I'm not sure what you mean by "pull one towards Christ." — Ciceronianus
I'm not sure what you mean by "pull one towards Christ." — Ciceronianus
As a Christian I believe that Christ is the fulfillment of truth. — Dermot Griffin
However, I really believe that there are other systems of thought that predate the church can pull one towards Christ if the individual lets himself. — Dermot Griffin
Just curious: Why would you come to a philosophy forum to preach your religion? — Jackson
Not “preaching” anything. Simply interested in exploring the connections between classical philosophy and Christianity is all. Idc what religion anyone is. — Dermot Griffin
Preach on brother. — Jackson
In short I think that the concept of Logos applied to God becoming Jesus, in a Kierkegaardian sense, is interesting. That’s why I see all the aforementioned schools of thought as pointers to Christianity but that’s just an opinion. One could study Stoicism and become Buddhist. One could study Platonism and find himself a practicing Hindu and so on. — Dermot Griffin
Early Christian thought and theology was heavily influenced by texts and philosophies that already existed. It's perhaps not surprising that the New Testament is packed with fulfillments of ancient prophecies. — Cuthbert
I really believe that there are other systems of thought that predate the church can pull one towards Christ if the individual lets himself. — Dermot Griffin
I have heard that on one occasion, when the Blessed One [the Buddha] was newly Self-awakened, he was staying at Uruvela on the bank of the Nerañjara River, at the foot of the Goatherd's Banyan Tree. Then, while he was alone and in seclusion, this line of thinking arose in his awareness: "One suffers if dwelling without reverence or deference. Now on what brahman or contemplative can I dwell in dependence, honoring and respecting him?"
Then the thought occurred to him: "It would be for the sake of perfecting an unperfected aggregate of virtue that I would dwell in dependence on another brahman or contemplative, honoring and respecting him. However, in this world with its devas, Maras, & Brahmas, in this generation with its brahmans and contemplatives, its royalty and common-folk, I do not see another brahman or contemplative more consummate in virtue than I, on whom I could dwell in dependence, honoring and respecting him. ...
..."What if I were to dwell in dependence on this very Dhamma to which I have fully awakened, honoring and respecting it?" — Garava Sutta: Reverence
Christianity was influenced by and borrowed extensively from virtually every philosophy and religion popular in the Roman Empire. — Ciceronianus
It is foolish to do away with what is good in other systems of thinking. — Dermot Griffin
Christianity actively demolished the philosophical schools of Athens and Alexandria, destroyed philosophical texts and persecuted teachers of philosophy. The detrimental impact of the Christin hegemony on intellectual life was not reversed for a thousand years. The classical texts were so utterly destroyed in Europe that they had to be "rediscovered" in the east, mostly from Islamic sources. — Banno
Christianity actively demolished the philosophical schools of Athens and Alexandria, destroyed philosophical texts and persecuted teachers of philosophy. — Banno
If you ain't doing your basics right then you will get what is coming to you. — Moses
What’s interesting about Christianity is that it adopts whatever culture it mixes with, not destroying what is good. — Dermot Griffin
Funny thing though, Dermot, almost every ex-Christian I've ever met or read was, by their own accounts, "pulled away" – liberated – from the Christianity of their upbringing / education by several of the pre-Christian traditions on your list. Some of my liberators (in the 10th-11th years of my 12 years of excellent Parochial school education) are indicated in bold above.Heraclitus
Platonism
Pythagoreanism
Aristotelianism
Stoicism
Confucianism
Daoism
Buddhism
Vedantism
Nyaya
Zoroastrianism
Sapiential Books of the Bible (Psalms, Proverbs, Sirach, Wisdom, Song of Songs, Ecclesiastes)
Hillel the Elder — Dermot Griffin
Christianity actively demolished the philosophical schools of Athens and Alexandria, destroyed philosophical texts and persecuted teachers of philosophy. The detrimental impact of the Christin hegemony on intellectual life was not reversed for a thousand years. The classical texts were so utterly destroyed in Europe that they had to be "rediscovered" in the east, mostly from Islamic sources. — Banno
What’s interesting about Christianity is that it adopts whatever culture it mixes with, not destroying what is good. — Dermot Griffin
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