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
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
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
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
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
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
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
How do you know, if a person may ask?I'm not Christian, — Hanover
There seem two general questions in this thread, does God exist? Who gets to call themselves a Christian? The first oft pursued here and imho not to much effect, being a contest I style as being between rationalists on one side, and on the other the irrational. The irrational get to claim and argue as they like, but the waves of their thinking always break against the rock of the simple rational request for evidence. Which evidence, even if provided, would be as noted above and elsewhere fatal to most conceptions of God and problematic for all.[LDS] Church members believe that.... — Hanover
Ok. You tell me something about God. And you tell me how the Patristic Fathers would have responded to someone asking how tall God was, or fat, or skinny. or bald, or smart. The problem with facts is that they come with accidents, and the Fathers were in my opinion smart enough to recognize that if on the basis of some fact you were compelled to say what God is, then you have also said what He isn't, and I'm thinking they were smart enough not to go there. So it's not a question of worrying about beliefs, but instead about what you may be forced to say about facts. Apparently you are unable to distinguish between belief and knowledge, and suppose that they couldn't either. But don't feel alone; I have lots of neighbors who cannot either.predications — Leontiskos
Affirmation as a fact.. I can affirm all kinds of things - and what would that mean? To affirm them as facts, then, would make them different, in all contexts where the difference would matter.Or are you under the impression that belief and affirmation are altogether distinct? — Leontiskos
"Potential failure"? Being charitable, I will suppose you think and express yourself a lot more precisely in your native language, and give you credit for your efforts in English. As it sits, however, yours a disgusting absurdity. Or maybe you're fourteen years old and going through a phase of adolescent power worship. Being likely the third greatest murderer in history, behind God and Mao and ahead of Hitler, he was either on his own terms a spectacular success or a complete failure - nothing potential or half-way about it. 40 million killed is 1,000 per day, every single day, for 110 years.That and he killed 40 million people.
— Hanover
That is indeed a potential failure. The goal is to subdue. — Tarskian
By a quick count you have more than half the responses on this thread.Not a Christian so I won't answer. — Lionino
This seems right. And I'd like to think it was evolving, but the sheer inertia of that thought also impedes its own movement, which means its ground changes even if the words don't. But it leaves the question to you, for you to reconcile. You, and others, seem to feel that affirmation of the supernatural as a fact is a sine qua non of Christianity (which in fact is not and never was true - the creed is, "We believe..."). If so, then what matter the "centuries of sophisticated and curated thought"?. The latter has centuries of sophisticated and curated thought building its tradition, — Lionino
If I remember aright from reading, Madison has Randolph of Vir. introducing early on the form of government that the convention after debate finally settled on. I imagine the template were the state governments of the time, probably mainly Virginia's.I think it was just commonsense once the big leap towards treating society as a designable machine for delivering desired ends became a thing with the Enlightenment. Madison and Bentham both arrived at the same conclusions around the same time. — apokrisis
And this means what? You appear to be neck deep in nonsense and non-sequiturs. If you'd like to reset, try making a simple statement in simple terms.You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs. — Tarskian
You realize that the biblical God is the first practitioner of genocide, yes? And a serial offender at that. No interpretation required; it's just reading the words. And in the Laws sections it does indeed both prescribe and proscribe. Some of it still makes sense, some doesn't, and some disgusting. In my opinion we're in the middle of the age of the death of religions based on the supernatural. And it will take multiple generations because believers won't change, but will instead die out.I do not interpret the text like that. It spells out particular types of misbehavior to avoid, but that is exactly what morality is about. — Tarskian
Maybe this. Unicorns are real. Unicorns are not real. Contradiction? One true the other false? Unreal unicorns are real? Real unicorns are unreal? It matters simply and only how you define it - and if your definition is useful.I am aware that 'real' is a human construct. — Jack Cummins
I see you qualify your view as "one who sees...". Your beliefs get a pass from me. Anything more to it than what you happen to believe? That is, are your vocalizations expressions of belief only, or are they categorical in nature? E.g., "I believe life sucks," v. "Life sucks!"Ironically, you make the case for why one who sees the injustice of procreation would be so vocally against it. — schopenhauer1
Answer: yes.Seems like the real question is: 'Should we obey a law that is not enforced?' — kudos
Recognized, acknowledged, established and perhaps sometimes institutionalized instead of created. And if laws not a product of communities, then from whom or what?I would argue that norms and customs are created by communities, while laws are not. — kudos
They're called criminals.Those who fight against the law in order to attain their own ends are simply living out their own will that involves their self-determination, — kudos
A consequence of what, then?However, organization into states is not a consequence of human civilization, — kudos
Do you mean "ideality" instead of "non-ideality"? I hear the cry of a good thought trying to get out of your sentence, but I cannot hear it clearly enough to understand it. Clarify?People often feel the need to become instruments of non-ideality. There is an imperative to live life that often gets confused with the universal idea of living life. — kudos
A liitle too facile, imo. I don't know what biological firmware is, and I'd say that people corrupt it and civilization tries to maintain it.Our sense of justice is part of our biological firmware. Civilization corrupts it, though. — Tarskian
The Torah, for a guess, c. 1500 BCE, the Quran c. 625 CE. These don't qualify for oldest .Code of Hammurabi, c. 1750 BCE. Ur and the Egyptians, both c. 3000 BCE - and no doubt the Egyptians far before that. And never mind India and China and countless small communities that would have had laws. As to "God's law," what does that mean?Therefore, the best reflection of what is preprogrammed in our biological firmware, are the laws of the earliest societies for which we have records.
You can find this law in the Torah and the Quran mentioned as God's law.
While God's law is meant to bring justice, man-made law always aims to justify injustices to the benefit of the ruling oligarchy. — Tarskian
That is, by working within the structure or destroying it. But it's generally recognized that working within notwithstanding the difficulties, is better than destruction, which is ultimately more difficult.Laws should be obeyed as long as they are just. If they are unjust then adjusting laws either by legislation change or rebellion/revolution is the right course of action. — kindred
Just for the heck of it, you would say the same about Russia?This is a direct threat to the values we should cherish: the protection of human rights, respect for and adherence to international law, and the commitment to diplomacy over violence.... A country that deliberately bombs hospitals, schools, refugee camps, universities, museums, churches, mosques, and entire residential neighborhoods rejects the foundations of a civilised way of life. — Benkei
Are you suggesting western powers' guaranteeing of Israel's security? I'd be for that, details to be worked out.Israel has the right to security, but that right should not become an excuse for unchecked power politics and the denial of the fundamental rights of others and the denial of their security. It is time for a reassessment, in the interest of both Israel and the global community. — Benkei