I'm really into this dude.
Could he be called a Christain Mystic?
Is this post in the wrong forum?
Rock out guys.
-Gil
Could he be called a Christain Mystic?
Is this post in the wrong forum?
Rock out guys.
-Gil
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Okay, I must say that this is very apealing to me. I may find it hard not to let Christ into my heart but all of these rules just don't work for me. A man who is doing a Ph.D in Theology, a very passionate Christain and a wonderful poet told me that Christ came to destroy death, not to create all these endless rules. I believe in responsibility but I find that all of these rules are just a barrier to people who feel Christ in their heart but they are told by everyone else "no, what you feel is wrong... there are rules and they haven't changed for 2000 years... nothing changes."awen said:As far as Scripture is concerned, his thoughts on subjective truth in particular are of concern, as they tend to annul any attempt to claim that Christianity is truth (after all, does it matter if Christianity is absolute truth? Not to Kirkegaard, as long as you believe strongly enough in whatever you DO hold to).
One thing that Jesus didn't come to do is burden people with a bunch of new rules. Jesus spent a LOT of time speaking against the Pharisees, who were the most legalistic religious people of that time period. How ironic that some Christians sometimes get so hung up on being legalistic!Matthew 22:34-40 said:The Most Important Command
When the Pharisees heard how he had bested the Sadducees, they gathered their forces for an assault. One of their religion scholars spoke for them, posing a question they hoped would show him up: "Teacher, which command in God's Law is the most important?"
Jesus said, ""Love the Lord your God with all your passion and prayer and intelligence.' This is the most important, the first on any list. But there is a second to set alongside it: "Love others as well as you love yourself.' These two commands are pegs; everything in God's Law and the Prophets hangs from them."
I think you are mistaken there. Kierkegaard was thoroughly orthodox, the article below explains better than I can:awen said:I think you'll find that he's referring to Soren Kierkegaard, who died nearly 150 years ago now.
Kirkegaard can be considered preudo-Christian philosophy.
I think that this is accurate. This is a paraphrase of his definition of truth?awen said:As far as Scripture is concerned, his thoughts on subjective truth in particular are of concern, as they tend to annul any attempt to claim that Christianity is truth (after all, does it matter if Christianity is absolute truth? Not to Kirkegaard, as long as you believe strongly enough in whatever you DO hold to).
Good for you. I would not say he is a mystic at all; rather the opposite, an anti-mystic. Mysticism has a view of man with a basic inner connection to the truth - I think - whereas Kierkegaard denies it and asserts the separation between existing people and absolute truth. Sin creates the situation in which direct knowledge of the truth is not possible.Gilbert Switzer said:I'm really into this dude.
Could he be called a Christain Mystic?