↪ThinkOfOne
You seem to be talking about Christianity from a more modern social perspective. From a theological and philosophical perspective I see nothing wrong with a Christianity that clings to the word of Jesus and disregards those of Paul. One could hold that view and still call oneself a Christian. I'm lukewarm on Paul but he was undoubtedly influential but I don't think anyone can call Paul infallible. I'm familiar with anti-Paul views but I don't hate the man. I'd be interested to know in what way he perverts the word of Jesus. Your dispute is with the compilers of the canon. — Moses
The righteous do not commit sin. They are not "sinners". They do not "do evil".
The unrighteous commit sin. They are "sinners". They "do evil".
The righteous are considered to have "life".
The unrighteous are considered to be "dead".
It is crucial to note that this is a strict dichotomy. An individual is considered to be either righteous or unrighteous. There is no overlap between the two. There are no partly righteous and partly unrighteous individuals.
Some of the unrighteous make a show of "acting righteously". Jesus calls them "whitewashed tombs" or even "wolves in sheep's clothing". Righteous looking on the outside. Corrupt on the inside.
They may do many "good deeds". Jesus does not consider their "good deeds" to be good.
Jesus "came not to call the righteous, but to call the sinners (unrighteous) to repentance". Jesus calls the unrighteous to make themselves righteous.
Note that Jesus speaks of there being those who are righteous for whom He did not come.
Those who have made themselves righteous are considered to have been "resurrected" from death unto life. They have been "raised up". They have been "born from above". They have been "saved".
Note that the "resurrection" is figurative rather than literal.
"Repentance" entails making oneself righteous. Anything short of this is not true repentance.
Only the righteous receive eternal life, live in the Kingdom of God, etc.
Judaism and Christianity understand righteousness differently. Judaism understands righteousness through the lens of ethical conduct (i.e. action.) I am not quite familiar with how Christians understand the term.
Judaism has always been a religion focused on action over belief (or more generally it prioritizes the external over the internal.) If Jesus was initially preaching within Jewish communities his focus on the sinners is brilliant because the righteous believe that they're already saved due to their good deeds. The Jewish sinners have nothing to lose especially if they're already low on the social totem pole in addition to bleak afterlife prospects. His focus on them is brilliant.
It's still not entirely clear to me how one is saved under Christianity. — Moses
"In the teachings of Christ, religion is completely present tense: Jesus is the prototype and our task is to imitate him, become a disciple. But then through Paul came a basic alteration. Paul draws attention away from imitating Christ and fixes attention on the death of Christ The Atoner. What Martin Luther. in his reformation, failed to realize is that even before Catholicism, Christianity had become degenerate at the hands of Paul. Paul made Christianity the religion of Paul, not of Christ. Paul threw the Christianity of Christ away, completely turning it upside down. making it just the opposite of the original proclamation of Christ"
My thoughts exactly. Excellent point on Kant. What really matters are the underlying concepts conveyed by the words attributed to Jesus while He walked the Earth.I've been reading the NT lately and I agree with Lewis's point. It's a shame that so many in this thread have tried to bypass it by saying insubstantial excuses along the lines of "oh well we don't really know whether JC existed" or "well how do we know those are the real quotes?" We're philosophers here, give the document a bit of a charity. It wouldn't even matter if the person of Immanuel Kant never existed if we have his work. We'd just deal with the ideas. That's how we should treat the ideas in the NT. — Moses
Also what I love about JC is how he says in Mark "I have not come to call the righteous, but the sinners." The sinful Jews are on the bottom of the totem pole so why not jump ship? — Moses
So, the way, the truth and the life is the way, the truth and the life?
— Fooloso4
The question remains: what is the way, the truth and the life? A tautology does not provide an answer. — Fooloso4
He is figuratively "the way".
— ThinkOfOne
And what does this mean?
A figure of speech is not without meaning. — Fooloso4
Putting it together it, the point Jesus is making is that:
“no one comes to the Father except through [the way, the truth and the life]".
— ThinkOfOne
And, as you say, the way, the truth, the life = Jesus. You have not said anything that is not evident in the statement from John. You have not identified what is figurative in the statement. It is a straightforward claim. Calling it figurative is a smokescreen. — Fooloso4
Jesus is speaking figuratively.
— ThinkOfOne
So what does he mean by these figures of speech? What is he actually claiming? — Fooloso4
That there is a man who is "the way" is a myth. A man who is "the truth" is a myth. A man who is "the life" is a myth. That "no one comes to the Father except through [this man]"is a myth. If you argue that Jesus is not just a man, then you accept the myth. — Fooloso4
That's not the problem. I've discussed these things with people I know in real life who are well educated, have good reading comprehension skills, good critical thinking and conceptual thinking skills.
