Crazy Liz said:
Explain?
All these peoples have opinions (beliefs) about Jesus - some more wrong than others.
What benefit is it to their souls if what they think about Jesus is so egregiously distorted that it bears absolutely no relationship to a standard relationship with God? This is tantamount to me asserting that "Crazy Liz is my friend, because she is this world-famous Lepidoptera expert and has the power to give my net magical gifts so that I never, ever will miss another butterfly I swing at." My expectations of you, and what I believe I know about you, are so beyond the pale in this scenario that I really wouldn't know you at all if that were true.
I've changed my mind about enough things (especially theological matters) in my life not to trust my own beliefs.
We all change our minds on various debatable matters--i.e. eternal security, sanctity of the Sabbath in modern times, whether or not God has ever incorporated evolution into the universe, etc. What I hope that neither of us ever has waffled on and never will are obvious core matters to our salvation--whether or not we believe we are saved by the attitude of our heart (as opposed to works), whether we believe God alone is sovereign in the universe--essentials like that.
But I trust Jesus, whether I understand him or not.
Liz, none of us will fully understand the Lord, but He does expect for us to make a sincere effort to. We may trust Jesus with all that we reasonably know and are capable of, but not everyone does. Mormons, Unitarian Universalists, etc. are not expending any effort to really understand Him in a biblical sense.
This is why "believe" or "believe in" aren't really very good words (in our current Western modern/postmodern culture) to translate the Greek verb pisteuo, the verb form of the noun pistis, faith.
OK... I get your point. "Believe" in the West means when someone thinks they know something but aren't 100% sure. I guess a better translation would be to simply say "we KNOW Jesus Christ" rather than "we believe in Him".
That is why I liked the fact that the post I responded to contrasted "believing about" with "believing in." I disagreed with Mike's conclusion (with which you apparently agree) that "believing about" is as important as "believing in."
What I meant is that I agreed with him that there are countless millions of people who are quite positive about what they (think they) know about Jesus and are absolutely wrong. Almost all of them would say that Jesus is the way to heaven, but in actuality most of them have invented their personal paths to heaven and tack on Jesus as windowdressing, even if sincerely so.
There are appx 2 billion nominal Christians on this planet--a third of the global population. When you add Muslims, who by default have a very high (historical, at least) opinion of Him, that brings us to over half of the people in the world "believing" something great about Jesus. Now, do the math... 1s 60% of the population of planet Earth achieving salvation?
Now that you have pointed it out, I really don't know what Mike meant by "believing in" - which is why "believing" is not really a very good word, in 21st century English, for faith.
The way I see it, there are at least three definitions in the vernacular for belief:
(1) like I said before, thinking something is true without being positive ("I believe that there is an afterlife and we all get rewarded")
(2) being positive something is true ("I believe He died and rose again")
(3) incorrectly used, a signifier of personal moral validation ("I believe in adoption, I don't believe in animal testing")
Mike could have meant, as you did, "believing in" as having some sort of opinion about Jesus as having existed and as having some sort of importance. If that's what he meant, then I guess I'd have to agree that the content of that opinion is more important than the mere fact of having an opinion.
Fair enough.
However, the usual Christian meaning of "believe in" means to have faith in, to trust. Trusting someone is a very different thing than having an opinion about someone. WRT our faith in Jesus, trust is far, far more important than our opinions.
What about the people who trust that Jesus wants to give them lots of riches, that Jesus doesn' care what they do as long as they do "good deeds", and so on?