The first question is a mess, but the latter two strike me as very American answers (sadly).pic.twitter.com/jT5DePG47b
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here are my two quibbles: "basically good" if refering to man's nature would be true, and is irrelevant with concern to people individually, the question is if they have a propensity towards sin/error/turning away from God.
on the second, worship is underspecified. It is a traditional belief that when the pagans worshiped their gods, God did to some extent accept the worship, but also reject it. This is more about the difference between service and veneration, and about the meetness of acts.
it should be remembered that in the context of the old Testament era, sometimes God even rejected the sacrifices (worship) of his own people done "correctly". The present language used is not specific enough to capture the difference between fear, dread, sacrifice, veneration...
to ascribe to something that isn't God the qualities of God is false, i.e. belief that a thunder-god rules the world - whether or not the actual thunder-god worshiped is a demon or just a delusion. But the acts of worship and the attitudes of pagans were often correct, despite.
Since I'm criticizing I'll offer my own alternate questions (some will be the same) as an antidote.
1. Does all sin separate man from God? 2. [same] 3. [same]
4. Is there such thing as a universally true religion? 5. Do men have a propensity towards sin? 6. Is it permissible for a Christian to participate in non-Christian services of worship? 7. Did the Son of God exist before anything was created?
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