All right, tell us what a Christian is. Don't waste our time telling us what someone else said. You either know and can say, or you do not know. And don't be arbitrary: being a Christian - you appear to say - is a definite something: say what that something is.That one does not care about a question.... — Leontiskos
You seem not to like this. Show the sense, then.As to who gets to call themselves a Christian, as the whole topic is based in nonsense, who cares?! — tim wood
Principles as ideas, amen. Is there more to it? Or not? And whichever side you're on, what do you say to the other side? In my view, there may well have been a time when being a Christian meant something definite; and of that I think only the ideas/principles remain. Of those, I cannot think of any that are clearly originally Christian - anyone?Why can't I appreciate and adhere to Christian principles — ENOAH
Yes, you could follow Christian principles without believing in its supernatural aspects.Why can't I appreciate and adhere to Christian principles and deny its history. Who says that you have two choices, believe and belong, or reject and stay clear? — ENOAH
Agreed. Christians believe in God. Now the question, if one's God is not the supernatural being of most Christians' belief, can a person still be a Christian? And I trust you will see this as a not-so-simple question, and not to be answered in a knee-jerk reflexive way.For Christianity this is not a minor mistake; it is a category error that destroys one of the most basic and most fundamental presuppositions of Christianity. — Leontiskos
it is a category error that destroys one of the most basic and most fundamental presuppositions of Christianity. — Leontiskos
You do realize - yes? - all the problems with this?I asked for a source on "love your enemies" that predates Jesus. You did not provide one. ChatGPT attributes the idea/quote to Jesus. — BitconnectCarlos
Proverbs 25:21–22, and go from there. I refer you to your own devices not because I'm lazy, but because there are more than I care to list, and because you will see them "when they're at home," when you can judge them for yourself best. — tim wood
Love your enemy." Which leaves open the question of what was attributed to him, which centers on the ancient Greek word we all love and think we understand, agape — tim wood
But Jesus makes clear in Luke 6: 27-36 (& Matt. 5: 43-48) what he does mean — tim wood
the novelty of Christianity being the uses, "spin," applied to those stories in their retelling - and nothing wrong with that, as the judgment of the world for almost 2,000 years attests. — tim wood
No reason to think Jesus was familiar with these in particular, but it's a lesson life teaches often enough in one or another form that a person sensitive to such things would pick up on. — tim wood
And Aramaic ->Greek->English, what I take note of is Jesus's simple transactional nature of the "love" called for - do these things and you will be rewarded. — tim wood
It's a strange notion.... I can see how the transactional nature devalues the statement. In the Jesus seminars they consider "your reward will be great" to be a later addition. — BitconnectCarlos
is part way on the right track but would modify it to focusing on what he did say or is credited with saying and trying to understand what he meant.IMHO by limiting the scope of what Jesus says you'll find a stronger Jesus, — BitconnectCarlos
Suppose you somehow became convinced that Christianity is false. — Art48
Do you see the trap - that most of us are caught in most of the time? That of judging what we ought not judge. Of deciding what is right/wrong, good/bad, better/worse in a text, especially an ancient text; and in this case claiming it sacred and divine, while at the same time saying that parts of it aren't. — tim wood
is part way on the right track but would modify it to focusing on what he did say or is credited with saying and trying to understand what he meant. — tim wood
Agreed. Christians believe in God. — tim wood
And I trust you will see this as a not-so-simple question — tim wood
I don't think fundamental Christianity requires any super specific philosophy about what God exactly is. Hell, I don't think most Christians in history even gave that question much thought - and that's equally true of most Mormons, among whom this "god as man" doctrine is obscure and niche and not at all universally accepted. — flannel jesus
You, if I understand aright, maintain that they held that God existed. I merely that they believed that God existed and were explicit in that distinction. — tim wood
You, if I understand aright, maintain that they held that God existed. I merely that they believed that God existed and were explicit in that distinction. — tim wood
In discussing Mormonism, you're confusing me with someone else; I've expressed nothing on the subject. Maybe that the source of your perplexity. Which might account for why you failed to understand my question. .It is an enormously simple question to determine whether the Mormon believes in the "God" just mentioned. I'm still perplexed that we are having this conversation at all. — Leontiskos
You seem unclear about your own topic. On the one hand, people will claim all kinds of things, on the other is the question as to what something is and is not. If you want to assert that there are people who claim to be Christian and at the same time affirm that God exists, then no disagreement. I've met such people; they're not rare. And when asked about any of the details of that existence - that I call predicates - they all (in my experience all) blow up or run away. They call themselves Christians, but in a significant way they're not.This strikes me as deeply confused, and I have no idea why you believe such a thing.
Cutting to the chase, you think that ancients, including Christians, did not make firm claims about supernatural entities. — Leontiskos
Mormons think they will ontologically become an independent "God." Christians think it is blasphemy to say such a thing. But no biggie, right? No significant difference there. :groan: — Leontiskos
Then Jesus told his disciples, “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me." — Matthew 16:24
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