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Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 5:00pm On Jul 11, 2016
If you've seen me on NL recently, you'll know that I'm not religious. My 'religion' is kindness. Humanism. I believe that we can learn to be kind to our fellow human beings and love one another without the concept of any god.

ANYWAY enough of me. As for the question, I heard two religious friends of mine arguing (different faiths) and the non christian posed this question: "In your bible, its clearly stated that god sent his son to die for our sins, that that was his mission on earth, (John 3:16) and Christianity as a whole recognizes that the blood of Jesus 'washes away' sin. If that is so, why are the people who facilitated the prophecy, such as Judas, the Roman Government, the Pharisees, etc not celebrated as heroes of Christianity? After all, if Jesus' mission was to come to earth and die, then surely the people who helped make that mission a success should be celebrated!"


After this statement, my Christian friend could not speak. I'd like to know what you Christians have to say about this.

cc: Seun Lalasticlala

6 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 5:20pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:
If you've seen me on NL recently, you'll know that I'm not religious. My 'religion' is kindness. Humanism. I believe that we can learn to be kind to our fellow human beings and love one another without the concept of any god.

ANYWAY enough of me. As for the question, I heard two religious friends of mine arguing (different faiths) and the non christian posed this question: "In your bible, its clearly stated that god sent his son to die for our sins, that that was his mission on earth, (John 3:16) and Christianity as a whole recognizes that the blood of Jesus 'washes away' sin. If that is so, why are the people who facilitated the prophecy, such as Judas, the Roman Government, the Pharisees, etc not celebrated as heroes of Christianity? After all, if Jesus' mission was to come to earth and die, then surely the people who helped make that mission a as access should be celebrated!"


After this statement, my Christian friend could not speak. I'd like to know what you Christians have to say about this.

cc: Seun

Did your friend show your other friend this verse?

Matthew 18:7
Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

2 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by kestolove95(m): 5:22pm On Jul 11, 2016
Jesus died for his sins not ours.cox if he had..we won't b facin challenges In our life tym

1 Like

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 5:23pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


Did your friend show your other friend this verse?

Matthew 18:7
Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

I want to make sure I understand you well. Can you please explain in relation to the question?
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 5:27pm On Jul 11, 2016
kestolove95:
Jesus died for his sins not ours.cox if he had..we won't b facin challenges In our life tym
I thought in Christianity Jesus is not capable of sin since he is god
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 5:27pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

I want to make sure I understand you well. Can you please explain in relation to the question?

Christianity as a whole recognizes that the blood of Jesus 'washes away' sin. If that is so, why are the people who facilitated the prophecy, such as Judas, the Roman Government, the Pharisees, etc not celebrated as heroes of Christianity? After all, if Jesus' mission was to come to earth and die, then surely the people who helped make that mission a as access should be celebrated!"


the forgoing is your 'thought provoking' conundrum, innit? Now look again at the verse


Matthew 18:7
Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

2 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 5:41pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


Christianity as a whole recognizes that the blood of Jesus 'washes away' sin. If that is so, why are the people who facilitated the prophecy, such as Judas, the Roman Government, the Pharisees, etc not celebrated as heroes of Christianity? After all, if Jesus' mission was to come to earth and die, then surely the people who helped make that mission a as access should be celebrated!"


the forgoing is your 'thought provoking' conundrum, innit? Now look again at the verse


Matthew 18:7
Woe unto the world because of offences! for it must needs be that offences come; but woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

If it 'needs be' that offences come, then men cannot be blamed for their offences. Because its predestined.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 5:45pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:


If it 'needs be' that offences come, then men cannot be blamed for their offences. Because its predestined.


for it must needs be that offences come; woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Scholar8200(m): 5:53pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:


If it 'needs be' that offences come, then men cannot be blamed for their offences. Because its predestined.
It is NOT predestined but it is a prediction predicated on the state of depravity man fell into after the fall.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 6:11pm On Jul 11, 2016
Scholar8200:
It is NOT predestined but it is a prediction predicated on the state of depravity man fell into after the fall.
In other words, God did not consider the fact that man could repent? After all, we are supposed to have free will. If there is true free will, then anything is possible.
Look at this analogy:
A government decides that they want to give scholarship to a 100 students only, if they pass.
And instead of basing the cutoff mark from the results, they state before hand that the passmark is 50%
Yet, there are more than 100 brilliant students.
In a case like that, the only way to fulfill the conditions (the prophecy) is to make some students (who actually passed) fail! i.e make people who actually repented, sin, for the purpose of fulfilling the prophecy.

