In this case one (David)
may have misintrepreted one's self - David. As you know, David, I have long
believed that you do not know yourself. A certain basic understanding of the
believing community is missing. IFF you are human, David, then you sin
daily. In some cases you will repeat the same sin..


From: "David Miller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: April 22, 2005 11:44
Subject: [Bulk] Re: [TruthTalk] More wisdom from Dallas Willard


> Debbie wrote:
> > ... I do believe I am accountable to God for how
> > I live, but I admit that on the question of exactly
> > when and how (and how often?) I will be called
> > to account, my thinking is in flux.
>
> The Bible has hundreds of passages about the coming judgment. Why would
you
> be in flux regarding this question? Do you think that perhaps you might
put
> the teachings of men on the same level as the Holy Scriptures?
>
> Debbie wrote:
> > My charge of ignorance had to do with your statement
> > about Caroline. Assuming your version of how this calling
> > to account will occur, how could you possibly know whether
> > you would not want to be "in Caroline's shoes", as it were,
> > on that occasion? What do you know of her works, or how
> > they compare with yours??? That's where I thought you were
> > proceeding on ignorance.
>
> How her works compare with mine? Where did that come from? Such a
concept
> should never enter our minds. The only one we should compare ourselves
with
> is Jesus Christ. When we believe upon him, and make him our Lord, then
our
> life no longer becomes our own. We are committed to living as he lived,
and
> if anything in our life is not according to him, we should repent (change
> our mind), and turn back toward him.
>
> My comment about being her before the judgment seat of Christ had to do
with
> what she said on this forum.. Surely you know that each of us will give
> account to the Lord for every word we type in this forum. Caroline joked
> about the judgment of hell fire that God brings upon the unbelievers. She
> described warnings about the judgment of hell as "#($&%^ you guys (in good
> KJV biblical lingo)." I would be extremely embarassed to come before the
> Lord and have this brought up, and I was expressing such to her, hoping
that
> she will reconsider her cavalier attitude toward the judgment of God.
>
> Debbie wrote:
> > Caroline, John, and (less often) I have numerous times
> > tried to make clear that our complete and unqualified
> > reliance on God's grace and mercy in spite of our sin
> > does not mean that we are cavalier about such sin or
> > our behaviour. On the contrary ... I know from my own
> > experience that this reliance on God's unconditional love
> > is just what nourishes my desire to be conformed to his
> > image, and is what produces that conformity over time.
>
> Empty words. It is easy to claim that you are concerned about sin, but
when
> people joke around about it, that indicates something else entirely.
> Furthermore, since you mention John, he professes to continue in sin and
> teaches that the tension created by not wanting to sin but sinning anyway
is
> what gives him indication that he is saved! It is very clear to me that
> your theology has caused many like John not only to be unconcerned about
his
> own sin, but unconcerned about the sins of others. How can we watch our
> neighbors sin, knowing that such actions bring forth the wrath of God, and
> stay silent? It seems to me that a theology that teaches all are already
> saved in Christ whether they believe or not contributes to such apathy
> toward sin gaining ground. More than that, it actually has caused some,
> like Caroline, to jest about it!
>
> Debbie wrote:
> > P.S.: I started a post some time ago, in response to one
> > of yours, which I never sent. It dared to suggest that perhaps
> > the people who continue to acknowledge sin in our lives do
> > so because we actually look to a higher standard of obedience
> > than you do.
>
> Well, let's talk specifics then. First, how often do you confess sins?
Do
> you confess sins every day, every week, every month, what? What kind of
> sins are you confessing? Are you confessing getting angry without a
cause,
> impure thoughts, stealing from someone, coveting, fornicating,
drunkenness,
> what? Are you confessing not helping your neighbor? Let's get specific
and
> examine this thing. If my standard of obedience is too low, then I will
> certainly confess my sin of having this too low of a standard right away
and
> repent. I hope you understand that I am not against confession and
> repentance. I am against people using confession as a "get out of jail
free
> card" that would enable them to continue in sin. When we acknowledge our
> sin, we need to change our mind about it and start living right. That
means
> you would not expect to be confessing that particular sin again, right?
>
> By the way, I taught at church this last Wednesday night on Eternal
> Judgment. I connected it to holiness at the end of my homily, exhorting
the
> believers to put away all sin and be conscious of the Biblical fact that
> they will stand before Christ on the day of Judgment, whether they be
> Christian or not a Christian, and they will be judged by the works they
have
> done. I received a lot of feedback after the service was over, and one
> woman said to me, "I really needed to hear that. I'm realizing that I
need
> to ask for forgiveness every day." Now, I have no problem with this
> response. Her awareness of her shortcomings is increased by hearing God's
> standard of holiness. However, even though I don't have a problem with
her
> increase of confession and asking forgiveness, I do hope that she moves
away
> from asking forgiveness to repenting of her sins and having a clear
> conscience. In other words, I want her to walk in holiness, walk in the
> Spirit, not just come to the realization that her behavior falls short of
> God's glory. First there is confession and repentance, then there is
faith
> toward God and walking in the Spirit.
>
> Peace be with you.
> David Miller.
>
>
> ----------
> "Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may
know how you ought to answer every man." (Colossians 4:6)
http://www.InnGlory.org
>
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>


----------
"Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer every man." (Colossians 4:6) http://www.InnGlory.org

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