News:

Our Hosting and Server Costs Are Expensive! Please Subscribe To Help With Monthly Donations.

Main Menu
+-+-

+-User

Welcome, Guest.
Please login or register.
 
 
 
Forgot your password?

+-Stats ezBlock

Members
Total Members: 89503
Latest: Reirric
New This Month: 0
New This Week: 0
New Today: 0
Stats
Total Posts: 893969
Total Topics: 89948
Most Online Today: 122
Most Online Ever: 12150
(Tue Mar 18, 2025 - 06:32:52)
Users Online
Members: 0
Guests: 32
Total: 32
Google (3)

FROM ONE WHO ONCE KNEW IT ALL

Started by Reformer, Today at 12:48:35

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Reformer

FROM ONE WHO ONCE KNEW IT ALL

    "More than once over the past fifty years, I have felt legitimate shame upon encountering someone I knew in college, only to be told they remembered me for my dogmatism, intolerance, and certainty that I was correct."—The late Edward Fudge - 9/22/2013.

    This brother goes on to relate how the Holy Spirit did some gardening in his life and changed him from someone who thought he had all of the answers to someone who discovered he had a lot to learn.

    That was me, too! Praise my God, for He rescued me. I was once so knowledgeable of God's will that, even without having been conferred the supernatural gift of discernment, I was able to look into another person's heart and determine whether or not he was saved—particularly if his doctrinal posture did not carry the same echo as mine. In the process, I made a lot of enemies and portrayed myself as a foolish, wet-behind-the-ears novice in the faith.

    In time, a patient and tolerant God reformed my thinking and my life and I began to acknowledge that wherever He has a child, I have a brother or a sister, although he doesn't part his hair on the same side as I do.

    Alexander Campbell, reformer, wrote in one of his essays in the 1800s, a quote I often use, "I was once so strong a separatist that I would neither sing nor pray with another unless he was as perfect as I felt myself to be. I persisted in this most unpopular course until I came to the realization that if I position be sound, there could never be a church or congregation upon the face of the earth."

    I have since lost track of the date of his statement, but I have always remembered it because of the wisdom it comprises. Campbell's remarks harmonize with the apostle Paul's instructions. "We who are strong [in the faith] have an obligation to bear with the failings of the weak...Therefore welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God" (Rom. 15:1 & 7). Our blessed Lord has welcomed us, warts and all! Therefore, we should welcome one another, even though each of us is defective in his own way.—Buff.

Rella

Quote from: Reformer on Today at 12:48:35
FROM ONE WHO ONCE KNEW IT ALL

    "More than once over the past fifty years, I have felt legitimate shame upon encountering someone I knew in college, only to be told they remembered me for my dogmatism, intolerance, and certainty that I was correct."—The late Edward Fudge - 9/22/2013.

    This brother goes on to relate how the Holy Spirit did some gardening in his life and changed him from someone who thought he had all of the answers to someone who discovered he had a lot to learn.

    That was me, too! Praise my God, for He rescued me. I was once so knowledgeable of God's will that, even without having been conferred the supernatural gift of discernment, I was able to look into another person's heart and determine whether or not he was saved—particularly if his doctrinal posture did not carry the same echo as mine. In the process, I made a lot of enemies and portrayed myself as a foolish, wet-behind-the-ears novice in the faith.

    In time, a patient and tolerant God reformed my thinking and my life and I began to acknowledge that wherever He has a child, I have a brother or a sister, although he doesn't part his hair on the same side as I do.

    Alexander Campbell, reformer, wrote in one of his essays in the 1800s, a quote I often use, "I was once so strong a separatist that I would neither sing nor pray with another unless he was as perfect as I felt myself to be. I persisted in this most unpopular course until I came to the realization that if I position be sound, there could never be a church or congregation upon the face of the earth."

    I have since lost track of the date of his statement, but I have always remembered it because of the wisdom it comprises. Campbell's remarks harmonize with the apostle Paul's instructions. "We who are strong [in the faith] have an obligation to bear with the failings of the weak...Therefore welcome one another as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God" (Rom. 15:1 & 7). Our blessed Lord has welcomed us, warts and all! Therefore, we should welcome one another, even though each of us is defective in his own way.—Buff.

 ::thumbup::  ::thumbup::

+-Recent Topics

FROM ONE WHO ONCE KNEW IT ALL by Rella
Today at 15:06:39

Revelation 1:8 by pppp
Today at 09:34:42

1 Chronicles 16:34 by pppp
Today at 09:15:16

Does this passage bother anyone else? by Jaime
Yesterday at 18:02:30

Recapturing The Vocabulary Of The Holy Spirit - Part 2 by Rella
Yesterday at 10:28:11

My testimony I am a reborn creature born of water and spirit  by Rella
Yesterday at 10:02:14

The Beast Revelation by garee
Yesterday at 07:55:52

Movie series - The Chosen by garee
Tue Oct 21, 2025 - 08:09:43

New Topics with old ideas or old topics with new ideas. (@Red Baker) by garee
Mon Oct 20, 2025 - 08:56:01

the Leading Creation Evidences by garee
Mon Oct 20, 2025 - 07:41:06

Powered by EzPortal