His teachings become like someone’s great-grandmother’s bone china dinner set, entirely too rare, valuable, and historic to actually be used at a dinner. — Art48
On the other hand, if Jesus is God, then of course his teachings are great and valuable, but we normal, weak, sinful human beings really can’t be faulted for not following such elevated and noble teachings. — Art48
I’m merely asking you to entertain for a few minutes the idea that Jesus was just a normal human being who had some good teachings about how to live. — Art48
I’m webmaster, zoom operator (services are online), and general tech resource. People often thank me for doing what I do — Art48
to avoid having to do what he taught — Art48
Most Christians say they believe God commands us to love our enemies and forgive seventy times seven. Yet when 9/11 happened, I don't recall any Christian saying we should turn the other cheek. — Art48
What is in the teachings of Jesus that are not in the teaching of Jewish scriptures and works of the rabbis? — Fooloso4
But the metaphorical words are of course not brand-new words but are the already given words. Just as the spirit is invisible, so also is its language a secret, and the secret lies in its using the same words as the child and the simpleminded person but using them metaphorically, whereby the spirit denies the sensate or sensate-physical way. The difference is by no means a noticeable difference. For this reason we rightfully regard it as a sign of false spirituality to parade a noticeable difference-which is merely sensate, whereas the spirit's manner is the metaphor's quiet, whispering secret – for the person who has ears to hear. Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love, 1847, Hong 1995 p. 209-210
Love builds up by presupposing that love is present. Have you not experienced this yourself, my listener? If anyone has ever spoken to you in such a way or treated you in such a way that you really felt built up, this was because you very vividly perceived how he presupposed love to be in you. Wisdom is a being-for-itself quality; power, talent, knowledge, etc. are likewise being-for-itself qualities. To be wise does not mean to presuppose that others are wise; on the contrary, it may be very wise and true if the truly wise person assumes that far from all people are wise. But love is not a being-for-itself quality but a quality by which or in which you are for others. Loving means to presuppose love in others. Soren Kierkegaard Works of Love, Hong p. 222-224
It's easier to worship Jesus than to become Jesus so if you call him a god you are making that goal unreachable and then go your usual way. — TheMadMan
Whatever else one might think of Kierkegaard, he saw the demand from a person to follow Christ as a direct requirement even if the metaphors were unclear. — Paine
Kierkegaard was pretty clear about what conditions he laid out required of an individual. — Paine
You will have to enlighten me how and where Heidegger 'generalized' that. — Paine
So, if I said Jesus was just a regular guy with some great teachings that I really admire, then someone might ask me why I don’t practice those I teachings which I claim to value so much. On the other hand, if Jesus is God, then of course his teachings are great and valuable, but we normal, weak, sinful human beings really can’t be faulted for not following such elevated and noble teachings. — Art48
I don't think so. For instance, Rabbi Yeshua ben Yosef is reported to have taught support of "evil" by not resisting "evil-doers" (re: "turn the other cheek" Matthew 5:38–42, "love your enemies" Luke 6:27–31, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me" Matthew 16:24, etc). :brow:I’m merely asking you to entertain for a few minutes the idea that Jesus was just a normal human being who had some good teachings about how to live. — Art48
Idolatry. Familial/sectarian indoctrination. Masochistic gullibility (re: conversion).If the idea were true, would there be some sort of reason or motive for people to say Jesus is God anyway?
Jesus often spoke with the authority of someone who had direct knowledge of God, — Wayfarer
He challenged the traditional interpretations of the Jewish Law, emphasizing the spirit rather than the letter. — Wayfarer
He welcomed all people, regardless of their social status or background, whereas the rabbis tended to maintain the social heirarchy. — Wayfarer
love for one's neighbor — Wayfarer
Jesus performed miracles, such as healing the sick and raising the dead, which were not part of traditional Jewish teachings, and which the Rabbis didn't or couldn't do. — Wayfarer
Do scientists have a gulf between theory and practice? If science says plutonium is deadly, do some scientists nonetheless carry plutonium in the pockets? Religion claims possession of the Truth (with a capital "T") but I'd say science respects the truth much more than religion.The gulf between theory and practice is one of the things which makes us human. — Tom Storm
Do scientists have a gulf between theory and practice? — Art48
Religion claims possession of the Truth (with a capital "T") but I'd say science respects the truth much more than religion. — Art48
That's what an idealized Jesus might say: take up your cross ! — green flag
Their goal is Buddha and yet they are aware that it is also their biggest obstacle. — TheMadMan
At the risk of diverting this thread, I'd say that science + goals can give us oughts.Science, as we all learn, can't give us an ought from an is. — Tom Storm
Human flourishing is one, admittedly vague, answer. But it's far superior to the Bible's "morality" which says "witches" are to be put to death and which gives specific rules for the buying and selling of slaves.Some "goals" are moral and some are not; how do we tell the difference? — 180 Proof
Think of science as a map. I want to go from A to B. There are rivers, mountains, and private property between A and B. — Art48
But it's far superior to the Bible's "morality" which says "witches" are to be put to death and which gives specific rules for the buying and selling of slaves. — Art48
Jesus often spoke with the authority of someone who had direct knowledge of God, whereas the rabbis tended to rely on the authority of the Torah and the interpretations of previous rabbis. — Wayfarer
We have no knowledge of how he spoke or what he said. — Fooloso4
I’m merely asking you to entertain for a few minutes the idea that Jesus was just a normal human being who had some good teachings about how to live. — Art48
I don't think so. For instance, Rabbi Yeshua ben Yosef is reported to have taught support of "evil" by not resisting "evil-doers" (re: "turn the other cheek" Matthew 5:38–42, "love your enemies" Luke 6:27–31, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me" Matthew 16:24, etc). :brow:
Not a "word" preached against marital rape or incest, against slavery, against executions, or in favor of thinking for oneself – nothing but teachings on how to live self-abegnating lives like "sheep" to be flocked and fleeced by "the shepherd" for his piously mysterious (i.e. "revealed") purpose. — 180 Proof
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