Monday 19 March 2018

Is the inerrant word of God the words or the author's meaning?

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Christian Pharisees preach that the bible is the inerrant word of God
and they are keeping to it. This is hilarious to anyone who has any understanding of the bible
The christian church today is completely different from Paul’s church 
and barely anyone in it would qualify to cross the threshold of Paul’s church, let alone join it
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Paul and his church lived and breathed the 40 commandments that Jesus gave at the Sermon On The Mount
to the extent that each of them sold everything he had and gave the money to church. Each of them also handed their weekly wage over to the church, and the church distributed back the minimum that each person needed to live
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Each member of Paul’s church had to demonstrate a gift of the Holy Ghost such as healing or prophesying or speaking in tongues in order to prove that they had received the fullness of the Holy Ghost. In some Churches today, one or two may qualify here. In the vast majority of churches no one qualifies, including the preacher. 
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Of course, every Christian Pharisee says he has received the ‘gift of preaching’
You would expect that if God himself had given a pharisee that gift, then the pharisee would be able to convert people with his preaching
Strangely, none of them can. 
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What about the bible is the inerrant word of God?
The form that the magic spell words take on the page
or what the author meant when he wrote those words?
What Paul meant was “I am keeping to Jesus’ 40 commandments and these words are meant for others who are also keeping Jesus’ 40 commandments. On that understanding, this is how we now proceed
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