I saw this at a stop light the other day when I had a decision weighing on my mind.
5 replies on “U-TURN Allowed”
I’d say not just allows, but encourages. The base concept of forgiveness that people usually bring up is that Hitler could have repented on his death bed (even after trying to kill himself, if it took a few minutes to fully die) and you’d see him in Heaven.
The difficulty is once you change your mind and turn around to not change your mind again and turn back to go with the flow.
interesting that others I showed this to had the same first comment.
Depending on their Christian denomination they may have the same teaching and mindset I do. I’m LCMS, so kinda middle-conservative I’d say. No gay or women priests but women can vote in church meetings (which I think some don’t).
I guess I just put the “turning around” concept with forgiveness and all that it entails.
I have a bit of a unique path. Grew up Catholic and had some issue with the “church” growing up. When my wife and I were searching for a church family, we found a Baptist church. Now I am serving my second term as a Deacon.
Nobody I grew up with would have predicted that.
I also left the Catholic church about 30 years ago. I now belong to a non-denominational Christian church that teaches solely from the Bible. I am so much more fulfilled with what the Bible teaches than I ever was prior to making the change.
5 replies on “U-TURN Allowed”
I’d say not just allows, but encourages. The base concept of forgiveness that people usually bring up is that Hitler could have repented on his death bed (even after trying to kill himself, if it took a few minutes to fully die) and you’d see him in Heaven.
The difficulty is once you change your mind and turn around to not change your mind again and turn back to go with the flow.
interesting that others I showed this to had the same first comment.
Depending on their Christian denomination they may have the same teaching and mindset I do. I’m LCMS, so kinda middle-conservative I’d say. No gay or women priests but women can vote in church meetings (which I think some don’t).
I guess I just put the “turning around” concept with forgiveness and all that it entails.
I have a bit of a unique path. Grew up Catholic and had some issue with the “church” growing up. When my wife and I were searching for a church family, we found a Baptist church. Now I am serving my second term as a Deacon.
Nobody I grew up with would have predicted that.
I also left the Catholic church about 30 years ago. I now belong to a non-denominational Christian church that teaches solely from the Bible. I am so much more fulfilled with what the Bible teaches than I ever was prior to making the change.