Puritan wrote:I hope I don't sound like I am condemning you, for I am as guilty of this as you are, but I find that remembering this helps me immensely.
None taken. Without a doubt the problem I have relies on the very things that you have mentioned. When I started getting into Christianity, very rarely have I really looked upon my own sins as a reflection of other people. For some reason, it just never registered to me that I am still among those who are sinners, and that I too need to constantly seek the Lord for assistance in my life.
When one realizes the full effect all of this sin is having upon the world and the self, it will indeed cause one grief that so many people don't care, that they will spend their lives forging Hell, and some of them will indeed find their desired fate there. "
GhostntheNet: I applaud your response as it shows you are indeed knowledgeable and well-versed in the theological area, which is something I lack as a newly born Christian. Realizing that society as a whole doesn't hold the Lord in good terms, I agree with you that man is able to forge their own Hell. It is something I see in the news and media everyday, as well as everytime I walk out of the house, drive, or go to work. Everybody is held into sin like Puritan mentioned, and that many people on this planet would rather choose to live among sin rather than against it. There is no denying the premises that you stated in your posting.
However, the bulk of my pessimism (although perhaps I wasn't clear in the opening post) lies in my denial of knowing that each individual has the potential to change their state of sin. Rather than to face that fact in my everyday life, it's caused me to even question people I have never even met, assuming that the next person I'll meet is a casual sinner and not worthy of speaking to, or debating with. Surely you do realize that man, while fallible, has the potential at one point in his life to look sin in the eye and turn away from it. This is something that I have not considered early on as a Christian, and I still manage to hold some fragments of that mindset to heart. In one way it's pride and in another the inability to look at my own sins and reflect it upon other people. It's also compromised my well-being as a functional asset of our Lord, simply turning away from another person's sins, rather than to challenge them.