Abortion is murder, plain and simple. Lives are at threat. The same cannot be said about adultery and fornication, no matter what the gender of the participants.
Oh well....then if those things are not murder then they must be A...ok...then.
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
Abortion is murder, plain and simple. Lives are at threat. The same cannot be said about adultery and fornication, no matter what the gender of the participants.
Oh well....then if those things are not murder then they must be A...ok...then.![]()
Would that not also apply to a fornicator, an adulterer (who proved himself unfaithful to his vows), a liar, or a blasphemer?
As a senator their responsibility is not to press their personal standards, but to look for constitutional qualifications and a professional record.
Ask Anthony D. Weiner
Former U.S. Representative
We had better get used to the fact that this world is no longer going to be guided by our principles.
They don't need Constitutional grounds. A senator can vote no for any reason he wants.Precisely what constitutional grounds would the Senate have to refuse confirmation?
This has been going on for ages. One of the early incidents was the approval of Pres Bush's appointment of an openly g@y ambassador to Romania.
That's right.Uh no we do not have to get used to it. And I am not convinced that we should just shut up and sit down.
Then why don't you enlighten me as to your point, because it does not seem readily discernible.You missed my point entirely
And if they will not "observe"? What then? Kill 'em all?That's right.
"Teach all nations to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you."
Is civil government ordained of God? What is its purpose?And if they will not "observe"? What then? Kill 'em all?
If you would say "we'd better get used to persecution and suffering for speaking out against idolatry and immorality," I would agree, but that ain't what's being said.To say "we don't have to get used to it" is a head-in-the-sand attitude.
That's not an answer. Civil government has long abandoned the Christian foundation upon which liberty is founded. There are governments that have never acknowledged their God-given right to govern. God doesn't dictate that they do so. He only says the power comes from Him. If they choose not to acknowledge Him, there is nothing we can do. Our Constitution didn't set up a theocracy, it set up a democracy, which is to say that our founders expected Christian love, charity and justice to be enacted, but not biblically enforced. What we can do in our churches to protect our faith is not the same thing we can do in our legislatures to protect our freedoms, nor should it be, necessarily.Is civil government ordained of God? What is its purpose?
Actually, I know the exact opposite. If we are going to insist that biblical principles be the rule of the nation, and the day, then we are fundamentally changing how we have governed ourselves for 227 years. We are biblically guided, not biblically ruled. There is a subtle but distinct difference in those two attitudes.If you would say "we'd better get used to persecution and suffering for speaking out against idolatry and immorality," I would agree, but that ain't what's being said.
And you know it.
That's not an answer. Civil government has long abandoned the Christian foundation upon which liberty is founded. There are governments that have never acknowledged their God-given right to govern. God doesn't dictate that they do so. He only says the power comes from Him. If they choose not to acknowledge Him, there is nothing we can do. Our Constitution didn't set up a theocracy, it set up a democracy, which is to say that our founders expected Christian love, charity and justice to be enacted, but not biblically enforced. What we can do in our churches to protect our faith is not the same thing we can do in our legislatures to protect our freedoms, nor should it be, necessarily.
Actually, I know the exact opposite. If we are going to insist that biblical principles be the rule of the nation, and the day, then we are fundamentally changing how we have governed ourselves for 227 years. We are biblically guided, not biblically ruled. There is a subtle but distinct difference in those two attitudes.
The problem: Our founders never envisioned a day when gay marriage, homosexuality, advocation of free love and free drugs, in addition to a general moral decline, would be held dear in the hearts of the majority of the populace. Had they so anticipated, they would have probably been more dynamic in establishing biblical principle in law. They did not. Therefore, we live with it. Or we change it. And as I've said, such change fundamentally changes us as a nation -- for the better, to be certain, given this day an age. But nonetheless, it changes us in a way the majority will no longer support.
First, civil government was instituted by God. They are His ministers to execute wrath upon the evildoer and to praise those who do well. That is their function.That's not an answer. Civil government has long abandoned the Christian foundation upon which liberty is founded. There are governments that have never acknowledged their God-given right to govern. God doesn't dictate that they do so. He only says the power comes from Him. If they choose not to acknowledge Him, there is nothing we can do. Our Constitution didn't set up a theocracy, it set up a democracy, which is to say that our founders expected Christian love, charity and justice to be enacted, but not biblically enforced. What we can do in our churches to protect our faith is not the same thing we can do in our legislatures to protect our freedoms, nor should it be, necessarily.
Not true. They knew of Sodom. They also knew of the profligate immorality of Greece and Rome. They knew what brought them down and also knew that men are the same everywhere.The problem: Our founders never envisioned a day when gay marriage, homosexuality, advocation of free love and free drugs, in addition to a general moral decline, would be held dear in the hearts of the majority of the populace.