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| #Post#: 12138-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Kerry Date: May 8, 2016, 2:57 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I ask because I ran into this question again just tonight | |
| browsing the internet -- it's on another forum and the rules | |
| here forbid saying where it is, and perhaps it doesn't matter | |
| where it is. (I can send you a link in a PM if you want to | |
| know.) The poster mentions praying for the "gift of love." I | |
| can't fathom it. | |
| I believe God gave us all the ability to love others. In that | |
| way, you could call it a gift the way you can call life itself a | |
| gift; and then it's our choice if we love or not. I can think | |
| of no place in the Bible that says the ability to love others is | |
| a gift God gives us -- meaning if God didn't give us that gift, | |
| then we can't love others. The list of of the "gifts of the | |
| Spirit" do not include charity or love. I think that's right. | |
| Even people who lack the Holy Spirit can choose to love if they | |
| want to. If God is Love and if we are all made in His image | |
| and likeness, that means to me we all also have the potential to | |
| love. | |
| So if I am right, where does this idea of the ability to love | |
| others being a gift from God come from? Everyone already has | |
| this ability. I don't see the need to pray for a gift when we | |
| already can love if we so choose. It seems to me that someone | |
| who is thinking like this may be excusing his own lack of | |
| expressing love and praying for God to do something about it. | |
| Or does the person who thinks like this have an erroneous idea | |
| about what he himself is and thus also about what God is too? | |
| I can think of everything else being gifts from God -- down to | |
| the air we breath even and the sun that shines -- and our minds, | |
| bodies and souls. Artistic talents are gifts from God, I | |
| think. Everything we can do is the result of God giving us | |
| the ability to do it; and if He doesn't give us a particular | |
| gift, there's nothing we do about it unless He gives it to us. | |
| Everything except love -- we can all do that. Why pray for it | |
| then? I don't understand. | |
| #Post#: 12139-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: paralambano Date: May 8, 2016, 6:46 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| People think it's a gift when they're feeling negative or empty. | |
| This ability is always there awaiting uncovering. | |
| It takes work to reject lies and affirm truth. | |
| We have always been the perfect reflection of God. | |
| He doesn't make Pintos. It only seems that He does. | |
| Every kingdom including heaven divided falls. | |
| Either make the whole tree rotten and its fruit bad or make it | |
| good and its fruit good. | |
| What say you? | |
| I say it is impossible for a good and perfect tree as Jesus | |
| claimed Love to be to | |
| to produce actual failures. This goes against rev. We are | |
| children of a lesser God if this is so | |
| We might as well discard it all without hope if it's so. I hold | |
| and defend with all my heart, soul, mind and might the absolute | |
| invincibility, perfection, omnipresence and all-power of Love. | |
| Jesus said be perfect as God is perfect. We can be none | |
| other actually. | |
| Yes, it has all to do as to what we know or believe about God. | |
| . . . . | |
| para . . . . | |
| #Post#: 12141-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Justaname Date: May 8, 2016, 11:28 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [size=14pt]I just got here, but really off to bed. So the usual | |
| fuzzy late night brain thing going on. | |
| I agree Kerry, God did not give us a 'gift of love'..He just | |
| said, LOVE. | |
| On the flip side it is something which is never really discussed | |
| ( without people getting annoyed) Not many are honest but just | |
| trot out platitudes. | |
| Did Jesus love everybody? Did He love them when He tipped up | |
| the money lenders tables? | |
| I have a good friend of many years...I really like her a lot, I | |
| can't say that I "love" her. | |
| I can honestly say I do not love everyone. Some people irritate | |
| me. Many will say- " I love everyone, but I don't like | |
| everyone." But I don't love everybody, I think those people of | |
| just using a religious cop out. | |
| Then we come down the Jesus and Peter...lovest thou Me. And | |
| Peter saying, "Yes I like you." | |
| It is a weighty matter...too deep for me at 10.30pm!! | |
| LOL/size] | |
| #Post#: 12142-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: May 9, 2016, 9:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Kerry link=topic=1083.msg12138#msg12138 | |
| date=1462694233] | |
| I ask because I ran into this question again just tonight | |
| browsing the internet -- it's on another forum and the rules | |
| here forbid saying where it is, and perhaps it doesn't matter | |
| where it is. (I can send you a link in a PM if you want to | |
