Tolerance and Intolerance –
. . . . no one can call themselves tolerant. The point I am making is that the question is rarely about being tolerant or intolerant, it really is about judging and not judging.
. . . . no one can call themselves tolerant. The point I am making is that the question is rarely about being tolerant or intolerant, it really is about judging and not judging.
The world has removed God’s judgment from their vocabulary just as they have removed the word ‘sin’ and replaced it with the word ‘mistake.’ You do realize that you can rectify a mistake, but sin is a transgression against God, and man cannot rectify his sin by himself; it has to be through . . . . . .
What was the motivating factor that drove Cain to violently murder his brother? We are informed from previous verses that the conflict between these two brothers was not merely a disagreement between two, but it was the conflict of Cain with God — Jehovah. Some have considered this to be the first ‘religious’ dispute which led to the first ‘religious’ persecution. Indeed, that is partly true, for on Cain’s part it was about ‘religion’ — man’s religion versus God’s way and God’s Word.