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Question for Christians - #3

Diogenes said:
But if Chesterton is saying the problem is not with Christianity, but with the Christians? Doesn't that sort of make Christianity irrelevant?
If there is nothing distinguishable about a group of people who gather under a banner, of what relevance is their banner?

I don't think that standards are irrelevant! Christians define themselves as people who are supposed to be living to the standards of Christ. *Problem* as I use it is not the mere fact that the Christian will not perfectly correspond to the ideal; the problem, as I see it, is that people will see the Christian fall and have a bad attitude about Christianity, and not the Christian.

When it's Christianity ITSELF (the standard) that enables the problem (the Christian can't live up perfectly to Christianity) to exist. Therefore it can't be irrelevant because it makes the problem exist.

Their banner is relevant because it is the standard they espouse. If nobody espoused the standard or gathered under its banner, it really would be irrelevant, I guess. Maybe.

-Elliot
 
Lucifuge Rofocale said:
Those are the contradictions I wanted to be answered. Thanks Ossai for taking the time to respond to Elliot posts while I wasn't here (I had to marry those days).
Elliot would you answer Ossais's post above?

Congratulations on your marriage!

Regarding Ossai's post...he calls my thinking fractured. I'm not just going to respond to the mere statement.

I think that *punishment* is a way of looking at the objective reality of the situation. I'm taking the Skinner approach here (beyond reward/punishment). :)

See, I call it punishment because I want the alternative. It's punishment to me. That's great if it's punishment to you too.

But I am allowing for other people to have the OPPOSITE attitude. If someone wants to be cut off from God, the reality of that will be a REWARD. That's the notion I'm injecting into all of this, and I'm not sure if I'll get anyone here to appreciate that notion, but understand, if you're going to call my thinking *fractured* that notion might be the reason for your opinion, so maybe try to understand what I'm saying here, even if you disagree with that, and just maybe that'll help to mend the supposed broken bones (which I happen to think walk around just fine).

Ossai said that I said there was no need for a sacrificial plan...if I said that, I meant it in that God did not need to have it all laid out like he laid it out. He also didn't need to have a plan to reconcile himself with humanity. That's what I meant when I said that it wasn't necessary. Regarding sacrifice, I suppose that God didn't need to have Jesus in order for the reconciliation to happen, but that's the way it happened, and I think it all works out, and I have no problem with it. If you want to quibble over what God needed to do, or should have done, I'm not all that interested. I'm sorry I even mentioned *need* to that extent, but I will say that God could have done it anyway he wanted to, and that's as far as I meant the word *need*.

I do yield to God's universal authority. He would extent that to a universal *might makes right*. I reject that, because God makes free choice allowances (of course they'd have to *work* in his universal framework) and I reject how he would have me translate that to how morality would work on Earth. No one on Earth is God, so I have no use for *might makes right* in terms of human interaction.

Of course I never SAID *might makes right* so I don't feel any further need to defend a case that I didn't actually make.

As for the Christian angle being meaningless, that's poppycock. I believe that the Christian angle is the recognition of the salvific act. Forget for a moment the specifics of the salvific act. If you can appreciate the concept (maybe you can't), the specifics fill the glass. The specifics aren't the glass. The specifics could be something else. They are what they are. The salvific act had to be something. If it was something else, I'd like to think the Christians would have *that* angle (but then the Christians probably wouldn't be called Christians, would they? :) )

Re: all anyone has to do is wait until they are dead...if anybody has that attitude and glories in that attitude they will have to be accountable for that attitude. They would have to admit that the mere attitude was at the very least unfortunate. The attitude admits that they *knew better*.

Now, if the person does not have that willful attitude (the way in which you express it), I don't think their accountability is by any means commensurate.

And you're back on the *punishing* gig! It isn't that you don't want to be punished! If that's your attitude on getting into heaven (I don't want to be heaven) I'll insist here and now that you won't be getting in that way (and I don't like to use such phrases, but I'm thinking that this is the kind of phraseology you are thinking about, or expecting). It isn't what you DON'T want, but what you DO want. A negative attitude will not (WILL NOT) reconcile you to God. Ugh. You're looking at this totally backwards, and all I can do is shake me head.

The salvific act does not nullify original sin in the immediate, obviously. We are born flawed, with the tendency to sin, and sin we will. We can be freed from that eventually. If you will, you can say or understand that the sacrifice and resurrection of Christ will have its fullest meaning PERSONALLY to the individual at that moment after death, when God is faced and judgment happens and all that. This would be the more transcendant, timeless, and universal understanding of the salvific act.

