What puzzles me most of all about all this is the sheer defensiveness that has emerged. My questions were seeking information and enlightenment. In fact, as it turns out, I am receiving both as to what people's reasoning is, but it's certainly not the kind of explanation i was hoping for or expecting.
I absolutely agree with you, Tammy. Justmom's response was indeed lovely, and I said as much.
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There is no such thing as "Shelby's Christology". Just as there should be no such thing as Pauline theology, or Calvinism, etc. The people here have responded why they use the term, and it is not because Shelby teaches it to be so. You of course can choose to believe that, or you can just outright reject that.
"There is no such thing as "Shelby's Christology"." Actually, there is. Shelby has a unique and distinct understanding of Jesus Christ. Perhaps you share it, perhaps you don't, though you have made it clear that you share some of it, not necessarily because she has it, but just of yourself. The free dictionary on the web defines Christology here
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Christologyand Shelby's interpretation and understanding, backed up by the regular, indeed, constant, as she said the other day, conversations she has with her Lord and the things she tells us she is shown make it very clear that her understanding is sufficiently distinctive and unusual to be described thus. There is nothing critical in the use of such a term. it is merely fact.
"it is not because Shelby teaches it to be so. You of course can choose to believe that, or you can just outright reject that. " I am not sure why you say any of that. Never have I said that you believe something because Shelby teaches it to be so, annd so I have never rejected it, so, no thanks, I decline your offer that I may reject something I have no inclination to reject. Tammy, you sound here as though you are in an argument wiith hostile inquisitors on JWN. This is not JWN, and I am not a hostile inquisitor.
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Yes... but not because your answer is different than what another person says they heard... but because you 'came up with it'.
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No one is doing the above, and the way that you have worded the above is insulting to each person who has taken the time to explain to you the reason for their faith.
Please would you explain where I insulted anyone? None was intended.
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People are not doing as Shelby says. People, including Shelby, are following the same One: Christ.
"Doing as" someone says is not cause and effect. It's not obeying an instruction, unless in context it's like a child being told by a parent "Do as you're told." it can merely be descriptive and accurate, which is what it is here. No insult. No dark agenda.
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Unless that is a figure of speech difference, coming up with something tends to be something that one gets from themselves... rather than something one receives and hears from Christ.
Purely a figure of speech. No deep meaning intended.
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Char, no one HAS assumed this. No one has taken issue with anyone saying our lord. You took issue with someone saying 'my lord', linking that to someone thinking they are an exclusive group. The answers you have been given have shown otherwise, yes?
"Taking issue" seems to be on your mind. It's really not a phrase in common usage in this country, though I've met others who use it a lot. It seems to be general forum-speak. If by "taking issue" you mean "finding fault with" or "criticising", then no, I was not criticising and found no fault. I am not the only, or the first one, who finds some modes of speech used by Shelby and some others here, though naturally not because Shelby uses them, and rarely encountered elsewhere, and so it was a natural question to ask. Again, the defensiveness of the reaction is remarkable, and somewhat mystifying.
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You asked a matter on the use of 'my lord', and have been given answers. I don't think that was the root of your issue with the people here though, or the matter should have rested after those answers, that did not mean what you thought they might mean.
Yes, noting the consistent employment of the personal possessive pronoun I was musing on its distinctive and unusual use by just a few people here...not, I think, most....and submitted a genuine request for clarification. The resulting...and if I may say so rather paranoid and definitely very defensive response of some reactions... not all, thank you again, justmom!

...is even more puzzling, and merely serves to deepen the oddness.
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He is my Lord and your Lord and Our Lord, here for us all. I believe that accepting a teaching that he is here just to save a few who will then go to heaven and sit on thrones is a mistake, not a deliberate human deception on the part of a human, but it's just plain not true.
I think you must be referring to what I wrote about sittiing on thrones? Actually, you're wrong there, Tammy. It would be a month or so ago, but during the course of a thread on the old forum Shelby insisted that this was exactly what Christ's chosen ones, or something like that, I forget her exact words, WOULD be doing, and when I demurred there was a Biblical reference to demonstrate to me that I was wrong. I let it go then, but I haven't forgotten. It'll be there in the records if that thread has come across, but I didn't bookmark it and am not sure when exactly it was. I'd say within the last couple of months, but I'm guessing. I was very surprised, and that's why it made an impression on me.
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But please don't assume that not using the term "my Lord" means discomfort at owning the personal link
Char, no one HAS assumed this. No one has taken issue with anyone saying our lord. You took issue with someone saying 'my lord', linking that to someone thinking they are an exclusive group. The answers you have been given have shown otherwise, yes?
" No one has taken issue with anyone saying our lord." I didn't say anyone had. I merely asked why, from some people, "my" was used where others would more usually use "our". Simple question. Why all the fuss?
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You asked a matter on the use of 'my lord', and have been given answers. I don't think that was the root of your issue with the people here though, or the matter should have rested after those answers, that did not mean what you thought they might mean.
Strange. Again, I have no "issue with the people here", so how a non-existent abstract could have a root must remain a mystery.... "the matter should have rested"...should?
Should? Ought to? Curiouser and curiouser, as Alice said.
What a strange, incomprehensible, defensive exchange. I am none the wiser, and utterly bemused as to why a perfectly simple question should have provoked such an extraordinary sequence of outbursts. Normally, when a person or group respond like that, it means the querent has touched a nerve. What could possibly be the reason here.
Once more, though, Justmom, thank you for your very plain straightforward answer. Much appreciated. Paul too, and I answered you earlier, Paul.