| know.) The poster mentions praying for the "gift of love." I | |
| can't fathom it. | |
| I believe God gave us all the ability to love others. In that | |
| way, you could call it a gift the way you can call life itself a | |
| gift; and then it's our choice if we love or not. I can think | |
| of no place in the Bible that says the ability to love others is | |
| a gift God gives us -- meaning if God didn't give us that gift, | |
| then we can't love others. The list of of the "gifts of the | |
| Spirit" do not include charity or love. I think that's right. | |
| Even people who lack the Holy Spirit can choose to love if they | |
| want to. If God is Love and if we are all made in His image | |
| and likeness, that means to me we all also have the potential to | |
| love. | |
| So if I am right, where does this idea of the ability to love | |
| others being a gift from God come from? Everyone already has | |
| this ability. I don't see the need to pray for a gift when we | |
| already can love if we so choose. It seems to me that someone | |
| who is thinking like this may be excusing his own lack of | |
| expressing love and praying for God to do something about it. | |
| Or does the person who thinks like this have an erroneous idea | |
| about what he himself is and thus also about what God is too? | |
| I can think of everything else being gifts from God -- down to | |
| the air we breath even and the sun that shines -- and our minds, | |
| bodies and souls. Artistic talents are gifts from God, I | |
| think. Everything we can do is the result of God giving us | |
| the ability to do it; and if He doesn't give us a particular | |
| gift, there's nothing we do about it unless He gives it to us. | |
| Everything except love -- we can all do that. Why pray for it | |
| then? I don't understand. | |
| [/quote] | |
| I wonder, Kerry, if the person in that other web site is | |
| thinking about the "gift of love" is actually a speaking of | |
| shared love, a mutuality that is a gift from God. | |
| I would agree with you that to love is already something that is | |
| given to us. We can choose to love another though it may not be | |
| reciprocated or is not considered rational by others or by the | |
| person being loved. I wonder if the poster on that other web | |
| site is angry or disappointed in the disappointment of love that | |
| does not become shared. This love, though it is unshared, can | |
| become a gift from God if it is taken rightly. We grow in the | |
| meaning of love. It makes us to become what we are to be in | |
| God's love. We love and we pray, but love's meaning would seem | |
| to occur in the act of love, and that prayer is merely the | |
| voicing of the petition and thankfulness to God concerning the | |
| meaning of that love. | |
| I agree with your puzzlement at what the person had posted on | |
| that web site regarding the "gift of love". | |
| Peace be with you! | |
| #Post#: 12143-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Kerry Date: May 10, 2016, 5:53 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=paralambano link=topic=1083.msg12139#msg12139 | |
| date=1462707999] | |
| People think it's a gift when they're feeling negative or empty. | |
| This ability is always there awaiting uncovering.[/quote] | |
| I think it's connected to at least four parables: The treasure | |
| in the field, the pearl of great price, the lost coin, and the | |
| mustard seed. | |
| [quote]It takes work to reject lies and affirm truth. | |
| We have always been the perfect reflection of God. | |
| He doesn't make Pintos. It only seems that He does. | |
| Every kingdom including heaven divided falls. | |
| Either make the whole tree rotten and its fruit bad or make it | |
| good and its fruit good. | |
| What say you?[/quote] | |
| Thus the need to prune off the "bad" branches and to preserve | |
| and encourage what is good and productive. I think this | |
| explains Moses' statement that "man is a tree." | |
| Deuteronomy 20:19 When thou shalt besiege a city a long time, in | |
| making war against it to take it, thou shalt not destroy the | |
| trees thereof by forcing an axe against them: for thou mayest | |
| eat of them, and thou shalt not cut them down (for [s]the tree | |
| of the field is man's life[/s]<man is a tree of the field) to | |
| employ them in the siege: | |
| 20 Only the trees which thou knowest that they be not trees for | |
| meat, thou shalt destroy and cut them down; and thou shalt build | |
| bulwarks against the city that maketh war with thee, until it be | |
| subdued. | |
| A parallel is being made between the wise way to conduct a war | |
| and the wise way to deal with ourselves in the ways we are like | |
| trees -- and I'd say this world does resemble a battle field | |
| with the strange requirement that we subdue ourselves. | |
| Proverbs 16:32 He that is slow to anger is better than the | |
| mighty; and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a | |
| city. | |
| [quote]I say it is impossible for a good and perfect tree as | |
