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Judas was faithful for a time
I give up. My earlier assumption was obviously correct about how some will interpret scripture. Every time many people see Judas called a Disciple, or read about something good that all of the disciples said or believed, they are going to read into it "except Judas", despite the scriptures never adding this addendum. But Thaddeus we're OK with being a hero even though we're never told by name that he specifically did anything good, but because he was a "disciple" and some other disciples were good, Thaddeus must have been good. The inconsistency amazes me. We give hero cards to the 12 sons of Jacob without any hesitation, despite the only things we have on some of them being bad! It's just a game though, and I know that anyone can make a mistake. Like I said this is not what I had in mind when I created the card, but perhaps now you can see where I was coming from. Thanks.
Quote from: stefferweffer on December 10, 2010, 08:28:17 AMI give up. My earlier assumption was obviously correct about how some will interpret scripture. Every time many people see Judas called a Disciple, or read about something good that all of the disciples said or believed, they are going to read into it "except Judas", despite the scriptures never adding this addendum. But Thaddeus we're OK with being a hero even though we're never told by name that he specifically did anything good, but because he was a "disciple" and some other disciples were good, Thaddeus must have been good. The inconsistency amazes me. We give hero cards to the 12 sons of Jacob without any hesitation, despite the only things we have on some of them being bad! It's just a game though, and I know that anyone can make a mistake. Like I said this is not what I had in mind when I created the card, but perhaps now you can see where I was coming from. Thanks.Thaddeus is good because he is part of a group considered to be good, and is never portrayed in a personally negative light. Judas was portrayed in a personally negative light, and never in a positive one (on a personal level) and never showed Godly repentance. I am not reading into anything in the Bible. I am reading where the Bible mentions Judas, realizing it never has anything good to say about him, and typing accordingly.What you are arguing is essentially that because he was a member of a church (disciple) he should be a hero. I don't think that's a good thought at all. On top of that, try explaining to the mother of the 10 year old why Judas Iscariot, who many consider the guy most responsible for Christ' death (in a historical sense), is a hero and can be used to save souls when he himself was not even saved.
Are you saying we should make every card evil/good, since at one point in their life they were evil?King Solomon is known as a good king. No problems there. Yeah, he did some really stupid stuff, but still. (Which reminds me, I need to get back to the "Once Saved, Always Saved?" thread...)Simeon and Levi? Just because they murdered some people? Levi had a covenant with God. I don't think he was "evil." Yeah, he did some really stupid stuff, but still.Joab and King Saul is a decent argument, but somewhat irrelevant, since nobody uses those heroes anyway...Personally, I'm against King Saul being a hero. He was God's anointed, but he was definitely only focused on himself, not God.Not sure about where I stand on Joab.
Um, around here in VA Solomon is NOT known as a good King. Have you read 1 Kings 11? Where did Solomon return to the Lord?
I would be against Evil Solomon (he repented at the end of his life and wrote Ecclesiastes).
And around here in PA Solomon was a great king. Thank you for introducing a logical fallacy to your argument.You are right, Simeon and Levi aren't the greatest people. But, there are signs they showed more remorse than Judas ever did (it is very much implied that the sons of Jacob repented of selling Joseph).
Quote from: Alex_Olijar on December 10, 2010, 04:13:47 PMAnd around here in PA Solomon was a great king. Thank you for introducing a logical fallacy to your argument.You are right, Simeon and Levi aren't the greatest people. But, there are signs they showed more remorse than Judas ever did (it is very much implied that the sons of Jacob repented of selling Joseph).Wow. Now I know that I should have left this alone several posts ago. Simeon and Levi cowering in fear before the second in command of all Egypt (Joseph) is evidence of remorse to you? Not only this, but you find this greater evidence of remorse than someone who confessed his sin, returned the wages of his betrayal, and even inappropriately killed himself because he did not feel capable of being forgiven? I'm sorry, but I have nothing more to convince you with. In my opinion, any ideology that says some men are just chosen by God for destruction through no fault of their own, with no hope of being saved no matter what they do or believe, despite us being told in the scriptures that God is not willing that ANY should perish and desires that all men come to repentance, is getting in the way of making any forward progress on this subject.
"Then when Judas, who had betrayed Him, saw that He had been condemned, he felt remorse and returned the 30 pieces of silver to the chief priests and elders, saying 'I have sinned by betraying innocent blood." Matt.27:3-4