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The more I learn about Christianity, the less true it seems

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bling

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How do you know Jesus did not also grow in love?

1) We have little to nothing recorded about his early years
2) He seems to go through a variety of "spiritual growths" including the pivotal baptism moment (which some have argued was the moment he became truly divine).

Good question and I might not be able to answer that right off.

We talk about Jesus being 100% human and 100% Deity, but that’s not easy to grasp.

To be obedient you have to first Love and since Christ was 100% obedient His Love had to be huge.


I do think some “powers” and knowledge were kept from Jesus and it may have been vat his baptism he got the power to perform miracles. There would be good reason to keep this power away until he was old enough to start his ministry.

So let me get this straight: Jesus got into some trouble with the religious leaders and was crucified and nearly his entire following fled except for three.

It sure sounds like there was "turmoil and the number of followers dropped off" right around his death. Probably took a few months to restore the following.

I'll quote you here: "right after a religious leader dies (the first six months) there is turmoil and the followers drop off".

Jesus was down to three true followers before His death is the point I was making.

When Jesus returns from the dead and you have many witnesses then the true “Christian” followers start. 50 days later on Pentecost you have 3000 and the church grows rapidly from there.

The point being is it comes rapidly after his death, so something had to have happened.


From my perspective, this is the biggest arm-twisting theology that orthodox Christianity has swallowed in its 2000 year history. It makes no sense that an omnipotent God could find no other way to forgive human beings for their sins other than to send his incarnation to 1st century Palestine to be crucified by a Roman polity.

Do you know how I forgive people? Three words: "I forgive you".

Sidenote: If Jesus' death and resurrection was the crucial moment in history when people could finally find forgiveness and repentance from God, why was Jesus himself telling people to repent prior to his crucifixion?

Your understanding of the cross is the way many people present it, but that is not right.

God has no problem forgiving people and did forgive many before the cross.

The “problem” Christ is resolving by going to the cross is not a “problem” God has in any way, but it was done for man’s sake, so it is out of God’s and Christ’s Love for man.

“Repentance”, had to do with the giving up on the idea of doing good to deserve a heavenly home and relying on God’s Love to forgive you of your past sins. God could always forgive them, but how could they really feel/experience forgiven and know they were a child of God without experiencing Loving just/fair parental disciplining? It was done by some by weeping over their sins, but more was needed.


1) How do you know that?
2) How do you know that Jesus' was able to?

Jesus said: Matt. 26: 53 Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will at once send me more than twelve legions of angels? 54 But how then should the scriptures be fulfilled, that it must be so?”
 
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FireDragon76

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Would you prefer to be in a place where your eternal close relationship with God was dependent on your personal ability to obey (the Garden) or be in a place where your eternal close relationship with God was dependent on your just accepting God’s charity (where we are today)?

I am Lutheran on this point (and most others too). My "eternal close relationship with God" is based on Jesus' self-offering in his life, death, and resurrection, not anything I might do or not do in this life.
 
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bling

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I am Lutheran on this point (and most others too). My "eternal close relationship with God" is based on Jesus' self-offering in his life, death, and resurrection, not anything I might do or not do in this life.
I would say the Master of the banquet invites everyone, but some accept and others refuse to accept (the master does not have them kidnapped to come to the banquet). The offer (draw) by the Master is actually easier to accept than reject since you have to come up with some weak excuse. Those homeless street people didn't do anything to be at the banquet, but they also did not refuse to go.
 
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FireDragon76

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Talk is cheap. Somebody might say "I forgive you", but we might not believe it, and they might not mean it. Actions mean a lot more than words. Sin is so great that it would not be fitting for God to just say "I forgive you. Deal with the mess of sin on your own. Have a nice day". God has to actually do something, and the way he does so is through Jesus' death.

Penal substitution is just one way of talking about what Christ's death means, and its really associated more with Calvinism. The perception may be that many Christians share this understanding as paramount, but that's only because Calvinism plays such a large role in American popular Christianity.
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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Good question and I might not be able to answer that right off.

We talk about Jesus being 100% human and 100% Deity, but that’s not easy to grasp.

To be obedient you have to first Love and since Christ was 100% obedient His Love had to be huge.

But all we see recorded about Jesus (primarily) is him as a 30-year old man. So, the Bible records him being very obedient to God (or at least his vision of God...the Pharisees would disagree). However, it is completely up in the air whether or not he was rebellious or disobedient earlier on. We all go through rebellious phases as teenagers, I'm not sure how Jesus would have been different.

The Bible is not clear exactly about how or when Jesus, as a human, became divine. Most argue that the Christ (or the Logos) is an eternal piece of the Trinity but there is disagreement about when that Lordship or Logos was bestowed upon Jesus as a physical human. It has been argued that this imbuing of the divine upon Jesus occurred at four different times:

1) At creation (John 1:1-18)
2) At his birth (Luke 2:11)
3) At his baptism (adoptionism; Mark 1:10-11)
4) After his resurrection (Acts 2:22-24).

