The Hebrews and their Jewish descendants had Moses' law: the ten commandments. Our Lord incarnated to die for our sins, to establish the Church and the new law for everyone, that is, the perfected law of God that supersedes the ten commandments. That law is: love God, love your neighbor.
An "extremist" of said philosophy of life is a saint. That's a good thing to be.
The left changed the definition of -phobes and -ists, if you do not celebrate gay people and gay lifestyles then you are a homophobe now. Love the sinner but hate the sin is already considered phobic.
The person that follows Christ and the teachings of the Bible is going to be a very good and loving person but that is not enough for the left.
On the 10 commandments I think you are wrong, I vaguely remember in several places Christ saying He has not come to replace the old law and He says to a guy that if he follows the 10 commandments then he is a good person. There was also a part about being upset on the Jews that they turned societal practices in to religious law and that is the reason we do not follow a lot of Jewish practices, but is all very vague as I'm not well versed in the Bible.
On the 10 commandments I think you are wrong, I vaguely remember in several places Christ saying He has not come to replace the old law and He says to a guy that if he follows the 10 commandments then he is a good person.
I am not wrong. Jesus doesn't "replace" the ten commandments: he supersedes them. If you love God and your neighbor, you will by default obey the ten commandments, and more. Regarding the guy who followed the ten commandments, are you talking about the man who left sad after being told "sell all you own, give it to the poor and follow me"? Here's the ever excellent Fulton Sheen explaining the point I was making and mentioning the case you brought up. I assure you it's a great listen:
For people who want a refresh of Catholic axioms:
The Hebrews and their Jewish descendants had Moses' law: the ten commandments. Our Lord incarnated to die for our sins, to establish the Church and the new law for everyone, that is, the perfected law of God that supersedes the ten commandments. That law is: love God, love your neighbor.
An "extremist" of said philosophy of life is a saint. That's a good thing to be.
The left changed the definition of -phobes and -ists, if you do not celebrate gay people and gay lifestyles then you are a homophobe now. Love the sinner but hate the sin is already considered phobic.
The person that follows Christ and the teachings of the Bible is going to be a very good and loving person but that is not enough for the left.
On the 10 commandments I think you are wrong, I vaguely remember in several places Christ saying He has not come to replace the old law and He says to a guy that if he follows the 10 commandments then he is a good person. There was also a part about being upset on the Jews that they turned societal practices in to religious law and that is the reason we do not follow a lot of Jewish practices, but is all very vague as I'm not well versed in the Bible.
I am not wrong. Jesus doesn't "replace" the ten commandments: he supersedes them. If you love God and your neighbor, you will by default obey the ten commandments, and more. Regarding the guy who followed the ten commandments, are you talking about the man who left sad after being told "sell all you own, give it to the poor and follow me"? Here's the ever excellent Fulton Sheen explaining the point I was making and mentioning the case you brought up. I assure you it's a great listen:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0iYaw8uGZOs