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Exploring Christianity
Why is the crucifixion so meaningful when the rise of Jesus means he sacrificed very little?
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<blockquote data-quote="TheLightInTheTower" data-source="post: 70791645" data-attributes="member: 394744"><p>Yeah, back to the original question, thank you.</p><p></p><p>I guess based on the answers I've seen so far... I have some further questions, which I have seen answers for but they might not be your answers so I'll ask them here.</p><p></p><p>I suppose in some ways based on the responses I've gotten, he really didn't die at all - but in being "killed", transcended death. Can it rightly be called a "sacrifice" at all when nothing was given up? Was there actually something given up? Or did it happen the way it did mostly as a form of symbolism?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TheLightInTheTower, post: 70791645, member: 394744"] Yeah, back to the original question, thank you. I guess based on the answers I've seen so far... I have some further questions, which I have seen answers for but they might not be your answers so I'll ask them here. I suppose in some ways based on the responses I've gotten, he really didn't die at all - but in being "killed", transcended death. Can it rightly be called a "sacrifice" at all when nothing was given up? Was there actually something given up? Or did it happen the way it did mostly as a form of symbolism? [/QUOTE]
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Why is the crucifixion so meaningful when the rise of Jesus means he sacrificed very little?
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