Obviously the Christian does not believe that Christ's death and resurrection enables us humans to live perfectly moral lives! I'm not sure how to respond to the contrary notion as it is too absurd to consider.

Ossai then boils down his question:
"Why don't you tell me whats that horrible sin jesus need to pay in the cross. To exist?”"

And the answer is that the question is ridiculous. There is no singular horrible sin that Jesus needs to pay on the cross. It is the totality of human sin. In its entirety. We're all part of that.

-Elliot
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Jesus Christ!

Lucifuge Rofocale said:
How can we hate the non-existant?

Argh. Listen, if you don't believe in God, why are you engaging Christian theology?

Go back to the original post in this thread. I understand that it has evolved/mutated whatever. But the implicit understanding in this thread is that you'll accept some basic theological points in order to engage the Christian in a theological discussion in which some inconsistancies can be exposed. That's what the thread was after.

Frankly Lucifuge, your "God doesn't actually exist" should beg the question. Why are you in this thread? You have other threads to choose from. This one's working WITHIN Christian dogma. Patrick (the original post) starts by saying "If I understand Christian doctrine correctly..." He's working with some givens, and then he asks questions. You are questioning the fundamental given, and that is completely opposite to the point of this thread.

There. I've said it. There have been hundreds of God exists/God doesn't exist threads here. Your comment would fit nicely in one of those.

any new born hates god?

Not sure how you conceive of "hate god". Of course no newborn *articulates* that he/she hates God. And neither do I. And of course no newborn shakes his/her fist at God and curses. And neither do I. What does the newborn do? Place his/herself in the center of the universe. That's original sin. But can you blame the newborn for doing that? Blame has nothing to do with it. It's are state of existence. We have inheritied it. We are as we are. We are given the means to be better than we are. That's the Christian message.

how can an atheist can hate god if he/she does not believe in it?

I've just explained it. Pride is the great sin.

by your theology, an atheist can't sin.......

You've got my theology wrong.

But I will say this. If you don't believe in God, I think you're a different case than I. God has a different understanding of you. This isn't to say that you can't sin...but I think that as a believer, God has different expectiations of me than he has of you.

I'm still demanding objetive proof ;)

No kidding, that's what I keep saying to the abiogeneticists! :)

It is not my purpose to fulfill your demands. I'm just here talking about Christian theolgoy. The skeptics have asked the questions in this thread. If the thread began with "I demand objective proof", you can bet your butt I wouldn't be in this thread. :)

It appears this thread has run its course, if the *objective truth* demand is the ultimate recourse of the skeptic. And it's fine for what it is, but it is not what it was on previous pages of the thread. :)

I'm not sure how can you reject your faith in an all powerfull creator of the universe and still go to church.

Easy. You just do it. I think it's possible (you used the word can). Try really hard? I don't know. Actually, I think you'd have to explain to me why a person who rejects their faith could not go to church. Would that mental belief shift affect how their muscles coordinate with each other?

If you say that the tsunami was not god's business, amen.

Seriously, I think we're together on this one. The people who say that the tsunami was God's wrath applied on man...ugh.

Now I'm sure you are not sure. Well, your theology keeps amazing me a lot. I'll keep yor idea of hell not being a punishment...not even a negative. It would be rather a club where all non believers can hang aroung without god annoying us. That would be a great place to be if god exists. Thanks

I think it will be quite solitary essentially, although the individual may be able to conjure up people to inhabit his own personal hell. But the conjuring will be, must be, totally futile and unhappy. In my conception of hell that is.

If you embrace pride, you embrace yourself. Me myself and I. If you want to hang out with yourself for eternity, and that will make you happy for eternity...yeah. I guess God will allow that happiness. How could he not? That's free will, and individuals will forever be free to be happy with themselves.

-Elliot
 
Conceptions of Hell

Now I feel like spewing forth about Hell and what it's all about, and that's completely off the initial topics of the thread, so I do declare that I am through with this thread. A very successful thread, 9 pages and 2000+ views. Nice one!

Back to hell. Many people (most of them Christians) think that hell is the place where Satan lives! And all of the devils! And you're bobbed up in down in fire!

I don't see hell that way, and my particular branch of Christianity does not define hell that way. I think hell will be a reality for some humans, and it will be a *human* reality. Satan and demons are on different levels of existence and I don't believe we'll all be mixed in together.

I believe that humans are created in God's image, and are themselves a unique creation that is created to be live a fulfilled existence in a unique way. Original sin is something we possess that other orders of beings (angels and devils) do not possess. Our "punishment" will differ from the punishment of fallen angels.

