by Edwin » Mon Aug 26, 2013 4:28 pm
What you said, Smiley, reminds me of a famous quote of one of our more famous preachers from yesteryear. I heard it when I was in Bible College many years ago, so I don't remember who the preacher was, Dwight L. Moody, or some other great preacher. He was observing a drunk person that most of us would look down on. He said: "But for the grace of God, there go I." Many of us on this forum believe not only in the goodness of man, but also we believe in his badness, or his depravity. "All have sinned and come short of the glory of God." Not one of us measures up to God's standards of righteousness. We are all born with a sinful nature, and our bent, if we could call it that, is on doing evil. We all have a tendency towards evil, to do evil. One of my fellow school teachers from years ago told me that in his early days of teaching he believed in the goodness of man, and that people were basically good, but after 25 or so years of teaching, he changed his mind about that. He said that he believed that people were basically evil. I don't think he understood the basis for that, but he understood that much anyway. We need the ten commandments. We need God to show us that we are evil, and then we need to become aware that we need a savior to deliver us from our own evil. I know a lot of it has to do with choice. Some choose to do good, while others choose to do evil, but there are powers involved, like "We wrestle not against flesh and blood," but against powers of evil that Satan is behind. My Dad when I was little said that, and I think it was an old Indian that told him that, that there are two dogs. One dog is black and represents evil. The other dog is white and represents righteousness. We have those two dogs fighting within us. So within us we have an evil dog, and a good dog. Which dog wins depends on which do we say "sic em" to. God helps us, but we have something we have to do as well.
Yes, Smiley, many people do tend to stereotype people, and that is a problem. They might know one person from a race or a group, and they will see all of them as being just like that one person. I have lots of examples in mind, but I think all of us get this picture. Sometimes, and many times what we are stereotyping is only true of a very, very small percentage of the group, but sometimes we see them all as being that way, or maybe we might think there is a large percentage of that group that is that way, when very few are guilty of it.
Yes, Red, there is a big difference in the kinds of attitudes that our siblings grow up with, regardless of the way they have been trained. Of our children the one who is the most respectful and the most helpful is the one that had the worst beginning. The one I would have expected to be the best person is the most disrepectful. The other one is a very good person, but she has been affected by her sister's bad attitude, even though she is on our side, she takes here sister's side as well, but she recognizes that her sisiter's attitude, and what she has done is not good. It is sad when families have these kinds of problems. We are hoping and praying that things will get better here, but for now our daughter and son in law who live here are distant, not warm, friendly, and helpful. They have trouble getting along with a lot of people, so I think it is just the kind of people they have become that makes the problems.