To: Houghton M.
So the man who owed all those talents and was forgiven still owed those talents? I thought the king said they were square. Works does become involved at the end, when he refuses to forgive another man for his pithy debt. I figured that the grace granted to him by the king should have prompted him to forgive the man out of pure joy of his own forgiveness, not as something he owed to the king.
19 posted on
06/02/2009 7:40:22 AM PDT by
In veno, veritas
(Please identify my Ad Hominem attacks. I should be debating ideas.)
To: In veno, veritas
For me the real point here is not the validity of what we teach. It’s that this article is based on a gross and easily avoidable misconception about what we teach. The article shows no real concern for the truth.
24 posted on
06/02/2009 7:44:01 AM PDT by
Mad Dawg
(Oh Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee.)
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