But the death of Jesus Christ on the Cross was not a sacrifice — Agustino
But the death of Jesus Christ on the Cross was not a sacrifice. This is precisely the point of the Gospels. Unlike all other myths, Jesus Christ was innocent. The sacrifice wasn't necessary. He was not guilty. Read more here (I've started to adapt your tactic to send you to other sources ;) - see, I'm learning from you): — Agustino
virtually every god or hero of classical myth boasts an ambiguity of character that previous theories of myth could not fully resolve. Thus Apollo both sends plagues and restores health; Oedipus saves Thebes from a monster and then perpetrates a monstrosity that threatens to destroy Thebes.
The major theses of Girard’s theory are: (1) That, as Aristotle affirmed in his Poetics, human beings are the most mimetic or imitative of animals; (2) that the human propensity of one individual to imitate another, not only in gestures, but in appetitive interest and desire, conduces to the belligerent convergence of two or more parties on solitary objects of mediated and amplified allure; (3) that, as proto-humanity’s instinctual aversion against intra-specific aggression broke down, such mimetic convergence became an existential problem for the most advanced hominid groups, leading in one such group to a unique sacrificial crisis, in which excitation over an object became a war of all against all; (4) that the afflicted not-quite-community resolves its mayhem through concentrating the chaos of blows on an arbitrarily selected individual who therefore seems not only the cause of the riot but also the agent of its resolution. The victim is thus (5) transfigured in the new type of awareness that he creates as both miscreant and intercessor-god; he becomes sacred, and the sacred, rooted in the dissimulation of “the scapegoat mechanism,” is, as Girard asserts, the oldest of institutions.
And that's precisely the point Girard makes. We don't get the idea of sacrificial atonement because the idea is unjust at its core - and the Gospel exposes it as unjust and undeserved. Jesus the blameless Lamb is put on the Cross and killed - but His death, unlike the death of mythical heroes - does NOT resolve the crisis in society but rather exacerbates it. Jesus brings a SWORD:post-industrial culture simply doesn't 'get' the idea of 'sacrificial atonement' at all. — Wayfarer
sacrifice involves the sanctification of something that is profane — Agustino
Jesus is not a sacrifice — Agustino
No, that's actually not true at all. If I ask a fellow Christian, he will tell me his whole faith revolves around the death and resurrection of Jesus, not His sacrifice.That is not what Christians believe, though. I believe you have said in the past that you are associated with the Orthodox faith - ask any orthodox Christian whether they speak of 'the sacrifice of Jesus', I'm pretty sure that they will tell you that is what their faith revolves around. — Wayfarer
René Girard is a Christian. He's a Catholic. His anthropology and work led him to convert and affirm the truth of the Gospels, since the Gospels are the opposite of all other myths.I am not familiar with Rene Girard, but I presume his account is naturalistic, is it not? Anthropological? — Wayfarer
Precisely. But usually in myth, the sacrifice of the victim brought peace to society (that was Satan's lie). In this case the opposite happens - the death and resurrection of Jesus brings division, not peace in His society.As is obvious, many of those who originally followed Jesus were put to the sword for their faith. — Wayfarer
If I ask a fellow Christian, he will tell me his whole faith revolves around the death and resurrection of Jesus, not His sacrifice. — Agustino
No, that's actually not true at all. If I ask a fellow Christian, he will tell me his whole faith revolves around the death and resurrection of Jesus, not His sacrifice. — Agustino
Why? Why is Jesus' death and Resurrection a sacrifice? It is true that Jesus died for our sins (that's why he was killed), but that doesn't mean that it's a sacrificial death. The reason why it's not is because it didn't perform the function of a sacrifice, which is at-onement of the community. It didn't bring peace, but division.And I would have thought the former presupposes the latter. — Wayfarer
The Orthodox don't typically view it as a sacrifice. — Agustino
Why is Jesus' death and Resurrection a sacrifice? — Agustino
Why do you think it's naturalistic? — Agustino
I don't find this site to be trustworthy. A lot of the Anglo material isn't very good with regards to Orthodoxy, which explains a lot of the misunderstanding one finds here with regards to it.Here is a catechism from a site called 'Orthodox Europe' which is 'Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate'. There are 18 instances of the word 'sacrifice' on it, in such phrases as:
'Christ’s sacrifice for the life of the world...'
'a Cup, the symbol of Christ’s redemptive sacrifice...'
'Orthodox Tradition regards Christ’s saving sacrifice as a common act of love and self-emptying of all three Persons of the Trinity'...
'It is in this sacrifice that the love which exists within the Trinity was given and became known to humans....'
'The Local Council of Constantinople, which was convoked in 1157, stated that Christ brought His redemptive sacrifice not to the Father alone, but to the Trinity as a whole: ‘Christ voluntarily offered Himself as a sacrifice, offered Himself in His humanity and Himself accepted the sacrifice as God with the Father and the Spirit... The God-man of the Word offered His redemptive sacrifice to the Father, to Himself as God, and to the Spirit...’ — Wayfarer
This is where the Bible differs from myths. In myths and other ancient stories, sacrifices are made to appease the gods, and save a community (from the mimetic conflict as René Girard remarks). Thus something or someone profane - a criminal - is sacrificed, and because the community is saved through his sacrifice, he also becomes holy and pure - a hero. This is close to the old Latin meaning of sacrifice, which as I said before, is "to make sacred".Jesus was the one ultimate sacrifice to god that was such a great sacrifice that it meant god could forgive the sins of all mankind (so they could achieve salvation/a blessed afterlife). — VagabondSpectre
Because you have to illustrate to me how it makes someone sacred, how it appeases God, etc. if that's what you believe.What is the point of asking me that? — Wayfarer
Yes, I'm asking you why do you consider G's account naturalistic? G does not deny that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, and the Messiah.What I said was that Girard's account is naturalistic, not the Bible's. I'm not saying there's anything the matter with it on that account. — Wayfarer
I don't find this site to be trustworthy. — Agustino
he death of Jesus Christ isn't a form of penal substitution to a menacing God — Agustino
In this sense, yes, he sacrificed himself. — Agustino
What is the point of asking me that?