So I view hell as the choice of the human individual. It may manifest itself as demons poking with hot pokers and all that, because that may be the rationalization of the person in "hell". In this way the descriptions of hell are true. And they could also be false.

-Elliot
 
Adieu thread. Vaya con Dios!

I will no longer be stopping by this thread. Any unresolved issues can be directed to me via private message. I will be happy to start a new thread with unresolved issues! But you're going to have to send me a private message, directing me to that thread, so I'll know what's up! Thanks, this was very enjoyable and stimulating. -Elliot
 
Elliotfc
Some believe faith itself is a gift of God's grace.
Yes that's true. I also think that free will is a gift of God's grace.
So if faith is a gift of god and some people obviously don’t have it then god deliberately withholds the gift of faith. If faith is necessary for salvation then god deliberately condemns some by not granting faith. Well, you’re going along with the bible so far.

Punishment is allowing someone who wants to be permanently seperated from God to be permanently seperated from God. The *punished* could very well be the *rewarded*; it's all about how it is perceived.
Ok, this definitely does not coincide with the bible. The lake of fire/the pit/hell are all considered punishment and eternal suffering. How could anyone consider them anything else?

In this case I think it's just like Jesus. Ask Jesus. He'll answer.
Tried it, didn’t work.

The belief is inconsistent with his divine plan, and the proud person does not believe that he/she is in the wrong. How can forgiveness happen in that situation?
You do believe in a divine plan, so the tsunami was god’s doing.

You may not be in the know (I take it you don't go to church) but different sorts of pressures are applied on church goers. Peer pressure. Bible pressure. Jesus pressure. Pastor pressure.
You are saying that churches give more money because of the pressure applied to the members. Kind of like a protection scheme.

Regarding Ossai's post...he calls my thinking fractured.
No, I showed your thinking is fractured.

See, I call it punishment because I want the alternative. It's punishment to me. That's great if it's punishment to you too.

But I am allowing for other people to have the OPPOSITE attitude. If someone wants to be cut off from God, the reality of that will be a REWARD.
You are disagreeing with your own holy book. If you can interpret it as you wish why can’t I and why can’t everyone? God created the world static and unchanging. Satan, the most holy light, gave humanity free will so that they may see with clarity all the evil perpetuated by god in his pettiness and anger. People were starting to drift away and actually ‘wake-up’ when god in his capriciousness wanted them back. So he sent his son to be tortured and killed so that all those who follow him could honor an instrument of torture and death. This would cause a schism between god’s original choose and the followers of torture so that chaos could be sown and death would follow.

Ossai said that I said there was no need for a sacrificial plan...if I said that, I meant it in that God did not need to have it all laid out like he laid it out.
Now you are saying that god is not omnipotent. After all an omnipotent entity could have come up with a much better plan.

As for the Christian angle being meaningless, that's poppycock. I believe that the Christian angle is the recognition of the salvific act. Forget for a moment the specifics of the salvific act.
Considering there was no sacrifice, the salvific act you keep referring to is meaningless.

Re: all anyone has to do is wait until they are dead...if anybody has that attitude and glories in that attitude they will have to be accountable for that attitude. They would have to admit that the mere attitude was at the very least unfortunate. The attitude admits that they *knew better*.
But according to what you posted earlier, it would still work and the would still be admitted to heaven.
“Oops, sorry bout that.”
“That’s ok, come on in.”

And you're back on the *punishing* gig! It isn't that you don't want to be punished! If that's your attitude on getting into heaven
Because Christianity, like many religions, has two motivations punishment, hell, and reward, heaven, everything else is window dressing. If you discount one motivational factor that only leaves the other.

The salvific act does not nullify original sin in the immediate, obviously.
So the non-sacrifice is meaningless to the living.

If you will, you can say or understand that the sacrifice and resurrection of Christ will have its fullest meaning PERSONALLY to the individual at that moment after death, when God is faced and judgment happens and all that. This would be the more transcendant, timeless, and universal understanding of the salvific act.
So if I don’t understand it now, because of the lack of faith, all anyone would have to do is wait till they die. Again, the same get out of hell free card, just worded slightly different.

Ossai then boils down his question:
"Why don't you tell me what is that horrible sin jesus need to pay for on the cross, to exist?”"

And the answer is that the question is ridiculous. There is no singular horrible sin that Jesus needs to pay on the cross. It is the totality of human sin. In its entirety. We're all part of that.
Then original sin is included and people aren’t born
We are born flawed, with the tendency to sin, and sin we will.
Hmmm, again you contradict yourself.

