Heaven Not For Christians Only

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Cybrweez
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Post by Cybrweez »

Xar wrote: if the belief that the Christian faith is essential to salvation is true, on the other hand, then despite the fact that I do believe in God, I find that I would tend to associate with Avatar in saying that a God who does not save His children unless they worship him is not a deity worth worshiping in the first place, since establishing such a criterion suggests intolerance or at least, less than perfection.
This is the problem w/subjectivity. If I don't like what I hear, I'll not believe in it. Truth is determined by what I like.

rusmeister asks, is Christian worldview true?

Xar says, its irrelevant, I don't like it.

Suggests intolerance or imperfection? Really? According to? Xar?

If there is a God, who is in charge of your life, and He says my way or the highway, it matters little whether you like His way or not, He's in charge! What people like to do is determine whether this God exists, and what His highway is, by whether they like the idea or not. Don't know if that's really rational. Or, they take Av's route, which is, I have more confidence in my ability than the captain's.

That's the problem w/the Bible. It says, don't have confidence in your own abilities. And we like to be God, so we certainly don't like that idea. We'd rather earn our keep, thank you very much. I'll stay on this plank of wood and hope for the best.
--Andy

"Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur."
Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound.

I believe in the One who says there is life after this.
Now tell me how much more open can my mind be?
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rusmeister
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Post by rusmeister »

Wow, Cybrweez, you totally beat me to it.

The question, of course, that
subjectivists desperately try to avoid, is, is the view of the Church true or
not? If it is not, then it hardly matters what they think. Christianity is of no
importance at all as a faith and should be dropped like a dirty rag. If it is,
it is of absolute importance for your immortal being. Therefore, if it IS true,
then you wilfully choose damnation by rejecting the salvation that is offered to
you, just as a person drowning at sea refuses a lifeline and thus condemns
themselves to drown. It is NOT something God "does" to you.

For some reason what comes up for me here
are situations like the 1997 film "The Titanic", where the heroes are depicted
in repellent situations where the only way to escape is to dive under the very
water you don't want to go into. The assumption here is that God does not
forgive. Of course He does. But such forgiveness is useless if it is not
accepted. Any parent will tell you that. If the child does not repent, say "I'm
sorry", but instead insists on doing the same awful things, the forgiveness goes
into nowhere. People damn themselves; they are not damned by God. It's NOT an
authority from above.
The doors of hell are locked from the INSIDE. What you
refer to as 'a choice of religion' is something that the Orthodox Church would
understand quite differently. The ultimate issue is whether a person is really seeking God; really seeking the Truth.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)

"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton
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Post by Xar »

First, a disclaimer. I'm going to make a few comparisons and statements which some faithful could take as of poor taste (in the best case) and actually blasphemous (in the worst case). If you're offended by such things, please do not continue. If you read on, do not write inflamed posts afterwards - I gave you fair warning.

No, Cyberweez, the problem is rather different... first of all, once again this suggests that what religion you follow is more important than your deeds - and I notice that this is a topic neither you nor rus have addressed. Not only that, but it creates a very large discrepancy:

1) If none but those who follow the "true" religion are saved no matter what, then it means that of all people living nowadays, at least 5/6 (probably much more) will not be allowed into Heaven; this includes many people who actually perform more good deeds and are much nobler souls than some who follow the "true" religion. In turn, this means that God in this scenario cares more about people worshiping him than people doing good deeds.

2) Some denominations say that as long as you haven't been exposed to the Christian message, your good deeds could save you; the moment in which you learn about Christianity, though, you need to join if you want to be saved, otherwise your good deeds won't help you. Once again, a large gap and double standards - why, all else being equal, is the person who refuses Christianity penalized while the one who never heard of it is not?

Third, and more important: how do you know yours is the "true" faith? You can't just call yourself a "Christian", because there are many different kinds of Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, LDS, and what have you, not counting the little cults), and these denominations often differ substantially in terms of doctrine and - most importantly - in terms of how to act and what is necessary for salvation. And very often, the branch you belong to depends on where you were born and raised. So, who's right?

The fact is, both of those views promote intolerance - or at least, imply that all those who do not conform to the "true" religion will be damned for all eternity for exercising their free will in a way that harms no one (since the fact I am or I am not a Christian doesn't hurt anybody at all). Also, these same views could be held by other religions too - for instance, what of some views of Islam who believe that all who do not convert to Islam will burn for eternity?

If you, as a Christian, are faced with a Muslim telling you that if you don't convert to Islam, you'll burn forever, what's your first thought? Yet his claim is equally as likely as yours to be true - since you won't know for sure until you die.

See, the real problem is that the moment you say "my way or the highway" you say "I'm right, therefore everybody else is wrong". But it also implies that the fact you are right is undeniable - it doesn't even entertain the notion that others might be equally likely to be right as you are. In fact, I would go as far as saying it's an act of arrogance to claim you know for sure your way is the only way - if nothing else because you have no definite proof of that (and as history demonstrates, the Bible can be read in many different interpretations) and perhaps the right way is somebody else's.

Let me ask you something. If God is the Father, and He is perfect, should He not also be infinitely forgiving? After all, He made us flawed, didn't He?

When we read the news and hear that in Pakistan, for example, a girl who "dared" to love a man her family didn't approve of was slain so as to "save the family's honor", what is our first thought? Is it "well, she had it coming, since she didn't conform", or is it "that's abominable"?

And is that not the same with God and religion? A God who damns His children because they do not worship him is really that different from the father who hangs his daughter because she won't obey? If you find the latter abominable, then why should the former be acceptable?
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Linna Heartbooger
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On the meaning of "saved"

Post by Linna Heartbooger »

Xar wrote: Yes, there are, and that's why I mentioned them when responding to Lina. For some denominations, good works are entirely superfluous, and you can only enter Heaven if you are a member of the faith or...
I've decided that the argument that I initially started describing was so utterly pointless in terms of having any direct/immediate relevance on the lives of most of y'all here... so I'm probably -not- going to respond to your previous point-by-point breakdown.

But as far as "saved"... yes, I do believe that being "saved" is both necessary and sufficient. But what exactly does "saved" mean? I still say that it's a very deep heart attitude that one simply cannot fake. I don't believe that there will be any mere "get out of hell free" conversions, in the usual sense of that expression because I think that desiring to "get out of (SOME aspects of) hell" is not the same as desiring heaven at all.

Let's take the example of Hitler. He may have at some point SAID the words, "God, please forgive me and let me into heaven." But could he have actually MEANT them? I'm thinking that given that he spent his life desiring nothing more than to be ruler of the whole world and to exterminate the entire Jewish race... I'm thinking that the odds are close to IMPOSSIBLE that the next moment he could sincerely have MEANT, "God, I'm so sorry... I acknowledge that I am responsible for the death of millions of innocent victims and there is nothing I can do to make that up. Please take me in to your Kingdom even if it means I have to be a doorkeeper. Lord, I want a Jew to rule over me, and I am willing to be a foot-washing slave in a Kingdom where many of the positions of honor are held by Jews. (i.e. Moses, David, Elijah, etc.)"