— Wayfarer
Because you have to illustrate to me how it makes someone sacred, how it appeases God, etc. if that's what you believe. — Agustino
But the story of the Gospel exposes the inadequacy of sacrifice. When Cain murders Abel, the sacrifice is shown to be evil, for it does not resolve the mayhem. — Agustino
You can say that Jesus Christ sacrificed Himself to save us (& reveal the mimetic conflict) - however this "sacrificed" means something completely different. This means giving up on oneself, in order to benefit another. Jesus Christ willingly went to his death, even though He could have avoided it being God. In this sense, yes, he sacrificed himself. — Agustino
Jesus Christ is not "made sacred" through his sacrifice, nor is the Pharisaic community saved through it - but quite the contrary. — Agustino
No, my objection is to the meaning of sacrifice I described in my first post on this subject:Your objection is to specific forms of 'atonement theory'. I already said that the Orthodox churches don't believe in the doctrine of vicarious atonement. — Wayfarer
This meaning is not the Christian meaning of it.I think you're not quite aware of this Wayfarer, but sacrifice involves the sanctification of something that is profane. Sacrificium in Latin literarily means to make something sacred. — Agustino
Right, but this wasn't the sense I referred to in the post where I said to say that Jesus Christ is a sacrifice is heretical. As I had clarified in the previous post, I was dealing with the old meaning of sacrifice, which involves appeasing the gods, etc.Which is the sense in which I referred to it, and what I think it means, and what I believe you are denying. — Wayfarer
Well do you believe those articles of faith? If so, then yes, I would expect you to explain them.I didn't define the articles of the Christian faith. When young, I went to a Church school, and we were taught about 'Christ's sacrifice', which is what Christianity revolves around. So it's not my job to explain the articles of faith to you. — Wayfarer
my objection is to the meaning of sacrifice I described in my first post on this subject — Agustino
the death of Jesus Christ on the Cross was not a sacrifice. — Agustino
Which was: — Wayfarer
the death of Jesus Christ on the Cross was not a sacrifice — Agustino
No it was not a sacrifice if you bother to read my definition. I can't believe that you're insisting on equivocating on the word. Yes it seems that the English language does not distinguish between different meanings of sacrifice as well as other languages do.I think you're not quite aware of this Wayfarer, but sacrifice involves the sanctification of something that is profane. Sacrificium in Latin literarily means to make something sacred. — Agustino
No you haven't. It seems that you don't quite understand how Orthodoxy works, nor do you get that the English term sacrifice has two different meanings, which are actually two different words in some of the Eastern languages.I quoted the Catechism of the Orthodox Church — Wayfarer
Yes, in a very different sense than what you mean by sacrifice, and what was originally meant by sacrifice.which states that it is a sacrifice — Wayfarer
I quoted the Catechism of the Orthodox Church
— Wayfarer
No you haven't. — Agustino
In our day there is a widely held view that religious dogmas are not compulsory but secondary: even if they still have a certain historical value, they are no longer vital for Christians. Moral and social agendas have become the main concern of many Christian communities, while theological issues are often neglected. The dissociation of dogma and morality, however, contradicts the very nature of religious life, which presupposes that faith should always be confirmed by deeds, and vice versa. Emphasizing this, St James said: ‘Faith apart from works is dead’ (James 2:26). St Paul, on the other hand, claimed that ‘a man is justified by faith apart from works of law’ (Rom.3:28). Under the ‘works of law’ he meant the Old Testament rites and sacrifices which were no longer necessary after Christ’s sacrifice for the life of the world.
Christ's sacrifice 'put an end to all sacrifice' — Wayfarer
>:O >:O >:O Good that I see at least you removed your insults from this comment.I did, Agustino. Those citations were from http://orthodoxeurope.org/page/10/1.aspx . It is not a matter of equivocation, I am simply citing an authoritative source.
It is the official, online 'Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate', presented in multiple languages. Yet you dismiss it as 'unreliable' because it doesn't suit your argument. Indeed, All of the catechisms of the Orthodox, Catholic, and Anglican religions refer to 'Christ's sacrifice'. — Wayfarer
The Mystery of Faith is "A personal commentary on the teaching of the Orthodox Church, its historical development and its relationship to the spiritual life".An Online Orthodox Catechism adopted from ‘The Mystery of Faith’ by Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev
See the bolded bit? If I took sacrifice to hold the meaning of Jesus dying for our sins (or sacrificing Himself for our sins), then I would not deny it - for behold, I affirmed it many posts ago, the same way the "Catechism" you have presented affirms it. But it is very clear that I was referencing the other, older meaning of sacrifice, which is to make something profane into something sacred for the purpose of appeasing the gods.Why is Jesus' death and Resurrection a sacrifice? It is true that Jesus died for our sins (that's why he was killed), but that doesn't mean that it's a sacrificial death. — Agustino
This is false under a common reading that equivocates between the two uses of sacrifice. Orthodox believers are supposed to, in English terminology, sacrifice themselves for the good of their community and for God - the same way Christ sacrificed Himself for mankind. So no, Christ did not end this sacrifice.Christ's sacrifice 'put an end to all sacrifice' — Wayfarer
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