So I think your view is overly simplistic. Jesus may have grown in spirit and love and he may have been rebellious and disobedient at times. He may have spent many years not as a divine creation. The only story in the entire Bible we have that mentions Jesus as a boy has this to say: "And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man" (Luke 2:52). It also says this: "they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions." (Luke 2:46). He was obviously a very thoughtful and contemplative young boy who had some good questions which amazed the teachers of the day. But he was also growing and learning and asking them questions.

I do think some “powers” and knowledge were kept from Jesus and it may have been vat his baptism he got the power to perform miracles. There would be good reason to keep this power away until he was old enough to start his ministry.

"Keeping knowledge from someone" and "someone learning something new" are very fuzzy lines.

I suppose knowledge was kept from me when I was a kid...until I learned that knowledge. I think Jesus was just like any other kid: learning and growing. He was unique perhaps in his inquisitiveness and philosophical bent.

Jesus was down to three true followers before His death is the point I was making.

When Jesus returns from the dead and you have many witnesses then the true “Christian” followers start. 50 days later on Pentecost you have 3000 and the church grows rapidly from there.

The point being is it comes rapidly after his death, so something had to have happened.

Indeed something may have happened. A vision of some sort perhaps. But, as I have said countless times, a Hindu perspective on this event is that it is not unique. Countless wise men of India have been claimed to be incarnations (or reincarnations) and many have developed a following. Jesus appears, to me, as one among these.

Your understanding of the cross is the way many people present it, but that is not right.

God has no problem forgiving people and did forgive many before the cross.

The “problem” Christ is resolving by going to the cross is not a “problem” God has in any way, but it was done for man’s sake, so it is out of God’s and Christ’s Love for man.

Can you clarify why you believe he had to die?

The Christian Apologetics Research Ministry has this to say: "The reason Jesus had to die for our sins was so that we could be forgiven"

gotquestions.org has this to say: "Jesus died on the cross, taking the punishment that we deserve! As God, Jesus' death provided forgiveness for the sins of the entire world"

See also: Acts 13:38.

“Repentance”, had to do with the giving up on the idea of doing good to deserve a heavenly home and relying on God’s Love to forgive you of your past sins.

This is reasonable.

God could always forgive them, but how could they really feel/experience forgiven and know they were a child of God without experiencing Loving just/fair parental disciplining?

So Jesus was just an example on display for our benefit? A metaphor of just/fair parental disciplining?

Jesus said: Matt. 26: 53 Do you think that I cannot appeal to my Father, and he will at once send me more than twelve legions of angels? 54 But how then should the scriptures be fulfilled, that it must be so?”

Fair enough. Why does Jesus ask God to remove the cup in Luke 22:42?

The primary reason Jesus doesn't call down a legion of angels is because he wants the scriptures to be fulfilled. But then, on the other hand, he asks God to remove the cup and find some other way (if possible) for this to play out. So in one breath he argues that scripture must be fulfilled and then in the next he prays that scripture not be fulfilled...
 
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Hoghead1

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But all we see recorded about Jesus (primarily) is him as a 30-year old man. So, the Bible records him being very obedient to God (or at least his vision of God...the Pharisees would disagree). However, it is completely up in the air whether or not he was rebellious or disobedient earlier on. We all go through rebellious phases as teenagers, I'm not sure how Jesus would have been different.

The Bible is not clear exactly about how or when Jesus, as a human, became divine. Most argue that the Christ (or the Logos) is an eternal piece of the Trinity but there is disagreement about when that Lordship or Logos was bestowed upon Jesus as a physical human. It has been argued that this imbuing of the divine upon Jesus occurred at four different times:

1) At creation (John 1:1-18)
2) At his birth (Luke 2:11)
3) At his baptism (adoptionism; Mark 1:10-11)
4) After his resurrection (Acts 2:22-24).

So I think your view is overly simplistic. Jesus may have grown in spirit and love and he may have been rebellious and disobedient at times. He may have spent many years not as a divine creation. The only story in the entire Bible we have that mentions Jesus as a boy has this to say: "And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man" (Luke 2:52). It also says this: "they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions." (Luke 2:46). He was obviously a very thoughtful and contemplative young boy who had some good questions which amazed the teachers of the day. But he was also growing and learning and asking them questions.



"Keeping knowledge from someone" and "someone learning something new" are very fuzzy lines.

I suppose knowledge was kept from me when I was a kid...until I learned that knowledge. I think Jesus was just like any other kid: learning and growing. He was unique perhaps in his inquisitiveness and philosophical bent.