Bloody unlikely!!! Yes, I believe that it IS important for us to know as much as we can about what we're asking for. Again... because God knows our innermost thoughts, feelings and desires. I also think there are some prayers that, if granted, would just violate the fabric of Truth. For example, if a man asked, "God please save me from the mental anguish of being angry at my wife all the time [but let me keep hating her]." Same with if Hitler asked, "God, please give me my idea of heaven [a heaven where I am the one who sets the rules, and therefore there are no Jews]."

On the other hand... what about convicted criminals who didn't have the time to "prove themselves" or "make restitution by doing good works"? This is an important question because "prison conversions" were common throughout history. And I think it's likely that at least SOME of them are truly sincere people seeking with honest hearts to "turn around" from all their past misdeeds. One story that I think is just lovely is that of Tokichi Ichii, a man who was to be hanged for murder in Tokyo in 1918. He had been sent to prison more than 20 times and was known as being "cruel as a tiger." He even attacked prison officials when he was in prison, and continually refused to say he was sorry for what he had done.

But apparently he was given a Bible by some missionaries and began to read the story of Jesus' trial and execution. His attention was riveted by the sentence, "And Jesus said, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' "
"I stopped: I was stabbed to the heart, as if by a five-inch nail. What did the verse reveal to me? Shall I call it the love of the heart of Christ? Shall I call it His compassion? I do not know what to call it. I only know that with an unspeakably grateful heart I believed."
It seems that now he DID feel sorry for what he had done. Plus, his heart was so changed that he was looking outward to others, viewing his fellow humans as real PEOPLE to care about, even from within the closed walls of his cell!
" 'As poor, yet making many rich.'
This certainly does not apply to the evil life I led before I repented. But perhaps in the future, someone in the world may hear that the most desperate villain that ever lived repented of his sins and was saved by the power of Christ, and so may come to repent also. Then it may be that though I am poor myself, I shall be able to make many rich."
(Source of the story about Tokichi Ichii: Desiring God: Meditations of a Christian Hedonist, by John Piper; Chapter 5.)
Last edited by Linna Heartbooger on Thu Oct 11, 2007 6:03 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them.
They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
-Flannery O'Connor

"In spite of much that militates against quietness there are people who still read books. They are the people who keep me going."
-Elisabeth Elliot, Preface, "A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael"
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Post by Menolly »

Wonderfully stated, Xar.

Thank you.
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Post by The Laughing Man »

I wonder what happens when a Christian who told a Muslim that he would burn in hell meet in heaven? Do they both start to wonder where they really are? :?
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Mostly to Menolly - about the afterlife and other stuff...

Post by Linna Heartbooger »

Menolly wrote:
Lina Heartlistener wrote:...I don't think you realistically want me in these discussions...
Lina, welcome to The Close.
Hiyah, Menolly. Thanks for your welcome. Hospitality is a splendid thing.

My "I don't think you realistically want me in these discussions..." comment was, I now realize, another "small dishonesty" of mine. What I was REALLY thinking was, "Gah! Postmodern relativism makes my head hurt and makes me angry! I don't want to deal with these people and their opinions!" And so in that I failed to love. Sometimes we Christians (or perhaps I should qualify myself by saying "we who hope we are Christians") are just plain open to the charges that get levelled against us.
As for the rest of your post, this is why I am glad I don't fear a fire and brimstone afterlife. Being Jewish, Olam Ha-Ba (the World to Come) just is not a concern in everyday life. Bringing mitzvot into the here and now is the concern. So, I don't generally even think about it, and when I do it is one thing I don't worry about.
Okay, then I'm curious about where the ideas (or lack of specifics?) about "Olam Ha-Ba" come from. I am somewhat ignorant about the "rabbinic tradition" aspects. The main ideas RE the afterlife that I saw in the Old Testament (this is just my own reading of it - I'm sure that our ideas on how to interpret scripture vary widely) were people who rested with their ancestors or people who go down to sheol.

Yet I think that David, who I see as a deep lover of the One he worshipped (even though David did some terrible things) dreamt of some sort of an everlasting life that was wonderful and even "too glorious" as he wrote his psalms. I, personally have to admit that I very badly (achingly!) want there to be "something MUCH better than this world" out there for us!
That said, I will admit I have friends who practice various faiths, and they have all asked for, and received my permission, for them to do whatever it is they can do to make a non-believer's path easier for me. May as well cover my bases, yes? ;)
By the way, this comment was probably the thing that made me saddest of all, of everything I saw on this whole thread so far. :cry: This is coming from my perspective that reads the torah and the other Old Testament prophetic writing as a literal spiritual history (though it's not limited to being ONLY that!) of things that really happened on this earth to the children of Jacob.

Btw, I'll try to keep the vowels (which we don't even know whether they are the "right ones") out of the "Y" Name if I ever use it explicitly, cause that's maybe important to you, but other than that... I'll use my own convention. (UNLESS there any words that actually "burn your eyes" to see on the page. But I'm guessing that's just your own personal habit of writing "names" that relate to the Name.)[/i]
Last edited by Linna Heartbooger on Thu Oct 11, 2007 7:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"People without hope not only don't write novels, but what is more to the point, they don't read them.
They don't take long looks at anything, because they lack the courage.
The way to despair is to refuse to have any kind of experience, and the novel, of course, is a way to have experience."
-Flannery O'Connor

"In spite of much that militates against quietness there are people who still read books. They are the people who keep me going."
-Elisabeth Elliot, Preface, "A Chance to Die: The Life and Legacy of Amy Carmichael"
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Post by emotional leper »

Esmer wrote:I wonder what happens when a Christian who told a Muslim that he would burn in hell meet in heaven? Do they both start to wonder where they really are? :?
Well, if they notice that Heaven's a bar, and it's right down the road from a Hooker Factory and a Beer Volcano, then I'll probably be laughing my ass off as I do belly-shots off of Allison Reynolds.
B&
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Post by rusmeister »

Xar wrote:First, a disclaimer. I'm going to make a few comparisons and statements which some faithful could take as of poor taste (in the best case) and actually blasphemous (in the worst case). If you're offended by such things, please do not continue. If you read on, do not write inflamed posts afterwards - I gave you fair warning.

No, Cyberweez, the problem is rather different... first of all, once again this suggests that what religion you follow is more important than your deeds - and I notice that this is a topic neither you nor rus have addressed. Not only that, but it creates a very large discrepancy:

1) If none but those who follow the "true" religion are saved no matter what, then it means that of all people living nowadays, at least 5/6 (probably much more) will not be allowed into Heaven; this includes many people who actually perform more good deeds and are much nobler souls than some who follow the "true" religion. In turn, this means that God in this scenario cares more about people worshiping him than people doing good deeds.

2) Some denominations say that as long as you haven't been exposed to the Christian message, your good deeds could save you; the moment in which you learn about Christianity, though, you need to join if you want to be saved, otherwise your good deeds won't help you. Once again, a large gap and double standards - why, all else being equal, is the person who refuses Christianity penalized while the one who never heard of it is not?