Argh. Listen, if you don't believe in God, why are you engaging Christian theology?
While we don’t believe it, many people do and we have to deal with them on a day to day basis. It’s always good to know how they form their opinions. If I were living in a predominately Buddhist country, it would be Buddhism I would be reading and talking about.

He's working with some givens, and then he asks questions. You are questioning the fundamental given, and that is completely opposite to the point of this thread.
Actually, Christians don’t even agree on the fundamentals of their own religion, and I’m only speaking about the mainstream versions.

That's original sin. But can you blame the newborn for doing that? Blame has nothing to do with it. It's are state of existence. We have inheritied it. We are as we are. We are given the means to be better than we are. That's the Christian message.
But Jesus had a bad weekend – which was cut short by the way – to make-up for the sins, which apparently didn’t work.

I've just explained it. Pride is the great sin.
And here I thought cursing the holy spirit was the greatest sin. At least according to those fundamentals you keep mentioning.

No kidding, that's what I keep saying to the abiogeneticists!
And once objective proof is given, then what of your beliefs?

All that space wasted and you still haven’t answered the basic questions I put forth and now you’re running away.

Ossai
 
elliotfc said:
That's how I view free will! The ability of a human being to make decisions.[/qoute]

Fair enough but you haven't made an argument to distinguish that from a decision made by a non-human. Any decision, made by any decider can only be caused (therefore determined) or random.

Yes, but a computer program is not a human being, so this is irrelevant to my definition.

Ditto!

Ditto ditto

I think this is a hard question for you to answer...but I have to ask it. Hard because you reject free will. Anyhow...how do you define free will (the concept you reject)?

Its not definable logically - its like saying 'define dry liquid'. Thats my point - its an irrelevant concept.

So you accept the Christian notion of evil then? What Christian notions do you accept, and what Christian notions do you reject?

I mean, if you are going to invoke a particular notion of Christianity (evil), why do you accept that notion? Or, are you only accepting the notion theoretically?

If so, you've avoided my question. You either believe in evil, or you don't believe in evil. If you don't believe in evil, I don't care about your opinions about what is evil and what isn't evil, to be perfectly honest.

Define evil then. If you don't believe in evil, why are you using a definition of evil that you don't believe in?

Evil *can* exist, because God created imperfect creatures. I believe that God obviously believes that it is justifiable to create imperfect creatures knowing that evil would thus be a *possibility* (you yourself used the word *can*). I say this because I exist. If I didn't exist, and if no imperfect creatures exist, then neither would your question.

Your question is contingent upon the *possibility* (remember, you used the word *can*) of evil. I do believe that you have the possibility of doing evil things. Does that make you evil then? For example, if you (are you male/female?) have a child, and the child has the capacity to perform evil, does that make you evil?

I reject your idea because when I follow it through, it would make all creators evil. It would make everybody evil. It doesn't make any sense to me. How can everything be evil?

I am using your own definitions to define your own meanings - I am asking you to consider how your concept of evil could exist in your universe without your God having evil within him.

I don't know enough about you. For now I am merely curious about you. :)

You seem like a thinking sort of a chap/chappette. Am I right? That's about the only conclusion about you that I am comfortable making at this time.

A thinking chap I am - and where I come from (the Black Country) the feminine of 'chap' is 'wench'.

Cheers,

- Julian.

-Elliot
 
The answer to the questions in the first post are found in Gods word:

Romans:8:29: For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren.

Romans:8:30: Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.

Eph:1:4: According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love:

Eph:1:5: Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will,

Eph:1:11: In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will:
 
Richard G said:
The answer to the questions in the first post are found in Gods word:

Just as a minor nitpick - what evidence have you that these are, in fact, God's words?

For that matter, what proof do you have at all that these are even the words actually contained in the original letters, as written in their original tongues?
 
Richard G
The answer to the questions in the first post are found in Gods word:
You believe in predestination and not freewill. No wonder humanity is so !u(<#d, we do exactly what god wants and he apparently likes suffering.

Ossai
 
Richard G said:
The answer to the questions in the first post are found in Gods word:
quote:Romans:8:29: For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brethren.

Romans:8:30: Moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called: and whom he called, them he also justified: and whom he justified, them he also glorified.

Eph:1:4: According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love:

Eph:1:5: Having predestinated us unto the adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his will,

Eph:1:11: In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will:
--------------------------------------------------------------------

Do you by any chance have an English translation of this?
 
Diogenes
Do you by any chance have an English translation of this?

The Shakespearean language is obviously divinely inspired, how dare you throw doubt on the KJV of the bible. Apparently it just took god a while (about a thousand years) to get it right. ;)

Ossai
 

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