Indeed something may have happened. A vision of some sort perhaps. But, as I have said countless times, a Hindu perspective on this event is that it is not unique. Countless wise men of India have been claimed to be incarnations (or reincarnations) and many have developed a following. Jesus appears, to me, as one among these.



Can you clarify why you believe he had to die?

The Christian Apologetics Research Ministry has this to say: "The reason Jesus had to die for our sins was so that we could be forgiven"

gotquestions.org has this to say: "Jesus died on the cross, taking the punishment that we deserve! As God, Jesus' death provided forgiveness for the sins of the entire world"

See also: Acts 13:38.



This is reasonable.



So Jesus was just an example on display for our benefit? A metaphor of just/fair parental disciplining?
The online sources you are referring to are largely creation-science sites. If I were you, I would avoid them. Their science is not solid and neither is their theology.



Fair enough. Why does Jesus ask God to remove the cup in Luke 22:42?

The primary reason Jesus doesn't call down a legion of angels is because he wants the scriptures to be fulfilled. But then, on the other hand, he asks God to remove the cup and find some other way (if possible) for this to play out. So in one breath he argues that scripture must be fulfilled and then in the next he prays that scripture not be fulfilled...
 
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bling

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Talk is cheap. Somebody might say "I forgive you", but we might not believe it, and they might not mean it. Actions mean a lot more than words. Sin is so great that it would not be fitting for God to just say "I forgive you. Deal with the mess of sin on your own. Have a nice day". God has to actually do something, and the way he does so is through Jesus' death.

Penal substitution is just one way of talking about what Christ's death means, and its really associated more with Calvinism. The perception may be that many Christians share this understanding as paramount, but that's only because Calvinism plays such a large role in American popular Christianity.

Forgiveness is a huge topic and may not be possible to “cover” in one class, especially if we drift into the relationship of atonement and forgiveness, so I would limit it to just one parable we could discuss, but it is not an “easy” parable to understand

God is not bound by the dictionary to define His words and “forgiving” is one of those words Christ gives us God’s definition and it is very different.

Christ’s disciples had a problem with forgiveness. Matt 18: 21 Then Peter came up and said to him, “Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? As many as seven times?” 22 Jesus said to him, “I do not say to you seven times, but seventy times seven.

In Matt. 18:22 does Jesus give a complete answer to Peter’s question?

The follow up question to Peter’s “how many times”, might be: “ Wow, Jesus you got to be kidding, if I forgive my brother as many times as he asks, he will walk all over me.”

Jesus’ parable poorly titled “Unmerciful Servant” Matt. 18: 21-35 gives the answer to this possible disciples un-verbalized question.

To begin with you need to understand how Jesus addresses questions and comments. Does Jesus always address the comment or question directly or does Jesus address the “question” on the person’s heart that will help that person reach the greater spiritual understanding he needs?

Here are some questions I have asked in the past:


The Master (God as seen in verse 35) is the way the apostles and all Christians are to behave.

The (wicked) servant I think would be referring to all mature adults, but am open to other alternatives? (This example, for our behavior will later refer to all other humans we will relate to or just other Christian brothers?)

The Master (God) would have to be doing all His part completely perfectly and all He can do in unconditionally forgive the servant, but does the servant accept the forgiveness as pure charity (undeserving/unconditional)?

The servant is asking for “Give me time” and “I’ll pay everything back.” Now this unbelievably huge debt is way beyond any possibility of being paid back even with 1000 years of time and the servant would know that, so is the servant lying with: “I’ll pay everything back”? (That is impossible.)

If the servant truly accept unconditional forgiveness of this unbelievable huge debt, would he not automatically have an unbelievable huge Love (really Godly type Love) (Luke 7: 40-50) and would that Love be seen in Loving the Master’s other servants, which it is not being seen?

If “unconditional forgiveness” had taken place/been completed how could the Master (God) say and do: “Shouldn’t you have had mercy on the other servant just as I had mercy on you?” 34 In anger his master turned him over to the jailers. He would be punished until he paid back everything he owed.”?

Is there any other debt since Jesus tells us this is what he owed, that the Master “tried” to forgive?

Does the servant still owes the master, because the servant did not accept the unconditional forgiveness as pure charity and thus automatically Love much?

In the parable, which scenario would give the wicked servant more “glory” accepting or rejecting God’s charity or does it even matter, since all the glory in the story goes to the Master no matter what the wicked servant does?

Can the wicked servant take pride (a false pride) in the fact that, in his mind, he did not “accept” charity but talked the Master into giving him more time?


Christ’s parables address one area of how things work in the Kingdom, but may leave other areas unaddressed (it is only a short story), so we need to be cautious.