Third, and more important: how do you know yours is the "true" faith? You can't just call yourself a "Christian", because there are many different kinds of Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, LDS, and what have you, not counting the little cults), and these denominations often differ substantially in terms of doctrine and - most importantly - in terms of how to act and what is necessary for salvation. And very often, the branch you belong to depends on where you were born and raised. So, who's right?

The fact is, both of those views promote intolerance - or at least, imply that all those who do not conform to the "true" religion will be damned for all eternity for exercising their free will in a way that harms no one (since the fact I am or I am not a Christian doesn't hurt anybody at all). Also, these same views could be held by other religions too - for instance, what of some views of Islam who believe that all who do not convert to Islam will burn for eternity?

If you, as a Christian, are faced with a Muslim telling you that if you don't convert to Islam, you'll burn forever, what's your first thought? Yet his claim is equally as likely as yours to be true - since you won't know for sure until you die.

See, the real problem is that the moment you say "my way or the highway" you say "I'm right, therefore everybody else is wrong". But it also implies that the fact you are right is undeniable - it doesn't even entertain the notion that others might be equally likely to be right as you are. In fact, I would go as far as saying it's an act of arrogance to claim you know for sure your way is the only way - if nothing else because you have no definite proof of that (and as history demonstrates, the Bible can be read in many different interpretations) and perhaps the right way is somebody else's.

Let me ask you something. If God is the Father, and He is perfect, should He not also be infinitely forgiving? After all, He made us flawed, didn't He?

When we read the news and hear that in Pakistan, for example, a girl who "dared" to love a man her family didn't approve of was slain so as to "save the family's honor", what is our first thought? Is it "well, she had it coming, since she didn't conform", or is it "that's abominable"?

And is that not the same with God and religion? A God who damns His children because they do not worship him is really that different from the father who hangs his daughter because she won't obey? If you find the latter abominable, then why should the former be acceptable?
It's difficult to respond to you, Zar, because you don't seem to have read what cybrweez or I said or to share common definitions with us. It seems that you have certain concepts in your head of what Christianity teaches - what does 'saved' mean?; what does 'allowed into Heaven' mean? You seem to be speaking of some of the more primitive versions of fundamental or evangelical Christianity (and even there there are more educated understandings of these concepts) with a vengeful God out to get us if we make the wrong choice. I've already tried to get across to you that you may need to be saved from yourself, and that by your own choices you can damn yourself, rather than the false idea that God wants to punish us forever and ever and ever, but you don't seem to have picked up on this.

In addition, you speak about following a religion as if it were a certain set of rules, very similar to other sets of rules, most if not all of which ought to lead us to eternal bliss, rather than discovering a blueprint by which to live our lives that accurately diagnoses our condition and helps us to reject our own tendency to self-destruct and become the way God wants us to be. I do think your question about denominations is a good one, that deserves careful consideration. But it IS a problem that is ultimately soluble.

You say that God 'made us flawed'. This is NOT the Christian understanding, but a straw man invented to make Christianity easy to prove wrong (in some people's minds). If you honestly inquire into Christian teaching (I will speak from Orthodox Christianity, as the only Church that I can honestly defend) you will discover that God made us perfect and saw that "it was good", and that man fell by his own choice to turn away from God and reject God as the source of life, seeking that life instead in himself. We were never intended to die. It's a tragedy that was never supposed to happen, and lead to the Incarnation of God Himself, to sacrifice Himself, in order to save us from our own mistakes. But now the pride that keeps us from accepting the lifelines thrown to us and keeps us floating on our little planks leads us to our destruction. Again, as you pointed out, the theologies of varying denominations do have holes or points that are difficult to explain at various points - but FTR, Orthodoxy claims to be PRE-denominational. It's always been around, and never broke off from anybody. Unlike Protestant denominations, there is no date of the founding of the Orthodox Church, other than roughly AD 33 (The only other Church that can make this claim is the Roman Catholic Church, so that would narrow down your search really fast). I'd suggest you seek to understand Orthodox teaching before rejecting it, and you need to get your info from the horse's mouth.

Cybrweez's point that if there is only one Truth, your protests boot nothing, is good. In that case, you would need to try to understand why things are that way. Either way, you're back to the original question of whether the claims of Christianity are true or not. Once again, I'll try to steer you to G.K. Chesterton's book, "The Everlasting Man" as an examination from a point of view that a pagan or pantheist (or agnostic)could appreciate.

Esmer, your speculative question has a good point - we can't really know how things work on the other side, outside of things specifically given in revelation. CS Lewis said, "There will be surprises", so I think your point is good - but I doubt that we would be questioning where we are at that point.
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Post by rusmeister »

Xar wrote:First, a disclaimer. I'm going to make a few comparisons and statements which some faithful could take as of poor taste (in the best case) and actually blasphemous (in the worst case). If you're offended by such things, please do not continue. If you read on, do not write inflamed posts afterwards - I gave you fair warning.

No, Cyberweez, the problem is rather different... first of all, once again this suggests that what religion you follow is more important than your deeds - and I notice that this is a topic neither you nor rus have addressed. Not only that, but it creates a very large discrepancy:

1) If none but those who follow the "true" religion are saved no matter what, then it means that of all people living nowadays, at least 5/6 (probably much more) will not be allowed into Heaven; this includes many people who actually perform more good deeds and are much nobler souls than some who follow the "true" religion. In turn, this means that God in this scenario cares more about people worshiping him than people doing good deeds.

2) Some denominations say that as long as you haven't been exposed to the Christian message, your good deeds could save you; the moment in which you learn about Christianity, though, you need to join if you want to be saved, otherwise your good deeds won't help you. Once again, a large gap and double standards - why, all else being equal, is the person who refuses Christianity penalized while the one who never heard of it is not?

Third, and more important: how do you know yours is the "true" faith? You can't just call yourself a "Christian", because there are many different kinds of Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox, LDS, and what have you, not counting the little cults), and these denominations often differ substantially in terms of doctrine and - most importantly - in terms of how to act and what is necessary for salvation. And very often, the branch you belong to depends on where you were born and raised. So, who's right?

The fact is, both of those views promote intolerance - or at least, imply that all those who do not conform to the "true" religion will be damned for all eternity for exercising their free will in a way that harms no one (since the fact I am or I am not a Christian doesn't hurt anybody at all). Also, these same views could be held by other religions too - for instance, what of some views of Islam who believe that all who do not convert to Islam will burn for eternity?

If you, as a Christian, are faced with a Muslim telling you that if you don't convert to Islam, you'll burn forever, what's your first thought? Yet his claim is equally as likely as yours to be true - since you won't know for sure until you die.

See, the real problem is that the moment you say "my way or the highway" you say "I'm right, therefore everybody else is wrong". But it also implies that the fact you are right is undeniable - it doesn't even entertain the notion that others might be equally likely to be right as you are. In fact, I would go as far as saying it's an act of arrogance to claim you know for sure your way is the only way - if nothing else because you have no definite proof of that (and as history demonstrates, the Bible can be read in many different interpretations) and perhaps the right way is somebody else's.

