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Where's the Fight?
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Holy Moment
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Where's the Fight?
In my journey, lerning more about Jesus, I once happend to donate the book "The Jesus I never knew" by Philip Yancey to my local SDA church. It was rejected by the church liberian stating that the Jesus Yancey presents is not the Jesus adventism teach. This was a turningpoint for me. From that moment I knew there is a need for a new Jesus among Adventists - so once again - thank you for taking up the quest about the real Jesus.
Having only these three pictures to choose from maybe explains that thing about no graven images or likeness'.
Dick Larsen
If we are ever going to make headway with the Muslim world we will have to have a closer look at Jesus as a prophet more than as a saviour who died for the sins of mankind. That is where the link lies with Islam. Luke is especially useful in that regard because of the many parables which illustrate the love and mercy of God. Sometimes we are inclined to 'come at' many of the parables from our evangelical background. I think it may be useful to imagine you were standing in the crowd listening to the story of the prodigal son back two thousand years ago. Today we can be a little too swayed by the christologies which have cluttered the Chrsitian church over the centuries. Nobody who was listening to Jesus at that time would have thought in the least that the forgiven younger son eventually found his place back in the family because of the sacrificial death of Jesus having made such forgiveness possible. At that time it was just God and men/women - with no Jesus as a mediator. Bystanders would simply have accepted that God is inideed forgiving and merciful quite aside from later interpretations - espceically the idea of ransom - that God's mercy had to be 'bought' by Jesus. Muslims would understand the parable to stand just as it is and just as the Jews of that time understood it; God is merciful and that is the end of the story - and Jesus was a prophet who lived to direct others back to God.