Lots of times you need to put yourself into the audience Jesus is addressing and try to be thinking: what they would be thinking about at the time, because Jesus addresses what is on the heart of the individual person(s) and not what has been verbalized (there are a dozen examples of this).


I did not really look at the details of the servant throwing the other servant in prison. There are always limits to parables, but look at the subtle differences between what the servants did and what the master did. The wicked servant only put the fellow servant in prison (no mention of torture this could be like Paul’s imprisonment) while the master had the wicked servant turned over to a person (being) for continuous torture?

If you want to discuss further let’s start with what we do agree with.



Can we start with what we do agree with in this parable, just let me know yes or no:

1. The master is representing God in the Spiritual Kingdom?

2. The “turned him over to the jailers. He would be punished until he paid back everything he owed.” Represents Hell in the spiritual meaning?

3. The millions and millions of dollars represents spiritually the huge debt sin creates?

4. The wicked servant is a sinner?

5. The Master’s forgiveness of the servant’s debt is the same as God’s part in forgiving a sinner’s sins?

6. The servant’s debt was not forgiven, since in the end the master says, he is imprisoned for the debt?

7. The servant is lying when he says “I will pay everything back” since it is totally not possible?

8. The servant was asking for time and not forgiveness and gives no indication He accepted the forgiveness as charity?

If we agree with this we are 90% in agreement. The only question is: “Since the wicked servant still owes the master the huge debt after the master did his part of forgiving the wicked servant, what else must happen for the transaction of forgiveness to be fully completed?



Under Christ’s definition forgiveness is not “one sided”. We are to do our part in forgiving everyone and anyone but just as God forgives everyone, it does not mean true forgiveness has taken place, because those being forgiven have a part to play which is: correctly accepting forgiveness as “charity”.
 
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bling

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But all we see recorded about Jesus (primarily) is him as a 30-year old man. So, the Bible records him being very obedient to God (or at least his vision of God...the Pharisees would disagree). However, it is completely up in the air whether or not he was rebellious or disobedient earlier on. We all go through rebellious phases as teenagers, I'm not sure how Jesus would have been different.

The Bible is not clear exactly about how or when Jesus, as a human, became divine. Most argue that the Christ (or the Logos) is an eternal piece of the Trinity but there is disagreement about when that Lordship or Logos was bestowed upon Jesus as a physical human. It has been argued that this imbuing of the divine upon Jesus occurred at four different times:

1) At creation (John 1:1-18)
2) At his birth (Luke 2:11)
3) At his baptism (adoptionism; Mark 1:10-11)
4) After his resurrection (Acts 2:22-24).

So I think your view is overly simplistic. Jesus may have grown in spirit and love and he may have been rebellious and disobedient at times. He may have spent many years not as a divine creation. The only story in the entire Bible we have that mentions Jesus as a boy has this to say: "And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and man" (Luke 2:52). It also says this: "they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions." (Luke 2:46). He was obviously a very thoughtful and contemplative young boy who had some good questions which amazed the teachers of the day. But he was also growing and learning and asking them questions.

The Bible talks about Jesus never sinning:

Heb. 4: 15 For we have not a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin.

2 Corinthians 5:21 God made him who had no sin to be sin (a sin offering) for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God

Knowing what sin is and how hard it would be to never/ever sin tells me Jesus had to be deity from the beginning.

You are right to point out we have very little knowledge of Jesus’ first 30 years of life.





Indeed something may have happened. A vision of some sort perhaps. But, as I have said countless times, a Hindu perspective on this event is that it is not unique. Countless wise men of India have been claimed to be incarnations (or reincarnations) and many have developed a following. Jesus appears, to me, as one among these.

There are lots of claims being made about Jesus recorded when people were still privy to eye witnesses of these happenings. Paul talks about 600 eye witnesses of Jesus resurrected body being seem and most of those people still being alive. To show this was a false teaching someone could just show the grave of Christ and/or others that were in Jerusalem at the time of Passover and Pentecost, just could say: “I was there and saw none of this”. It would have been easy to disprove any of this happened and squelch this whole movement. The movement started in Jerusalem (where all this was to have taken place weeks earlier). If you say: “the story changed significantly from a spiritual incarnation to a physical incarnation”, there would have been lots of different stories running around and people talking about different versions of what happened.

To make this out to be some giant conspiracy put together by people that get nothing financially out of it and will likely be severely persecuted for holding to it, does not seem logical.

Can you clarify why you believe he had to die?

The Christian Apologetics Research Ministry has this to say: "The reason Jesus had to die for our sins was so that we could be forgiven"

gotquestions.org has this to say: "Jesus died on the cross, taking the punishment that we deserve! As God, Jesus' death provided forgiveness for the sins of the entire world"

See also: Acts 13:38.

So Jesus was just an example on display for our benefit? A metaphor of just/fair parental disciplining?

