*See the chapter links embedded in the video description to navigate this audiobook.* *Do you care to help in this ministry?* www.anekopress.org/donate *Buy the book on Amazon:* amzn.to/44n2H3x *Buy the book on ChristianBook:* bit.ly/4ctXNGx
Thank you my brother in the LORD Jesus, I so much appreciate your ministry your book's, your audiobooks, your prison ministry, these things that the LORD has given you to do . I pray that GOD'S presence and HIS peace be always upon you, I pray this in the LORD Jesus Christ's Name. Hallelujah!
Me as a Christian I can’t go to war to kill another man who us made in the image of God as well. Kill to be rewarded? Even if I can expect being rewarded by the Queen or now King I wouldn’t go to kill for that. I wouldn’t feel any joy because I have killed even being forced by the government. Killing in war has nothing to do with honor it’s murder in commissioned by the government for their ideologies. Instead I go and preach the gospel of salvation.
Thanks for your comment Oliver. For me, I feel a lot the same. I can't imagine killing someone, in the military or outside of the military. Still, there was a time when I read the account in Acts of Peter being shown in a vision that he was to go to a Gentile Centurian and to receive him because God received him, and it occurred to me that a Centurian was a military man. Peter's initial inclination was to not go, but God persisted. And as we all know, he did go, and this man and his whole house believed, were baptized, and received the Holy Spirit. And Peter didn't rebuke him for his "job," or tell him he needs to quit. Not only that, Jesus actually commended a different Centurian and said he had more faith than anyone else in Israel. With other situations in scripture, Jesus always rebuked sin, for their sake and also ours as readers. With something we may think to be extremely important, Jesus didn't rebuke the Centurian for. Since God doesn't prohibit killing (and actually directed it in the OT, even after the ten commandments were given), and because there will also be an army at the end (Revelation), I can't help but think that we have to be careful to not go further than scripture in our theology. The risk for us from our backgrounds is for us to not receive others whom God receives. We essentially reject other parts of the body of Christ, and say we have no need of them, when in fact we may actually need them. Regarding non-resistance, the situations and examples Jesus gave were always personal. Meaning, if someone takes something of mine, I'm supposed to let him have it, and in fact, give him more. Do you think there can be a difference between personal non-resistance, and larger-picture situations such as wars? Again, I'm not for war, but for the sake of God's people, some wars are necessary (as we see in the OT). That is how scripture seems to divide the issue, personal non-resistance being different than military operations. I wonder if we can choose to abstain from being part of the military (which is where both of us seem to be), and still accept those who go. Not that we personally have to go, but still to have room in our theology for those who do?
*See the chapter links embedded in the video description to navigate this audiobook.*
*Do you care to help in this ministry?* www.anekopress.org/donate
*Buy the book on Amazon:* amzn.to/44n2H3x
*Buy the book on ChristianBook:* bit.ly/4ctXNGx
Thank you! ❤
May the Lord bless everyone involved in this ministry! 🙏
You are very welcome. All praises to the Lord...
What a great book.
Amen.- "Praise God For This Awesome Incredible Great Book," I Am Doing A Sermon On This "SUBJECT FOR THE BODY OF CHRIST," To God Be All The Glory!"
Thank You All And May God Continue To Smile On You All.
Found this channel by accident at 3 am unable to sleep, what great peace!! THANK you so very much, the reader made each word so easy to understand!❤
All praises to the Lord!
Good job
Fabulous read! I’ll need to listen again; so much rich material. Wow!
Bookmark: 1:07:00
Thank you for sharing the jewel ❤
This is wonderful. I'll have to go back and take each section, alone. :D. Bite-sized to better HEED!
Grace Ambassador and Les Feldick is really good too!!!
Thank you my brother in the LORD Jesus, I so much appreciate your ministry your book's, your audiobooks, your prison ministry, these things that the LORD has given you to do . I pray that GOD'S presence and HIS peace be always upon you, I pray this in the LORD Jesus Christ's Name. Hallelujah!
Thank you, Gary! All for the Lord Jesus Christ, may his name be praised among all people.
✝️👑🪽
very good
These books are truly a blessing to me.
Your uploading of this master peace is greatly appreciated.
You are very welcome, friend. The Lord is great, and greatly to be praised! (Ps. 48:1)
I know that iam in the ❤ of 🌹GOD🌹💐💙💚🌼💛💘
Me as a Christian I can’t go to war to kill another man who us made in the image of God as well. Kill to be rewarded? Even if I can expect being rewarded by the Queen or now King I wouldn’t go to kill for that. I wouldn’t feel any joy because I have killed even being forced by the government. Killing in war has nothing to do with honor it’s murder in commissioned by the government for their ideologies. Instead I go and preach the gospel of salvation.
Thanks for your comment Oliver. For me, I feel a lot the same. I can't imagine killing someone, in the military or outside of the military. Still, there was a time when I read the account in Acts of Peter being shown in a vision that he was to go to a Gentile Centurian and to receive him because God received him, and it occurred to me that a Centurian was a military man. Peter's initial inclination was to not go, but God persisted. And as we all know, he did go, and this man and his whole house believed, were baptized, and received the Holy Spirit. And Peter didn't rebuke him for his "job," or tell him he needs to quit. Not only that, Jesus actually commended a different Centurian and said he had more faith than anyone else in Israel. With other situations in scripture, Jesus always rebuked sin, for their sake and also ours as readers. With something we may think to be extremely important, Jesus didn't rebuke the Centurian for. Since God doesn't prohibit killing (and actually directed it in the OT, even after the ten commandments were given), and because there will also be an army at the end (Revelation), I can't help but think that we have to be careful to not go further than scripture in our theology.
The risk for us from our backgrounds is for us to not receive others whom God receives. We essentially reject other parts of the body of Christ, and say we have no need of them, when in fact we may actually need them.
Regarding non-resistance, the situations and examples Jesus gave were always personal. Meaning, if someone takes something of mine, I'm supposed to let him have it, and in fact, give him more. Do you think there can be a difference between personal non-resistance, and larger-picture situations such as wars? Again, I'm not for war, but for the sake of God's people, some wars are necessary (as we see in the OT). That is how scripture seems to divide the issue, personal non-resistance being different than military operations.
I wonder if we can choose to abstain from being part of the military (which is where both of us seem to be), and still accept those who go. Not that we personally have to go, but still to have room in our theology for those who do?
Thanks!
Thank you for your support!