Overview All Christians believe or have high hopes they are saved. But only the "few" believe Jesus in Matthew 7:13-14 and 7:21-23 who says that "many" will be "surprised" they are lost and that only "few" will be saved. The author has surveyed many Christians. None can articulate the difference between the thinking of the "few" and the "many." You probably can't concisely articulate that difference either. The "many" of the 43,000+ Christian denominations with opposing faiths all claim to have the "saving faith" of the "few." This book clearly identifies the difference in the faiths of the…mehr
Overview All Christians believe or have high hopes they are saved. But only the "few" believe Jesus in Matthew 7:13-14 and 7:21-23 who says that "many" will be "surprised" they are lost and that only "few" will be saved. The author has surveyed many Christians. None can articulate the difference between the thinking of the "few" and the "many." You probably can't concisely articulate that difference either. The "many" of the 43,000+ Christian denominations with opposing faiths all claim to have the "saving faith" of the "few." This book clearly identifies the difference in the faiths of the "few" and the "many" for your consideration, showing that most Christians only think they understand faith but in reality they don't. Test yourself. Read the Hebrews 11:1 Bible definition of faith. Then pick five secular and five religious examples of what you call "faith." Now, explain which parts of your examples of faith correspond to the "substance of things hoped for" and "evidence of things not seen" in Hebrews 11:1. If you are stumbling over this exercise, you don't understand what faith is as you thought you did. When you're done reading this book, you will understand the "substance of things hoped for" and the "evidence of things not seen" in Hebrews 11:1. You will be able to show how Abraham's or any examples of faith correspond to the words of the Hebrews 11:1 definition of faith. Hebrews 11:1 is one sentence. Faith, properly understood, can also be expressed in one simple sentence that even a child can understand. About the Author The author is a retired electro-mechanical engineer and department head with a career of troubleshooting both engineering systems and personnel management problems. This background helped the author solve what Hebrews 11:1 actually says. The author gives many life examples to illustrate the differences between the thinking of the "few" who are saved and the "many" who are lost according to Jesus, using Hebrews 11:1.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
JAY K. FUNG graduated college and, as an electrical engineer, worked for 25 years at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard, Honolulu, Hawaii. Jay spent most of his professional career testing and troubleshooting electrical and mechanical systems and managing personnel. Troubleshooting forced Jay to think methodically, logically and to test his conclusions. Managing personnel and conducting meetings required dealing with how people think and why they think the way they do. Understanding how people think helps one understand why "belief" is such a difficult concept to change. Jay also served 20 years in the National Guard. As an officer, his function was training, and at one point in his service, he was in charge of the Officer Candidate School, which also required understanding how people think and what motivates them to do what they do. Through his career background, the Reader is presented with the types of thinking Jay has done throughout the years. Now in the sunset of his life, Jay believes in God, Heaven and eternal life, as he has proven them to be "true" in his mind. Through What Must I Do to be Saved, Jay wishes to inspire critical thinking in Readers to prove their faiths and not be an echo chamber for their authority figures' beliefs.
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