This is a huge topic and I am not in agreement with those you quoted:


To begin with:


During the time of Christ, the Jewish people in and around Jerusalem would have had a much better understanding of atonement since atonement sacrifices were going on every hour at the temple, maybe thousands each day. All mature adults would have most likely participated in the individual process of atonement, but this was only for unintentional sins (really minor sins) since intentional sins had no Old Testament system for atonement.


Those only able to afford a bag of flour (Lev. 5) certainly would not have considered that bag of flour to be a “substitute” for them. There is nothing to suggest the Jewish people ever thought of any sacrifices to be substitutes for them. So what did they experience in this atonement process for unintentional sins?

If we could relate to their atonement experience for “minor” sins we might be able to extrapolate to what the atonement process would be like for intentional sins? (Read Lev. 5)


Forgiveness for unintentional sins came after the completion of the atonement process (Lev. 5), but did God need a bag of flour to forgive the person’s sins?


Would God need anything to forgive a person’s sins or is it the person needing something to accept that forgiveness as pure charity?


Is Christ Crucified described by Paul, Peter, Jesus, John and the Hebrew writer as a ransom payment (it is not even said to be like a ransom payment, but it was a ransom payment)?


I find the ransom description more than just an analogy to be an excellent fit and I am not talking about the “Ransom Theory of Atonement”

(The “Ransom Theory of Atonement” has God paying satan the cruel torture, humiliation and murder of Christ but: Does God owe Satan anything? Is there some cosmic “law” saying you have to pay the kidnapper? Would it not be wrong for God to pay satan, if God could just as easily and safely take back His children without paying satan?)


Would a ransom as those in the first century might understand it (it was well known Caesura at 21 had been kidnapped and a ransom paid for him) included the following elements:


1. Someone other than the captive paying the ransom.

2. The payment is a huge sacrificial payment for the payer, who would personally prefer not to pay.

3. Since those that come to God must come as children, it is the children of God that go to the Father.

4. The payer cannot safely or for some other reason get his children any other way than making the payment.

5. The kidnapper is totally undeserving.

6. The kidnapper can accept or reject the payment.



Go to Luke 15: 11-32 the prodigal son story to illustrate:


Who in the middle of the night snuck in and dragged off the young son, force the son to do evil stuff and finally chained him to a pigsty starving to death? (this is not the way it happened, but the child of the father was kidnapped.)


Who returned to the father, was it the son that rebelliously wished his father’s death so he could get his inheritance or was it the child of the father?


We can only come to our Father as children, so who is keeping the nonbeliever in the unbelieving state (who is this kidnapper)?


There is the one ransom, but could there be many kidnappers and many children?


Who are the kidnappers?


Looking at verses in particular:


(NIV) Ro. 3:25 God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of his blood—to be received by faith. He did this to demonstrate his righteousness, because in his forbearance he had left the sins committed beforehand unpunished—


“God presented” this might be better expressed as “God is offering” since it will later be received, received or rejected on the contingency of some kind of “faith”. Instead of received it might better be translated as accepted (with the option of being rejected or not accepted).

“Sacrifice of atonement” is described by Jesus, Paul, Peter, John and the Hebrew writer as the “ransom payment” or just “ransom”. So God is offering a ransom payment to be accepted by those with faith or rejected by those refusing or just not accepted by those lacking faith.


A huge part of that ransom payment that especially applies to those that are already Christians is the life giving cleansing blood of Christ. Christ and God would have personally preferred that blood remained in Christ’s veins, but I needed it given up by Christ to flow over both my outside and my heart to know, experience, “trust” and feel I am cleansed and made alive. So Christ willingly gave up His blood for me and because of me. This is an overwhelming tragedy I insisted on to believe: I was made holy, righteous and stand justified. Without knowing and feeling this blood flowing over my heart, I might question my cleansing?


“Demonstrate his righteousness” God did not become righteous, but just showed the righteousness He has always had. (God’s justice/ holiness/being right) comes with the atoning sacrifice that includes the life giving cleansing blood showing God’s righteousness/justice in a very particular way; by resolving the huge problem that existed under the Old Covenant. That huge problem in the Old Covenant was with the handling of intentional sins that where committed, repented of, and which the individual sought forgiveness from God for doing (and God forgave without justly disciplining the sinner [thus not showing His righteousness through His disciplining]). These sins could be forgiven by God, but there was no way to fairly/justly discipline (punish) the sinner and still have the sinner live in the Promised Land. God did have fair/just punishments (discipline) for these sins, but the Jews could not follow through with them, since all Jews deserved to be treated similarly (there would be no one left in the Promised Land).


“in his forbearance he had left the sins committed beforehand unpunished” Instead of “unpunished” I would translate that Greek word to be “undisciplined”.