Let me ask you something. If God is the Father, and He is perfect, should He not also be infinitely forgiving? After all, He made us flawed, didn't He?

When we read the news and hear that in Pakistan, for example, a girl who "dared" to love a man her family didn't approve of was slain so as to "save the family's honor", what is our first thought? Is it "well, she had it coming, since she didn't conform", or is it "that's abominable"?

And is that not the same with God and religion? A God who damns His children because they do not worship him is really that different from the father who hangs his daughter because she won't obey? If you find the latter abominable, then why should the former be acceptable?
It's difficult to respond to you, Zar, because you don't seem to have read what cybrweez or I said or to share common definitions with us. It seems that you have certain concepts in your head of what Christianity teaches - what does 'saved' mean?; what does 'allowed into Heaven' mean? You seem to be speaking of some of the more primitive versions of fundamental or evangelical Christianity (and even there there are more educated understandings of these concepts) with a vengeful God out to get us if we make the wrong choice. I've already tried to get across to you that you may need to be saved from yourself, and that by your own choices you can damn yourself, rather than the false idea that God wants to punish us forever and ever and ever, but you don't seem to have picked up on this.

In addition, you speak about following a religion as if it were a certain set of rules, very similar to other sets of rules, most if not all of which ought to lead us to eternal bliss, rather than discovering a blueprint by which to live our lives that accurately diagnoses our condition and helps us to reject our own tendency to self-destruct and become the way God wants us to be. I do think your question about denominations is a good one, that deserves careful consideration. But it IS a problem that is ultimately soluble.

You say that God 'made us flawed'. This is NOT the Christian understanding, but a straw man invented to make Christianity easy to prove wrong (in some people's minds). If you honestly inquire into Christian teaching (I will speak from Orthodox Christianity, as the only Church that I can honestly defend) you will discover that God made us perfect and saw that "it was good", and that man fell by his own choice to turn away from God and reject God as the source of life, seeking that life instead in himself. We were never intended to die. It's a tragedy that was never supposed to happen, and lead to the Incarnation of God Himself, to sacrifice Himself, in order to save us from our own mistakes. But now the pride that keeps us from accepting the lifelines thrown to us and keeps us floating on our little planks leads us to our destruction. Again, as you pointed out, the theologies of varying denominations do have holes or points that are difficult to explain at various points - but FTR, Orthodoxy claims to be PRE-denominational. It's always been around, and never broke off from anybody. Unlike Protestant denominations, there is no date of the founding of the Orthodox Church, other than roughly AD 33 (The only other Church that can make this claim is the Roman Catholic Church, so that would narrow down your search really fast). I'd suggest you seek to understand Orthodox teaching before rejecting it, and you need to get your info from the horse's mouth.

Cybrweez's point that if there is only one Truth, your protests boot nothing, is good. In that case, you would need to try to understand why things are that way. Either way, you're back to the original question of whether the claims of Christianity are true or not. Once again, I'll try to steer you to G.K. Chesterton's book, "The Everlasting Man" as an examination from a point of view that a pagan or pantheist (or agnostic)could appreciate.

Esmer, your speculative question has a good point - we can't really know how things work on the other side, outside of things specifically given in revelation. CS Lewis said, "There will be surprises", so I think your point is good - but I doubt that we would be questioning where we are at that point.

Was that well said, Menolly? :)
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"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton
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Re: Mostly to Menolly - about the afterlife and other stuff.

Post by Menolly »

Lina Heartlistener wrote:
Menolly wrote:
Lina Heartlistener wrote:...I don't think you realistically want me in these discussions...
Lina, welcome to The Close.
Hiyah, Menolly. Thanks for your welcome. Hospitality is a splendid thing.


:)

You're welcome. I try.
Lina Heartlistener wrote:
As for the rest of your post, this is why I am glad I don't fear a fire and brimstone afterlife. Being Jewish, Olam Ha-Ba (the World to Come) just is not a concern in everyday life. Bringing mitzvot into the here and now is the concern. So, I don't generally even think about it, and when I do it is one thing I don't worry about.
Okay, then I'm curious about where the ideas (or lack of specifics?) about "Olam Ha-Ba" come from. I am somewhat ignorant about the "rabbinic tradition" aspects. The main ideas RE the afterlife that I saw in the Old Testament (this is just my own reading of it - I'm sure that our ideas on how to interpret scripture vary widely) were people who rested with their ancestors or people who go down to sheol.

Yet I think that David, who I see as a deep lover of the One he worshipped (even though David did some terrible things) dreamt of some sort of an everlasting life that was wonderful and even "too glorious" as he wrote his psalms. I, personally have to admit that I very badly (achingly!) want there to be "something MUCH better than this world" out there for us!
I am hoping on attending a course starting on Monday about the anthropology of the siddur (weekday and Shabbos prayer book), and have started a thread in anticipation of it. I already posted what little I have read so far regarding Olam Ha-Ba in it. The post is at Theology and Folklore in Judaism.

But you are correct regarding interpretations of the TANACH. I freely admit I am not well versed. But, I always refer to the ORT Navigating the Bible II site for my biblical reading, and use the Torah and Haftorah pages instead of the Translation with Commentaries. I have already had a private discussion with a member of the Watch where the translation of certain passages definitely varied, and helped explain why Jews do not say "yes, this prophesy matches this event in the New Testament." But, I no longer remember which passsage it was on. My memory is terrible in regards to stuff like that.

Lina Heartlistener wrote:
That said, I will admit I have friends who practice various faiths, and they have all asked for, and received my permission, for them to do whatever it is they can do to make a non-believer's path easier for me. May as well cover my bases, yes? ;)
Bythe way, this comment was probably the thing that made me saddest of all, of everything I saw on this whole thread so far. :cry: This is coming from my perspective that reads the torah and the other Old Testament prophetic writing as a literal spiritual history (though it's not limited to being ONLY that!) of things that really happened on this earth to the children of Jacob.
It is pretty common among American Jews to take what is known as the "scientific" approach regarding the TANACH nowadays. Pretty much only the ultra-orthodox believe that Moses received the entire Torah on Mount Sinai nowadays, and take every word in the TANACH literally. But though I prefer sitting behind the mihitzah at orthodox services for worship, I freely admit I am far from Torah observant. I view most of the TANACH as allegories and parables. Yet I still observe the major holidays. So, we will be approaching things from very different POVs. But, that's OK.
Lina Heartlistener wrote:Btw, I'll try to keep the vowels (which we don't even know whether they are the "right ones") out of the "Y" Name if I ever use it explicitly, cause that's maybe important to you, but other than that... I'll use my own convention. (UNLESS there any words that actually "burn your eyes" to see on the page. But I'm guessing that's just your own personal habit of writing "names" that relate to the Name.)[/i]
*hiding grin*

This always comes up when people see my style of writing the various Names for G-d that I recognize as such. My take on that is first of all, Jewish Law only applies to Jews, and occasionally the law of the land will even superceded that. This helps explain the apparent contradiction many had with Joseph Lieberman's stance on abortion. As an Orthodox Jew, he would never personally encourage a family member to have an abortion. But, for non-Jews, whatever the law of the land dictates is what they follow. And since Judaism does not view a fetus as viable until birth for a girl or on the eighth day for a boy, there is no moral problem for him to vote for the law of the land to allow it (I don't want to get into an abortion debate, that is just an example). So, unless someone agrees with Jewish Law about not writing out the name of HaShem, I do not expect anyone else to do such.

