Exacts.
not everyone who says “Lord, Lord” will enter into the kingdom of HeavenVery true. What with purgatory right? If God wanted us all in Heaven, he wouldnt have made the world the way it is today.
purgatory is not real, that is a catholic concept. God DOES want us all in heaven, he gave us his only SON just to SAVE US from the condemnation we drove ourselves to. The world we live in today was created by man. Adam and Eve were in heaven WITH God but because of defiance we did we live in the world we do today. The quote is meant that there are believers in the world who do not live correctly in the eyes of the Lord and that is what will keep them from their kingdom
Whats living correctly? Its all based on a book that can be interpretted so many different ways. I’m just saying stating that there will be those who will not enter the kingdom of heaven, and we all to chose Jesus or 666. We cant cast judgment on others. We dont know what happens on the day of reckoning. And Adam and Eve were on Earth, in Eden, and they sinned. And God punished them. But the whole world grew corrupt and God flooded it all, leaving us only Noah and his family. They restarted the world. Yeah, the worlds evil and the worlds corrupt. But people interpret God and his plans so many different ways, whats right? We cant decide that. Its all just too fantastical.
living “correctly” would be living righteous and according to the law God wants you to abide by. The word of God is the word of God, he clearly tells you what to do and that is to love fruitfully and with righteousness. I see no other interpretation of those words.
So the different names of different churches, and the countless denominations and every individual who lives in their eyes righteously, arent other interpretations? Its hardly simple and defintely not easy to follow. I’m done though. Religion is not something worth debating. I just know what I believe. Any one can believe whatever they want. In the end, we’ll see what happens.
Well said, Zackary. Well said.
2 years ago • Notes