Topic: Two different Pictures | |
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actually i think what i can see you describing is mentioned by darrell
fasching and dell dechant in the book comparative religious ethics. often fasching and dechant talk about a sacred society and a holy community , the best way to describe this is holy communities exist inside of sacred societies.. a sacred society could be christianity as a whole they don't welcome the stranger by saying this i mean they don't welcome different faiths, if they do it's only for the purpose of trying to convert those people to christianity, they don't welcome questions about the faith or else they believe they will go to hell and so will those asking, theres actually a small list of differences, a holy community could be a sect of christians or a certain church or ajust a group of followers they may actually welcome people of different faiths and share stories and casually talk, they might like to mix some of their friends beliefs with their own, they question things in their religion and they seek for the answer so in one way the group can entirely close off different people, but at the same time a smaller group can welcome them i'm not sure if this is clear or not but if you're interested in the idea it is a comparative religious book that uses the ideas and explains what they are they also talk about many of the major religions comparatively |
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Sororitygurl4life writes:
" i'm not sure if this is clear or not but if you're interested in the idea it is a comparative religious book that uses the ideas and explains what they are they also talk about many of the major religions comparatively " Nono, it was very clear and well-worded. Although I haven't read that one, there are others through the years similar to it that I have read. While reading some of the posts in this thread, another dynamic occurred to me in this same vein-- how non-believers are often treated like heterosexists treat gay folks. 'There not like us!' 'How do they know they won't like it if they have never tried it'. 'It's a choice, and the wrong one at that.' 'If we let one in...' 'They make me uncomfortable.' And sometimes I feel like that in certain quarters there's an unspoken 'Don't ask, don't tell' rule for one's being a non-Christian. I've often found that one can have a unique experience by discussion fictional religions. Makes it less threatening for some, and people take it less personally since they can't identify with it quite so closely. One of my favorite examples was the religions of the Dune novels. Such as contrasting the Bene Gesserit with the Fremen. And throwing in IX and the Spacing Guild for good measure. -Kerry O. |
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I think this is a very good, and very important question that
"invisible" asks. The Biblical depiction of Jesus is very warm, good-humored, and embracing of sinners — bringing them into himself. The only people Jesus really seems to reject are those who place themselves first — selfish, narcissistic people or the self-righteous who believe they have a right to pass judgement upon the morality of others. Overall, this openness is the depiction of Jesus that gives warmth to Christianity. The other side is sin and the moral theology that is written around Jesus. The Bible tells that Jesus' sacrifice paid the debt of original sin that we each inherited, freeing humanity from the clutches of Hell. "I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me." (From John 14) This passage can be read in such a way as to exclude all who never know of Jesus or never accept him as their Lord and Savior. So, infants cannot go to Heaven. If you are trying to take a somewhat literal approach here, there is no qualifier to grant any form of dispensation for infants, people who are mentally retarded, or anyone ignorant of Jesus. The problem, as I see it, is in interpretation. First, you can't take a truly literal reading here. If that were the case, going through Jesus would be a physical journy passing through his torso (or worse, through his digestive tract). Why could he not be saying that being Christlike is "the Way" — that through emulation of him, even unwittingly, one may reach the Father? So, on what are we really basing the notion that belief in Jesus is the only way to Heaven? "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life." (From John 3) Taken literally, those who believe in Jesus will not die. But, it does not say that no others will achieve everlasting life. "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God." (From Romans 3) The full passage is rather long, and it seems to clearly state (in some translations moreso than others) that faith in Jesus, not works, is required to receive his gift of salvation. However, the passage is really an affirmation of something else. It assures Gentiles that they need not adhere to the works of Jewish Law to be included, for God is the God — not only of the Jews — but also of the Gentiles. "Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law. ... Is he the God of the Jews only? is he not also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles also. ... Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law." (From Romans 3) The meaning is less about faith than it is about the inclusion of the Gentiles. It is a message of hope and reassurance, not about fear of eternal damnation. It is a new convenant, superseding the archaic laws and expanding the "chosen people" to include all peoples. "Yea, a man may say, Thou hast faith, and I have works: shew me thy faith without thy works, and I will shew thee my faith by my works. Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble." (From James 2) This passage clearly states that faith is good, but works are better. Here it does not speak of Jewish Law, but rather basic conduct. It says, I will show you my faith by my works. There is Biblical basis for claiming that works show a deeper, truer faith than mere outward belief. I think a large part of why Christianity places such importance on the faith aspect is because of a remnant from the Reformation, when the Protestants split from the Church because of corruption, in particular the selling of plenary indulgences. Clearly "selling tickets" to Heaven was a horrible transgression that should never have happened, and Martin Luther was right to speak out against it. The backlash, however, was the concept that no action truly mattered — that faith alone was the only way to achieve salvation. It was an understandable stance, particularly if one wanted to keep such corruption from tainting the faith again. Some denominations of Christianity are much less accepting than others, too. Calvinism, is truly a "closed" faith — it's members believing that all actions, even belief in Jesus, is by God's hand alone and that no one can change their wants or actions unless God deems it so. They believe that free will does not exist (at least not anymore) and that humnaity is too depraved to ever willfully turn to God. Surprisingly, Catholicism (a denomination that has oft been criticized for it's rigid theology) is rather open in many respects in regard to accepting people of other faiths, etc. (though this certainly wasn't the case not even 50 years ago). Episcopals are more accepting than Catholics, typically. Many denominations are very accepting, within and without the church walls. Not all believe that non-believers will be denied Heaven and experience the eternal horrors of Hell. |
