@karmaal2010@CSLewisDaily He also said, "Go forth, and sin no more." Forgiveness is partnered with repentance. Repentance is a "turning away from" sin, with no intent to return. So yeah, you can be forgiven, but that means don't do it again.
@ItsTheRealDeej @Wizards_Help@MTG_Arena I have the opposite problem; keep getting the driest swamps this side of the Mississippi. Nothing as annoying as having three win-cons in your hand and being one mana shy of casting them for six turns in a row.
Just found out I can ignore an entire assignment and still make an "A" in the class as long as I don't do anything stupid on the final. I feel slightly guilty, but I really needed this reprieve. The timing is perfect.
A productive weekend of D&D terrain building. With the seasons changing around my players, I figured the scenery should reflect that. May or may not have them find a foggy cliff-side graveyard and get ambushed by skeletons with blindsight 60'. They're getting too comfortable, imo
@j_e_willis @CSLewisDaily Apparently we are not both speaking about the same God, then. The Apostles have the authority of the Judeo-Christian God, and the Bible is a perfect recording of their divinely-inspired writings. If that says you're wrong, then your "prophets" are liars. It says you're wrong.
@j_e_willis @CSLewisDaily I've given you scripture bluntly saying you're wrong on this. If someone claims to be a prophet and isn't congruent with scripture, they're a false prophet.
@j_e_willis @CSLewisDaily Finally, and looping back to the first comment, the Sadducees' question becomes relevant if marriage does indeed persist to the next life. Which of the husbands keeps the wife? Indeed, for each subsequent husband to be married to the wife, does the prior bond not end in death?
@j_e_willis @CSLewisDaily First point is irrelevant, second is nonsensical. Why would Jesus say "no one is getting married" if the question was "who will she be married to", referring to men she has already been married to on earth? That's a mismatch of tenses between question and answer.
@j_e_willis @CSLewisDaily Becoming one flesh ends when the flesh dies, see Paul: "For a married woman is bound by law to her husband while he lives, but if her husband dies she is released from the law of marriage." Romans 7:2