The only way that will not happen is if we don't have free will, and in that case, they can't be blamed for their actions

3 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 6:21pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:



for it must needs be that offences come; woe to that man by whom the offence cometh!

You're just quoting the same sentence. If it 'needs' be, it is predestined, and therefore not their fault. in that case, you're basically saying 'Woe unto them (by God) for doing things which they were predestined to do (by the same God)'

3 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by NegusNegaste(m): 6:31pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:
If you've seen me on NL recently, you'll know that I'm not religious. My 'religion' is kindness. Humanism. I believe that we can learn to be kind to our fellow human beings and love one another without the concept of any god.

ANYWAY enough of me. As for the question, I heard two religious friends of mine arguing (different faiths) and the non christian posed this question: "In your bible, its clearly stated that god sent his son to die for our sins, that that was his mission on earth, (John 3:16) and Christianity as a whole recognizes that the blood of Jesus 'washes away' sin. If that is so, why are the people who facilitated the prophecy, such as Judas, the Roman Government, the Pharisees, etc not celebrated as heroes of Christianity? After all, if Jesus' mission was to come to earth and die, then surely the people who helped make that mission a as access should be celebrated!"


After this statement, my Christian friend could not speak. I'd like to know what you Christians have to say about this.

cc: Seun
Nice food for thought bro. Christians, and indeed all religious people in their blind following of their various 'Gods' forget to observe that they shoot themselves in the leg.

5 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 6:34pm On Jul 11, 2016
NegusNegaste:
Nice food for thought bro. Christians, and indeed all religious people in their blind following of their various 'Gods' forget to observe that they shoot themselves in the leg.
Its the very reason why I don't consider myself religious. There are lots of loopholes like this in all religions, yet people choose to blindly follow, calling it 'faith'. Not my business. It becomes my business when they, with their illogical reasoning, commit terror acts, kill people, defraud people of their money, or contribute to noise pollution by screaming in the middle of the night, disturbing us,etc all in the name of that 'faith'.

3 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Scholar8200(m): 6:44pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

In other words, God did not consider the fact that man could repent? After all, we are supposed to have free will. If there is true free will, then anything is possible.
Judas had as much opportunity as Peter a chance to repent. Concerning the former, did not Jesus openly say that he would do it?


Look at this analogy:
A government decides that they want to give scholarship to a 100 students only, if they pass.
And instead of basing the cutoff mark from the results, they state before hand that the passmark is 50%
Yet, there are more than 100 brilliant students.
In a case like that, the only way to fulfill the conditions (the prophecy) is to make some students (who actually passed) fail! i.e make people who actually repented, sin, for the purpose of fulfilling the prophecy.

The only way that will not happen is if we don't have free will, and in that case, they can't be blamed for their actions

That example is not applicable. That will be injustice at its worst and this is where the Calvinists are wrong!!!

What I believe is that we have a freewill but there is a choice/option not open to us viz neutrality!

To reject an option would bring us into the category of those that fulfill the other options.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by truthmans2012: 7:07pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

You're just quoting the same sentence. If it 'needs' be, it is predestined, and therefore not their fault. in that case, you're basically saying 'Woe unto them (by God) for doing things which they were predestined to do (by the same God)'

Do you know that before Judas carried his evil assignment, Jesus on two or three occasions had warned him. Why? Because if there was anyone who would do the assignment, it should not be Judas as he was one of his own. If you are warned against something and you still do it, you deserve punishment, right?

For others who facilitated the killing, they were guilty: Firstly because Pilate (Governor) himself said he didn't find any offence Jesus committed, then, why punish the innocent? Secondly, their motive for killing him was wrong. If their intention was to kill him deliberately for washing away their sins with Jesus himself consenting to it, it would have a different ball game. But they kill him out of hatred and they did for prophets before him.

I know your next question will be "how would he have died"?. He could have surrendered himself to be killed in due time. It is predestination because God sees the end of things from the beginning. He knew that was how it would happen as it was prophesied by Isaiah (Isaiah 53:7).The important message is, he came to die for the sins of those who believe in his death.

2 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 7:09pm On Jul 11, 2016
Scholar8200:
Judas had as much opportunity as Peter a chance to repent. Concerning the former, did not Jesus openly say that he would do it?

That example is not applicable. That will be injustice at its worst and this is where the Calvinists are wrong!!!

What I believe is that we have a freewill but there is a choice/option not open to us viz neutrality!

To reject an option would bring us into the category of those that fulfill the other options.

