In a sense I've tended to look at the meaning and the spiritual. The physical aspect to the story provides the clarity but its not the main concern. So with the miracles, when Jesus heals a blind man, ...
The physical is the main concern. If it were not, god could have just saved everyone without laying a foot on the earth.
When Jesus walked on water He was teaching us that we can rise above oI gur lower nature and have our being in the heavenly realm. The physical exists but it is temporal for our soul is eternal whereas our bodies are not.
That doesn't make sense. Physical exist always. From jesus coming to earth (human representation of a invisible god). Communion is physical.
It's like that example I gave posts back. If you were in the middle of an intersection with cars flying back and forth, I'm assuming if the physical isn't important, you'd close your eyes and try to spiritually move yourself from the traffic. Of course, once you actually walk out of the street, it's temporary and it may teach a lesson but that does not mean the physical just disappears. You still needed the actual walking as a part of the lesson.
I don't think its about one or the other. I call that dichotomous thinking. Its both but we need to have discernment otherwise we won't be walking above the water but drowning in a mire of superstition and dogma. I make no apologies for saying this because Jesus Christ is just as much my saviour as He is to the Christians. I experience Him too. Am I not allowed a voice? Should I be silent?
The bible is full of unjustified beliefs (superstition). It's not all backed up by science. It doesn't need to be even though people, even christians, try to make it to justify it's validity. If jesus saw that, he'd probably say something like "you search the scriptures as if they have eternal life; but even the scriptures testify on my behalf." He's not saying throw away the
physical scriptures it just means you (people in general) are using it to find jesus.
You need both. You need the bible, jesus words. You need faith, jesus Word. You need the physical and the spiritual.
I have to be honest, jesus was never my savior. I saw it from a different perspective that wasn't inline with the Church and scripture. I don't understand how you believe in both religions without saying you are a christian (a follower of christ) as well as a Bahai. I know it's just a word but if you support christianity a lot, and have no problem saying that jesus is your savior, are you christian? If not, what beliefs make you not a christian?
We all need love and that is expressed in so many different ways. My mother did not need to rise from the dead physically to show her love for me, and I don't believe Jesus did either. I see no connection between love and ascending into the physical sky. But that's culture again where we all see through our own eyes.
Well, its like this: Saying "I love you" is-->Spirit rising only
Giving only a hug: Body rising only
What most christians belief: Spirit
and body rising only.
Here is a diagram I gave Quin on a completely different topic.
The second one is how I see you're viewing it. Rock is jesus body and spirit is the spirit of god. So, if the body is temporary, then only the spirit rises not the flesh.
Christianity teaches the third circle. You can't separate the body from the spirit because in scripture it says when you go to heaven you will get new bodies. You can't get new bodies if you have just left your old one behind. That example of rising in body had to be physical because all throughout scripture, physical supported the spiritual. If jesus told people "I can raise the dead" they'd look at him funny. If he actually did it, lesson or not, that
action was needed for the disciples to understand what the lesson mean not just in spirit but in their noggin too. We are no different. I just find the "spiritual and not religious" or "symbolism not literalism" a bit new and annoying. A lot of people actually
do believe that Orishas are in their given statues and you can't have one without the other. Christianity is no different.
I hope I did not offend you with that. It certainly is not my intention to offend anyone. In truth of the all those that have taken time to respond on this post you have excelled everyone in your passion for a belief in a physically resurrected Christ. You may not see yourself as Catholic or Christian and say it has just left a dent, but it appears profoundly interwoven with your being. You may feel 90% pagan and 10% Christian but you appear 90% Christian to my eyes. That's a positive because I love Christ and I love Christians...
When you are christian, you love christ with all your being. You believe that he has saved you. You repent to him for your misdeeds to get back in union with his father. You understand him more via scripture, experiences, and life itself. You commune with people of like mind, and you believe the lessons or facts in scripture are real. It isn't just taking the sacraments and believing in christ. I'm christian by confirmation.
You have to be christian by all the rest above. I don't have that experience of loving christ, he's my savior, and all of that. I just have Catholic view of experiencing the sacraments and what Im telling you is from scripture not from my belief. In my belief, there is no god. Jesus isn't different than you and I. I don't place people, things, gods, etc on a pedestal. (Which would get me killed back in the day).