| Jesus claimed Love to be to | |
| to produce actual failures. This goes against rev. We are | |
| children of a lesser God if this is so[/quote] | |
| Psalm 91 comes to mind. Whatever the appearances are and | |
| whatever our imaginations may tell us is true, we should keep | |
| in mind the truth about ourselves which is what tells us we can | |
| rely completely on God. | |
| Psalm 91:1He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High | |
| shall abide under the shadow <tsel> of the Almighty. | |
| Surely this tsel or "shadow" has something to do with how we | |
| were made when Genesis 1:26 reads tselem or "image." | |
| [quote]We might as well discard it all without hope if it's so. | |
| I hold and defend with all my heart, soul, mind and might the | |
| absolute invincibility, perfection, omnipresence and all-power | |
| of Love.[/quote] | |
| And if you should fall, there is nothing to fear: The angels | |
| will bear you up. Back to Psalm 91: | |
| 9 Because thou hast made the Lord, which is my refuge, even the | |
| most High, thy habitation; | |
| 10 There shall no evil befall thee, neither shall any plague | |
| come nigh thy dwelling. | |
| 11 For he shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee | |
| in all thy ways. | |
| 12 They shall bear thee up in their hands, lest thou dash thy | |
| foot against a stone. | |
| [quote]Jesus said be perfect as God is perfect. We can be none | |
| other actually. | |
| Yes, it has all to do as to what we know or believe about God. | |
| . . . .[/quote] | |
| In a way that often seems strange to me, the whole world | |
| already looks perfect -- or on its way to it. The whole earth | |
| sometimes reminds me of a grape growing and maturing, ripening | |
| on a vine. It may seem something is wrong, but there's not | |
| really. | |
| #Post#: 12144-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Kerry Date: May 10, 2016, 6:21 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Justaname link=topic=1083.msg12141#msg12141 | |
| date=1462768117] | |
| I just got here, but really off to bed. So the usual fuzzy late | |
| night brain thing going on. | |
| I agree Kerry, God did not give us a 'gift of love'..He just | |
| said, LOVE.[/quote] | |
| Yes, and I'd say God does not ask the impossible from us. | |
| [quote]On the flip side it is something which is never really | |
| discussed ( without people getting annoyed) Not many are honest | |
| but just trot out platitudes. | |
| Did Jesus love everybody? Did He love them when He tipped up | |
| the money lenders tables?[/quote] | |
| I think that was a loving thing to do. Real love sometimes | |
| ruffles some feathers. Real love requires sometimes that a | |
| foot be amputated. It may seem kinder to give someone with a | |
| gangrene in his foot pain pills and sympathy -- but is that | |
| really loving when the gangrene could spread and maybe kill him? | |
| [quote]I have a good friend of many years...I really like her a | |
| lot, I can't say that I "love" her. [/quote]That may depend on | |
| how we define love. I don't think love always means lots of | |
| warm cuddly feelings. I think it does mean we wish people the | |
| best and we act in ways that don't create problems for them that | |
| they don't need. | |
| Does love your neighbour as yourself mean swapping spouses from | |
| time to time? Does it mean a man should love his neighbor's | |
| wife the way he loves his own? Of course not. I think it | |
| means, "If you want to be happy and secure in your own marriage, | |
| don't undermine your neighbor's." So I don't see the warm | |
| cuddly feelings as being the only form of love -- sometimes true | |
| love means keeping those warm cuddly feelings in check if they | |
| would damage other people or ourselves. | |
| You know how young girls can get into predicaments by saying, | |
| "But I love him." The guy often doesn't care about her very | |
| much at all; but the young girl thinks it must be real love if | |
| she has such wonderful feelings. | |
| [quote]I can honestly say I do not love everyone. Some people | |
| irritate me. Many will say- " I love everyone, but I don't like | |
| everyone." But I don't love everybody, I think those people of | |
| just using a religious cop out.[/quote] | |
| I don't know what they mean when they say that. | |
| I think it's natural to be irritated by some people. If people | |
| are irritating, you'd be a little crazy to be making merry about | |
| it. When people irritate me, I take that as a signal it's | |
| better not to be around them if I can help it. | |
| That may sound selfish; but shouldn't irritating people learn | |
| from life? If people avoid them, maybe they'll learn to stop | |
| being so irritating. We read in the Bible that God avoids some | |
| people; and God is love. Yes, I think sometimes the truly | |
| loving thing to do is to let people alone -- and when we feel | |
| irritated, sometimes it might be us and sometimes it might be | |
| them. I think it's wrong to be too kind to people when they | |