You believe in free will.
To state beforehand that a particular outcome has to happen means there isn't complete free will.
If there is complete free will, the possibility that none of them wish to betray/kill Jesus exists.
In that case, what happens to the prophecy that Jesus was sent to die for us?
He won't die anymore, because nobody is willing to kill him.
His blood would not be shed.
And there would be no blood to 'wash away' our sins.
Keep in mind that if we have free will, this will be a possible outcome.
.
.
.

In logic and probability theory, two propositions (or events) are mutually exclusive or disjoint if they cannot both be true (occur)
.
.
.
However, if free will exists, the event of Judas, Peter, and everyone else choosing to do the right thing is NOT mutually exclusive
i.e When two people are both picking their phones. One of them says 'hello'. And its destined that one person will NOT say hello.
It means that either:
Free will exists, the event of both of them saying hello is not mutually exclusive, the second person can say hello, and the destiny is incorrect (Jesus was NOT sent to die for our sins, shattering the basis of that religion)
OR
Free will does not exist, the event of each of them saying hello is mutually exclusive, the second person's mouth is forced to say any word apart from 'hello' (Jesus was sent to die for our sins, the people who killed him had no free will and therefore are not responsible for their actions, rather, they should be celebrated for fulfilling the prophecy)
...
...
There is no neutral ground. You kill or you did not kill. You lied, or you did not lie. Actions are binary. 0 and 1. True or not True.

1 Like

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by truthmans2012: 7:12pm On Jul 11, 2016
truthmans2012:


Do you know that before Judas carried his evil assignment, Jesus on two or three occasions had warned him. Why? Because if there was anyone who would do the assignment, it should not be Judas as he was one of his own. If you are warned against something and you still do it, you deserve punishment, right?

For others who facilitated the killing, they were guilty: Firstly because Pilate (Governor) himself said he didn't find any offence Jesus committed, then, why punish the innocent? Secondly, their motive for killing him was wrong. If their intention was to kill him deliberately for washing away their sins with Jesus himself consenting to it, it would have a different ball game. But they kill him out of hatred and they did for prophets before him.

I know your next question will be "how would he have died"?. He could have surrendered himself to be killed in due time. It is predestination because God sees the end of things from the beginning. He knew that was how it would happen as it was prophesied by Isaiah (Isaiah 53:7).The important message is, he came to die for the sins of those who believe in his death.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Scholar8200(m): 7:19pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

You believe in free will.
To state beforehand that a particular outcome has to happen means there isn't complete free will.
There is but if you say there isnt, then it will be because God knew that after the fall, man became a slave to sin!!!A slave has no choice!


If there is complete free will, the possibility that none of them wish to betray/kill Jesus exists.
In that case, what happens to the prophecy that Jesus was sent to die for us?
He won't die anymore, because nobody is willing to kill him.
His blood would not be shed.
And there would be no blood to 'wash away' our sins.
Keep in mind that if we have free will, this will be a possible outcome.
But man was a slave to sin, there was depravity in his heart. Hence his possible reaction to Jesus was predictable.

In Acts 7, Stephen showed how it had become a pattern for Israel to reject those sent to save them!A manifestation of their depravity to love their deceivers and hate their teachers.

Besides, there is NO prophecy that it had to be one of the 12 that will betray Jesus. It could have been one of the many repentant publicans and sinners that He ate with.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 7:22pm On Jul 11, 2016
truthmans2012:


Do you know that before Judas carried his evil assignment, Jesus on two or three occasions had warned him. Why? Because if there was anyone who would do the assignment, it should not be Judas as he was one of his own. If you are warned against something and you still do it, you deserve punishment, right?

For others who facilitated the killing, they were guilty: Firstly because Pilate (Governor) himself said he didn't find any offence Jesus committed, then, why punish the innocent? Secondly, their motive for killing him was wrong. If their intention was to kill him deliberately for washing away their sins with Jesus himself consenting to it, it would have a different ball game. But they kill him out of hatred and they did for prophets before him.

I know your next question will be "how would he have died"?. He could have surrendered himself to be killed in due time. It is predestination because God sees the end of things from the beginning. He knew that was how it would happen as it was prophesied by Isaiah (Isaiah 53:7).The important message is, he came to die for the sins of those who believe in his death.
You've missed my point. My point is not about who specifically carried it out, whether Judas, Peter, Bartholomew or whoever. No.

"Because if there was anyone who would do the assignment, it should not be Judas as he was one of his own."
(Your statement)
It should not be Judas, since he was one of his(Jesus') own, right? But SOMEBODY had to do it to fulfill the prophecy. As you said, Jesus warned him. And he still did it. Since you believe we have free will, what if he did not do it? That's a possibility too, right?
...