“because in his forbearance he had left the sins committed beforehand unpunished”, shows the contrast between before and after the cross. This is not saying: “before the cross sins are now being punished by Christ going to the cross”, but is say they were left unpunished prior to the cross. If they are being handled the “same way” as sins after the cross there would be no contrast? (And there are lots of other problems with this reasoning.) There is no “punishment” (disciplining for intentional sins) before the cross and there is “punishment” (disciplining of God’s children) with the cross.


Any good parent realizes the need for not just forgiving their rebellious disobedient child, but to also see to the child’s fair/just/loving discipline if at all possible, but under the Old Covenant there was no “fair/just/loving discipline” so God could not show His justice/righteousness except to point out in the Law what really should happen, but that is not “good” disciplining, the child can almost feel they got away with something.


By my coming to the realization of my forcing Christ to be tortured, humiliated and murdered, because of my personal sins I experience a death blow to my heart (Acts 2: 37) the worst possible experience I can have and still live (That is also the most sever disciplining I can experience and still live). Thus I know God is my loving concerned Parent (since He at great cost has seen to my disciplining). I know how significant my sins really are; I can put those sins behind me after being disciplined. Since God and Jesus shared in my disciplining “I am crucified with Christ” (a teaching moment) our relationship is even greater than before my transgressing.

What is the benefit/value for us that we would want to accept the ransom payment of Christ’s torture, humiliation and murder?

What value benefit did it have for those 3000 on the day of Pentecost?

Would those 3000 have become baptized believers on the day of Pentecost if Peter had not been able to say: Acts 2:36 “…this Jesus whom you crucified”?

So for those 3000, their crucifying Christ (ransom payment/atoning sacrifice) resulted in them becoming baptized believers on the day of Pentecost! Did it have value for them?


This will get us started if you really want to know.


Fair enough. Why does Jesus ask God to remove the cup in Luke 22:42?

The primary reason Jesus doesn't call down a legion of angels is because he wants the scriptures to be fulfilled. But then, on the other hand, he asks God to remove the cup and find some other way (if possible) for this to play out. So in one breath he argues that scripture must be fulfilled and then in the next he prays that scripture not be fulfilled...

These words are the only words we have to the most intense pray Christ made, so it really must be for our benefit to know.

The question is “What alternative could even be considered?”

If I personally lived my life fulfilling my earthly objective without sinning than Christ would not have had to die for me (personally). God could have looked down the corridor of time and seen “I” had fulfilled my objective without needing Christ to go to the cross thus “another way”, so there would be another way. The fact I personally did sin means I did not keep Christ from having to go to the cross, so I personally am responsible for Christ going to the cross, since I personally could have provided that “other way”.
 
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Radagast

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1) The Bible is not historically or literally accurate. There are parts that are likely based off true events and true people, but I would say the majority is either exaggeration, allegory, myth or poetry.

Really? The majority of it records events of various kinds; where they are archaeologically checkable they check out OK.

Jesus is not the literal "Son of God". I do not know what this means outside of some sort of metaphorical context.

Well, that is the core Christian belief: that God is a Trinity; that one "part" of God is related to another in a way resembling Father and Son; that God the Son took human form as Jesus -- basically the Gospel of John, chapter 1.

3) Church sermons do not depend on the historical truth of the Bible. Many sermons that I have heard are simply literary analysis of a passage which is independent of the historicity of the passage.

They do in any true Christian church. Without historicity the Bible means nothing.

1 Cor 15:14-19: And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. We are even found to be misrepresenting God, because we testified about God that he raised Christ, whom he did not raise if it is true that the dead are not raised. For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied.

4) Christianity is a 2000-year old evolving misunderstanding; a group of conflicting opinions on God, Jesus, spirituality, and paganism. It was warped so thoroughly by the Roman empire, that it is difficult to try to reconstruct what the "original" Christianity looked like. We look at Jesus, Paul and the Bible through a 2000-year lens of history with all the associated theological and historical baggage.

That is certainly not true. We have a continuous sequence of writings by Christians starting just after the New Testament was written.

And what "warping" could you possibly mean?
 
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Hoghead1

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Really, the majority of it records events of various kinds; where they are archaeologically checkable they check out OK.



Well, that is the core Christian belief: that God is a Trinity; that one "part" of God is related to another in a way resembling Father and Son; that Gd the Son took human form as Jesus -- basically the Gospel of John, chapter 1.



They do in any true Christian church. Without historicity the Bible means nothing.

1 Cor 15:14-19: And if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. We are even found to be misrepresenting God, because we testified about God that he raised Christ, whom he did not raise if it is true that the dead are not raised. For if the dead are not raised, not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile and you are still in your sins. Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. If in Christ we have hope in this life only, we are of all people most to be pitied.