— ThinkOfOne
And there are more than a few of those people here, but since they do not agree with you, you question their abilities. — Fooloso4
She finds the depth of my understanding of the entirety of the teachings of Jesus to be extraordinary.
— ThinkOfOne
That's nice, but I do not find it extraordinary. — Fooloso4
Those would be words attributed to Jesus.
— ThinkOfOne
Right, but are part of John's mythology wrapped around the words attributed to him. — Fooloso4
↪ThinkOfOne
So when Jesus says in John:
Jesus answered, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
Are they words attributed to Jesus or the mythology? — Fooloso4
Of course, you could have exercised a little patience and waited for my response to you post instead of jumping the gun...
— ThinkOfOne
.You had already said:
That said, I suspect that some who post on this site are a bit short on logical thinking skills and/or the basic teaching of Jesus. Likely they mindlessly repeat things they found on the internet.
— ThinkOfOne — Fooloso4
Of course, perhaps I have a deep understanding of the entirety of the teachings of Jesus and so reject simplistic views...
— ThinkOfOne
Of course, perhaps you don't. Perhaps this is the problem. — Fooloso4
Well, you certainly don't lack confidence in yourself...[/quote
I don't, but having confidence in myself is quite different than claiming to have a deep understanding of the entirety of the teachings of Jesus. That is something I would not say. — ThinkOfOne
You're conflating the words attributed to Jesus said while He walked the Earth with the mythology NT writers wrapped around His words.
— ThinkOfOne
How do you disentangle the two? — Fooloso4
Rather than confront and address what I have pointed to in the texts you ignore it and attempt to discredit me. That is a common tactic of someone who wants to protect their beliefs and must ignore the texts to do so. — Fooloso4
Your response is typical of someone who clings to their beliefs and refuses to look carefully at what the gospel texts actually say. You assume you have an adequate understanding of the basic teachings of Jesus and so reject anything that does not conform to your beliefs. Unfortunately for you, this includes what is actually said in the texts themselves. — Fooloso4
There is a great deal of scholarly disagreement, but at a minimum one must be able to address specifically what is said in the text, rather than impose one's assumptions on it. As a general rule of interpretation, when there is evidence in the text that seems to contradict one's assumptions then you must either alter those assumptions or defend them on the basis of additional evidence found in the text. Vague claims about the basic teachings of Jesus won't cut it. — Fooloso4
The smallest letter and stroke of the pen refer to what is written. — Fooloso4
I never said that Jesus did. There are many parts of the OT which are compatible with the "Golden Rule" There are parts that are not. You lost the context of what I wrote.He does not say to ignore all that written stuff. — Fooloso4
Jesus read from the Book of Isaiah presenting it as prophecy of which He Himself is the fulfillment (4:21). You missed the context of Luke 4.It is Isaiah not Jesus who claims to have been anointed (4:18) — Fooloso4
Actually you were correct in your assessment that " ‘Whoever reviles father or mother must surely die.’" is not what Jesus Himself believed and taught.
— ThinkOfOne
It's only logical, isn't?
Thank you. Well, at least one acknowledgment! :smile:
Anyway, it's silly to argue about things that are known to be plenty of inaccuracies, biases and question marks. That's why I have withdrawn myself from this subject. — Alkis Piskas
• For God commanded, ‘Honor your father and your mother,’ and, ‘Whoever reviles father or mother must surely die.’ Matthew 15:4
— Art48
This is not what Jesus himself believed and taught! This was his reply to Pharisees who asked him "Why do your disciples break the tradition of the elders?", referring them to their own scriptures.
How can Jesus ever say or think such a thing at the moment he was agains killing? (https://www.bible.com/bible/compare/MAT.15.1-20, https://biblehub.com/matthew/15-2.htm)
I was amazed by reading such a thing, esp. in here. And consider that I am not even a fan of Jesus. — Alkis Piskas
↪Alkis Piskas
It is not so simple. What is at issue is the distinction between tradition and commandments. (Matthew 15:3) The background here is likely to be the dispute between Paul and Jesus' disciples regarding the Law. Jesus not only quotes the commandment, he says elsewhere that all the commandments, even the least, must be upheld (Matthew 5:17-20).
How can Jesus ever say or think such a thing at the moment he was agains killing?