"If you are warned against something and you still do it, you deserve punishment, right?
"
(Your statement)
Yes, I agree with this statement. What if everyone else in their time agreed with this statement and decided, they want no punishment, therefore, they won't do it?

...


"I know your next question will be "how would he have died"?. He could have surrendered himself to be killed in due time."
(Your statement)
Surrendered himself? To who? He broke no laws of the land: Christians commonly quote 'Give unto Caesar what is for Caesar'. Therefore he broke no laws! For doing nothing wrong, who, in his right senses, will kill him? Anyone who does that must be mad, and therefore not responsible for their actions.

1 Like

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 7:29pm On Jul 11, 2016
Scholar8200:
There is but if you say there isnt, then it will be because God knew that after the fall, man became a slave to sin!!! A slave has no choice!

But man was a slave to sin, there was depravity in his heart. Hence his possible reaction to Jesus was predictable.

In Acts 7, Stephen showed how it had become a pattern for Israel to reject those sent to save them!A manifestation of their depravity to love their deceivers and hate their teachers.

Besides, there is NO prophecy that it had to be one of the 12 that will betray Jesus. It could have been one of the many repentant publicans and sinners that He ate with.

1. If a slave has no choice, you're just confirming the absence of free will.

2. I never mentioned anything about the 12. Whoever it was, whether a Roman soldier, or a cattle rearer, is supposed to have free will to choose NOT to kill or betray Jesus.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Scholar8200(m): 7:49pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:


1. If a slave has no choice, you're just confirming the absence of free will.
Remember he became a slave by choice not by Divine design! And like Esau, he can choose to be free! No Divine force on either side.



2. I never mentioned anything about the 12. Whoever it was, whether a Roman soldier, or a cattle rearer, is supposed to have free will to choose NOT to kill or betray Jesus.
But the depraved nature was there to ensure that he might choose to do just that!
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by truthmans2012: 7:51pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous

It should not be Judas, since he was one of his(Jesus') own, right? But SOMEBODY had to do it to fulfill the prophecy. As you said, Jesus warned him. And he still did it. Since you believe we have free will, what if he did not do it? That's a possibility too, right?


Your free will should not make you independent of God. If your free will is against the will of God, you will suffer the consequence. If Judas didn't do it, God knew how to bring it about.

Surrendered himself? To who? He broke no laws of the land: Christians commonly quote 'Give unto Caesar what is for Caesar'. Therefore he broke no laws! For doing nothing wrong, who, in his right senses, will kill him? Anyone who does that must be mad, and therefore not responsible for their actions....

Since Jesus wanted to die for the sin of the world, he could surrender himself to anybody who could do it. He could convince his disciples to do it with the consent of the government authority. Like I said before God knows how to execute His plans, humans' ntelligence is too low to understand God entirely. People base their judgement on the limit of their wisdom, which is so little when compared to God's. Or are you claiming you know better than God?
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 8:15pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

You're just quoting the same sentence. If it 'needs' be, it is predestined, and therefore not their fault. in that case, you're basically saying 'Woe unto them (by God) for doing things which they were predestined to do (by the same God)'

You are just wilfully blind. Offence will surely come but woe to him by whom it comes, it is left to you to make yourself a willing tool in the hands of the devil or not. You and your likers should open your heads to reason, men are predestined to greatness or poverty but men have been known to fight to overcome evil sentences and achieve greatness, if you say yes, your Chi will never say no.

Offence will surely come, it is left for you to choose to be the one through whom offence comes or not. If you allow offence to come through you, then it is your destiny to be damned, if you choose not to allow offence to come through you, then it is your destiny to be saved. Bottom line is, the ball is in your court, and the choice is yours.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 8:29pm On Jul 11, 2016
Scholar8200:
Remember he became a slave by choice not by Divine design! And like Esau, he can choose to be free! No Divine force on either side.


But the depraved nature was there to ensure that he might choose to do just that!
If he can choose to be free then he is not a slave. Slaves cannot choose to be free.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 8:36pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


You are just wilfully blind. Offence will surely come but woe to him by whom it comes, it is left to you to make yourself a willing tool in the hands of the devil or not. You and your likers should open your heads to reason, men are predestined to greatness or poverty but men have been known to fight to overcome evil sentences and achieve greatness, if you say yes, your Chi will never say no.