That is certainly not true. We have a continuous sequence of writings by Christians starting just after the New Testament was written.

And what "warping" could you possibly mean?
There is, however, much archaeology has yet to verify and some important biblical claims have be4en debunked by archaeology, such as Jericho, which Kenyon found to have been abandoned long before the Israelites came along.
We do have Christian writings from teh early centuries, but still there is much ewe do not know. Up to Nag Hamendi in 1947, we knew very little about the early Christian gnostics. We're pretty sure the early church really wasn't a church but more like feuding sects, each with a different gospel account. However, we certainly don't have the whole story yet.
 
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Radagast

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Was Jesus the incarnate Logos?

Again, that is the question, because it's the core Christian belief.

As I've studied Christianity, I've found that words only have meaning if they have clear definitions. If the word "Christian" means "anyone and their dog", then I don't see how the term "Christian" has any significance. It should be abandoned and more precise words should be used.

And here you are in agreement with, for example, C. S. Lewis. "Christian" has to include e.g. accepting the historically accepted core beliefs in the Creed (which is part of the definition of "Christian" that this site uses), or it is meaningless.

"Far deeper objections may be felt -- and have been expressed -- against my use of the word Christian to mean one who accepts the common doctrines of Christianity. People ask: 'Who are you, to lay down who is, and who is not a Christian?' or 'May not many a man who cannot believe these doctrines be far more truly a Christian, far closer to the spirit of Christ, than some who do?' Now this objection is in one sense very right, very charitable, very spiritual, very sensitive. It has every amiable quality except that of being useful. We simply cannot, without disaster, use language as these objectors want us to use it. I will try to make this clear by the history of another, and very much less important, word.

The word gentleman originally meant something recognisable; one who had a coat of arms and some landed property. When you called someone 'a gentleman' you were not paying him a compliment, but merely stating a fact. If you said he was not 'a gentleman' you were not insulting him, but giving information. There was no contradiction in saying that John was a liar and a gentleman; any more than there now is in saying that James is a fool and an M.A. But then there came people who said -- so rightly, charitably, spiritually, sensitively, so anything but usefully -- 'Ah, but surely the important thing about a gentleman is not the coat of arms and the land, but the behaviour? Surely he is the true gentleman who behaves as a gentleman should? Surely in that sense Edward is far more truly a gentleman than John?'

They meant well. To be honourable and courteous and brave is of course a far better thing than to have a coat of arms. But it is not the same thing. Worse still, it is not a thing everyone will agree about. To call a man 'a gentleman' in this new, refined sense, becomes, in fact, not a way of giving information about him, but a way of praising him: to deny that he is 'a gentleman' becomes simply a way of insulting him. When a word ceases to be a term of description and becomes merely a term of praise, it no longer tells you facts about the object: it only tells you about the speaker's attitude to that object. (A 'nice' meal only means a meal the speaker likes.)

A gentleman, once it has been spiritualised and refined out of its old
coarse, objective sense, means hardly more than a man whom the speaker likes. As a result, gentleman is now a useless word." -- Mere Christianity
 
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Radagast

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ldonjohn

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leftrightleftrightleft said:

4) Christianity is a 2000-year old evolving misunderstanding; a group of conflicting opinions on God, Jesus, spirituality, and paganism. It was warped so thoroughly by the Roman empire, that it is difficult to try to reconstruct what the "original" Christianity looked like.
We look at Jesus, Paul and the Bible through a 2000-year lens of history with all the associated theological and historical baggage.

The Holy Spirit will allow you to see through all that "historical baggage" if you would only allow Him to do so. I don't think you want to see the truth. Am I wrong about that leftright?

John
 
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Radagast

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From my perspective, this is the biggest arm-twisting theology that orthodox Christianity has swallowed in its 2000 year history. It makes no sense that an omnipotent God could find no other way to forgive human beings for their sins other than to send his incarnation to 1st century Palestine to be crucified by a Roman polity.

Well, that has been a question right from the start: Why the Cross?

The complete answer is a mystery. One aspect is that God in human form would experience the bad that we do. Other aspects are explored in Lewis's Mere Christianity.
 
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razzelflabben

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Well, that has been a question right from the start: Why the Cross?

The complete answer is a mystery. One aspect is that God in human form would experience the bad that we do. Other aspects are explored in Lewis's Mere Christianity.
Why does scripture say that the cross was necessary? Scripture being the authority on the God of the bible, it would be scriptures view that would answer the question.
 
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leftrightleftrightleft

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No, it's quite clear: at his conception (John 1:14, Luke 1:41). The Church has always accepted this.

Adoptionism.

There was somewhat of a debate in the early church, pre-Nicene Creed. A few prominent early Christians had adoptionist views.

