In Post #71 on Page 8, popsthebuilder said [emphasis added]:
I would request of popsthebuilder, counsel him even, not to act precipitously should the same feeling overtake him again.
I’m sure he knows already that it is a normal human trait to resist having one’s mind changed, irrespective of the amount and quality of relevant evidence that is presented – evidence that should convince people to do so.
That is why Baptists remain Baptists, Anglicans remain Anglicans, Roman Catholics remain Roman Catholics, and Lutherans remain Lutherans, for instance.
It is a characteristic of Fallen Man to adopt a stance for whatever reason, then defend that stance to the death as it were, using whatever weapons come to hand, whether logical or illogical, honest or dishonest, as the situation requires. Courtroom lawyers are an extreme, but by no means isolated, example of this general rule.
That being the case, what should be the aim of people like popsthebuilder, seeing that convincing others is not a practical proposition?
I suggest that the only sensible objective for them is to bear witness to the truth as they see it, and leave the staunch denominationalists without excuse if they happen to reject a truth of God, or maybe two, or three, or more, when those truths are presented.
I further suggest that popsthebuilder et al be open to adjusting their views in the light of Scripture when viewed in its proper context. I submit that it is only by doing so that we can understand God’s real message to us, especially as directly expressed by Jesus, by the Gospel writers, and by the writers of the “epistles”. (It is understood that there is some overlap in those categories.)
I don’t think it inappropriate to encourage popsthebuilder to continue to bear witness to the truth as he sees it, and also to be sensitive to the true context of each section of God’s Holy Revelation as he reads it, be it in his own personal study, or as presented by others in this forum.