Christianity has missed the importance of the person, of personality. The idea of eternal conscious torment is dehumanizing; it begins with man in a state of total depravity.
But the way Christianity unfolded in history assigned a normative toxic shame to sin, and, therefore, to all of life; all aspects. The typical Christian ethos is one embroiled in shame and subsequent virtue-signaling. Shame creates an entire culture of pathological play-acting. But none of this has to do with the crux of the actual Gospel.
Christus Victor places Christ as the victorious hero conquering sin and death; it's a cosmic battle that's already been won. If Christianity had adopted this view of the Gospel as it's basis, then the culture of shame that embroils it wouldn't exist.
The notion that man's need for God is not reciprocated for need on God's end is nonsensical. Man has zero value if God does not assign value to him, and God cannot assign value to man without having a need. Any value assigned without need would be purely theoretical; value means need.
So, Christianity begins with man in a near-exalted state. — John Harris
This is not Christ's conquest to many Christians. — John Harris
This is not Catholic belief — John Harris
So, Christianity begins with man in a near-exalted state.
— John Harris
This is theologically true, but not really the case in the general zeitgeist of the faith, which is what I was commenting on. I already made the distinction later on in that post.
This is not Catholic belief
— John Harris
I was talking about the general Protestant view.
Sure it is, and grouping members of all the various Christian groups in one gestalt is a mistake and a poor indicator. — John Harris
particularly most American, Christians do see themselves in a exalted, not a degraded, state because of their Christian faith. — John Harris
I disagree, but again, we're making wide sweeping statements here
My personal experience within Christian protestantism revealed a hidden shame that was lying underneath the outward exuberance. And that shame is latent in the way the American church at large interprets scripture, I think.
Noble Dust Based on my own experience with American Protestantism and their leaders like John Piper, John MacArthur, etc. I must say that I agree with you here too
Incidentally, I think she may be right :-OUsing that logic, a woman who was raped by a police officer could say all police officers rape women. — John Harris
John Harris Yes I see what you mean, but it certainly is true that these leaders either knowingly or unknowingly try to invoke this kind of feelings of shame.
You can disagree, but you'd be wrong, — John Harris
and most Christians don't go looking for it. — John Harris
No, mostly they don't, — John Harris
The reality is most Christians, including American ones, — John Harris
Oh... I was thinking more with the man himself :PI'm sure John Piper could set me up with a fine young Christian lass. — Noble Dust
You continue to generalize. Are your generalizations based on pew research data or something, or are they based on your personal experience?
I disagree, but again, we're making wide sweeping statements here.
are you over 18? — John Harris
I continue to generalize because you continued to generalized — John Harris
I dunno, I guess we're done debating this topic? As you've offered no actual points for me to address here.
Anyone should know that personal anecdotal experience is not sufficient evidence to speak for a group. And no, it does not--except the fundamentalists--hide a hidden shame or interpret scripture to find it, and most Christians don't go looking for it.
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