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
.You had already said:Of course, you could have exercised a little patience and waited for my response to you post instead of jumping the gun... — ThinkOfOne
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
Of course, perhaps I have a deep understanding of the entirety of the teachings of Jesus and so reject simplistic views... — ThinkOfOne
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.
If you have something substantive to say regarding the texts I will respond. Otherwise if your interest is in building yourself up and tearing others down I will not indulge you further. — ThinkOfOne
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
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
She finds the depth of my understanding of the entirety of the teachings of Jesus to be extraordinary. — ThinkOfOne
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
‘Honor your father and your mother,’ [10 Commandments] and, ‘Whoever reviles father or mother must surely die [Exodus 21:17]’ (Matthew 15:4)
Do not judge, or you too will be judged. (7:1)
You hypocrite, first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to remove the the speck from your brother’s eye. (7.5)
Go into everlasting fire that was prepared for the devil and his angels! (25:41)
The greatness of a moral teaching lies solely in the goodness of its contents. The person who repeats it, or even the person who invents it, are in my opinion not relevant at all to the worth of a teaching. — Tzeentch
Indeed; but this is a philosophy forum. If Jesus is a great moral teacher, then we ought be able to cite his great moral teachings. But that is not what the posts here do. — Banno
JC paints a picture of a certain type of society, it's up to us to accept or reject that picture. — Moses
I don't think of Jesus as trying to provide social architecture. There was no need for that in his world. His target audience was oppressed and full of bitterness. That's what he and other preachers like him were trying to deal with. And of course, the end of the world was mixed in. — Tate
It is a society of righteous people where outside behavior is apparently pretty rigidly constrained. It's kind of strange vision. — Moses
He said they were like whitewashed tombs: appearing upright and clean on the outside, but full of decadence on the inside. Don't take it personally. He wasn't attacking all Jews, just the ones who pay more attention to how they appear than whether they show love, mercy, and ensure justice.The Pharisees give to charity, JC just criticizes the manner in which they give — Moses
There's a lot of material on your question in the NT but in short he envisions a society where people flex by asking "how can I help you?" as opposed to "look how many people I have under me. — Moses
It is a society of righteous people where outside behavior is apparently pretty rigidly constrained. It's kind of strange vision — Moses
I hear that. When I read the Sermon on the Mount, the call for not reacting to violence with violence strikes me as particular answer to a specific situation, not an adequate response to all situations. In many articulations of Christian belief, this issue keeps coming up with the whole range of being comfortable with being a soldier of God or renouncing War as such. — Paine
Jews have always had an idea that fixed societies are inherently evil, as if you're closer to God if you're detached from cities and able to dwell in the desert, free from the corruption that inevitably creeps into city life.
Think of Jesus as attempting to inject this ancient ideal back into a world that had become fixated on law to the exclusion of the kind of morality that comes from the heart. — Tate
It's more about how you engage the society you're in than how to build a functional society. — Tate
Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? (Matthew 6:25)
Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? (Matthew 6:25)
Jews have always had an idea that fixed societies are inherently evil, as if you're closer to God if you're detached from cities and able to dwell in the desert, free from the corruption that inevitably creeps 8nto city life.
— Tate
This idea was put forward in The Protocols of Zion. — Paine
This is Jesus thinking that applies regardless of whether the apocalypse/rapture is near at hand at not -- we're all going to die and what's far more important than our lives is the final destination of our soul according to JC. — Moses
He also says no one knows the time or place of the rapture. — Moses
But about that day or hour no one knows ...
Be on guard! Be alert!
Therefore keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come ...
So you also must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.