Do bad (law) things happen to good (grace) people, or only to people who mingle...

Allegory

New member
...good (grace) + evil (law)? Hint1: JC would not receive the "mingled" drink
Matthew 27:34... Mark 15:23... Luke 13:1-3

Hint2: Mingled good + evil is as grace + law addead
Genesis 2: 16 + 17(the law given by Moses: Jn 1:17)

Hint3: Use all five of your God given senses to
discern (a-void) both good + evil = law: Hebrews 5.
If it looks kinda Fish-y, and
If it sounds like Horeb-bull, and
If it smells kinda Pew-y, and
If it tastes Both sweet + bitter, and
If it feels like Hell when swallowed,
Then it's obviously law = both good + evil ends bad,
as bad as blessed + cursed = accursed: Gal 1:8,9.

HInt4: when THEY say Peace & safety in law (worketh wrath),
then sudden destruction and no escape comes upon THEM;
But God hath not appointed US to wrath (law): 1Thess 5:3,9.
 
Except in this world of illusion, there is no good or bad. All is just experience.

In God's perfect world nothing is amiss.
Our greatest teacher is cause and effect. Didn't Jesus say :"every jot and every tittle.?

To awaken from this dream world made up by man, we need to un learn every rule
we ever made up about life on earth, and remember spiritual Life with our Creator.

When we get sick and tired of being sick and tired on this earth, we will
seek reunion with God, not just talk about what other men may possibly
have said about Him
 
Law is not evil.



Aquinas describes law as "a certain rule and measure of acts whereby man is induced to act or is restrained from acting." (q90, a1) Because the rule and measure of human actions is reason, law has an essential relation to reason; in the first place to divine reason; in the second place to human reason, when it acts correctly, i.e., in accordance with the purpose or final cause implanted in it by God.

Law is directed by its nature to the good, and especially to the universal or common good. (q90, a3) It is addressed not primarily to private persons but to the whole people meeting in common or to persons who have charge of the community as a whole.

Promulgation--i.e., the application of the law to those to whom it is applied and the communication of this law to them--is essential to the nature of the law. The natural law is promulgated by God: "God has instilled it into human minds so as to be known by them naturally." Divine and human laws can be promulgated by word of mouth or, even better, by writing.
 
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