Your response (and the responsibility thereof) is your choice.
I won't say that I like the mockery that seems embedded in your comment.
Would you say the same thing about the biblical accounts of such questions?
For example, when God asked Jonah twice if he did well to be angry? Jonah 4:4 & 4:9 (I'm pretty sure God knew the answer the whole time, but needed Jonah to acknowledge his feelings so God could deal with them without Jonah denying them). Or God asking Jeremiah "What seest thou?" in Jeremiah 1:11 & 1:13.
From my experience, when God asks a clarifying question, there is no suggestion that God doesn't know the answer, but there is a suggestion that the person he's asking needs to more deeply consider some aspect of the situation.
Love in Jesus,
Kelby
I won't say that I like the mockery that seems embedded in your comment.
Would you say the same thing about the biblical accounts of such questions?
For example, when God asked Jonah twice if he did well to be angry? Jonah 4:4 & 4:9 (I'm pretty sure God knew the answer the whole time, but needed Jonah to acknowledge his feelings so God could deal with them without Jonah denying them). Or God asking Jeremiah "What seest thou?" in Jeremiah 1:11 & 1:13.
From my experience, when God asks a clarifying question, there is no suggestion that God doesn't know the answer, but there is a suggestion that the person he's asking needs to more deeply consider some aspect of the situation.
Love in Jesus,
Kelby
No, I don't believe your story, it doesn't pass a biblical discernment test.
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