Perspective wrote: ↑Thu Mar 06, 2025 5:02 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Mar 04, 2025 3:24 am
Perspective wrote: ↑Mon Mar 03, 2025 8:50 pm
Thank you for your feedback. I did look at the forum but to view discussion, it seems I must open an account. Maybe I can view videos without that. Good idea.
Personally, I see the agnostic view as most logical, when it comes to a belief in a higher power (God), but practically, it makes more sense to use our power of belief to work for us, rather than against us, including a sense of priorities (highest GOoD).
It really depends on how God is defined. It seems much more rare to define God than to argue about it. If God is intelligent design, we are walking proof. But I think God is more than that.
What are your beliefs?
I believe God is personal, not merely a sort of "force" or "out-there-ness." But then, I'm a Christian, so that goes along with that.
Most Christians I know believe differently than that - they see Jesus as God & external, despite Luke 17: “The kingdom of God is WITHIN YOU.”
Well, some commentators opt for the variant reading of "within":
"The phrase "in your midst" can also be translated as "within you" or "among you," leading to various interpretations. Theologically, this suggests that the kingdom of God is a present reality, embodied in the person and work of Jesus Christ." (The Study Bible)
"The kingdom of God could not be said to be in the hearts of those Pharisees to whom the Master was especially directing his words of reply here. It should be rather understood in the midst of your ranks; so Meyer and Farrar and others interpret it..." (Pulpit Commentary)
However, let's grant that it says "within." The question becomes, what does it imply? Does it imply that the Kingdom of God is latent within all human beings, or only within those who belong to Christ, as a result of salvation -- that it's a transformation of the inward man, not a universal possession of all men, including those who, like the listening Pharisees, hate God and are hypocrites? It's ambiguous, at best, if all we look at is that little phrase, "within you."
I think that to be fair, we would have to build a theology from more than one verse here. We'd need both the immediate context and the larger Scriptural context, in order to delimit the proper meaning of the saying. We would, as the Pulpit Commentary suggests, have to decide what Jesus meant in the presence of the Pharisees as well as the disciples.
And given that the rest of Scripture invites the interpretation I suggest -- that it refers to Christians, not to everybody -- but in no way invites the one you suggest -- that it means "within all human beings already," (assuming I'm understanding your objection), then I submit to you that there are good reasons why I don't believe in the Gnostic reading of that lone verse.
So, now I’m curious how you came to see God as personal & not external.
"External"? Did you mean "internal"? I'm not sure of what your question is here. Sorry.
By "personal," I simply mean that God is a "Person" in the larger sense of having a specific identity, will, volition, nature, and so forth, as "persons" inevitably do: in fact, I suggest that the very concept "personhood," with which we are all so familiar, is derivative from God's primary "Personhood," since we are, as Genesis says, "created in the image" of God. We are "persons" because God, our Creator, is a "Person."
I trust this clears that up.