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- 24 de Ago, 2014
Abraham also lied to not one but two kings that Sarah was his sister and not his wife, putting the kings at risk of inadvertently offending God.I find it interesting that the human characters of the Bible are morally flawed, especially for the principal Jewish characters. Abraham, for instance, was so devoted to God that he would have gone through with killing his son, Isaac, until an angel intervenes. Something to note is that Isaac does not follow Abraham afterwards and Sarah dies soon after. There is a possibility that Abraham's attempted killing of his son was wrong and that it ruined his family.
The only redeemable value of David is his almost absolute obedience to God. I call him "Yahwah's Lapdog". And to me the OT values a person's relationship with God far more than a person's relationship with other people. When David offended God by conducting a census (despite Joab's protests -- a census is a survey of the number of able bodied men that can be drafted into war; conducting a census means David doesn't put enough trust in God's hand), God gave him a choice of three punishments. David chose the plague that killed 70,000 men, rather than bearing the full force of punishment himself (being chased by his personal enemies for three months). This scenario tells me that, at least in OT times, it is okay to sacrifice your people just to assuage God.Another character would be King David.
You can say so, but the affirmation of his repentance comes later. For his three denials, Peter reaffirms Jesus three times.I recently learned about the denial(s) of Peter. I know he cried at the end - does that count as repentance?
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