Offence will surely come, it is left for you to choose to be the one through whom offence comes or not. If you allow offence to come through you, then it is your destiny to be damned, if you choose not to allow offence to come through you, then it is your destiny to be saved. Bottom line is, the ball is in your court, and the choice is yours.
I am 'opening my head to reason' and you are not understanding me. If you say 'men are predestined to greatness or evil, but have been known to fight evil sentences and achieve greatness' then what you are saying is that destiny is based on your current circumstances, e.g a boy born into a family of gangs has the free will to change a bad destiny and become a president. ok. I agree with that.
That statement 'Offence will surely come' negates free will. I have the choice to be good and so do the other 7 billion people on the planet. In the event that that happens, even if its a 1 in a million chance, the chance exists. Saying 'offence will surely come' is eliminating that chance, and therefore eliminating free will of the person that will commit the offence.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 8:45pm On Jul 11, 2016
truthmans2012:


Your free will should not make you independent of God. If your free will is against the will of God, you will suffer the consequence. If Judas didn't do it, God knew how to bring it about.



Since Jesus wanted to die for the sin of the world, he could surrender himself to anybody who could do it. He could convince his disciples to do it with the consent of the government authority. Like I said before God knows how to execute His plans, humans' ntelligence is too low to understand God entirely. People base their judgement on the limit of their wisdom, which is so little when compared to God's. Or are you claiming you know better than God?
As for you, the statement "are you claiming to know better than God?" makes me not want to continue discussing with you. The same thing they do in churches. Anytime someone finds a loophole, they ask a genuine question, they get told to just 'believe' because 'you don't know more than god'.
You said, he could convince his disciples to do it. So, the disciple that killed Jesus MUST be celebrated as a hero (even though its explicitly stated in your Bible that killing is a sin), and that verse from the book Matthew, quoted above, is invalid.
In other words 'thou shall not kill (unless I ask you to then its perfectly acceptable)'

1 Like

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 9:01pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

I am 'opening my head to reason' and you are not understanding me. If you say 'men are predestined to greatness or evil, but have been known to fight evil sentences and achieve greatness' then what you are saying is that destiny is based on your current circumstances, e.g a boy born into a family of gangs has the free will to change a bad destiny and become a president. ok. I agree with that.
That statement 'Offence will surely come' negates free will. I have the choice to be good and so do the other 7 billion people on the planet. In the event that that happens, even if its a 1 in a million chance, the chance exists. Saying 'offence will surely come' is eliminating that chance, and therefore eliminating free will of the person that will commit the offence.

You can choose to be the one or not to be the one, the choice is all yours because unfortunately what is written cannot be changed, that is what is destined to happen, it must happen. Good must come, offence must come, here comes your choice here comes your destiny, here you stand at the crossroads of life, the choice is entirely yours.

That fact remains that once you elect to be the bringer of offence, that is the destiny that is chosen for you, ratified by your own free will.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 9:07pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


You can choose to be the one or not to be the one, the choice is all yours because unfortunately what is written cannot be changed, that is what is destined to happen, it must happen. Good MUST come, offence MUST come, here comes your choice here comes your destiny, here you stand at the crossroads of life, the choice is entirely yours.

That fact remains that once you elect to be the bringer of offence, that is the destiny that is chosen for you, ratified by your own free will.

Ok. I got you. Its impossible for everybody to choose good. Because offence MUST come i.e everybody does not have free will.
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 9:28pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:


Ok. I got you. Its impossible for everybody to choose good. Because offence MUST come i.e everybody does not have free will.


Good must come, offence must come, either must be ratified by your frre will, you are free to choose, it is called free will.

2 Likes

Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 9:35pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


Good must come, offence must come, either must be ratified by your frre will, you are free to choose, it is called free will.
The two options must both happen, yet you are free to choose. Where is the choice?
Are you listening to yourself?
Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by MrPresident1: 10:09pm On Jul 11, 2016
AnonyNymous:

The two options must both happen, yet you are free to choose. Where is the choice?
Are you listening to yourself?

Yin and yang, positive and negative, left and right, the balance of life. Choice is the exercise of freewill, you have alternatives, good or offence, your choice automatically becomes your destiny.

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Re: Very Interesting Question For Christians by Nobody: 10:11pm On Jul 11, 2016
MrPresident1:


Yin and yang, positive and negative, left and right, the balance of life. Choice is the exercise of freewill, you have alternatives, good or offence, your choice automatically becomes your destiny.
You said offence must happen. If I choose good why must offence still happen?! That's what I'm asking! What if everyone in the world uses their free will to choose good?! Then why must offence still happen?!

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