We are the cause of the current mass extinction. Sooner or later, the ecosystem will fail to sustain us. I’d certainly call this a mess. — Noah Te Stroete
The ones telling the stories? I believe most of them had more insight than you give them credit for. — Noah Te Stroete
You really have no imagination. As StreetlightX once said, you’re a “fucking retard.” — Noah Te Stroete
I give them a lot of credit and only go into literal use to engage the fools who are literal readers of myths.
I seek the foolish literalists, as the non-literalists are, as you seem to know, a lot brighter and mostly do not need the correcting that would have them stop using homophobic and misogynous teachings the way immoral literalists do. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The Serpent in Genesis tempted Adam & Eve, claiming they would gain the knowledge of God. I thought you would know that. — Noah Te Stroete
I thought you did not like literal reading. Are you a hypocrite or a liar? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I’m sorry but no one knows how to fix our problems. — Noah Te Stroete
Yes we do.
We do not have the political will. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
That’s good. I just don’t think you have an audience here. I also think your approach is all wrong. — Noah Te Stroete
I’m not taking it literally. What makes you think I am? — Noah Te Stroete
Really? Explain. I think we all would love to hear the solutions. — Noah Te Stroete
Who is your God? The genocidal Yahweh? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Are you Jesus returned? — Noah Te Stroete
The fact that you will not name your imaginary god tells me a lot. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
No. But following his esoteric ways and having suffered my apotheosis, has given me a Christ consciousness. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Bertha — Noah Te Stroete
If that is your name, good. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
First readings, then, ought to be a modest, humble, measured and prudent look at the text itself: first reading irreducibly meaning reading. The metes and bounds of the text being at least tentatively set, you go on from there. The idea being you don't allow yourself to float away into a footless sky of fantasy. — tim wood
The original Jewish messianic myth did not include anything about the forgiveness of sin. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Not in Catholicism, for example. Chritianity is a bit like saying 'asian culture is....' and one must ask `´then 'which one?'Was Jesus born with Original Sin? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
The way I got it growing up was not that he was the perfect sacrifice because he ended up killed. In fact I never heard the phrase 'perfect sacrifice'. The idea was that God made himself vulnerable, in the end to torture, but even to human things like desire and guilt and doubt. And when Jesus was crucified he suffered human agony. I suppose it was obvious to me, even as a child, that some people have been tortured much longer than Jesus was, so it wasn't the most horrible suffering even. But it was a deity willing to enter into manifestation, when this deity did not need to. And I suppose I got the idea that perhaps his suffering became universal, like he allowed it to encompass mankind in some greater way, like suffering more that the exact torture and this was the sacrifice. But we all knew he was going to actually die, in fact that's how the story is presented.If so, then he could not be the perfect sacrifice.
If not, then he had no human side and was pure god, and god cannot die which, makes the sacrifice a lie. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
I think the differences around Original Sin in Judaism and Christianity are nicely explained here....Could these facts be why the Jews have no Original Sin concept in their religion? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
it seems to me this is assuming that the human side is Original Sin, period. The human side does have this aspect, but also other aspect, some of them I mentioned above.If not, then he had no human side and was pure god, and god cannot die which, makes the sacrifice a lie. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Is that also why Jews rejected Jesus as their messiah, — Gnostic Christian Bishop
This is binary. It's not binary. Obviously Christianity considers people responsible for their actions. Just because there is something that contradicts this, in relation to a phenomenon, does not mean all the other parts of Christianity where one is, clearly, responsible no longer apply.the abdication of one’s responsibility for their actions, which is against all moral legal systems? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Most organized religions have contradictions. But here's the rub....Why have Christians embraced such an immoral and illegal concept? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
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