FadedOne wrote:hmm....my pastor told that story at church last year. I'd be curious to know much of it is true or if it's just one of those warm/fuzzy things.
Also, I had seen a story told on some Chick tract a long time ago where instead you have a church in one South American plagued with terrorism, and naturally, the terrorists burst in and line the believers on one side of the wall and the non-believers on the other in a similar fashion, planning on killing all the believers to destroy the church, but the Pastor and his wife boldly accept their death without fear on the promise of heaven, and the terrorists instead decide to mow down the others for 'not believing in anything'. Since I'll be attending Asbury College in the fall, perhaps I'll have the chance to hear the story about what happened there.shooraijin wrote:I do think it is important to know whether a story is true or false before reporting it, even if the moral of the story is good. A story of God's grace that in that particular case is fictional, but gets reported as fact, may be uplifting temporarily to Christians who read it but is embarrassing when an unbeliever reads it who may already wonder if this Jesus guy is just a crock. If he or she is reading obvious baloney, that's a very poor witness (especially if that person winds up of the opinion that Christianity can't even stand up to the smallest scrutiny -- "look at how accurate their alleged true stories are").
I think it would be very important to justify this with a reference or a person, rather than simply state it as fact, because we have other people reading this site who may not be as firm in their faith (if at all).
Fictional stories about God's love are also wonderful, but should be clearly labeled as fiction.
shooraijin wrote:I do think it is important to know whether a story is true or false before reporting it, even if the moral of the story is good. A story of God's grace that in that particular case is fictional, but gets reported as fact, may be uplifting temporarily to Christians who read it but is embarrassing when an unbeliever reads it who may already wonder if this Jesus guy is just a crock. If he or she is reading obvious baloney, that's a very poor witness (especially if that person winds up of the opinion that Christianity can't even stand up to the smallest scrutiny -- "look at how accurate their alleged true stories are").
I think it would be very important to justify this with a reference or a person, rather than simply state it as fact, because we have other people reading this site who may not be as firm in their faith (if at all).
Fictional stories about God's love are also wonderful, but should be clearly labeled as fiction.
agasfas wrote:My biggest problem with the story is the basic premise. Although, it is uplifting to a point... if the Russian guards were wanting to kill the christians so much, then why would the guard be so moved by the little girl's devotion that he starts killing the people who denied Jesus instead? Doesn't seem to fit right...
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