| are misbehaving. We see parents rearing children like that | |
| sometimes; and the poor children grow up as monsters, unprepared | |
| for the world when mommy and daddy die and can't shelter them | |
| anymore. Some parents that do that are afraid of disciplining | |
| their children -- because they want the "love" and "approval" of | |
| their children. | |
| Is that love? Is it love to want the love and approval of | |
| others so much that we're willing to play favorites and to | |
| excuse bad behavior in others? I used to be like that. I could | |
| excuse and tolerate almost anything . . . if I thought I could | |
| get others to like me by doing it. One day, I saw I was being | |
| selfish -- and had fooled myself into thinking I was so patient, | |
| kind, tolerant and forgiving. No, I was just being selfish and | |
| insecure. Those people could have done better; but I was | |
| telling them it was okay if they were second or third rate. | |
| And that also made me feel good about myself because I could | |
| feel superior to them. | |
| #Post#: 12145-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Kerry Date: May 10, 2016, 6:45 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=HOLLAND link=topic=1083.msg12142#msg12142 | |
| date=1462848518] | |
| I wonder, Kerry, if the person in that other web site is | |
| thinking about the "gift of love" is actually a speaking of | |
| shared love, a mutuality that is a gift from God.[/quote]Hard to | |
| say. He (if it is a man) also wrote that he loved Jesus more | |
| than anyone else; and that left me scratching my head over what | |
| he meant. | |
| [quote]I would agree with you that to love is already something | |
| that is given to us. We can choose to love another though it | |
| may not be reciprocated or is not considered rational by others | |
| or by the person being loved. [/quote] | |
| People sometimes talk about the "age of accountability" as if | |
| children aren't making decisions that may impact them the rest | |
| of their lives. I believe children are born, most children | |
| anyway, with a nature that is loving. What happens if a child | |
| is expressing that loving nature and gets malevolence back? | |
| Perhaps the most dangerous decision a child can make is to say | |
| to himself, "I was wrong to care about that person. I won't | |
| love others unless I am sure they love me first." | |
| [quote]I wonder if the poster on that other web site is angry or | |
| disappointed in the disappointment of love that does not become | |
| shared.[/quote]I wondered the same thing.[quote] This love, | |
| though it is unshared, can become a gift from God if it is taken | |
| rightly. We grow in the meaning of love. It makes us to become | |
| what we are to be in God's love. We love and we pray, but | |
| love's meaning would seem to occur in the act of love, and that | |
| prayer is merely the voicing of the petition and thankfulness to | |
| God concerning the meaning of that love.[/quote] | |
| Is the motive completely pure if we are upset when we do some | |
| act of kindness for him and he does not reciprocate? Doesn't | |
| that suggest our real motive was not the purest form of love? | |
| I figure if you care about others, some will reciprocate and | |
| some won't. That's not something I can control --it's up to | |
| them -- and my decision to care about others can't be based on | |
| what I expect back. | |
| Matthew 6:3 But when thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know | |
| what thy right hand doeth: | |
| This is sound psychology to me. If we can learn how to do good | |
| without considering what we expect back, we've learned the joy | |
| of giving for the sake of giving. If we give expecting | |
| something back, almost for sure we'll wind up disappointed or | |
| angry with some people. | |
| Still there is also the commandment not to toss pearls to the | |
| swine -- meaning if you perceive trying to do good for someone | |
| is only going to make him a worse person by inflaming him or | |
| weakening him, don't do it. If you are kind to someone, and | |
| he repays you with meanness, by all means stop wasting your time | |
| and energy and love. There are some people who think if you | |
| are being kind, it means you are weak and trying to placate them | |
| -- the kinder you are to them, the more they think they can walk | |
| all over you. I think it's a mistake to show kindness to them. | |
| They are equating love with weakness -- an error that should | |
| not be encourage in them. | |
| #Post#: 12146-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: paralambano Date: May 10, 2016, 11:11 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Kerry - | |
| [quote]It may seem something is wrong, but there's not really. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Yes. Seem. | |
| [quote]Whatever the appearances are and whatever our | |
| imaginations may tell us is true, we should keep in mind the | |
| truth about ourselves which is what tells us we can rely | |
| completely on God.[/quote] | |
