What they actually expected was a warlord who would throw off Roman domination. — frank
It's frequently referred to as the Jesus cult. — frank
This is the type of assumption I’m critiquing. It just doesn’t make sense. — Noble Dust
It's frequently referred to as the Jesus cult.
— frank
What are your sources of religious scholarship that inform what you imagine to be your superior knowledge? — Fooloso4
I don't know how we come to terms with our Christian past, or if we can. Perhaps it's something like Original Sin is said to be, and is an unending proclivity of some kind. — Ciceronianus
Just to be sure you guys aren't talking around each other — Hanover
I wasn't attacking you. Sorry you took it that way. — frank
It's really obvious that your knowledge of the Jesus cult doesn't come from religion scholarship. It comes from Matthew. :lol: — frank
It was used by Gandhi
— Olivier5
Gandhi was not a martyr. Peaceful disobedience is not martyrdom. — T Clark
This thread seems to have taken on a life of its own, and I think the theme you mention has become a part of it. But when I commenced it, I was noting what I felt to be the fact that sophisticated Christian apologists, theologians, or philosophers, though they include Jesus in their thought and work, do so in a way which I think ignores or is sometimes contrary to the Jesus depicted in Scripture--what he supposedly did and said. I wondered why, in that case, they included him in their work, and by implication whether their philosophy or theology should be considered "Christian," or whether it really isn't Christian at all, or only nominally so. — Ciceronianus
Martyrs are supposed to die, for a cause, and Gandhi did not. — god must be atheist
But he shamed some oppressors with the suffering he imposed on his own self.
The same that shook the world is the common thread between Gandhi and martyrdom. — god must be atheist
I am impressed by the opinions of Foolso4 and Olivier. — god must be atheist
The martyr angle that evolved from a failed messiah story. Brilliant — god must be atheist
Why they chose the Bible as their mechanism for such mental gymnastics likely has a historical basis, but I'd argue their odd enterprise has been successful in finding meaning in the world. — Hanover
It would have been interesting if the emperor Julian were to have not died after three short years as emperor. He was trying to reverse the course of the Christian spread. — schopenhauer1
Hadrian did that. I mean, the region was devastated by Hadrian's legions circa 130 AD, with millions of deaths. Jewish presence was purposefully erased from the area. Hence the Jewish Christians disappeared together with the Essenes, the Saducees and scores of other groups, and what was left was gentile Christians on the one hand and rabbinical Jews on the other.killed off most of the original Jewish Jesus Movement around Jerusalem, and that was that. — schopenhauer1
Very interesting. Some think it was too late to do anything significant, but perhaps he could at least have managed to keep paganism going for a time if only among minorities. — Ciceronianus
By the way, if you haven't read Gore Vidal's novel Julian, I recommend it highly. — Ciceronianus
We will never get the direct feed. — Paine
With that said, I do share one element of why you wanted to separate the two. I grew up in a church environment and was shocked when I actually read the New Testament for myself the first time. Hearing the words of Jesus was getting a different message outside of the bottle it was shoved into. — Paine
The problem is that the more one... treats them as metaphorical, the less "holy" they seem to be — Ciceronianus
I think Greco-Roman religion had a fatal flaw in that the gods themselves were not ethical, but capricious. Thus mystery-cults and religions that provided an ethical-oriented deity made more sense. Add to it the apocalypticism of a sort of "goal" and you have this inbuilt, very appealing worldview. — schopenhauer1
I think it's the opposite. — frank
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