08-14-2012, 03:23 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-14-2012, 04:02 PM by TheFifty9Sound.)
I'd like to hear some of Carla's personal experiences within the church.
I'm specifically interested in her interactions with Christians who are, for want of a better term, "King James Bible Believers". You know those rigid, dogmatists, who even though have they might have the best intentions, tend to exclude, label, and shun people who don't believe everything in the Bible is the infallible word of God, and salvation is through Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ alone.
I'd really like to know how people like this have responded to Carla's communication with Ra, the Law of One, beliefs she might hold and practices she has involved herself with that are not generally accepted by mainstream Christianity. I'm interested in both positive and negative reactions.
I'm back in the USA, again in East Texas, Baptist country, and can see myself at some point in the future being challenged or excluded from certain circles on account of my less-than-fundamental-christian-beliefs. Even though I feel I'm well equipped to deal with this should it eventuate, it'd still be helpful to hear from someone who may have been through it already.
EDIT: I feel it might be relevant to mention, I was raised Catholic and do consider myself a "Christian". It's not like I cannot understand and accept these types of people, it's that some of them will struggle to understand and accept me.
I'm specifically interested in her interactions with Christians who are, for want of a better term, "King James Bible Believers". You know those rigid, dogmatists, who even though have they might have the best intentions, tend to exclude, label, and shun people who don't believe everything in the Bible is the infallible word of God, and salvation is through Jesus Christ and Jesus Christ alone.
I'd really like to know how people like this have responded to Carla's communication with Ra, the Law of One, beliefs she might hold and practices she has involved herself with that are not generally accepted by mainstream Christianity. I'm interested in both positive and negative reactions.
I'm back in the USA, again in East Texas, Baptist country, and can see myself at some point in the future being challenged or excluded from certain circles on account of my less-than-fundamental-christian-beliefs. Even though I feel I'm well equipped to deal with this should it eventuate, it'd still be helpful to hear from someone who may have been through it already.
EDIT: I feel it might be relevant to mention, I was raised Catholic and do consider myself a "Christian". It's not like I cannot understand and accept these types of people, it's that some of them will struggle to understand and accept me.