Response to post 6963 by Sass,
Why do you feel love and compassion? If nature why doesn't everyone feel it?
Hitler... would you say his nature was to have love and compassion?
So tell me why he murdered so many innocent people? Your feelings of love and compassion are not part of mans nature.
I suggest that my feelings of love and compassion are part of my nature. I quite accept that there are other feelings which are also part of my nature too, not all of which would be regarded as positive towards others. I suggest my feeling of compassion, for instance, is an amalgum of empathy and altruism, fashioned by my culture, my nurture. my rationality and my experience. There are plenty of people who act in response to feelings of love and compassion towards others, I would suggest, and there is no evidence whatever that such people are limited to the religious.
You mention Hitler. I would suggest that any feelings of love and compassion that he may have had were subsumed by other more negative feelings which could well have been a result of his pernicious ideology amongst other influences.
I was referring to the general nature of mankind rather than the singular person.
We may have consciences and those conscience make you feel guilty that causes your compassion- having whilst others have not. But it is not of mans fallen nature to have genuine compassion and love for others.
Even believers do not of their own nature without God have love and compassion in it's true nature.
If you were referring to 'the general nature of mankind' then you should have made that clear..and you didn't. You separated mankind into believers and non believers, giving the unselfish motive only to the believer(Christian). In this, as I have already suggested, I think you are wrong. For me, whatever lies behind any unselfish motive in any individual is there regardless of religion. Furthermore you intimated that non believers necessarily do not act with a sincere wish to help others. Such an inference, I suggest, is entirely without foundation. As regards conscience, as you call it, I see this as a direct result of empathy and altruistic tendencies. Hence, I may well feel guilty towards another individual if I feel I have wronged that person, but such feelings for me are part of my nature, and, as I see it, a result of evolutionary traits that help us to cohere as a highly sophisticated social animal. So, no, the idea that man has a fallen nature which does not allow 'genuine compassion and love for others', I reject entirely. I see no evidence for this at all.
Quote
King James Bible
How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?
We feel guilt too when we realise the truth about Christ.
The truth is every good work we do is by the grace of God.
Quote
For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them.
I hope it makes it a little clearer to you that as believers we are doing that which God has set for us to do.
That of mans nature no one is generally good or truly loving of themselves. That out of conscience we often produce good works whether believer or unbeliever. But it is because of how or conscience allows us to feel.
It is not because we are good of ourselves. Hitler and many like him, show how man can ignore and lose conscience to their own ends..
It was clear enough without the quotations, Sass. I am fully aware that you think that. My point is that a person does not necessarily need any religion in order to show sincere love and compassion, because it is within oneself. Furthermore, an argument can be made that belonging to any religion or ideology runs the risk of following precepts that are divisive and selectively compassionate, encouraging, perhaps, other parts of our nature which are not conducive to the general good.
As, stated many times and this time no different. There is no way without the knowledge of God you can question our love and compassion. For they are simply Gods own love and compassion as I hope the information above explains.
Which I did not do. That is why I said the following:
"I would not presume to question your motives when acting out of love and compassion because I do not know you,"
So that point is redundant. You believe you are following what you call God's own love and compassion. That's your belief. No problem. I simply don't share it.
We are only doing that which our new nature in God has been prepared for. What we know is that the works were already prepared for us by God. It is simply us doing the will of God rather than living by our own nature.
Again, your belief. No problem. I simply don't share it. I prefer to see the individual and make my own judgement as to whether he/she is being loving and compassionate(and that includes myself, of course). I don't really care whether they are religious or non religious, unless their religion/non religion/ideology gets in the way of that person being a caring and compassionate person.