| Yes. Bottom line isn't it? I suppose the keeping in mind is | |
| another way of saying praying unceasingly, no? I suppose we | |
| could also say that Truth is invincible and falsehood vanishes | |
| sooner or later. It's never that darkness overwhelms Light when | |
| the door between them opens since evil/darkness is actually | |
| nothing. | |
| [quote]A parallel is being made between the wise way to conduct | |
| a war and the wise way to deal with ourselves in the ways we are | |
| like trees -- and I'd say this world does resemble a battle | |
| field with the strange requirement that we subdue ourselves. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Not as strange as we might think since this world is held in our | |
| consciousness/thought. Change consciousness and "place" and | |
| experience(s) change. And back of it God's consciousness | |
| omnipresent which is the only actual One. You referred to it | |
| some time ago as the conduit of the vine. We either have the | |
| hypothetical dual mind (good/evil thoughts) we foolishly think | |
| is real or the only real Mind (of Christ) (our salvation) - the | |
| eternal, everlasting consciousness of God/Good where everything | |
| that is Good and True exists. | |
| The Orthodox have this hymn for the Feast of the Nativity: | |
| Make ready, O Bethlehem, for Eden hath been opened for all. | |
| Prepare, O Ephratha, for the tree of life hath blossomed forth | |
| in the cave from the Virgin; for her womb did appear as a | |
| spiritual paradise in which is planted the divine Plant, whereof | |
| eating we shall live and not die as did Adam. Christ shall be | |
| born, raising the image that fell of old. | |
| You know, the language is metaphorical. Trees yes can represent | |
| people. Also Wisdom (Proverbs 3:something). In the hymn, Christ. | |
| I add (Truth). In kabbalah, man and sephirot but as the image of | |
| God as I see it. Always back to the Holy Good | |
| Causation/Premogenitor. This is where we must start and defend - | |
| the omnipresent perfection and eternal Good of God/Love in every | |
| case. Thus, I see the Tree of Life as being none other than | |
| God/Spirit. | |
| God is not the author of evil. Impossible for Him to be, do, | |
| commission. | |
| para . . . . | |
| #Post#: 12153-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: Kerry Date: May 12, 2016, 6:21 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=paralambano link=topic=1083.msg12146#msg12146 | |
| date=1462896701] | |
| Yes. Bottom line isn't it? I suppose the keeping in mind is | |
| another way of saying praying unceasingly, no?[/quote]Sorry to | |
| be so tardy in responding; but I haven't forgotten you. I never | |
| thought of that verse that way; but when I did, it sounded right | |
| to me. | |
| Every thing which is exists within the Unity of God. In Him, we | |
| live, move and have our being. The hierarchy of existence is | |
| also like a tree to me; and everything is meant somehow to fit | |
| into that tree. An analogy of a car might be appropriate too. | |
| How does a bolt on the wheel of a car fit into the unity which | |
| is the car? If we are realistic, we will not miss the | |
| relationships of the bolt to the wheel to the axle, to the drive | |
| mechanism, and so on. | |
| Thus in our relationships to everything else, we should be | |
| mindful of God, praying without ceasing. If we fail to do that, | |
| we are not being mindful of how things are meant to fit into the | |
| totality of all that is. I believe if we have wrong concepts | |
| about that "reality" we call the physical world, we will have | |
| wrong ideas about God and ourselves and vice versa. | |
| My opinion (strong one too) is that what passes for science | |
| today is often a strong materialistic bias that posits, without | |
| any evidence whatsoever, that nothing non-physical exists. | |
| Certainly I am in favor of searching for physical causes before | |
| positing any non-physical causes -- certainly -- but it does not | |
| strike me as "scientific" to believe that nothing non-physical | |
| exists. | |
| [quote]I suppose we could also say that Truth is invincible and | |
| falsehood vanishes sooner or later. It's never that darkness | |
| overwhelms Light when the door between them opens since | |
| evil/darkness is actually nothing.[/quote] | |
| Yes, I see what you mean here and agree; yet in another way in | |
| certain situations, lies persist and truth disappears. If we | |
| have a mistaken idea about what is causing a rattle in our car, | |
| the rattle will persist as long as the lie does. Once we | |
| realize the truth about the rattle and fix the problem, the | |
| problem goes away -- and we stop "thinking" about it. I don't | |
| know if "the truth" can be said to be a product of the mind | |
| even. Perhaps it is, but when the person himself, the spirit, | |
| perceives the truth, he is aware of reality -- can observe it | |
| without cringing -- and knows the truth without using logic. | |
| Now again, I'm all in favor of logic -- but generally speak not | |
