Truman wrote:As for your contradiction, Vtmarik, it's pretty simple, actually. It's both. If you ask in His name according to His will, you will receive whatever you ask. How is this a contradiction; am I not seeing it somehow? It's a given, and anyone with eyes can see it. I really can't understand why you don't.
Well, I guess its the semantics.
I mean, when I read "nothing will be impossible" I take it to mean that nothing will be impossible. He didn't say "Nothing will be impossible, as long as your desire matches God's."
I don't know, It's just the whole thing. If Jesus is saying nothing is impossible, then nothing is impossible. By Jesus' logic, you can pray for something that isn't in accordance with God's will, and it'll come to pass.
If that isn't the case, why wouldn't Jesus have said that in the first place? He is perfect, after all. He would've made himself quite clear to start with, or maybe I'm misinterpreting His perfection.
*shrugs* I'm only a novice in terms of biblical rhetoric, so that maybe that's why I don't get why a Perfect Book would have so many strange quirks about it. I don't call them contradictions anymore, I just call them "Evidence of Really Bad Editing."