Hmm...Naga Tuma
It is indeed a profound paradox to encounter one who devotes reverence to a tree while simultaneously ridiculing the sacred truths of the Old and New Testaments. This isn't a matter of human intellect, but of divine connection and angelic protection. The Old and New Testaments are not disparate narratives, but two halves of a seamless divine revelation: the former a preparation through prophetic foresight of the Messiah's coming and purpose, the latter the fulfillment of these very prophecies and an unveiling of our eternal destiny. As Jesus Himself declared, "Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them" (Matthew 5:17). Any perceived contradiction between the testaments would indeed negate their holiness.
God, being supremely just and merciful, consistently forewarns humanity of what is to come, whether through dreams or prophets. The unyielding consequence of sin, as scripture plainly states, is spiritual death—an eternal separation from God in a realm of torment, while the pure soul finds everlasting life in His presence, free from earthly travails. "For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Romans 6:23). Yet, the humbling truth is that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God" (Romans 3:23).
Given God's perfect justice and boundless mercy, a true dilemma arises: how can a just God punish sin—as He must—while also extending mercy to fallen humanity? The solution lies in His divine heart: God, in His infinite love, took on human form, born among us, to pay the ultimate penalty for our sins. "And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us" (John 1:14). He made "him who knew no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God" (2 Corinthians 5:21). This act of self-sacrifice reconciled divine justice with merciful forgiveness, ensuring the penalty was paid without compromising His holy character.
Through this singular, selfless act, a new path to paradise was opened for all who, of their own free will, choose to accept it. By acknowledging this profound sacrifice and offering heartfelt gratitude, we are cleansed and welcomed into His eternal presence. To choose, instead, the worship of a created thing—a tree—over this glorious, life-giving truth, and thereby imperil one's own eternal life and that of descendants, is a profound tragedy. The Old Testament, far from being mere ancient history, serves as a divine roadmap, detailing events that would unfold before the very end of human history. We stand at that precipice now, and the message is urgent: "Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts" (Hebrews 3:7-8). Return to the true God while there is still time.
Naga Tuma wrote: ↑25 Oct 2025, 17:59
eritrea wrote: ↑25 Oct 2025, 04:54
I don't know how it is that those who believe in cows are significantly smarter than those who believe in trees,
eritrea:
I infer that you carry the old Bible as a smart man. I stand to be corrected if I got it wrong.
Granted, meet the two Renaissances.
ያረጀዉ መጽሓፍ በመጀመርያዉ ሬይነሳንስ ተንገዳግዶ በሁለተኛዉ ሬይነሳንስ ተጥሏል።
የመጀመርያዉ ሬይነሳንስ በምን ተዓምር ነዉ ሴት ሳትጋደም ልጅ ያፈራችዉ ብሎ ነዉ ያንገዳገደዉ። ምናልባት ነቢይ ተልኮ ቢሆን እራሱ መጣ ኣላችሁ ብሎ ኣንገዳግዶት ሰነበተ።
ሁለተኛዉ ሬይነሳንስ በምን ተዓምር ነዉ ኣንድ የጥንት ነብይ በኣንድ በኩል ሃጥዓተኛ ተብሎ እየተኮነነ በሌላ በኩል ጻዲቅ ተብሎ የሚወደሰዉ ብሎ ነዉ የጣለዉ።
ኣይዞህ ወይም አጆካ፣ ይህ ስለተባለ ነገ ሰማዩ ፈርሶ እንደማታይ ዛሬ ላረጋግጥልህ እችላለሁ።
መለኮትም ተዓምራቱን ለቴስታመንት ፎር ኤተርኒቲ ሳያዘጋጅ ኣልጣለዉም ይሆናል።
Do you have an unlimited capacity to internalize የሁለቱንም ሬይነሳንሶች ጦሮች?
When some of us enlightened enough say this is a family tragedy over millennia, some of you say the tragedy in the family was one sided and your clowns join you for the chorus.