Second, my own mishigosh (craziness) is to take it further, and to try to apply it to allnames of HaShem I recognize. So I tend to write JC or Chr-st, Kr-shna, L-rd, etc. Again, that's just me. I don't expect anyone else to ever do that.

As far as the "Y" name goes, we never pronounce it, even in prayer. And even the substitute words we use "Adonoy, elohanu" in prayer, is substituted with "Hashem, elokaynu," even in study. There is no way I would ever need to write it on a message board. But as far as other names for HaShem go, I have basically expanded on the reasons stated in The Name of G-d.
rusmeister wrote:Was that well said, Menolly? :)
Yes, rus, it was. I disagree with you, but it was very well stated. :)
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Post by Xar »

rusmeister wrote:It's difficult to respond to you, Zar, because you don't seem to have read what cybrweez or I said or to share common definitions with us. It seems that you have certain concepts in your head of what Christianity teaches - what does 'saved' mean?; what does 'allowed into Heaven' mean? You seem to be speaking of some of the more primitive versions of fundamental or evangelical Christianity (and even there there are more educated understandings of these concepts) with a vengeful God out to get us if we make the wrong choice. I've already tried to get across to you that you may need to be saved from yourself, and that by your own choices you can damn yourself, rather than the false idea that God wants to punish us forever and ever and ever, but you don't seem to have picked up on this.
The name is "Xar", but I'll let that slide :P As for what I am speaking about - the denominations I mentioned - it's not a matter of a vengeful God or not; if a Christian denomination believes that God arbitrarily chooses whether to save you or not, that's what one has to go by in order to think about whether they are right or not. That said, I acknowledged that there are many Christian denominations, and just as many differences in doctrine and faith. However:
rusmeister wrote:Therefore, if it IS true, then you wilfully choose damnation by rejecting the salvation that is offered to you, just as a person drowning at sea refuses a lifeline and thus condemns themselves to drown. It is NOT something God "does" to you.
I disagree with this statement of yours. Since there is no authority higher than God and therefore He is the one who makes the rules about salvation, Heaven and Hell, it follows that depending on how one interprets "rejecting the salvation that is offered to you", the implications change. Let's make an example. I'll admit that I've had little first-hand experience with fundamentalist Christians, but I've heard from friends who have had these experiences, and of course I've read about them a lot on the internet and elsewhere. Now, for the sake of argument, I'll assume that most of what I've read is true - bear with me. So here we have groups of Christians who apparently believe that if you do not accept the message of Jesus Christ, you will burn in Hell. They actively try to save you, not because they want to be obnoxious, but because they genuinely believe they're doing you a favor. Some may go as far as claiming that yes, you may be a good person, but still you won't get into Heaven without this faith. Now, again for the sake of argument (and since you admit yourself that we cannot know for sure what awaits us on the other side), let's say they're right: if you do not accept the message of Jesus, you will burn into Hell no matter what you do. At best, a good and honest person may hope for purgatory (or Dante's limbo, maybe).
Now the question is - why should faith in this particular message, as opposed to any other, be the difference between this final destination and eternal Heaven? What I mean is - why should a good and honest man who lived his life trying to do good deeds be refused entry into Heaven just because he happened, for example, to be a Muslim or a Hindu?
Obviously this was an extreme example; but the fact is that whenever one says that faith is the important factor about the afterlife, he or she is implying that all other faiths, no matter how honest their adherents, are "inferior", "false", or ultimately flawed. But most of all, he or she is implying that faith is more important than good deeds and a good life. And while faith may be a way to admit who we are, to accept our shortcomings and possibly forgive ourselves for it by struggling to overcome them, this does not mean that only the Christian faith can do this. Islam, Hinduism, Shintoism, Zoroastrianism, and so many other faiths have adherents who are probably just as strong in their faith as you are in yours, and who are we to say they are wrong and we are right? You may say "because our book says so", but they too have their own books and holy texts (in the case of Islam, chronologically speaking one could even suggest that the Qu'ran, based on the Hebrew and Christian faith, could be considered an "updated version") which very likely say similar things, and the truth is that none of us knows enough about what lies beyond this life as to be able to formulate an objective statement as to which faith is right, if any. In fact, some of these faiths are quite strict in describing who goes to Heaven and who doesn't (usually those who belong to other faiths), but others are far more open (Zoroastrianism is a prime example - and interestingly enough, it predates all the Abrahamic religions and some believe it may have served as inspiration for them).

So, with this wealth of holy texts and scriptures, many of them contradicting each other, who are we to judge which one is the right one? A Muslim could easily say you, the Orthodox Christian, are wrong, and his word would have just as much validity as yours, since neither of you would know what happens after death.

And that's also why it's unrealistic to believe that belonging to a particular faith could be either essential or very helpful in increasing one's chances at Heaven after death; it is not adherence to doctrine as much as adherence to the spirit of the faith - the teachings, not the forms - that is important. And it is not a coincidence, in this case, that most religions share the same basic teachings and philosophies - something far more universal than dogmas and creeds.

After all, why should God care if we eat pork, or drink wine, or if we cut our hair or our beards, and so on? Why should God deny someone paradise only because he was buried with a piece of pork? I submit that the form of your faith - or the lack thereof - is not so important as your adherence to these teachings, and that these teachings do not necessarily require a religious framework to be fulfilled. To do good, to love, to improve the world... An atheist could stumble onto this philosophy and follow it even without ever thinking of a divine being behind it; but as long as he follows it sincerely and not with hidden purposes, he is just as sincere as the next pious Christian, Muslim, and so on.

The Zoroastrians have a central tenet of their faith that says:

"Good thought, good word, good deed."

They have another one which says:

"Don't be lazy."

