Originally posted by Ferdie
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Originally posted by JKD StudentThe term "Christian" was obviously derived from the name "Jesus Christ", but the beliefs that make a Christian are derived from Christian tradition. If believing in Jesus' virgin birth and resurrection is not part of your definition for Christian, then you have departed from that tradition. If you have been a Catholic student all your life, surely you have no argument with that. Things like honesty, self-sacrifice, responsibility, altruism and more are not teachings exclusive to Christianity, nor were Jesus or Christianity the first to teach them. While these things are a part of Christianity, they don't make you Christian any more than they make you Buddhist without the other more specific claims that Christianity makes about who Jesus is.
I don't think any Christian in this thread ever said anything about having those virtues you mentioned above being specific to Christianity alone. I know I even mentioned that different religions are but different paths by w/c to reach the same destination. Christians follow the life & teachings of Jesus. It may be the same as Muslims or Buddhists but it is only because when it is good, it is good.
Now you mentioned Christian tradition. You do not refer to the Bible's literature as tradition. Tradition would be the ritual practices of the Catholic Church or the ritual practices of Methodists, etc., etc. The Bible's words are not tradition. They are the accounts of events that happened during it's time. Again, how the authors depicted the events is a matter of norms when the different books of the Bible were written.
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Originally posted by FerdieI didn't say I did not believe virgin birth & resurrection. I said I believe it but also want to find something concrete to prove it to those who do not believe it. That is why I wrote, "to strengthen my beliefs".
Faith is belief in something that you don't see. And yet when the faithful say this, they are questioned to prove it. When the faithful tries to understand & look for ways to prove such a Faith, they are branded as not being Christians anymore. (Look at what you're writing to me now.)
Previously you said, "What separates my being a Christian from another religious is not the belief in just certain specifics in the Bible, but on my works that are Christ-like. Christians strive to live a life that is Christ-like - always giving".
My point is only that one can't leave out the specifics of traditional Christianity and still call his or herself Christian because they try to be Christ-like in their life. It's like a girl calling herself a boy because she tries to live the life of a boy. Living the life of a boy is only a part of the equation, and it isn't the definitive part. Having certain genetic traits is part of the definition of boy in the same way that believing in certain traditions is part of the definition of Christianity. I don't think anyone on the list has explicitly contradicted this, but I wanted to have your agreement so there was no waffling. It's hard to have a successful discussion if we aren't using the same definitions for the important terms.
Take my analogy on the parting of the sea a couple of posts above. Now, it may or may not be possible to prove virgin birth & resurrection but in either case, it becomes a matter of Faith.
I don't think any Christian in this thread ever said anything about having those virtues you mentioned above being specific to Christianity alone. I know I even mentioned that different religions are but different paths by w/c to reach the same destination. Christians follow the life & teachings of Jesus. It may be the same as Muslims or Buddhists but it is only because when it is good, it is good.
You said previously, "What separates my being a Christian from another religious is not the belief in just certain specifics in the Bible, but on my works that are Christ-like. Christians strive to live a life that is Christ-like - always giving"
Maybe I misunderstood what you meant, or maybe you didn't say what you meant. This is also dangerously close to departing from traditional christian beliefs.
Now you mentioned Christian tradition. You do not refer to the Bible's literature as tradition. Tradition would be the ritual practices of the Catholic Church or the ritual practices of Methodists, etc., etc. The Bible's words are not tradition. They are the accounts of events that happened during it's time. Again, how the authors depicted the events is a matter of norms when the different books of the Bible were written.
I am interested in your further responses in this thread, so please respond if you feel led to do so. But I'm going to be quiet for a while and allow some other folks to chime in.
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Interesting.
Originally posted by JKD StudentMy point is only that one can't leave out the specifics of traditional Christianity and still call his or herself Christian because they try to be Christ-like in their life. It's like a girl calling herself a boy because she tries to live the life of a boy.
Originally posted by JKD StudentLiving the life of a boy is only a part of the equation, and it isn't the definitive part. Having certain genetic traits is part of the definition of boy in the same way that believing in certain traditions is part of the definition of Christianity. I don't think anyone on the list has explicitly contradicted this, but I wanted to have your agreement so there was no waffling. It's hard to have a successful discussion if we aren't using the same definitions for the important terms.
Originally posted by JKD StudentThings that have been proven, or have a very high percentage of correlation are not so much a matter of faith. .
Originally posted by JKD StudentFaith is reserved for things that are difficult to believe given what we know of how the world works. .
