A friend of mine is going through a bit of a confusing time, for lack of a better word, she's starting to think she's bi, and she's quite Christian. Neither of these things bother me, but her way of dealing with them does. She's been asking a friend of hers how she can turn her back on her god to be bi. How she can just ignore he's there. She was asking me these questions, and really I'm not the right person to ask, since I've never been Christian. Besides these are things she has to reconcile herself, she's been looking for answers in other people.
The other night she kept asking what she was missing, how could someone just ignore the possibility of hell. My answer? Some of us don't believe in hell, and never have, therefore we have no fear of what does not exist. Then she replied saying how she couldn't understand having no fear of it. I couldn't really explain it to her any clearer than I had.
Then she really kind of pissed me off, we were talking about the experiences we've had with the divine, and she was essentially offhandedly dismissing the experiences I was telling her about, while trying to say that her's wasn't explainable in any way, even when I put out valid points to show that her's could be explained, not trying to invalidate at all, but making a point that I can give things back as well as she can give them.
What I don't get with her, is why she feels she needs to ignore her god when it comes to her sexuality. I mean wouldn't a connection to a divine being be something pretty important? And one's sexuality isn't something to be taken lightly either of course, and I can see having a hard time reconciling the two, but the way she's going about it grates on my nerves, because she's asking everyone else than the person she needs to ask, herself. She wants answers that no one else can give her. And she tries to invalidate any answers she doesn't want to hear, like when I said a lot of people understand that the Bible has been translated many times over, she just said "no god wouldn't let it be mistranslated"
I'm just tearing my hair out, because she keeps asking me, and I keep telling her I can't give her the answer she wants, and no one else can.
Sorry about the wall of text, I just needed to get it out.
The other night she kept asking what she was missing, how could someone just ignore the possibility of hell. My answer? Some of us don't believe in hell, and never have, therefore we have no fear of what does not exist. Then she replied saying how she couldn't understand having no fear of it. I couldn't really explain it to her any clearer than I had.
Then she really kind of pissed me off, we were talking about the experiences we've had with the divine, and she was essentially offhandedly dismissing the experiences I was telling her about, while trying to say that her's wasn't explainable in any way, even when I put out valid points to show that her's could be explained, not trying to invalidate at all, but making a point that I can give things back as well as she can give them.
What I don't get with her, is why she feels she needs to ignore her god when it comes to her sexuality. I mean wouldn't a connection to a divine being be something pretty important? And one's sexuality isn't something to be taken lightly either of course, and I can see having a hard time reconciling the two, but the way she's going about it grates on my nerves, because she's asking everyone else than the person she needs to ask, herself. She wants answers that no one else can give her. And she tries to invalidate any answers she doesn't want to hear, like when I said a lot of people understand that the Bible has been translated many times over, she just said "no god wouldn't let it be mistranslated"
I'm just tearing my hair out, because she keeps asking me, and I keep telling her I can't give her the answer she wants, and no one else can.
Sorry about the wall of text, I just needed to get it out.
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