These are the tenets by which their religion judges those who are worthy of paradise. And are they not at the core of almost every religion, in one form or another? So as long as one follows them sincerely, and strives to improve himself and the world - after all, one can admit his own faults and strive to change himself even without adhering to any one faith - what does it matter if he is Christian, Jewish, Muslim, atheist or agnostic?
rusmeister wrote:You say that God 'made us flawed'. This is NOT the Christian understanding, but a straw man invented to make Christianity easy to prove wrong (in some people's minds). If you honestly inquire into Christian teaching (I will speak from Orthodox Christianity, as the only Church that I can honestly defend) you will discover that God made us perfect and saw that "it was good", and that man fell by his own choice to turn away from God and reject God as the source of life, seeking that life instead in himself. We were never intended to die. It's a tragedy that was never supposed to happen, and lead to the Incarnation of God Himself, to sacrifice Himself, in order to save us from our own mistakes. But now the pride that keeps us from accepting the lifelines thrown to us and keeps us floating on our little planks leads us to our destruction. Again, as you pointed out, the theologies of varying denominations do have holes or points that are difficult to explain at various points - but FTR, Orthodoxy claims to be PRE-denominational. It's always been around, and never broke off from anybody. Unlike Protestant denominations, there is no date of the founding of the Orthodox Church, other than roughly AD 33 (The only other Church that can make this claim is the Roman Catholic Church, so that would narrow down your search really fast). I'd suggest you seek to understand Orthodox teaching before rejecting it, and you need to get your info from the horse's mouth.
As I said before, I was raised as a Catholic and I am still a believer, although my own experiences and my own interests in the study of other religions have changed my concepts quite a lot from mainstream Catholicism. I have had a Catholic education and I am quite aware of the points you raise. But I also try to think with my own head - simply because it is not good enough to me to accept what others tell me without questioning why. I'm a scientist, after all - curiosity comes with the name ;) Perhaps this is why I also disagree with you about the "flawed/not flawed" concept. But here we enter the arduous territory of the free will vs. determinism argument which detractors of the Christian faith use so happily, and I'd rather not go there in order to avoid derailing the thread.
rusmeister wrote:Esmer, your speculative question has a good point - we can't really know how things work on the other side, outside of things specifically given in revelation. CS Lewis said, "There will be surprises", so I think your point is good - but I doubt that we would be questioning where we are at that point.
I just want to point out something in the above quote which relates to what I said earlier about the validity of one faith over another. The part I highlighted in italics is what I want to call your attention on. Here, you speak from the assumption that the Christian revelation is true. It is understandable, given that you are Christian; however, anyone from a different faith or from no faith altogether could disagree with you with just the same validity. A Hindu could tell you that the revelations in the Bible are completely wrong - life is a cycle of reincarnations (interestingly, the ancient Jews had the concept of reincarnation). A Muslim could also tell you that his revelations of the afterlife don't quite match yours. And while you may think you are right, it does not negate the fact that they, too, think the same.

Honestly, that's why I prefer to question these things rather than to accept them without going deeper; and religion or not, I like to believe any parent would prefer his or her children to grow their own way, rather than to simply accept what they are told.
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Post by Menolly »

Xar wrote:A Hindu could tell you that the revelations in the Bible are completely wrong - life is a cycle of reincarnations (interestingly, the ancient Jews had the concept of reincarnation).
*some modern day Jews as well (myself included)*

From the Olam Ha-Ba article:
Resurrection and Reincarnation
Belief in the eventual resurrection of the dead is a fundamental belief of traditional Judaism. It was a belief that distinguished the Pharisees (intellectual ancestors of Rabbinical Judaism) from the Sadducees. The Sadducees rejected the concept, because it is not explicitly mentioned in the Torah. The Pharisees found the concept implied in certain verses.

Belief in resurrection of the dead is one of Rambam's 13 Principles of Faith. The second blessing of the Shemoneh Esrei prayer, which is recited three times daily, contains several references to resurrection. (Note: the Reform movement, which apparently rejects this belief, has rewritten the second blessing accordingly).

The resurrection of the dead will occur in the messianic age, a time referred to in Hebrew as the Olam Ha-Ba, the World to Come, but that term is also used to refer to the spiritual afterlife. When the messiah comes to initiate the perfect world of peace and prosperity, the righteous dead will be brought back to life and given the opportunity to experience the perfected world that their righteousness helped to create. The wicked dead will not be resurrected.

There are some mystical schools of thought that believe resurrection is not a one-time event, but is an ongoing process. The souls of the righteous are reborn in to continue the ongoing process of tikkun olam, mending of the world. Some sources indicate that reincarnation is a routine process, while others indicate that it only occurs in unusual circumstances, where the soul left unfinished business behind. Belief in reincarnation is also one way to explain the traditional Jewish belief that every Jewish soul in history was present at Sinai and agreed to the covenant with G-d. (Another explanation: that the soul exists before the body, and these unborn souls were present in some form at Sinai). Belief in reincarnation is commonly held by many Chasidic sects, as well as some other mystically-inclined Jews. See, for example Reincarnation Stories from Chasidic Tradition.
Xar wrote:Honestly, that's why I prefer to question these things rather than to accept them without going deeper; and religion or not, I like to believe any parent would prefer his or her children to grow their own way, rather than to simply accept what they are told.
*had this discussion already...although I agree with you for everyone else, I'm clamping my mouth shut for now*
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:LOLS: I swear, I've met my favourite Christians ever on this board. Xar I coulda made that same argument, with a few minor differences in emphasis.
Xar wrote:But most of all, he or she is implying that faith is more important than good deeds and a good life.
Exactly. And what just deity, who exhorts their followers to do good, could countenance such a thing?

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Post by danlo »

This is, basically, my relationship with God Real Man
fall far and well Pilots!
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Post by rusmeister »

This, guys, is why I'm trying to say that not all forms of Christianity can truly represent a full understanding of the teachings of Christ or the original Church - people pick on arguments of people from churches established 10, 50 or 150 years ago and take them for genuine/original Christian teaching. It must be obvious that they can't all represent what the original Church actually taught; therefore, most of them have gone wrong, some drastically so. The question becomes, which faith, if any, represents the teachings of the original Church and could be said to be what Christianity is really saying?

Xar (sorry about the previous misspelling), you continue to make assumptions theat ensure we speak different languages. It is an assumption to say that "God makes the rules" and thereby imaging that He could make any rules He liked. Even SRD doesn't go that far - his "Creator" is bound by his own nature to create what he does. Why don't you give the God of the Christians the same benefit of the doubt? Maybe this is not just one of many possible moralities, but the only possible one? If so, it would be inevitable that in order to have servants serving of their own free will, God would, a) be bound to create the situation that resulted in our having a free choice between Him and self and b) we would then be responsible for our own destruction and it would not be the imposition of arbitrary rules from above at all. Indeed, they may be the only rules that make free will possible. This may really be the only possible type of Creation. If so, your assumption of God 'making up the rules' is non sequitur. It becomes a primitive understanding of what is actually a more complex reality.

BTW, I agree completely with your (+Avatar's) sentiments that a God that valued a certain membership or faith over deeds would be horrendous, but that's not a mature Christian teaching, anyway - it's certainly not compatible with Orthodoxy.