Originally posted by JKD StudentFaith is not always a good thing, to understate my opinion. .
Originally posted by JKD StudentChristian tradition teaches that different religions are not different paths by which to reach the same destination. The only destination of consequence is eternity with God in Heaven, and the only path is through belief in Jesus as the son of God and his sacrifice for our sins according to Christian traditions. This is the kind of waffling I hoped to avoid by defining terms.
As for Christian teachings; of course it would teach its followers that the way to spend eternity with God would be through Faith in Him & Jesus Christ. Why would Christianity teach its followers that you could go through Allah or Buddha? Why would Islam teach their followers to go through Jesus?
Originally posted by JKD StudentYou said previously, "What separates my being a Christian from another religious is not the belief in just certain specifics in the Bible, but on my works that are Christ-like. Christians strive to live a life that is Christ-like - always giving"
Maybe I misunderstood what you meant, or maybe you didn't say what you meant. This is also dangerously close to departing from traditional christian beliefs..
Originally posted by JKD StudentNot all accounts in the Bible are of events that happened during its time, although it does seem to include some historical documentation. Take the creation story or the story of Adam and Eve for instance. Revelation is another example. None of the authors claim to have been around to witness these events. In addition, it is very difficult for scholars to determine the accuracy of historical Biblical accounts this long after they happened.
I am interested in your further responses in this thread, so please respond if you feel led to do so. But I'm going to be quiet for a while and allow some other folks to chime in.
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Originally posted by Toudiyama[NL]Are we no more than an experiment gone horribly wrong?
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Originally posted by FerdieI'm not sure if this was already brought up here. Got the idea from another forum. So let's hear it. You have a religion? How devoted are you to your beliefs?
I'm Roman Catholic. Practicing but not devout.
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This is so much fun!
I like reading all of your replies, I am quite facinated by different belifs...
My self, am a budhist, but I also belive in mystisism, and much of the ocult, after all, space and time is an ilusion, and can be manipulated to whatever purpose or form one would like...
I base my belifs on having seen and felt things that make me understand there is more to life...
what consicvense can telling about your belifs on the net possibly have?
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Originally posted by ZellI like reading all of your replies, I am quite facinated by different belifs...
My self, am a budhist, but I also belive in mystisism, and much of the ocult, after all, space and time is an ilusion, and can be manipulated to whatever purpose or form one would like...
Originally posted by Zellwhat consicvense can telling about your belifs on the net possibly have?
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ahh...
thou art wise, druid.
I met a vicca this other day, and as we talked, we found we agree in quite much...
I belive in chi, that there is a force in all life, simply the life force, and that if one develops his/her's senses, one can learn to draw infinite energy from this.
in budhism, chi is a energy that goes trugh your body in constant circulation...
I use my skill in distributing my chi, mostly in combat, but once i learned from a chiropractor how anatonomi and muscles work, and cince then, I have devoted myself more to healing arts...
also I belive in the five elements, and that balance betwen them is how to attain mastery of anything...
p.s. I think actualy, that I reached a point of enligthenment this summer, feels kinda wierd...
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Originally posted by GarlandIn fact....Jesus was a Jew...not a christian...
and also reading the "scriptures" one can see that Jesus, by the act of rising from his grave, is a zombie.
Jewish zombie son of God.
Jesus "Zombie" Christ.
man...eat my body and drink my blood....c'mon now, how much more does he need to spell it out for you guys. He's screaming ZOMBIE!
i havent finished this whole thread yet but just in case jesus and his followers (hmmm you know they do kinda act like mindless drones) are zombies...you know me ever the boy scout ...be prepared...here is an essential training manual...
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Originally posted by BoarSpeari havent finished this whole thread yet but just in case jesus and his followers (hmmm you know they do kinda act like mindless drones) ]
Can you help me solve some Partial Diff-Eq's?
I know, PDE's are neither liberal nor arts.
Originally posted by BoarSpearare zombies...you know me ever the boy scout ...be prepared...here is an essential training manual...
http://www.fvza.org/zdefense.html?
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Originally posted by Tom YumMindless drone here.....are you gonna eat that pie??
Can you help me solve some Partial Diff-Eq's?
I know, PDE's are neither liberal nor arts.
Are you really a "boy scout"?
so if you are all so smart...and you see all this going on and continue to participate maybe you arent drones ...
i preferred to think you were brainwashed...maybe youre just sick....
and yes i was a boyscout what of it?...
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