— Alkis Piskas
The prohibition against killing is one of the ten commandments. The obvious problem is, how can one
uphold all the commandment when one commandment says do not kill and another says that one who reviles his mother and father must die? One possible answer lies in the distinction between death and wrongful death. The full statement passage from Matthew is:
You shall not kill; and whoever kills will be liable to judgment. (5:20)
It is the second clause, which does not appear in the Hebrew Bible, that seems to support the distinction between death and wrongful death. Whether the action is wrong and punishable will be judged. If it is in accord with the commandment then it cannot be wrong. — Fooloso4
↪ThinkOfOne You sound more like a troll than someone who is interested in good arguments. — Sam26
You ALSO can't reasonably conclude that Jesus DID NOT say X, Y, or Z.
— ThinkOfOne
Sure I can. A few pages later he comes back from the dead. Hardly seems a credible book to take literally -- so it's reasonable to conclude Jesus didn't say anything, given that it's a fantastical text written by fervent people and pasted together as a political convenience. — Moliere
↪ThinkOfOne I could same about you, but where does that get us? We have different ideas about what's reasonable. I'm not even sure what you believe. I've been analyzing these arguments for about 47 years, so I quite familiar with the arguments. Moreover, I've a good background in logic, so don't talk to me about reasonably backing up my arguments. I find that most Christians, if you are one, aren't good at defending their beliefs. — Sam26
↪ThinkOfOne Well, we just disagree. I'll leave it at that. — Sam26
The point that you seem to be missing is that it's a simply a matter of definition -and definition alone- that powersets don't contain "all subsets" of the "original set". The original set IS the "set of all that exists". To conclude that the original set does not exist is nonsensical. It is borne of a failure of conceptual understanding on your part.
— ThinkOfOne
Powersets do contain all subsets of their original set, this is a well-proven theorem by Cantor that any elementary introduction to set theory should teach you. The set of all exists, by its very definition, includes the cardinality of a set strictly larger than it is, and is therefore incoherent/a contradiction (the proof of this is a very trivial exercise: Suppose E, then there exists P(E), P(E) is cardinally larger than E, therefore there exists x's that are members of P(E) and not E and thus E isn't E).
This does not mean the things that exist, like my keyboard or this screen, do not actually exist, but rather they cannot all be collected into set. If your standards of "conceptual understanding" is mathematical inconsistency, this is a problem on your end. — Kuro
All that needs to be decided is whether or not to allow "all subsets" of "all that exists" to be members of "all that exists".
Either way:
1. There is a set of "all that exists"
2. There is a powerset for "all that exists"
Ya, "IF" he said it, but I have no strong evidence/reasons to conclude that he did say it, other than very weak testimonial evidence. — Sam26
Why are you framing the argument in such absolute terms? I sure didn't frame it that way. Even if there was strong testimonial evidence to support that Jesus said X, Y, or Z, that doesn't support the idea that Jesus said it necessarily. The argument is an inductive argument. Inductive arguments don't give us conclusions that follow necessarily, only deductive arguments do that. So, again, it's not about what Jesus said necessarily. It's about what he probably said, or didn't say. If it was true that that is what I was implying, then I would agree, but it's not what I was implying. — Sam26
Since you responded as if you believe that Jesus claimed to be God, can you address the following which I posted earlier?
— ThinkOfOne
How did you come to that conclusion? I said, we don't know what Jesus actually said, because the testimonial evidence is too weak. — Sam26
If someone claimed to be God, he may not be a lunatic, he may just be delusional (you could argue that being delusional is a mental illness), or a good liar. — Sam26
The following makes Lewis' argument a non-starter.
As documented in the Four Gospels, while He walked the Earth Jesus never claimed to be God. Wherein Jesus claims to be literally God.
Yes, He claimed to be a "son of God". But He called for everyone to become "sons of God" as He was a son of God.
Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God. (Matthew 5:9).
It's a theme that runs throughout the gospel preached by Jesus. For example, someone "born from above" IS someone "born of the spirit [of God]" IS someone who has God as their Father IS a "son" of God.
Yes, He claimed to be "one" with God. But He called for everyone to become "one" with God as He was "one" with God.
I do not ask in behalf of these alone, but for those also who believe in Me through their word; that they may all be one; even as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be in Us; that the world may believe that Thou didst send Me. “And the glory which Thou hast given Me I have given to them; that they may be one, just as We are one; I in them, and Thou in Me, that they may be perfected in unity, that the world may know that Thou didst send Me, and didst love them, even as Thou didst love Me.
