Defy
teaches them to love themselves and their fellow man but also to love and respect their families.
It's a quote from Nelson Mandela, and Obama followed it up in two more tweets with the rest of the quote: «People must learn to hate, and if they can learn to hate, they can be
taught to love....
Thank God that Jesus
taught us to love our enemies because Muslims, especially extremist are definitely that.
Believing in a God that
teaches us to love one another more than yourself is the opposite of survival of the fittest and should be a positive thing, not a negative.
«If Jesus was just a soft moral teacher who
taught us to love one another and petted little babies, the Romans wouldn't have crucified him,» Litfin says.
Good article but there was a slight mistake I think... «If Jesus was just a soft moral teacher who
taught us to love one another and petted little babies, the Romans wouldn't have crucified him....
I believe on the same things about the meaning of life and I am very thankful to my parents who
taught me to love and forgive.
In a way all religion
teach you to love and respect others — some times religion (rather the people who claim they own the religion) gets over its head and not enourage love for other religion's believer..
See unlike your master, my Master
teaches me to love my enemies not hate them.
And as to Jesus
He taught us to love one another, help the poor, give to the needy, and stand up for justice.
To give us direction,
teach us to love and care the way God made us to.
«Didn't Jesus
teach us to love one another?»
Gracious God, in Jesus Christ
you teach us to love our neighbors, but we build dividing walls of hostility.
So I got down on my knees and prayed for God to
teach me to love like Christ loved and that's when it started less than an hour later I was given the chance to love someone that I would call unlovable like christ loved this man was lying about me to the point it could have ruined my career of 10 years.
I was not taught hate or bigotry but was
taught to love and respect others.
My husband is bi-racial, and we want our children to love everyone and
we teach them to love everyone regardless of their color or race.
... If the cross is a personal act of violence perpetrated by God towards humankind but borne by His Son, then it makes a mockery of Jesus» own
teaching to love your enemies and refuse to repay evil with evil (p. 182f).
Jesus
taught us to love our neighbors as ourselves, and we render this in terms of the cliches of pop psychology.
Jesus
taught us to love one another.
Jesus
taught us to love God and love our neighbor and to do as we would be done to, which words, as I see it, serve as a guide in deciding whether we do the things that make us feel good.
People just hate him because
he teaches to love everyone, unlike other Christian pastors who teach hatred.
As a Christian, I've been
taught to love my neighbor.
God
teaches us to love and forgive no matter how hard we may to learn life lessons.
Take it from me: When you grow up being
taught to love God with your mind and then get punished for trying to do so, the temptation to leave the faith in anger and disillusionment is overwhelming.
The same God who
teaches us to love our enemies in both the Old and New Testaments also commands the death penalty in both the Old and New Testaments.
It is true that Christ
taught us to love our enemies, but we must understand what he was saying when he said that.
The bible
teaches us to love our fellow brothers and sisters, and not to point fingers, remember what Jesus said???? Let thee who is without sin throw the first stone....
Jesus
taught us to love everyone, even our enemies.
First, Christians are
taught to love God with all their heart.
They teach you to love Jesus like he was a real person, actually love him better than every real person you know, including your family.
Jesus
teaches us to love and respect nature as God's providence for all humanity; globalization abuses and pollutes nature with grave harm to future generations.
Jesus
teaches us to love not just our friends, but our neighbors as well.
They taught me to love and memorize Scripture, to change a diaper, to rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep, and to think critically enough to deconstruct and reassess some of their own teachings.
The dark night of my soul is what
taught me to love God.
We were
taught to love God and his Word like I had never been taught to do so before.
At least Christianity
teaches to love one another and to help one another..
I was
taught to love Jesus in Sunday school, and the lessons took.
So Jesus wouldn't partake in this debate at all,...
He teaches us to Love God, Love our fellow man, and spread his word by FAITH.
It is depressing that humankind has not yet learned to beat swords into plowshares, but while the world remains in this fallen condition, it is just as well that our soldiers are not
taught to love those against whom they must fight.
The hymns, doctrine, discipline and liturgy of that tradition gave me faith and
taught me to love God.
Consider Matthew 5:43: «You have been
taught to love your neighbor and hate your enemies.»
Jesus
taught us to love, accept, and tolerate sinners.
It is true that Jesus
taught us to love those who hate us, forgive those who wrong us, and abstain from hypocritical comparisons between ourselves and those who offend us.
He, in no way, represents the Christain faith that
teaches to love all people.
He teaches us to Love the sinner... but do not love or tolerate the sin.
Rather than
teaching us to love our neighbor, as Jesus taught, these laws teach us to fear our neighbor.
Or will we instead see that every one of them was educated in truth, that they were awarded full liberty of belief, and that we have
taught them to love each other?
Rather than
teaching him to love God, we teach him to love some one that does not exist or even give them anything.
Raised Catholic, I was
taught to love others, but also that I was lucky enough to be in the one true religion.
I was baptized as an infant, raised in a faith tradition I was
taught to love and respect, and gradually grew into the theological convictions I strive to live.