If paganism didn't have so much new-age mess put to it, I could easily defend it but since we are so broad and many pagans are Pagans who take up European faiths, which I don't, there is nothing more I can say about the connect but by name. When you have a religion, basically all "naming" ceases. It becomes life.
Its fine that we all see through our eyes. The problem is when we can't see our own filters and lenses. Worse when we are so disconnected from our humanity that we lack empathy and compassion for others.
Can you take the lens from your eyes to see the
validity of other people's religions that you have not experienced? For example, can you see the validity of Paganism if a Pagan actually talked to you about his or her religion opposed to your religion?
That is what Jesus and the Christians did. He brought a new understanding to the Hebrew Bible. It clearly aggravated many of His fellow Jews and led to His crucifixion. The Christians did the same thing. Were they right to have done it? Change was needed then. It is needed now.
It's wrong and doing that is what got many people killed. Jesus using Hebrew scriptures to support his own faith did not go well with the Jews. I disagree with any religion whose belief incorporates another belief system to justify its own as valid. That's what Christianity does with the OT and NT debate. Nichiren Buddhism does it as well. Just from talking with Bahai here, there is a pattern with you all too. It's a pet peeve because I live around native religions that have had their religion broke in pieces because of it. It's one thing to have a history of gradual mixing of religions its a a whole other thing to have separate religions, mix the two, and say they one validates the other. Bothers the mess out of me.
The purpose of sharing the Bab's story was to demonstrate how much there was at stake for both those who loved and hated the Bab. Having access to His physical body was important for His followers and denying access the agenda for is enemies. I have no doubt that Jesus' remains are on the earth for flesh does not inherit the kingdom of God, and Heaven is not up in the sky where Jesus presumably ascended.
Jesus rose in the flesh for his flesh to transform into a new body to sit next to his father in heaven. If you took his body away, he and christians wouldn't have a new body. I think you're earing more towards JW side. Mainstream christianity is different.
We each have our experiences in this life for certain. However those experiences can both illuminate or cloud what Jesus really taught and did. So my concern is to look at the gospels afresh. The Hebrew bible belongs just as much to the Christians as the Jews. Likewise the Bible belongs to the Baha'is to.
This certainly is THE chapter where it all comes together or unravels depending on how you feel about Paul comparing his 'non-resurrection' experiences to the others allegedly resurrection experiences.
It doesn't need to be complicated. If someone needs to "die in christ" there needs to be a physical christ to die in order for him to die in spirit. You have to read beyond the authors and just get the concepts at least. If you have physical jesus live. Physical jesus die. You have physical jesus resurrection. Once you have all three, jesus flesh (christian's sin) sheds and turns into a new body purified at the right side of his father. Christians are promised the same thing when they die, they will rise in body and spirit and be transformed based on their needs (judgement or acceptance) with new bodies. As for heaven, Id have to read revelations a twentieth time to understand it. Too many analogies to get the point of the message and compare it to the meat/content/physical part of it.
Is this not questioning the authenticity and passion of my experience as a believer in Christ or is that negated because I don't take everything I read at face value?
I see a Christian as someone who has gone through jesus life, death, and resurrection. They have taken all the sacraments of christ and they are in-line with his body in spirit
and in flesh. That christian does not believe dogma/religion as a hindrance of their faith but every denomination I came across, their dogma/religion supports their faith. I see a christian who at least knows the core of their faith regardless if it's influenced by denominational perspectives. And from there, if, for example, if I were actually christian, that person who has experienced all of this would know they can't stray away from truth. If I know two and two is four and went through arithmetic class to show me this, I can't deny it anymore. Regardless of where I go, what religion I practice, the equation is still the same. For me, that was not the case. I didn't wait as the priest told me to so I don't believe in the equation I'm just a christian by sacrament.
I do raise a eyebrow when you say you believe in christian teachings, was a christian, and are a Bahai. How can you have been an ex-christian if you still believe in its teachings and you are supporting your belief by the words of your faith?
I do wonder if I've offended or insulted you? Once again no offence intended. You are certainty a staunch Christian apologist whether you know it or not. That's a good thing. Maybe your not a Catholic but the Catholics have been a friend to me at times when I needed it the most. This thread on the resurrection is a good example.
I'm Catholic by sacrament not by action.