thank you
| Posted On: 10/22/08 06:56:19 PM |
Age 65, NY |
thank you for all your tireless work in teaching the true history of this great nation can you try to get on the oreily factor
|

Much Ambiguity
| Posted On: 10/07/08 09:34:34 AM |
Age 40, NH |
1. Just because someone claims the Name doesn't make one a subject of the King. We speak of this today with all those who seem suspect and this same criteria should be appllied to the founders of this (and any other) country.
2. "The merits of Christ" is not always or even the majority of the times it is used, an orthodox claim to His deity and substitutionary atonement. This phrase is much of the time, shown to not be a claim of a follower of the Jesus of Nazareth that we see in Scripture but the claim of those who question the validity of the claims of the first 3-5 creeds of the church.
3. It matters not if all or many of the signers were Christians or not (most likely not), we do not have a covenant with God and therefore have never been a, "Christian" nation.
Grace and Peace,
Jim
|
Words don't make you a follower
| Posted On: 10/07/08 09:34:10 AM |
Age 46, PA |
There was a time in my life when I would have given a hardy AMEN to this article, but now I don't see things the same. I have come to realize that attending religous gatherings, spouting religous words doesn't make you a belivers. I have come to believe that the biggest deception in the church is unbelievers thinking they are belivers and being the majority attenders. So, with that said, theses "religous" quotes mean absolutly nothing. How could we be a christian nations when are churches are filled with unbelievers?
|
|
|
|
|