And in Mark 1, Jesus wouldn't let demons speak,
"because they knew who he was."
In the stories about Jesus a lot of people, including his
own family, are uncertain about exactly who Jesus is and
what he's up to-except demons, who know exactly who
he is and what's he doing.
As James wrote: "You believe that there is one God.
Good! Even the demons believe that-and shudder"
(chap. 2).
And then in Luke 7, a woman who has lived a "sinful life"
crashes a dinner Jesus is at and pours perfume on his
feet after wetting his feet with her tears and drying them
with her hair. Jesus then tells her that her "sins have been
forgiven."
So demons believe,
and washing Jesus's feet with your tears gets your sins
forgiven?
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We could go on,
verse after verse,
passage after passage,
question after question,
about heaven and hell and the afterlife
and salvation and believing and judgment
and who God is and what God is like
and how Jesus fits into any of it.
But this isn't just a book of questions.
It's a book of responses to these questions.
Join the conversation on Rob Bell's new book at the Patheos Book Club.