(John 17:20-23)
Jesus repeatedly makes a clear distinction between Himself and God. As but a couple of examples:
"He who believes in Me, does not believe in Me but in Him who sent Me. “He who sees Me sees the One who sent Me." (John 12:44-45)
“Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works." (John 14:10)
I've yet to have seen a cogent argument that Jesus claimed to be God while He walked the Earth. Can you make one? — ThinkOfOne
Either way:
1. There is a set of "all that exists"
2. There is a powerset for "all that exists"
— ThinkOfOne
The powerset will always strictly be cardinally larger than the set, and as you yourself understand, those subsets are not actually part of the original set (so there will exist members of the powerset not in the set, making the set not itself hence why the set doesn't exist) You've articulated precisely what I said in my post, so maybe this is a misreading? I'm not sure where exactly you're disagreeing with me or objecting — Kuro
Care to try again?
— ThinkOfOne
No, I think we can move on. Take care.
— Tom Storm
↪Art48 A more illustrative example of Rabbi Yeshua ben Yosef's failure as a moral teacher is this:
But I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right, turn to him the other also.
— Matthew 5:39
In other words (intentional or not), reward, even encourage, "evil". :mask: — 180 Proof
Hence, the Sermon on the Mount had a significant impact and role in the transformation of Gandhi's personality.20 For he said: "Sermon on the Mount went straight to my heart."21 And "The Sermon on the Mount left a deep impression on my mind when I read it."22 Thus, the Sermon made a permanent and lasting impact on Gandhi, as he followed it till the end his of life, being called as the 'Apostle of non-violence.'
What really impressed Gandhi in the Sermon was the teaching of Jesus - 'resist not evil.' So he often quoted from Mathew 5: 39,
Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you. Bless those who curse you and pray for those who treat you badly. To the one who strikes you on the cheek, turn the other cheek; to the one who takes your coat, give also your shirt.
What Jesus expects in this passage is not tit for tat, but the end of all resentment and retaliation. We must graciously forgive others of their wrong-doings and our goodness must exceed the evil that is there in the world. We must win over the evil by our goodness. That means we must not return evil for evil, but our response to evil must be good. And how to respond to the evil with goodness is a challenge always. Gandhi understood this challenge and loved the noble teaching of Jesus to love your enemy (ahimsa) in the Sermon. This meant non-violence, non-retaliation and non-resistance to the evil and doing further good to the evil ones. For example, Gandhi saw in Jesus' verse "If any man will take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also?" a picturesque and telling manner the great doctrine of non-violent non-co-operation.
https://www.mkgandhi.org/articles/mahatma-gandhi-and-sermon-on-the-mount.html#:~:text=of%20non%2Dviolence.-,',to%20those%20who%20hate%20you.
↪Tom Storm ↪ThinkOfOne
I'm feeling kind of sorry for wading into this one. All I know about this topic is that I know nothing. — introbert
↪ThinkOfOne
That you failed to recognise my showing how I arrived at that conclusion speaks louder.
We can all play at passive-aggressive chit chat. You like demand explanations from others because it saves you from having to actually think.
If you actually have something to say, just say it. Stop being coy. — Banno
"having dark thoughts about Jews"
— ThinkOfOne
the vicious ethics and deism of the Jews
that bit. — Cuthbert
↪ThinkOfOne Tom Storm's post was cogent and relevant. Don't blame the messenger.
Care to try again? — Banno
It's folly to take Jesus at face value.
— ThinkOfOne
Correct. What has come down to us is mostly fiction. — Art48
I hope Thomson reminded Jefferson that if we find ourselves cutting up Bibles to arrange the text differently and having dark thoughts about Jews then we may lose credibility on religious matters. — Cuthbert
Is this heading towards a 'no true Scotsman' fallacy? And how exactly in theory would one determine what counts as Christian and what does not count? — Tom Storm
1816 January 9. (Jefferson to Charles Thomson). "I too have made a wee little book, from the same materials, which I call the Philosophy of Jesus. it is a paradigma of his doctrines, made by cutting the texts out of the book, and arranging them on the pages of a blank book, in a certain order of time or subject. a more beautiful or precious morsel of ethics I have never seen. it is a document in proof that I am a real Christian, that is to say, a disciple of the doctrines of Jesus, very different from the Platonists, who call me infidel, and themselves Christians and preachers of the gospel, while they draw all their characteristic dogmas from what it’s Author never said nor saw. they have compounded from the heathen mysteries a system beyond the comprehension of man, of which the great reformer of the vicious ethics and deism of the Jews, were he to return on earth, would not recognise one feature.
Pasted from <http://www.monticello.org/site/research-and-collections/jeffersons-religious-beliefs>
There are no actual words of Jesus, just things written in books many years after the events depicted by anonymous sources. Which words exactly could we demonstrate as having been said? — Tom Storm