| to establish truth. Logic is more useful in telling us what | |
| can't be true. Logic can wake us up, "You can see that isn't | |
| right. Stop trying to grasp reality by endless cogitation and | |
| observe it -- be aware of it and of yourself." Certainly | |
| Peter did not arrive at his break-through "truth" by cogitating | |
| when Jesus asked who am I? | |
| [quote]Not as strange as we might think since this world is held | |
| in our consciousness/thought. Change consciousness and "place" | |
| and experience(s) change. [/quote]As a teen, I was struck by how | |
| children in general grew up and adopted the religion of their | |
| parents. That put me in an awkward spot -- somewhat -- perhaps | |
| though it was advantageous. I knew I could not justify my own | |
| set of beliefs by telling myself they had to be right because | |
| they were what my parents and others around me believed. | |
| [quote]And back of it God's consciousness omnipresent which is | |
| the only actual One. You referred to it some time ago as the | |
| conduit of the vine. We either have the hypothetical dual mind | |
| (good/evil thoughts) we foolishly think is real or the only real | |
| Mind (of Christ) (our salvation) - the eternal, everlasting | |
| consciousness of God/Good where everything that is Good and True | |
| exists.[/quote]May I ask your take on this verse? | |
| 1 Corinthians 2:16 For who hath known the mind of the Lord, that | |
| he may instruct him? but we have the mind of Christ. | |
| It seems to me that there is a difference of some sort (perhaps | |
| in roles?) between the "mind of God" and the "mind of Christ" | |
| with the mind of Christ acting as intermediary between the mind | |
| of God and the minds of men when they first begin to seek God. | |
| [quote]The Orthodox have this hymn for the Feast of the | |
| Nativity: | |
| Make ready, O Bethlehem, for Eden hath been opened for all. | |
| Prepare, O Ephratha, for the tree of life hath blossomed forth | |
| in the cave from the Virgin; for her womb did appear as a | |
| spiritual paradise in which is planted the divine Plant, whereof | |
| eating we shall live and not die as did Adam. Christ shall be | |
| born, raising the image that fell of old. | |
| You know, the language is metaphorical. Trees yes can represent | |
| people. Also Wisdom (Proverbs 3:something). In the hymn, Christ. | |
| I add (Truth). In kabbalah, man and sephirot but as the image of | |
| God as I see it. Always back to the Holy Good | |
| Causation/Premogenitor. This is where we must start and defend - | |
| the omnipresent perfection and eternal Good of God/Love in every | |
| case. Thus, I see the Tree of Life as being none other than | |
| God/Spirit.[/quote]I would phrase it differently saying, the | |
| Tree of Life is all that which is animated by the Spirit. | |
| [quote]God is not the author of evil. Impossible for Him to be, | |
| do, commission.[/quote] | |
| I believe this must be so since the commandment to love God | |
| would be impossible to obey if believe God could be the author | |
| of evil. I also believe that the commandment contains a | |
| concealed doctrine that God is worthy of our Love, and we ought | |
| not to imagine otherwise. If anyone has ideas which make him | |
| hate God or doubt His goodness, he should either dismiss them as | |
| impossible or say to himself he does not know and will not draw | |
| premature conclusions based on ignorance. | |
| The book of Job has a passage which I think deals with this when | |
| Elihu wants Job to pay attention and find relief: | |
| Job 33:31 Mark well, O Job, hearken unto me: hold thy peace, and | |
| I will speak. | |
| 32 If thou hast anything to say, answer me: speak, for I desire | |
| to justify thee. | |
| 33 If not, hearken unto me: hold thy peace, and I shall teach | |
| thee wisdom. | |
| I think it is by justifying God we become justified ourselves. | |
| #Post#: 12155-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Is the ability to love others a "gift" from God? | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: May 13, 2016, 11:34 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Maybe, Kerry, the poster on the other forum was thinking of love | |
| as a spiritual gift, such as in Galatians 5:22-25 (ESV): | |
| 22 But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, | |
| kindness, goodness, faithfulness, 23 gentleness, self-control; | |
| against such things there is no law. 24 And those who belong to | |
| Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and | |
| desires. | |
| 25 If we live by the Spirit, let us also keep in step with the | |
| Spirit. | |
| In this respect, as a spiritual gift, love would serve as a | |
| theological virtue, a forming of the new creation that we find | |
| in Christ, that makes our spiritual walk and relationship with | |
| God and with others possible. | |
| Maybe, considered as a gift, love has nothing to do with purely | |
| fleshly love as I had previously considered in my prior posting. | |
| Peace be with you! | |
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