Adoptionism was also popular in some areas of Spain in the 8th and 9th centuries.

Modalism.

Modalism is another non-Trinitarian view of Jesus which existed in early church groups. It was debated at the Council of Nicea.
 
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FireDragon76

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Be careful of citing Wikipedia as a source. It's OK for casual use, but its integrity is not good enough for serious reference.

Which prominent early Christians had adoptionist views? I don't think any revered by current Christians stated adoptionist theology.

The problem with some higher critics is that they give no authority to the Christian community as a whole to define what is, and is not, orthodox Christian belief.
 
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Radagast

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Modalism is another non-Trinitarian view of Jesus which existed in early church groups. It was debated at the Council of Nicea.

Early groups, yes, but outside the Christian mainstream.

And no, it wasn't debated at Nicaea. It only came up because they didn't want their condemnation of Arianism to accidentally stray into Modalist heresy.
 
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Fizzywig

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Hi leftrightleftrightlef (!)

I was giving this thread a look and saw your OP. As I have not followed through by reading every word of the thread I may be speaking out of place but would like to address the OP.

You may be familiar with the Biblical scholar Bart Ehrman. Beginning his studies of the Bible as a "born again" Christian, he has since lost that faith, but the important point to know and bare in mind is that according to his very own testimony it was not lost because he is now unable to believe that the Bible is inerrant. He acknowledges that many Christians are perfectly able to have a vibrant faith and quite able to live with the various contradictions and all else that Bart Ehrman writes of in his many books. He actually found that it was the suffering in the world that eventually took his faith away. We are all unique, all individuals.

For me, like you, I find the various apologetics of Christianity in all its expressions unconvincing, unconvincing that it is an infallible (and uniquely true as an "only way" ) guide to the nature of God (reality-as-is). But for me it does not end there and has not ended there. It IS for me a question of the very nature of reality-as-is. The following is from a book by the Catholic monk Thomas Merton. Please forgive its length but for me it has been worth pondering and re-reading....

the deeper question is the nature of reality itself.

Inexorable consistency. Is reality the same as consistency?

The "reality" of the world of many is of consistency, but the reality of the real world is not consistent.

The world of consistency is the world of justice, but justice is not the final word.

There is, above the consistent and logical world of justice, an inconsistent illogical world where nothing "hangs together," where justice no longer damns each to their own darkness. This inconsistent world is the realm of mercy.

The world can only be "consistent" without God.

His freedom will always threaten it with inconsistency - with unexpected gifts.

A god who is fitted into our world scheme in order to make it serious and consistent is not God.

Such a world is not to be taken seriously, such a god is not to be taken seriously. If such a god is "absent" then doubtless the absence is a blessing.

To take him seriously is to submit to obsession, to doubt, to magic, and then to escape these, or try to escape them, by willfulness, by the determination to stake all on an arbitrary selection of "things to be taken seriously" because they "save," because they are "his affairs."

(Note that even atheism takes seriously this god of consistency)

But mercy breaks into the world of magic and justice and overturns its apparent consistency. Mercy is inconsistent. It is therefore comic. It liberates us from the tragic seriousness of the obsessive world which we have "made up" for ourselves by yielding to our obsessions. Only mercy can liberate us from the madness of our determination to be consistent - from the awful pattern of lusts, greeds, angers and hatreds which mix us up altogether like a mass of dough and thrusts us all together into the oven.

Mercy cannot be contained in the web of obsessions.

Nor is it something one determines to think about - that one resolves to "take seriously," in the sense of becoming obsessed with it.

You cannot become obsessed with mercy!

This is the inner secret of mercy. It is totally incompatible with obsession, with compulsion. It liberates from all the rigid and deterministic structures which magic strives to impose on reality (or which science, the child of magic, tries to impose)

Mercy is not to be purchased by a set way of acting, by a formal determination to be consistent.

Law is consistent. Grace is "inconsistent."

The Cross is the sign of contradiction - destroying the seriousness of the Law, of the Empire, of the armies, of blood sacrifice, and of obsession.

But the magicians keep turning the Cross to their own purpose. Yes, it is for them too a sign of contradiction: the awful blasphemy of the religious magician who makes the Cross contradict mercy. This of course is the ultimate temptation of Christianity. To say that Christ has locked all doors, has given one answer, settled everything and departed, leaving all life enclosed in the frightful consistency of a system outside of which there isseriousness and damnation, inside of which there is the intolerable flippancy of the saved - while nowhere is there any place left for the mystery of the freedom of divine mercy which alone is truly serious, and worthy of being taken seriously.

(From "Raids on the Unspeakable")

As I try to say in various posts, to trust Reality is at the heart of faith. The paths to such a trust are infinite. Keep seeking but always be prepared for the unexpected gifts and surprises along the way. Give thanks always.
 
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