In the end, it is entirely possible (and I maintain in fact IS) that most Christian churches contain greater or lesser degrees of Truth and understandings of what that original faith 2,000 years ago was and is. The challenge is to do the necessary research and figure out which one is closest, or even actually is that original Church.
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rusmeister wrote:BTW, I agree completely with your (+Avatar's) sentiments that a God that valued a certain membership or faith over deeds would be horrendous...
If we agree that your actions, the way you live your life, are more important than what you believe, then I have no problem with your god either. ;)


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Post by Xar »

rusmeister wrote:Xar (sorry about the previous misspelling), you continue to make assumptions theat ensure we speak different languages. It is an assumption to say that "God makes the rules" and thereby imaging that He could make any rules He liked. Even SRD doesn't go that far - his "Creator" is bound by his own nature to create what he does. Why don't you give the God of the Christians the same benefit of the doubt? Maybe this is not just one of many possible moralities, but the only possible one? If so, it would be inevitable that in order to have servants serving of their own free will, God would, a) be bound to create the situation that resulted in our having a free choice between Him and self and b) we would then be responsible for our own destruction and it would not be the imposition of arbitrary rules from above at all. Indeed, they may be the only rules that make free will possible. This may really be the only possible type of Creation. If so, your assumption of God 'making up the rules' is non sequitur. It becomes a primitive understanding of what is actually a more complex reality.
But to say that God is bound by his own nature implies that He is constrained in some way - and since this means there would be something (a nature, a state of mind, whatever you want to call it) that He is not, then this in turn would mean God is not everything - and therefore you are postulating a Deity which does not represent totality. Is that not one of the attributes of God in the Abrahamic religions? The Jewish Kabbalah even suggests that God is MORE than everything in the universe, and that there cannot be anything which is not God, because it is inconceivable for something to exist without God. Therefore, I submit that - unlike SRD's Creator figure (who after all never claims nor is directly implied to be the equal of the Abrahamic God) for God to be perfect, He cannot be bound by anything, not even His nature; and if He cannot be bound by his nature, then it is impossible to say that this morality could be the only possible way. Not only that, but if you say this was the only possible morality He could create in order to give free will to His children, you limit God's omnipotence by saying "He has only one way to do something"; omnipotence by itself means being able to do everything, and therefore it implies that an omnipotent being could find infinite ways to do anything.

Just for the sake of discussion, I just read something on CNN which could be relevant here:
CNN wrote: Coulter: We want 'Jews to be perfected'

WASHINGTON (CNN) – Conservative commentator and best-selling author Ann Coulter may find herself in the midst of a controversy for comments Monday suggesting America would be better if everyone was Christian.

Asked by CNBC host Donny Deutsch what the U.S. looks like in her dreams, Coulter said it would look like the Republican National Convention in 2004

"People were happy,” she said, according to a transcript provided to CNN by CNBC. “They're Christian. They're tolerant. They defend America." (Video: Watch Coulter's comments on CNBC)

When Deutsch responded, "It would be better if we were all Christian?" Coulter said "Yeah."

Deutsch, himself Jewish, continued to press Coulter on her remarks, asking, "We should just throw Judaism away and we should all be Christians then?"

"Yeah," Coulter responded, adding "Well, it's a lot easier. It's kind of a fast track."

"You can't possibly believe that," Deutsch responded. “You can’t possibly. You’re too educated.”

"Do you know what Christianity is?" Coulter replied. "See, we believe your religion, but you have to obey. We have the fast track program."

Later in the interview Deutsch asked Coulter if she doesn't want any Jews in the world, Coulter responded, "No, we think — we just want Jews to be perfected, as they say."

"Wow, you didn't really say that, did you," Deutsch said.

"Yeah, no,” Coulter replied. “That’s what Christianity is. We believe the Old Testament, but ours is more like Federal Express. You have to obey laws. We know we're all sinners."

Deutsch said he was personally offended.

"No. I'm sorry. It is not intended to be," she said. "I don't think you should take it that way, but that is what Christians consider themselves: perfected Jews. We believe the Old Testament. As you know from the Old Testament, God was constantly getting fed up with humans for not being able to live up to all the laws. What Christians believe — this is just a statement of what the New Testament is — is that that's why Christ came and died for our sins. Christians believe the Old Testament. You don't believe our testament."

Deutsch continued to call Coulter's comments anti-semetic.

"No, no, — I don't want you being offended by this," she responded. "This is what Christians consider themselves, because our testament is the continuation of your testament. You know that. So we think Jews go to heaven. I mean, [the late Rev. Jerry] Falwell himself said that, but you have to follow laws. Ours is "Christ died for our sins." We consider ourselves perfected Christians. For me to say that for you to become a Christian is to become a perfected Christian is not offensive at all."
This is a perfect example of a few things I have mentioned. First of all, I think every rational and educated person could see that the woman starts from the assumption she is right and Christianity is indeed not only true, but also the best religion. She also seems to assume that: 1) People's motivation to join Christianity would be to get on the "fast track" to salvation; 2) Jews should be willing to convert to Christianity because it is an evolution of Judaism.
This serves as a good example of what I spoke earlier about other religions and assuming that yours is automatically the only right one (something which, rus, you haven't replied to yet ;) )...
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Post by Menolly »

Xar wrote:Just for the sake of discussion, I just read something on CNN which could be relevant here:
I was wondering if anyone would post this here. Duchess shared it over on the Hangar. She included the transcript as well.
A transcript, provided by Media Matters, follows.
*

DEUTSCH: Christian -- so we should be Christian? It would be better if we were all Christian?

COULTER: Yes.

DEUTSCH: We should all be Christian?

COULTER: Yes. Would you like to come to church with me, Donny?

DEUTSCH: So I should not be a Jew, I should be a Christian, and this would be a better place?

COULTER: Well, you could be a practicing Jew, but you're not.

DEUTSCH: I actually am. That's not true. I really am. But -- so we would be better if we were - if people -- if there were no Jews, no Buddhists --

COULTER: Whenever I'm harangued by --

DEUTSCH: -- in this country? You can't believe that.

COULTER: -- you know, liberals on diversity --

DEUTSCH: Here you go again.

COULTER: No, it's true. I give all of these speeches at megachurches across America, and the one thing that's really striking about it is how utterly, completely diverse they are, and completely unself-consciously. You walk past a mixed-race couple in New York, and it's like they have a chip on their shoulder. They're just waiting for somebody to say something, as if anybody would. And --

DEUTSCH: I don't agree with that. I don't agree with that at all. Maybe you have the chip looking at them. I see a lot of interracial couples, and I don't see any more or less chips there either way. That's erroneous.

COULTER: No. In fact, there was an entire Seinfeld episode about Elaine and her boyfriend dating because they wanted to be a mixed-race couple, so you're lying.

DEUTSCH: Oh, because of some Seinfeld episode? OK.

COULTER: But yeah, I think that's reflective of what's going on in the culture, but it is completely striking that at these huge megachurches -- the idea that, you know, the more Christian you are, the less tolerant you would be is preposterous.

DEUTSCH: That isn't what I said, but you said I should not -- we should just throw Judaism away and we should all be Christians, then, or --

COULTER: Yeah.

DEUTSCH: Really?

COULTER: Well, it's a lot easier. It's kind of a fast track.

DEUTSCH: Really?

COULTER: Yeah. You have to obey.

DEUTSCH: You can't possibly believe that.

COULTER: Yes.

DEUTSCH: You can't possibly -- you're too educated, you can't -- you're like my friend in --

COULTER: Do you know what Christianity is? We believe your religion, but you have to obey.

