MAGAs: "There was an American girl who was murdered by an illegal immigrant, and that's why this other immigrant (who is a totally different person and is wholly unrelated to that murder) should suffer eternally in CECOT, even though he's done nothing wrong."
Me: "Wait, this sounds familiar."
Me: "Wait, this sounds familiar."
Comments
And once we've been trained to believe that injustice is justice, it hampers our ability to seek justice around us.
Thank you.
I think it's important to see Jesus's death as an injustice, even though it was one he willingly accepted. He entered into our suffering, our pain, our mortality -- and even the injustices we face in this broken world.
Harumph.
We can table this till after Monday, though.
I am curious about your position on what implications regarding true justice you find objectionable. And, again, I strongly agree regarding presentations that aren’t strongly Athanasian Trinitarian
But Prov 17:15 reminds us that condemning the righteous is contrary to God's good justice.
"The wages of sin is death" but God is not who pays those wages.
I grew up in the Lutheran church (I left at age 17) and was never taught that applied to anybody but God/Jesus.