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Resserts wrote:
“Why could he not be saying that being Christlike is "the Way" — that through emulation of him, even unwittingly, one may reach the Father?” I’ve always believed that this is what precisely Jesus meant. |
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resserts, always enjoy your posts, so glad you take the time to post
them. |
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Eljay~~~ I wasn't aware that Hitler shipped Christians off to the
concentration camps. Where did this information originate? I would like to learn more. Peace, love & wisdom |
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There is a third picture that comes to mind. That of the raised sword
and 'believe or die'. Not all christians act this way but enough do that it makes it quite hard to listen to the ones that speak softly and carry the true message. |
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Ghost;
There is a very famous German minister named Bonnhofer who was imprisoned by Hitler. As the campaign of the 3rd Reich was moving into the "final solution" Hitler recruited Muslims into the S.S., and their task was to seek out Christians - who naturally were sympathetic to the Jews - and dragged them off to concentration camps. I just watched this on the WW2 channel yesterday. (History channel that is). I've also nkown about Hitlers obsession with the occult. There's an interesting book called "The Spear of Destiny" which goes into it quite extensively. |
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Abra;
Actually, I've always understood that man is born with a sin "nature" - not that he was born with sin. That is a concept in Catholicism - original sin they call it. It's why they baptize infants - in the hopes that it will forgive the "original" sin as it's called. So the point I was making is that everyone "sins", it is an active choice - not something you are born with. That is illogical - is it not? |
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Resserts;
"The other side is sin and the moral theology that is written around Jesus. The Bible tells that Jesus' sacrifice paid the debt of original sin that we each inherited, freeing humanity from the clutches of Hell." Actually - the bible says no such thing. Jesus' sacrifice was for the sins of the world - not just Adam and Eve's. The concept of "original sin" is not a Christian tennent, but one of Catholicism. No one is born with sin - only a sin nature. For it was through Adam that sin came into the world. But sin is not something you inherit - it is something done through commision - or omission. Therefore, an infant - who is incapable of sinning - is not barred from heaven. It is the soul who sins who will die, and there is only one unforgivable sin - blaspheming the Holy Ghost. As to "people who don't know Jesus" - who might that be? |
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Eljay wrote:
"Actually - the bible says no such thing. Jesus' sacrifice was for the sins of the world - not just Adam and Eve's. The concept of "original sin" is not a Christian tennent, but one of Catholicism. No one is born with sin - only a sin nature. For it was through Adam that sin came into the world. But sin is not something you inherit - it is something done through commision - or omission. Therefore, an infant - who is incapable of sinning - is not barred from heaven. It is the soul who sins who will die, and there is only one unforgivable sin - blaspheming the Holy Ghost. As to "people who don't know Jesus" - who might that be?" I believe you're splitting hairs here. The Bible is clear that it is through Adam and Eve's sin that we have a sinful nature — and _that_ is the concept of original sin. Catholicism may have labeled it, but the idea is very much a part of Christianity. Adam and Eve's trangression lost Paradise for all of humanity and the consequences are indeed inherited. God later made a covenant with the Jewish people — his "chosen people" — and Jesus forged a new covenant with all humanity. Regarding the infant concept: Again, you are picking apart my post to be contrary. If you read my post again, you will see that I'm actually claiming that Christianity is not as literal as some people sometimes make it and that I don't truly agree that the Bible says infants won't go to Heaven. My point was that interpretation must come into play, for several reasons, and then I laid out a picture of Christianity based on key scriptural passages (some which many Christians use to justify the opposing view) and an interpretation that takes a broad look at different aspects of redemption. 'As to "people who don't know Jesus" - who might that be?' Again, you seem to have latched on to such a minor detail, and are being a bit belligerent in your tone, to make a non-issue into a focal point. I didn't think this was especially important, but there are a lot of people who never hear of Jesus. Even with the widespread communication we enjoy, there are closed socieities, like North Korea, where it is unlikely that many are familiar with Jesus or the Bible. And certainly there are a lot of people worldwide who have heard of Jesus in the same way that I've heard of Shiva — they are aware he's a religious figure in Christianity, but really know very little about him. In any case, I don't believe there's much reason to debate these issues. I'm only clarifying my statements. It seems that you and I are on the same side of the coin — Christianity is inclusive and open if interpreted correctly. I apologize that I cannot cite any sources in this post — I'm running quite late for work. |
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