Tag Archives: savior

If you go to Hell by not accepting Jesus as the Lord and savior…?

what happened to all the people who lived and died before Jesus was born. Do they get a free pass? What about the Ethiopians who have little to no chance of learning about christianity, being that they devote all their time and energy to trying to get a morsel of food. Are they doomed to Hell simply because they live in the wrong part of the world. What about American Indians before the white man settled here. They never had a chance of learning of Christianity. Were they domed as well.
Hey Slim
Do you even know what the word ignorant means? Your answer has to be one of the dumbest ones I have ever read. You don’t think Ethiopians are starving? You don’t think thier life revolves around food. They go days without eating. You my friend are the ignorant one.
Curious Girl
I do not see where I answered my own question. I do see where you ask a question while trying to answer my question. No one can explain to me what happened to the American Indians who never heard of Christianity, or any other people on this earth that lived in remote parts that never even heard of Jesus or Christianity. What will happen to these people?

Why do people think being Pentecostal is wrong?

Pentecostals believe that one must be saved by believing in Jesus as Lord and Savior for the forgiveness of sins and to be made acceptable to God. Being descended from Methodism and the Methodist Holiness Movement, Pentecostal soteriology is mostly Arminian rather than Calvinian, believing that the ability to believe in Jesus is a power of the human free will.

Pentecostals believe in water baptism as an outward sign of conversion, and that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is a distinct spiritual experience that all who have believed in Jesus should receive. To be more precise, the Baptism in the Holy Spirit is a separate and distinct “second grace” received in a personal subjective and often emotional religious experience. All classical Pentecostals believe that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is always accompanied initially by the outward evidence of speaking in tongues. It is considered a liberalizing tendency to teach contrary to this historic position. This is a major difference between Pentecostal and Charismatic Christians, who believe that a Christian who is baptized in the Holy Spirit may exhibit physical signs, including but not necessarily including speaking in tongues, such “being slain in the spirit” where people fall to the ground as if asleep or in convolutions. Most major Pentecostal denominations reject any connection between personal salvation or conversion and the Pentecostal Baptism in the Holy Sprit and teach that it is not necessary to be saved but a gift from God available to all Christians. Many early Pentecostals believed that the revival of the gifts of the spirit were a sign from God of the latter rain, a period of restoration before the end of the age and the coming millennial reign of Christ. Traditional Protestants believe that one is baptized with or in the Holy Spirit upon Regeneration, the work of the Holy Spirit that enables faith and belief in the unbelieving heart. They most often reject such concepts as a “second grace” though not rejecting the idea of periodic or even weekly renewal in the sacraments.

Pentecostals also typically believe that the Bible has definitive authority in matters of faith like most other evangelicals.

Would you humble yourself enough to wash the Master’s feet?

In an upstairs room a parable is just about to come alive; and while they bicker about who is best, with a painful glance He’ll silently rise; their Savior’s servant must show them how through the will of the water and the tenderness of the “towel.” The call is to community, the improverished power that sets the soul free. In humility you take the vow that day after day you must take up the basin and the towel. In any ordinary place; in any ordinary day, the parable can live again when one will kneel and one will yield. Our Savior’s servant will show us how with through the will of the water and the tenderness of the towel. by the fragile bridge of the servant’s vow, we take up the basin and the towel. In Humility we take the vow that day after day we must take up the basin and the towel.

If you go to Hell by not accepting Jesus as the Lord and savior…?

what happened to all the people who lived and died before Jesus was born. Do they get a free pass? What about the Ethiopians who have little to no chance of learning about christianity, being that they devote all their time and energy to trying to get a morsel of food. Are they doomed to Hell simply because they live in the wrong part of the world. What about American Indians before the white man settled here. They never had a chance of learning of Christianity. Were they domed as well.
Hey Slim
Do you even know what the word ignorant means? Your answer has to be one of the dumbest ones I have ever read. You don’t think Ethiopians are starving? You don’t think thier life revolves around food. They go days without eating. You my friend are the ignorant one.
Curious Girl
I do not see where I answered my own question. I do see where you ask a question while trying to answer my question. No one can explain to me what happened to the American Indians who never heard of Christianity, or any other people on this earth that lived in remote parts that never even heard of Jesus or Christianity. What will happen to these people?