OK, lots to respond to.
Alex, the short answer to the omnipresent thing....as I understand it, this has to do with the Holy Trinity, the father, the son, and the Holy Spirit. Obviously the son, Jesus, could endure being around sin, and he took all sin upon himself. The omnipresent aspect is the Holy Spirit, and I would presume (though I can't point to any specific scripture reference for this) that the Holy Spirit must have the same sort of thing going on.
CP, Jesus was called the ultimate and final sacrifice, setting man free from the old covenant of law to a covenant of grace and forgiveness. Prior to that, forgiveness was something that had to be earned through atonement and sacrifice. Now forgiveness is there simply by asking because of that sacrifice.
And I do struggle all the time with with whether or not i think that the judgement of God is fair or not. That brings me a little bit toward what Alex commented on, as far as goodness. I think the issue is that no one is good enough in Christian theology. Hell, I do crappy stuff all the time that certainly do not match up with my faith. While there are those out there (and I hate it that it is this way) that think someone has to clean up and be good to decide to become a Christian, i think that if you have made the decision, you desire to do the right things. when people point out Christian hypocrisy, like with your Jimmy Swaggarts and whomever else, yeah, that sucks, but they are human just like anyone else and make mistakes. when you're public in your ministry and lact holier than thou it might be a good idea to make sure you're living it, but the fact is no one can.
I never want to stand in judgement of someone else and their eternal soul. I have always thought that was the whole purpose of the "judge not lest ye be judged" thing (rather than making moral statements on behavior). That's not my place. My place is to be charitable and relational and make efforts to meet the real needs of people (I won't go deep into it, but in the book of Acts the apostles basicaly say they are too holy to waste time feeding the poor, and after that the focus moves from them to those who do take the time to meet rea, physical needs). I know people who say "mormons won't go to heaven". Who are they to say? I have certain doctrinal issues with mormonism, but last I checked they profess the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus as well.
I have rambled on quite a bit here. Sorry if I missed anything anyone wanted a comment on.
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