The meaning of the Good Samaritan for Calvin was, instead, that "compassion, which an enemy showed to a Jew, demonstrates that the guidance and teaching of nature are sufficient to show that man was created for the sake of man. Hence it is inferred that there is a mutual obligation between all men." In other writings, Calvin pointed out that people are not born merely for themselves, but rather "mankind is knit together with a holy knot ... we must not live for ourselves, but for our neighbors.
I got this off of Wikipedia a while ago I thought I should post it again to see this man in another light that we should see from him also
I know there have been some such satirical sites, this site, unless their "disclaimer" is buried deeply somewhere on their site, appears to be "legit".
This Westboro Baptists thing.......yea, big time cheap shot......but you knew that & yet you still took it. Says allot for your character.......BTW, what's your name again?
No, I am not a liar, but am quite good at exposing those that have more baloney than knowledge.
Any fruitcake knows that has been a running joke for years, and any simple student of theological history knows Calvin would have never made such a statement.
No, I am not a liar, but you are nothing but smoke and mirrors.
If it were not condemned in Scripture, I would call you a fool.
"Re: Matthew 13:39--“This passage has been improperly abused by the Anabaptists, and by others like them, to take from the Church the power of the sword.” (p. 122; and thus Calvin defends the Church’s supposed right of capital “persecution of dissent” which he actively employed against Servetus and numerous Anabaptists."
I believe the above is from Doug Kutilek, As I See I, Volume 16, Number 3, March 2013
There has never been one post of mine that serves liberals.
If I did, it least it would be well thought out.
Yours are neither liberal or conservative, but basically inchoherent.
I don't doubt that people in the past have believed the earth to be flat.
However, there is nothing in Scripture that provides a basis for such a belief.
There is no reason that primitive man would not believe the earth to be flat.
There is no reason that the Christians of the dark ages would not believe the earth to be flat, but not on the basis of Scripture since the Bible was kept from them by the RCC.
An illustration:
I was raised in the mountains.
As a boy I had no idea there could be local rain squalls because it rained as far as I could see.
When I went into the Navy I could see a couple of things, rain squalls all around and from the crows nest a slight curvature of the earth. [Not that I ever believed the earth was flat.]
Now that I live in the flat lands of SC I can see rain squalls all around while my grass is parched!
From what I've read I think someone could make a case based on scripture that the earth is not only flat but that it also does not 'move' and also that the cosmos is geocentric.
Some of the stupidest things ever spoken have come from the lips of some of the most brilliant men who ever lived.
Anyone who studies history knows this pops up often- that one person can be so unbelievably brilliant in one area and so invincibly stupid in others.
His brilliance can be profound on one issue and be very lacking in another facet of the same issue.
This is called being human.
And this quote needs to be placed in context.
To the most devout of Christians in Calvin's day, heliocentricity was an assault upon the faith once handed down from the Apostles.
It puts me in mind of young earth creationists today.
One day they will be seen as absolute idiots.
One day it will be proven, not just scientifically, but exegetically that the idea that the earth is six to eight thousand years old is utterly ridiculous.
But those who see these YEC as idiots will be totally wrong in many cases.
It will simply be that they were VERY brilliant in many theological matters but blinded by an emotional attachment to a tradition they held as essential in this matter.
John Calvin represented in this statement the feelings of the VAST majority of Christians- both Calvinist and non-calvinist in his day.
So what is the point you are trying to make with this quote?
Some of the stupidest things ever spoken have come from the lips of some of the most brilliant men who ever lived.
Anyone who studies history knows this pops up often- that one person can be so unbelievably brilliant in one area and so invincibly stupid in others.
His brilliance can be profound on one issue and be very lacking in another facet of the same issue.
This is called being human.
And this quote needs to be placed in context. To the most devout of Christians in Calvin's day, heliocentricity was an assault upon the faith once handed down from the Apostles.
It puts me in mind of young earth creationists today.
One day they will be seen as absolute idiots. One day it will be proven, not just scientifically, but exegetically that the idea that the earth is six to eight thousand years old is utterly ridiculous.
But those who see these YEC as idiots will be totally wrong in many cases. It will simply be that they were VERY brilliant in many theological matters but blinded by an emotional attachment to a tradition they held as essential in this matter.
John Calvin represented in this statement the feelings of the VAST majority of Christians- both Calvinist and non-calvinist in his day.
So what is the point you are trying to make with this quote?
Dont you have a chicken farm Luke? Aint that a hobby? BTW, what breed do you have.... we got RD Island Reds & Comets (Hybrids) & Ban-tum White Silkies (Chinese Breed).