. Being a Christian, I have come to see the respective systems of thought as preannouncing the message of the gospel in terms of ethical questions about life. — Dermot Griffin
Indeed,Christianity borrowed heavily from other religions or philosophical traditions — Ciceronianus
...looks to be an idea borrowed from Islam, with the Prophets "preannouncing the message of" Mohamed....I have come to see the respective systems of thought as preannouncing the message of the gospel... — Dermot Griffin
Establishing that Christianity borrowed heavily from other religions or philosophical traditions wouldn't seem to indicate there's anything unique about it. — Ciceronianus
It uniquely took over Rome and subsequently became a uniquely ideologically complex religion by virtue of being a forum for diverse perspectives. — frank
..looks to be an idea borrowed from Islam, with the Prophets "preannouncing the message of" Mohamed. — Banno
..looks to be an idea borrowed from Islam, with the Prophets "preannouncing the message of" Mohamed. — Banno
My point is that defending Christianity as a religion because it assimilated the doctrines of much older religions/philosophies isn't much of an apology, as you're merely saying it's derivative and proposes nothing new. — Ciceronianus
It" was a dog's breakfast of conflicting views and accounts that needed hundreds of years and much violence to even begin to appear consistent. — Banno
Yep. Christianity is an intriguing myth made up of many appropriations. From the virgin birth story (borrowed from Ancient Egypt, Ra - the son of a virgin) to turning water into wine (a familiar trick of the Greek god Dionysus.) Adonis, like Jesus, was eaten in the form of bread. Osiris, like Jesus, was called the 'good shepherd'. And on it goes. I guess for some Christians, one way to deal with the discomfort this lack of authenticity creates (and to manage the fact that other spiritual traditions may hold wisdom), is to find a way to argue that those other traditions are prefiguring Christianity in some way. — Tom Storm
Nobody said the meek shall inherit the earth? — frank
I imagine the literature appropriated and adapted this, like it did with many other items. — Tom Storm
I was going to say Naughtius Maximus or Biggus Dickus, but don't want to be offensive. — Ciceronianus
Bishop Fulton Sheen said that truth is like a circle of 360 degrees; Confucianism, Buddhism, and Daoism all contribute to the fullness of truth found in Christ. Therefore, we should use these great Asian traditions (this would include certain ideas from Hinduism and Jainism as well which I have no proper understanding of) so long as we understand them in terms of grace. We cannot, from the biblical point of view, save ourselves from ourselves by ourselves. We need, to reference one wise Buddhist, tariki, "other power." To paraphrase something Alan Watts wrote in his early years, the coming of Christ is a satori, an awakening, upon human history. — Dermot Griffin
I have come to see the respective systems of thought as preannouncing the message of the gospel in terms of ethical questions about life. — Dermot Griffin
Therefore, we should use these great Asian traditions ... so long as we understand them in terms of grace. — Dermot Griffin
We cannot, from the biblical point of view, save ourselves from ourselves by ourselves. — Dermot Griffin
‘Comparitive religion’ (a tolerant and open attitude) and / or the Perennial Philosophy is not the most popular position at the moment unfortunately.
Thanks for going against the trend — 0 thru 9
Wish there were more of a similar mind. — Wayfarer
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