Uganda repents

 

Lk 15:7

 

Response to comment [from an atheist]: [Persephone66 (a man who dresses as a woman)] "What's stopping you from moving there? I doubt you will be missed here..."

 

This land is our land (Ge 12:3).

He (
Deut 22:5, Mt 19:4) thought we'd turn our country over to the Sodomites.

 

"It's our land too."

 

You notice I said, "he" (Deut 22:5, Mt 19:4).

 

"You did?"

 

Jesus loves you (Jn 3:16).  Jesus is willing to save you (2 Pe 3:9).  Repent (Eze 18:30-32; Ac 17:30).  Believe (Mk 9:23).

 

[from a Christian]:  [...Persephone66, whether you realize it or not you are blessed that there are two people in the world that care enough to offer you hope, even after you've mocked and derided them. Most people aren't anywhere near that lucky.] "No. I have two people that want to justify their hate and bigotry toward me and wrap it in their rather warped version of love..."

 

As usual, you've got it backward.

There are lovers and haters. Those who have not repented of their unlovingness toward others are haters. They bury their guilt and remain unrepentant (1 Jn). Some have love--but not enough (Ge 29:30). They fall short of what they ought to be and God calls that hatred. Anywhere love is missing--that is hatred. Love has: a high regard for others, desires their happiness, likes them (takes joy in them). Hatred is lacking those things. Hated: sees others with little value, views them as not worthy of their time or attention, is indifferent to their best interests, and in the extreme want to hurt them. People can hid their hatred behind the veneer of love (Ferguson).

Unrepentant hatred fails to love. If you fail to have new commandment love, you are in the darkness (Ferguson).

See:

Lovers/Haters: Part 7a (right click, open) from the series Knowing God and Loving People by Dr. Darrell Ferguson

 

Response to comment [from a Catholic]: "I think Nick, Serpent, and Angle would make great Ugandans."

 

You know they're black there.

See:


Barbarian

 

People Who Annoy You - South Park

 

Uganda repents