DEUTSCH: No, no, no, but I mean --

COULTER: We have the fast-track program.

DEUTSCH: Why don't I put you with the head of Iran? I mean, come on. You can't believe that.

COULTER: The head of Iran is not a Christian.

DEUTSCH: No, but in fact, "Let's wipe Israel" --

COULTER: I don't know if you've been paying attention.

DEUTSCH: "Let's wipe Israel off the earth." I mean, what, no Jews?

COULTER: No, we think -- we just want Jews to be perfected, as they say.

DEUTSCH: Wow, you didn't really say that, did you?

COULTER: Yes. That is what Christianity is. We believe the Old Testament, but ours is more like Federal Express. You have to obey laws. We know we're all sinners --

DEUTSCH: In my old days, I would have argued -- when you say something absurd like that, there's no --

COULTER: What's absurd?

DEUTSCH: Jews are going to be perfected. I'm going to go off and try to perfect myself --

COULTER: Well, that's what the New Testament says.

DEUTSCH: Ann Coulter, author of If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans, and if Ann Coulter had any brains, she would not say Jews need to be perfected. I'm offended by that personally. And we'll have more Big Idea when we come back.

[...]

DEUTSCH: Welcome back to The Big Idea. During the break, Ann said she wanted to explain her last comment. So I'm going to give her a chance. So you don't think that was offensive?

COULTER: No. I'm sorry. It is not intended to be. I don't think you should take it that way, but that is what Christians consider themselves: perfected Jews. We believe the Old Testament. As you know from the Old Testament, God was constantly getting fed up with humans for not being able to, you know, live up to all the laws. What Christians believe -- this is just a statement of what the New Testament is -- is that that's why Christ came and died for our sins. Christians believe the Old Testament. You don't believe our testament.

DEUTSCH: You said -- your exact words were, "Jews need to be perfected." Those are the words out of your mouth.

COULTER: No, I'm saying that's what a Christian is.

DEUTSCH: But that's what you said -- don't you see how hateful, how anti-Semitic --

COULTER: No!

DEUTSCH: How do you not see? You're an educated woman. How do you not see that?

COULTER: That isn't hateful at all.

DEUTSCH: But that's even a scarier thought.

***
My reply to this, responding to Duchess saying that Coulter frightens her.
Me too!!

...and yet, while I hate to admit it...

The majority of times that I do get into religious dicussion with personal friends, and we reach the topic of evangelism, they all tell me that yes, a major component of their belief is to bring non-believers to Chr-st. That most of them don't blatantly "witness" to me is a personal decision on their part, but that it is a fundamental tenant of their religion. And that it is not viewed as anti-semetism, but as a loving attitude towards their non-"completed" brethren. That's the phrase I hear most often. Not "perfected" Jew, but "completed" Jew.

For me, it's just something I know is nearly always an undercurrent. And as I have stated elsewhere, I allow those who do become passionate to do what they feel might possibly help a non-believer on their way. For some, it's including me in their prayers that I eventually "see the light." For some of my LDS friends, from what I understand, it goes a little further within their actual practises, but I am not personally in attendance, so it doesn't bother me.

But, having lived in Village housing, I have friends of all faiths from various countries, since the population is 85% international. And some of my Muslim friends do similar things. Evangelism is not strictly a Chr-stian concept. And for whatever reason, Jews appear to be a targeted audience.
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rusmeister
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Post by rusmeister »

Xar wrote: But to say that God is bound by his own nature implies that He is constrained in some way - and since this means there would be something (a nature, a state of mind, whatever you want to call it) that He is not, then this in turn would mean God is not everything - and therefore you are postulating a Deity which does not represent totality. Is that not one of the attributes of God in the Abrahamic religions? The Jewish Kabbalah even suggests that God is MORE than everything in the universe, and that there cannot be anything which is not God, because it is inconceivable for something to exist without God. Therefore, I submit that - unlike SRD's Creator figure (who after all never claims nor is directly implied to be the equal of the Abrahamic God) for God to be perfect, He cannot be bound by anything, not even His nature; and if He cannot be bound by his nature, then it is impossible to say that this morality could be the only possible way. Not only that, but if you say this was the only possible morality He could create in order to give free will to His children, you limit God's omnipotence by saying "He has only one way to do something"; omnipotence by itself means being able to do everything, and therefore it implies that an omnipotent being could find infinite ways to do anything.


This is a perfect example of a few things I have mentioned. First of all, I think every rational and educated person could see that the woman starts from the assumption she is right and Christianity is indeed not only true, but also the best religion. She also seems to assume that: 1) People's motivation to join Christianity would be to get on the "fast track" to salvation; 2) Jews should be willing to convert to Christianity because it is an evolution of Judaism.
This serves as a good example of what I spoke earlier about other religions and assuming that yours is automatically the only right one (something which, rus, you haven't replied to yet ;) )...
Regarding your first comment on the omnipotence of God, Lewis deals with this pretty effectively in his book, "The Problem With Pain".
"This is no limit to His power. If you choose to say God can give a creature free will and at the same time withhold free will from it', you have not succeeded in saying anything about God: meaningless combination of words do not suddenly acquire meaning simply because we prefix to them to other words `God can'". In the end, "not because His power meets an obstacle, but because nonsense remains nonsense even when we talk it about God".
Essentially, there are things that are inherently/intrinsically impossible, and it is no obstruction to omnipotence to deny self-contradiction.

Just to offer a pluralistic acknowledgement of this:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omnipotence_paradox

If we understand paradox correctly - as an apparent contradiction that is not intrinsic contradiction - then a being could be omnipotent and 'not be able' to do things that would contradict its own nature. The way you currently understand omnipotence leads to self-contradiction, which contradicts reason.

While I would acknowledge one serious strength in people like Ann Coulter - the ability to acknowledge that there is absolute Truth - neither would I support her understanding of Christianity as that of the original and continuously existing Christian Church established by Christ and the Apostles, and so presenting her as one of the best and wisest defenders of Christianity is not something I'll take you up on, nor would I say that using the weaknesses in her arguments to reject Christianity as a whole 'lets you off the hook'.

That said, the best thing reasoning people can do is to inquire,learn, and then come to conclusions - that is what reason is for, after all. You can condemn a person's conclusions by proving them wrong, but not condemn them for merely coming to conclusions.

As to Judaism... if Christianity is true and all of humanity needs to be saved, why
1) would people not want to be saved - or want to be destroyed?
2) why would Jews be exceptions?

Again, the focus on inferior forms and champions of a faith seem to indicate a desire to avoid engaging with what is wisest and truest in a faith. The way to come to a conclusion that you can consider valid is to defeat the best and wisest defenders of a faith, and to risk being 'defeated' yourself. If you knowingly seek out the Ann Coulters of the world and say "This is why I am not a Christian" you can't be said to have seriously investigated Christianity.
"Eh? Two views? There are a dozen views about everything until you know the answer. Then there's never more than one." Bill Hingest ("That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis)

"These are the days when the Christian is expected to praise every creed except his own." G.K. Chesterton
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