@Mammalia
You really do underestimate me. But I'll play this your way, sure.
*Rubs my leg*
And thank Accius for the handicap.
You really do underestimate me. But I'll play this your way, sure.
*Rubs my leg*
And thank Accius for the handicap.
<Snipped quote by Valiance>
-Arthur- Not sorry, but you can't really argue.
<Snipped quote by Valiance>
But this relies on a false premise--that is, if we can't convince someone to convert, then they are a lost cause. Often, it is not our words that will turn someone to Christ, but the circumstances that they find themselves in. God may use providence to save someone, or he may use punishment or hard times. So if we cannot convert someone, then we must find another way to discourage them, and that may be punishments. Consider these verses:
Romans 13:1-3a: "Let every person be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and those that exist have been instituted by God. Therefore whoever resists the authorities resists what God has appointed, and those who resist will incur judgment. For rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad. ..."
TL;DR: We must be subject to governing authorities, which are sent from God. That is not my point quite yet--just a premise we can both agree on, because it's in the Bible.
1 Peter 2:13-14: "Be subject for the Lord's sake to every human institution, whether it be to the emperor as supreme, or to governors as sent by him to punish those who do evil and to praise those who do good."
Now, you may say to this that the institutions are human, and you could interpret "him" as the emperor, although I wouldn't expect you to, so let me refer you to one last verse to drive my point home.
Deuteronomy 16:18: “You shall appoint judges and officers in all your towns that the Lord your God is giving you, according to your tribes, and they shall judge the people with righteous judgment."
Here, God explicitly appoints governmental officers to judge the people--a verse that combines the points of the previous two. When laws are produced that honour morality and punish immorality, then they must have been ordained by God.
So, at the last, I will continue Romans 13:1-3 with verse 5: "But if you do wrong, be afraid, for he does not bear the sword in vain. For he is the servant of God, an avenger who carries out God's wrath on the wrongdoer." Like I said, God punishes people--and the main way He does so is through the law. These statements can't be interpreted any other way, even in full context. They say what they mean and they mean what they say.
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I would never deny that that is the absolute best way to discourage someone from being immortal. Certainly, to convert someone to God is much better than just stopping someone from doing wrong! But we can't always take the best way. I mean, if God always took the best way to save people, then nobody would ever go through hardships to be saved, because God might just show them a vision, or something that would change their mind, or whatever else. It would be awesome if we could take what we saw as the best way, and use that effectively for everyone. But the problem is that we just can't. People are different, and, therefore, they require different methods, so we should take all reasonable avenues to discourage them from immorality.
God punishes immorality.
We do not wish for others to be punished.
If we do not wish for others to be punished, then we should discourage them from immorality in the best way we can.
God uses different ways to save people, because a way that works on one person may not work on another.
So to discourage someone from immorality, we must take the way that works best for them.
We cannot know what way works best for someone.
Therefore, we must take the best ways we know of, to discourage the most people.
One possible way is to convert them to Christ.
Another way is to put into effect laws that punish immorality (as proved by my previous argument).
Because both of these work, then we should put both into effect, to discourage the most people.
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-Arthur- Ah, but you just lost access to two of your members. *Ridge and Misty disappear and reappear in a mindscape, simply a grassy plain, with Arthur standing before them*
-Mindscape Arthur- Splintered off from the rest, left to fight me in a realm that accents all of us. Let's dance.
-Arthur- Yet I remain. Behold, we have now equal losses.
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*the shield absorbs the force of the knife and expels it, unchanged*
-Arthur- *scrutinises you sceptically, and then several golden tendrils stab into you from all sides*
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Lumar: Are y'all comin? I do believe Claire invited you two.
*Lunar appears*
Lunar: Let's get this over with. I have a wedding to get to.
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They finished the Almega and put it outside so it could absorb ambient energy for a few hours before activating, but then I swooped in and broke it with the Holy Sword, and then everyone blamed Nova, almost causing a huge split in the Nobility, but things calmed. Lizbeth's considering putting the splinters back together because they don't have much time, but it will be unstable. Crona also fought the group, but disintegrated into ash.